Seattle Now & Then: Tacoma’s dancing maidens, circa 1890s

(Click and click again to enlarge photos)

THEN: Homes overlook the north end of Wright Park and its two statues of dancing maidens circa 1890s. Along the 100 block of South G Street and above the sculptures, gravel road and sparse vegetation are an 1890 double house built for Charles E. Clancey and an 1889 Queen Anne-styled home owned by John Holgate. (A.C. Carpenter, Tacoma Public Library)
NOW: In front of the two statues of dancing maidens at the north entrance to Wright Park along Division Avenue, Chris Staudinger holds his book “Secret Tacoma: A Guide to the Weird, Wonderful and Obscure.” For info on book events, visit PrettyGrittyTours.com. (Clay Eals)

Published in The Seattle Times online on Oct. 30, 2025
and in Pacific NW Magazine of the printed Times on Nov. 2, 2025

 In new ‘secret’ book, dancing maidens sweeten Tacoma’s stature
By Clay Eals

Modeled on Grecian nymphs, two French-cast statues of dancing maidens have welcomed visitors at downtown Tacoma’s showcase Wright Park for an astounding 133 years.

NOW: The maidens stand at the north end of Wright Park, off Division Avenue, as indicated at the top of this guide map displayed at the park. (Clay Eals)

Their pale patina glows against the rich green of the 27-acre park’s abundant woods. Yet the maidens also hide, says Chris Staudinger, within the persistent persona of a city of 228,000 that’s shadowed by its Space Needled northern neighbor.

Tacoma, dubbed the City of Destiny when it was named the Northern Pacific Railroad’s western terminus in 1873, is “close to my heart,” says the 40-year-old ex-journalist. In the past nine years, Staudinger’s guided-tour business, Pretty Gritty Tours, has grown to 26 employees who mount a busy slate of excursions around the state, especially in Tacoma.

NOW: The cover of “Secret Tacoma: A Guide to the Weird, Wonderful, and Obscure.” For info on book events, visit PrettyGrittyTours.com. (Reedy Press)

“It is such an incredibly important and historically rich city that gets passed over by a modern lens all the time,” he says. “There’s so many firsts or huge achievements that took place here. But the City of Destiny is still better known as the ‘Tacoma aroma.’ And I aim to fix that.”

In his 190-page book, “Secret Tacoma: A Guide to the Weird, Wonderful, and Obscure” (2025, Reedy Press), Staudinger transforms the odiferous paper-mill/smelter reputation into a fragrant, fun collection of 94 unique, quirky spots that anyone would want to visit or revisit.

THEN: In this undated west-facing photo of the 1873 St. Peter’s Episcopal Church (aka Old St. Peter’s Church), a topped, ivy-covered 40-foot cedar stump serves as a bell tower. (Joseph Buchtel, Tacoma Public Library)
NOW: Today, the differently adorned bell tower for Tacoma’s Old St. Peter’s Church, located at 2910 N. Starr St. in the city’s Old Town neighborhood, is held aloft by a still-ivy-covered steel pole. Services are at 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. Sundays. The pole rises straight up, although in this wide-angled  view it appears titled. (Clay Eals)

Notably, they include Tacoma’s oldest existing building, the 1873 Old St. Peter’s Church, which still operates in the city’s Old Town, and, not far away, the 1907 Engine House No. 9, now a pub.

THEN: A team of horses and firefighters stands inside Engine House No. 9, built in 1907. The structure served as Tacoma’s firehouse for decades. (Tacoma Public Library)
NOW: Today Engine House No. 9 at 611 Pine St. is the E9 Firehouse and Gastropub. The building still has a brass fire pole and other elements from its firehouse years. (Clay Eals)

Back at Wright Park, the maiden statues, like many of Staudinger’s entries, bear a colorful backstory. They arrived with Clinton P. Ferry (1830-1909), a booster known as the “Duke of Tacoma.” Ferry acquired them and other pieces, intending them for a new marital home, during a late-1880s European trip with his second wife.

One day on that trip, as recounted in Murray Morgan’s Tacoma-centered tome “Puget’s Sound,” Ferry returned early to their Parisian suite and caught his wife and her French tutor in flagrante delicto. Heartbroken, Ferry ended the marriage and gave his collected art to the city of Tacoma.

“Annie.” (Clay Eals)
“Fannie.” (Clay Eals)

Over the years, the sculptures acquired nicknames — “Annie” (for her Annie Wright Seminary, now Schools, and for the wife of park donor Charles Wright) and “Fannie” (for nearby Fannie C. Paddock Memorial Hospital, now Tacoma General Hospital) — as well as a few bruises. Fannie’s right hand once reached her chin but now crosses her midsection. And today her right foot is missing.

Each mini-chapter in “Secret Tacoma” ends with a “Pro Tip.” The one for the maidens is “Be good to your loved ones.”

Short and, yes, sweet.

WEB EXTRAS

Big thanks to Boo Billstein and Chris Staudinger for their invaluable help with this installment!

To see Clay Eals‘ 360-degree video of the “Now” prospect and compare it with the “Then” photos, and to hear this column read aloud by Clay, check out our Seattle Now & Then 360 version of the column.

Below, you will find a video interview, 2 documents, 4 additional photos and 5 historical clips from The Seattle Times and Seattle Post-Intelligencer online archive (available via Seattle Public Library), Newspapers.com, Washington Digital Newspapers and other sources that were helpful in the preparation of this column.

Click cover above to download the 2005 master plan for Tacoma’s Wright Park.
Click the document above to download a full document on the dancing-maiden statues in Tacoma’s Wright Park.
THEN: An undated wintertime photo of an unnamed woman admiring the snow-capped Wright Park nymph nicknamed “Annie.”  (Tacoma Public Library)
NOW: Welcome sign at Old St. Peter’s Church. (Clay Eals)
NOW: Commemorative plaque at Old St. Peter’s Church. (Clay Eals)
“Puget’s Sound” by Murray Morgan, p353-354.
Jan. 17, 1901, Seattle Post-Intelligencer, p8.
Aug. 6, 1909, Clinton P. Ferry obituary, Washington Standard.
Oct. 21, 1962, Tacoma News-Tribune, p10, courtesy Chris Staudinger.
Sept. 25, 2007, Tacoma News-Tribune, pA8, courtesy Chris Staudinger.
Dec. 28, 2007, Tacoma News-Tribune, p85, courtesy Chris Staudinger.

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