In 2018, the city designated it an official landmark — the first on campus — and the UW is now searching for a lead donor as it explores launching a $13 million campaign to renovate and endow the Shell House, a key project in the reimagining of the university’s approximately 2-mile stretch of waterfront.
The layers of significance here are extraordinary. The building is an old U.S. Navy airplane hangar and instructional facility that dates back to 1918-19. It was built on Native ground where a strip of land once connected north Seattle to south, before Lake Washington and Lake Union were connected by a canal. The land was a portage and gathering site for Native peoples, who beached and carried their canoes here — the main mode of travel in presettlement times. It was called stukh-ug-weelth by the Lakes Duwamish people, meaning “carry a canoe.”
After World War I, the Navy hangar — one of only two surviving wooden Navy hangars from WWI in the country — became the home of the Husky crew and George Pocock, the world-famous builder of racing shells. Pocock built that 1936 gold-medal-winning boat, the Husky Clipper, and also revolutionized the sport of crew racing with innovative shell design and Northwest materials. Like Northwest Indigenous peoples, he came to see the unique virtues of red cedar on water; he called it “the wood eternal.” He learned about it while building flying boats for Boeing in the 1920s. It turned out to be a magic ingredient for faster, and cheaper, shells.
In the days before pro sports, rowing was the focus of local fandom in Seattle, as well as the centerpiece of the spring opening of boating season, as it still is. And while the Husky program has brought home many more championships and gold medals, the publication of The Boys in the Boat in 2013 by Daniel James Brown took everything to a new level. Its story of young men rising from Depression-era poverty and adversity to achieve at the highest levels has inspired people the world over.
Fans of the book began showing up at Montlake unannounced, wanting to see the old Shell House where the crew trained and where its boat was built. Melanie Barstow, a UW student rower, began giving “Boys of ’36” tours to the public. In the past three years, without major promotion, she has guided some 3,500 “Boys” fans.
The old Shell House is an extraordinary structure. It covers 10,000 square feet. Built of Douglas fir, it feels a bit like a glorious old barn. The loft where Pocock built his famous shells is still in place. Vast hangar doors face the lake, doors through which the Navy hauled in its instructional float planes and Husky rowers launched their shells.
The Husky crew moved to a new facility decades ago, and Pocock’s operation moved out in 1949. The building then became known as the Canoe House and has been used for storage and canoe rentals. The refurbished Shell House would be an events facility available to rent for conferences and weddings, a place to exhibit images and artifacts of the storied rowing history, a space for students and perhaps boatbuilders.
The Burke Museum, for example, stores a recently carved cedar hunting canoe there, a replica of one found in the Green River in the early 1960s. It’s the kind of everyday river canoe the Salish people used, and after the Shell House’s renovation, the public might be able to take it out on the lake. A gift shop and café also are envisioned as part of the building’s restoration.
It is hard to imagine a physical structure more redolent with history: a Native gathering spot, a naval aviation station, a place where Boeing influenced boat design and vice versa, a spot where championship athletic activities have been part of local sports and culture for generations, the building site of world-renowned racing shells made of local materials and the home of the 1936 team that beat Hitler’s crew.
“I see the building as a storyteller,” says storyteller extraordinaire Daniel Brown. Now it can be a powerful representation of historic connections.