EARLY WOODINVILLE HISTORY
Their single cabin in the wilderness didn’t retain its isolation long. In 1888, the Seattle-Lake Shore & Eastern Railway arrived and became the main transportation and replaced scows on the slough. The railroad accelerated the development of the Sammamish Valley. In a few years a whole town built up around them and became known as Woodinville. The early businesses evolved around the railroad depot on the southwest side of the slough with homes on the northeast side. Helen Woodin married Joseph Keller in 1880 and homesteaded land near Redmond, Washington. In 1883, Mary Woodin married Tom Sanders who later became her father’s partner in the first general store in Woodinville. Tom and Mary Sanders moved to Seattle in 1894 and bought the Fremont Milling Company. In 1901, Frank Woodin married Anna Johanna Peterson and entered the logging business with his father-in-law, Nels Peterson. They moved to the Yakima valley in 1915, where they farmed. During the Woodin’s lifetime they saw their valley grow from a river community to logging and then to farming. The Woodin’s gave land for the Woodinville Recessional Memorial Mead. Ira passed away in 1908 and Susan in 1919 and they as well as many other early settlers have been laid to rest in this cemetery. |
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