Meet the Producer!!
The famous words inscribed at the entrance of the Pike Place Market.
These words are the key to the origins of the Pike Place Market, one of the oldest continuing farmer’s markets in the United States.
Before the Market came into being over one hundred years ago, farmers would sell their produce to middlemen for pennies on the dollar. Hardly did the farmers make any profit. The profit was made by the brokers who passed on the high prices to the citizens.
At the turn of the 20th century, the cost of food was artificially high as brokers that took advantage of the growing city population. Consumers and farmers became increasingly vocal over the situation which eventually prompted the City Council of the day to take advantage of a prior ordinance that allowed the city to designate tracts of land as public markets. Seattle City Council member, Thomas Revelle, led this effort to support the farmers with this ordinance, and on August 17, 1907, the Pike Place Market was born. And "Meet the Producer" the famous words at the entrance of the Market, became the new way of doing business. The rest as they say is history.
The Pike Place Market is known as the "soul of the city" of Seattle, said Mark Tobey. The mid century painter Tobey, who spent many years in Seattle after gaining critically acclaimed recognition in New York City, is a member of “The Northwest School” of painters also known as “The Big Four” —Guy Anderson, Kenneth Callahan, Morris Graves, and Tobey—who were creating works in Seattle in the mid 20th Century.
Once the Market established a setting for the farmer to sell direct to the public (Meet the Producer,) the Pike Place Market was the place to get produce from its inception in 1907 through the 1930s. Over the decades, the Pike Place Market alternatively thrived and experienced decline, decay, and serious threats of extinction.
Since 1907, Market has faced three significant threats. World War II began it’s first decline as many of the farmers who sold at the market were of Japanese decent, and quite sadly and unjustly, were interred during the war, their farmland confiscated.
Added to the loss of a majority of farmers who sold directly to the public at the market, agriculture in general, once designed for local economies, began to be shipped outside of state lines at an increased capacity. Selling direct to the customer was not lucrative or competitive in the marketplace with the advent of the “Supermarket.” At the same time, the National Highway System of interstate freeways put into motion by President Eisenhower in 1956 that modernized mass transit of the roads. Road and air transportation made it possible to distribute fresh produce far and wide. Mass transportation and the Supermarket became active competitors to “Meet the Producer.”
The once vibrant setting fell into abandon and decay. By 1949 only 53 market stalls remained, down nearly 90 percent from a decade earlier. (Source: Seattle Times.)
The Pike Place Market, in the 1950s and 60s now sitting amidst brothels and peep show palaces was threatened to be turned into a parking lot. Joni Mitchell’s lyrics “They paved paradise and they put up a parking lot” was almost the fate of this beloved marketplace.
Enter: “The Friends of the Market.” 1968.
Where some saw blight and an ideal location of a parking lot, others saw culture, history, vibrancy.
Mark Tobey, a champion of the Pike Place Market, wrote referring to the Pike Place Market, "What do we want? A world of impersonal modernism, a world of automobiles? I've studied and painted the Paris stalls, the markets of London, Mexico and China, and none is as interesting as ours."
One of those people who saw promise was Victor Steinbrueck, architect, Professor at the University of Washington, and newly minted President of the “Friends of the Market” initiative to Save the Market.
Victor Steinbrueck is wildly credited with saving the Pike Place Market from the threat of the wrecking ball and developers. Steinbrueck was active in historic preservation in Seattle and led the fight to preserve the market beginning in the 1960s.Because of Steinbrueck's advocacy, the Market was designated with historic status in 1971.
An advocate of open space in the city, Steinbrueck co-designed the open space park at the north end of the market completed in 1984, called "Market Park."
Upon his passing in 1985, the park was renamed in Steinbrueck's honor.
For as many individual items of fresh produce and flowers, there are as many unique memories that have shaped the Market over the decades to this day. It is a special and unique environment full of theatre and drama as well as the best fresh produce and unique hand made crafts from hundreds of merchants generating commerce daily. The Pike Place Market is about life. For over a century, the Pike Place Market has etched in its named tiles, in its wooden high stalls, in its distinctive turn of the century architecture, in its endless lore, a vibrant and quite authentic history unlike any setting in the city of Seattle.
Mary Lamery is a lifelong resident of Seattle, Washington, USA and native of the Pacific Northwest.
Lamery paints regional landscape in a manner that leans towards 19th century French Impressionism. Her landscapes invite the viewer to add to the backstory of the composition through personal identification with the paintings and story telling of the experience.
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