North from Seattle (August/September 2004 | Volume: 55, Issue: 4)

North from Seattle

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Authors: Carla Davidson

Historic Era: Era 10: Contemporary United States (1968 to the present)

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August/September 2004 | Volume 55, Issue 4

From a cab hurtling down the West Side Highway en route to Newark Airport from New York City, I spied the looming superstructures of three giant ships. They were waiting to take on their complements of 2000 or more passengers heading for week-long Bermuda cruises. I was traveling to the other side of the country to join the 138-passenger Yorktown Clipper and sail along the isolated, rugged coast stretching north from Seattle to Vancouver, a journey of about 219 nautical miles. I felt privileged. In today’s world of ever-larger passenger ships, some now at 150,000 tons and carrying as many as 3000 travelers, the 2354-ton Yorktown Clipper and its like threaten to become an endangered species. Not, of course, if fans of small-ship travel have anything to say about it.

In the heart of Seattle’s busy waterfront, I easily spied the gleaming white Yorktown Clipper, tiny as it might be compared to the giants. Here, it dominated its fellow craft—the ferries, sailboats, and kayaks that make their home here. The skyline, soaring behind the harbor and burnished by late-afternoon September light, appeared slightly unreal, a stage set of urban aspiration.

We would be putting urban behind us, at least for the first part of the five-day cruise. The ship sailed at midnight and arrived the next morning, a spectacularly sunny day, at Friday Harbor on San Juan Island. With a year-round population of 1900, Friday Harbor is the largest town in the San Juans. The hundreds of windswept islands that make up the San Juan archipelago, between Washington state and Vancouver Island, share a U.S.-Canadian border and a history that is mostly peaceful. From the deck of a ship, the view is entrancing as island after hill-topped island draws near and then gives way to the next; the air is spiced with salt and the pine and cedar that grow thickly here. Together, the San Juans and Canada’s Gulf Islands reach from Puget Sound to British Columbia’s Inside Passage. Their Canadian and American inhabitants seem to have more in common with each other than with what islanders refer to, with a faintly dismissive tone, as the mainland, whichever side of the border they mean.

Still, the placing of boundary lines through these waters was once the big story here, culminating in the 1859 Pig War. The Joint Occupation Treaty of 1818 had opened to British and American settlers the vast Oregon Territory (covering present-day Washington, Oregon, and Idaho and parts of Montana, Wyoming, and British Columbia). Years of stewing about this arrangement resulted in the Oregon Treaty of 1846, which gave the United States all the land south of the 49th parallel (Washington’s northern border), but left a loophole in the way of a watery boundary vaguely referred to as “the middle of the channel.”

Which channel in this braided waterway? That remained of keen interest to the British who ran the Hudson’s Bay Company, and to the handful