Post navigation

Prev: (05/27/18) | Next: (05/29/18)

CHS Re:Take | In a message home to E Union, a memorial of war in the Pacific

Geisha going out, 1906

To H. S. Gullixson, Esq in Seattle from “R. F.” in Yokohama, Japan. 1906.

Earlier this month, CHS reported that the Knights of Columbus, Seattle Council 676 is preparing to sell its 106-year-old masonry clubhouse at the corner of Harvard and Union. Part of that property was remembered in this classic CHS Re:Take from the archives inspired by a postcard historian Robert Ketcherside found documenting the edges a personal tale that predates the old Knights hall and shines light on Seattle’s connection to a global conflict many of us know little about.

The postcard may seem a benign note of thanks on a charming Japanese street scene. On closer inspection it captures global trade, journalistic pursuit of truth, and the sharing of ideas; and also has ties with racism, death, war, and exploitation of immigrants. Here’s a Memorial Day revisit to the history.

The postcard
It was just a simple postcard.

708 E Union today is part of the parking lot next to the Knights of Columbus Hall. The card was postmarked 1906 in Seattle and Yokohama, Japan.

There are just enough traces to glimpse the world that created it. Let’s follow them back.

Home and Harry
The house is gone. It was a large, seven-room house built in about 1901. It shared its parcel with two other rentals, probably all copies of each other. Henry and Marie Gullixson earned mention of it for the first time on May 2, 1906 when their daughter Marion held her wedding in their home.  Henry was a successful rug and oriental carpet salesman. He had his own store in San Francisco earlier in life, and in Seattle worked at Frederick & Nelson past the age of 80.

They shared the house with another daughter, Edna, who graduated from the University of Washington that spring.

Their son Harry lived with them as well. He was recipient of the postcard in late April 1906.

We don’t have a photo of Harry, but there was a description in his May 1904 passport application: 5’10”, brown eyes, medium aquiline nose, large mouth, square chin, dark brown hair, smooth face, and fair and ruddy complexion.

The voyage

SS Minnesota berthed in Smith Cove (Atlantic Transport Line)

S.S. Minnesota berthed in Smith Cove (Atlantic Transport Line)

The postcard arrived in Seattle on April 15, 1906 aboard the S.S. Minnesota. The ship was huge and new. It was the largest American merchant vessel at the time: 622 feet long and 75 feet wide. It was built for the Great Northern Steamship Company (an appendage of the Great Northern Railway) just a year earlier.

Sharing the cargo hold with the mail was another 5,000 tons of merchandise from China and Japan. The passenger quarters housed 122 people for the two week voyage.

Among them were the US and British ambassadors to Japan, a member of Japan’s House of Peers, and a contingent of Japanese electrical engineers led by the “father of electricity in Japan,” Ichisuke Fujioka.

The postcard was hastily written on the morning of March 30, 1906. The Minnesota was loading and preparing to depart later in the day. On it was scribbled,

Received last night magazines, [Saturday Evening] Posts and Colliers. For writing am very grateful and appreciate your generosity. The mail closes this a.m. so will not have time to write. Now for breakfast and Tokyo train. R.F.

War
Under the message and the postage cancellation stamp was a hand-colored print of a photograph of a geisha entering a rickshaw. It was part of a series of twelve cards of a day in the life of a geisha, likely produced in 1904 or 1905. One near the end of the set was titled “While her maid makes ready her bed, O-koto-san indulges in a smoke, and thinks of her soldier lover.”

It was created at a time when American eyes were on the East. After Russia took parts of China and Korea and looked ready to continue seizing territories on the Pacific, Japan threatened war.

It was preposterous. No Pacific Asian country had ever defeated a European power. But Japan finally declared war in 1904. The American public cheered headlines of success for the “little brown men,” and Japan shocked Russia with defeat in 1905.

Along the way about 100,000 soldiers died, split evenly on both sides.

Meanwhile in Seattle…
To provision their soldiers, Japan purchased massive quantities of canned beef from American meat packers, including Armour & Company.

This brings us back to Harry Gullixson — the recipient of the postcard at the house next to what would someday be the Knights of Columbus Hall that will someday be developed into who knows what.

Armour & Company was Harry Gullixson’s employer from about 1902. He was a traveling agent for them and secured his passport in 1904 to work directly with the Japanese military.

Harry coordinated the sale of millions of rations. Prior to shipment to Japan through Seattle they were packed in Chicago. Worker conditions were desperate, described with embellishment in Upton Sinclair’s 1905 novel The Jungle. Sinclair researched the book in 1904 and met firsthand the large population of Slavic immigrants working at the meat packing plants.

Many of them, like Sinclair’s protagonist Jurgis Rudkus, fled their Russian-controlled lands to avoid conscription into its army for a looming war with Japan. It’s a cruel irony that they were still caught up in the machines of war, slaving to provide rations for Japan.

Subscribe and support CHS Contributors -- $1/$5/$10 per month

4 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Betty C.
Betty C.
5 years ago

Fascinating! Thank you!

SG
SG
5 years ago

Great read. Thank you. I’d love to see an article about the Japanese community in the CD who were interned in concentration camps (after first being housed in horse stalls at Long Acres) during WWII. My auntie’s parents came over in 1911. She was interned during WWII, attended Garfield High School. The massive loss of homes and businesses at that time changed the demographic of the neighborhood. It would be an interesting journalistic endeavor, before everyone involved is dead and many of their stories lost.

TB
TB
5 years ago

SG, thank you for caring about the the Japanese Incarceration and its local impact. It is a tragic chapter in our history that has numerous lessons for us today. To my knowledge, no one was housed at Long Acres. You may be thinking of the Puyallup (now Washington State) Fair grounds, where most Seattlites were kept before being sent on to more permanent camps (many from our area to Minidoka). The good news is that many have been working diligently to honor and document their experiences. A good place to start is with local organization Densho: https://densho.org. Poke around a bit to find the digital archives if you want to see filmed oral histories of members of the Japanese American community telling their own stories. You can search for specific names, locations, etc. You might also appreciate this film about another Garfield grad, Shiro Kashino. This film (and others from the series) was created with the help of the Seattle Nisei Veterans Foundation:

They have also been creating a small but very good museum in their location on S. King street: https://www.nvcfoundation.org/

SG
SG
5 years ago
Reply to  TB

Yes, it was Puyallup fairgrounds. My mistake. Minidoka is where my auntie went. I follow the Densho facebook page. A really great read on the issue from a Seattle perspective, if anyone is interested, is a book called The No No Boy. Thanks for the links! I can’t view the video for some reason.