The photo above was sent to us recently and is probably the earliest known photo of Colby and never published before. It was taken by Joseph Squire Grant Jr, and shows the town before the pier was installed, sometime between 1885 and 1890. The building directly in the center of the image is the Blalock Hotel, with the white IOGH Hall (Independent Order of Good Templars) just down the hill next to the water. Later, this building would become a store on the lower level. On the left, nearest the beach is the log-built store owned and operated by William Morgan. In the distance, upper right, is the original school house. This photo was provided by Doug and Ann (Levenseller) Northcutt. The original was extremely faded (see thumbnail) but was digitally corrected by Sam Bahloul.
This detail photo (below) of the town includes some features that can be seen today. The dockside Grant Warehouse, where goods could be loaded through the water-side large door, has been recreated with a residential “cabana” today. The familiar Grant & Sons Store sits beyond, with a Model T parked in front. On the hill above the store are various homes built by John Anspaugh for the Grant families, all still sound and occupied today.
The next photo, below, shows the same area a few years later, provided by the Kitsap Historical Society. It shows the huge Colby Lumber mill, with smokestacks for the steam engines and barges moored along the waterfront. Curley Creek is off in the distance. This area is completely residential today. The mill was removed sometime after 1945.
A separate feature, titled “Strolling Through Colby, Summer 1942,” written by Jo Ann, is featured in the posting section in the right-hand column. Also read the “Grant & Sons Store” feature.
The location of the photo, left, which may show virtually the entire population of one of the local towns, is uncertain. It was probably taken in August of 1889, just about the exact date of the Great Seattle Fire. The building is a mystery, but it could be original William Morgan Store in Colby or it’s sucessor, Grant & Sons, or perhaps the original store/post office in Olalla, where the Grants first settled before moving to Colby. Note the log steps. The young woman wearing the long white apron on the left has been identified as Annie Grant Hamilton, and the two boys near the end of the step are Squire Grant (straw hat and dark britches on on the step) and his older brother, Tom Grant (tall slender hatless boy). This photo was provided by Jo Ann Grant’s cousin, Shirlee Toman.
This photo, taken about 1908, shows the primary street of Colby looking South from where Cole Loop wraps down from Yukon Harbor Drive. The foursquare house with enclosed porch, center, remains essentially unchanged, as do the three houses in the distance, left. The house at right and the falsefront store/office building, past the foursquare, have been replaced. The two-story foursquare building is currently the headquarters of the Yukon Harbor Historical Society and a private residence occupied by the Russell Neyman family. Note that the mud-and-gravel street is at least 10-15 feet further inland than the current street plan.
The photo of the third-generation Grant sons (Joe, Fred, et al) fishing off the Colby Pier, below, is telling. Note the distinctive point of land in the background (South Colby along the water’s edge to the right, and the first signs of Harper at the point, left) and the fact that the trees are sparse. This 20 to 25-foot boat is set up for hauling nets over the rounded stern.
Below is a photo of “downtown” Colby taken from the lumber mill looking to the North, with a “Mosquito Fleet” steamer moored at the t-shaped pier. Only small fragments of these structures, including two posts from the pier and a portion of the shed shown in the foreground, survive. Just below that photograph is one of the steamer Grace, which frequented the Colby, Harper routes. The photo is highly damaged, but seems to show the heavily timbered coastline where Colchester and, further north, Manchester exist today.
This perspective, taken from the lumber mill located on the shoreline about half a mile north of Curley Creek, shows the Colby Steamship pier and essentially the entire business center, probably about 1900. The white building in the distant left is Grant & Sons Merchantile, and the darker building in the left foreground is probably the house owned by William Morgan, the town’s original postmaster. In the foreground, center, is a structure built on pilings that exists in a highly-evolved form in 2008 on the same site. To understand this photograph and the town’s layout more completely, compare it to JB Hall’s view in the “historical photographs” section in the right-hand column. (Photo courtesy of Jo Ann Grant Lorden.)
The photo of the wooded roadway depicts what is now Yukon Harbor Drive, near to Curley Creek looking back toward the sandy shoreline South of the Lumber Mill. Note the wooden walkway, built mostly to facilitate children trying to walk to the stores and school in poor weather. Note the deep wagon ruts on the dirt road. The boardwalk was built in 1909.
The Grace was a typical early-era Mosquito Fleet steamer, modestly built to carry passengers and limited freight. The steamer served all of the lumber and farming communities along the Western Shore of Puget Sound and was a common sight on the Bremerton-Colby-Harper-Vashon Island run. (Photo provided by Jo Ann Grant Lorden.)
The next two photographs show the people who lived in Colby, including the students from the second Colby School (now converted to a private residence) on Garfield Avenue directly uphill from the old pier, and a photograph of Jo Ann Lorden’s grandfather, Thomas Grant, Joseph Grant Senior’s son. Tom and his brothers followed in his father’s footsteps as a local merchant and a civic leader.
Front Row left to right– George Harris, Tom Colman, Llewellyn Waterman, Raymond Bulman, Antoinette Inglebretsen, Esther Neff, Ruby Foss, Emolita Welch, Marion Rust, Stella Hamilton, Joe Grant, Fred Grant; Second Row left to right– Thomas Wood, Leonard Bulmon, John Hamilton, Paul Kuhn, Percy Waterman, Bennett Johnson, Dudley Williamson, Clarence Foss; Third Row left to right– Jeff Rust, Miss Humbert (teacher), Rose Rau, Iris Harris, Pearl Callanan, Hazel Whetstone, Alice Callanan, Alice McMillan. Photo provided courtesy of Jo Ann Grant Lorden.
A hotel was built by John N Anspaugh about 1889 and named the Niblock Inn. It was located a few hundred feet uphill from the Colby landing, and was operated by the Weed family. The structure burned down in the 1920’s. Below is a photo of the overall building (with an additional to the rear) in 1908 and a detail of the hotel taken earlier, probably in 1890.


















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