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Services
Area Auburn
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Carpet Cleaning For Auburn Auburn was originally incorporated as "Slaughter," named after William Slaughter, who died in an Indian skirmish in 1855. At the time, the main hotel in town was called the "Slaughter House." In 1893, a large group of settlers from Auburn, New York moved to Slaughter, and renamed the town to "Auburn." Due to this history, when Auburn was building its second high school in the mid-1990s, there was a grass-roots effort to name the high school "Slaughter High School," but it was eventually decided that the name would be too politically incorrect, and the High School was named "Auburn Riverside High School," whose mascot is the Raven. There are several locations in Auburn on the National and State Registers of Historic Places, such as the Neely Mansion. The city
of Auburn, located 20 miles south of Seattle, was home to some of the
earliest settlers in King County. Nestled in a fertile river valley,
Auburn has been both a farm community and a center of business and industry
for more than 150 years. Auburn is located near the original confluence
of the Green and White rivers, both of which contain runoff water from
the Cascade Mountain range. The valley was originally the home of the
Skopamish, Smalhkamish, and Stkamish Indian tribes. The first white
men in the region were explorers and traders who arrived in the 1830s. White settlers,
the Neely and Ballard families began returning to the area. In 1891,
the town of Slaughter incorporated. Although many older citizens considered
the town's name as a memorial, many newer residents understandably felt
uncomfortable with it. Within two years, the town was renamed Auburn,
taken from the first line of Oliver Goldsmith's poem, The Deserted Village:
"Sweet Auburn! Loveliest village of the plain." Another
impetus to Auburn's growth was the railroad. The Northern Pacific Railroad
put a rail line through town in 1883, but it was the Seattle-Tacoma
Interurban line that allowed easy access to both cities starting in
1902. The Interurban allowed farmers to get their product to the markets
within hours after harvest. The railroad, along with better roads, caused
many new companies to set up business in Auburn, among them the Borden
Condensery (which made Borden's Condensed Milk) and the Northern Clay
Company. |
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