Burke, Thomas, 1849-1925

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Judge Thomas Burke was for nearly fifty years a central figure in the political and economic life of Washington State and especially Seattle. Burke arrived in Seattle in 1875 to make his fortune. An astute lawyer and speculator, he acquired a reputation as a talented courtroom advocate. As the Democratic candidate for territorial delegate to Congress in 1880, Burke conducted a vigorous, though unsuccessful, campaign. In 1885 he and Seattle newcomer Daniel Gilman attracted Eastern capital and built over 100 miles of the Seattle, Lake Shore, and Eastern Railway Company. James J. Hill, president of the Great Northern Railway, bought the Burke-Gilman venture and later made Seattle the western terminus of his railroad. Burke became Western counsel for the Great Northern, and his power and fortune grew after Hill took control of the rival Northern Pacific system in the mid 1890s. Burke led efforts to develop mineral resources in Eastern Washington, and with Daniel Gilman and others, he was involved in buying and promoting property in various parts of Seattle. Burke retired from the Great Northern in 1902, after which he focused on the management of his properties and on public affairs. In 1896 he repudiated the Democratic Party on the Free Silver question and became a Republican, and in 1910 he entered but lost the Republican primary for an open U.S. Senate seat. Burke remained a force in Seattle political and economic developments, however. He opposed the 1886 Anti-Chinese Riots in Seattle and was involved in the establishment of the Lake Washington Ship Canal, the Bremerton Navy Yard, Fort Lawton, the Port of Seattle, the Seattle street railways, and the creation of Seattle City Light. He also took part in charitable endeavors, contributing his efforts to Whitman College, the University of Washington, and the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Burke died in 1925, leaving a substantial gift for the construction of the Burke Museum on the University of Washington campus.

From the description of Thomas Burke papers, 1875-1925. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 77010214

Judge Thomas Burke (1849-1910) was a central figure in the political and economic life of Washington State and Seattle for nearly fifty years. Burke was born in New York on December 22, 1849. He received his law degree from the University of Michigan and was admitted to the Michigan bar in 1873. He moved to Seattle in 1875, where he opened a law office. In 1876, he married Caroline E. McGilvra and was elected to serve as a probate judge for King County, serving two terms. He was active in politics and was the Democratic candidate for Territorial delegate to Congress in 1880 and 1882. He opposed the anti-Chinese riots in 1886. In 1888, he was temporarily appointed to the Supreme Court of the Washington Territory, holding the office until 1889. Burke was also a crucial figure in the development of Seattle's railroads. He helped to organize the Seattle, Lake Shore & Eastern Railway with Daniel Gilman, which connected Seattle to the Union Pacific and the Canadian Pacific railroads. After the Great Northern Railway purchased the Burke-Gilman venture, Burke became the Western Counsel for the Great Northern Railway and was instrumental in making Seattle its western terminus. Burke was also active in developing mines in Eastern Washington, and in real estate in and around Seattle. He withdrew from the Democratic Party in 1896 over the silver question and joined the Republican Party a year later. He was interested in stimulating trade between Seattle and Asia and was among the originators of the 1909 Alaska-Yukon Pacific Exposition. In 1910, he unsuccessfully ran for United States Senate in the Republican primary. Burke was also active in the establishing the Lake Washington Ship Canal, the Bremerton Naval Yard, Fort Lawton, the Port of Seattle, Seattle street railways, and Seattle City Light. He was active in charities, contributing heavily to the University of Washington and Whitman College, and serving as a trustee of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. He died on December 4, 1925. The Burke Museum on the University of Washington's Seattle campus is named for him.

From the description of Thomas Burke scrapbook, 1910. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 275169409

Judge Thomas Burke was, for nearly fifty years, a central figure in the political and economic life of Washington State and especially Seattle. Burke arrived in Seattle in 1875 to make his fortune. He was a young man of twenty-five, lately admitted to the bar of Michigan. He had left home to make his own way at the age of eleven, so the prospect of beginning his career in a new city did not frighten him. Aside from his certificate of admission to the Michigan bar, Burke's tangible assets reportedly consisted of about $10 in cash.

Burke had come West because boosters predicted that a great manufacturing and trade center would inevitably rise on Puget Sound. According to the promoters, the only question was which of the towns on Puget Sound would grow into the predicted megacity. Seattle was among the leading contenders, but in 1875, it took some vision and confidence to place your bets there. With a population of just three thousand, the town rested on a narrow economic base formed mainly by San Francisco’s demand for lumber and coal. Nonetheless, Thomas Burke never doubted Seattle’s destiny. While he never hedged his bet on this, he did his best to tamper with the wheel of fortune in Seattle’s favor.

An astute lawyer and speculator, Burke soon acquired a reputation as a talented courtroom advocate among attorneys, businessmen, and government officials around the Sound. As a mark of his prominence, Burke was the candidate of the Democratic Party for territorial delegate to Congress in 1880--the most important territory-wide office decided by popular vote. While the Democratic nomination was a dubious commodity in a territory generally conceded to be solidly Republican, Burke conducted a vigorous, though unsuccessful, campaign.

Thomas Burke played a major role in the rivalry between Seattle and Tacoma. Soon after Burke’s arrival in Seattle, the Northern Pacific Railway announced it would make Tacoma its official western terminus. The firm determined to make Tacoma, where it owned substantial property, the metropolitan center of Puget Sound. Obviously, this had to be done at the expense of Seattle. In 1882 Burke took the lead in vigorously promoting a scheme to finance locally a narrow gauge railroad that would make Seattle its western terminus and extend over Snoqualmie Pass into the wheat-growing regions east of the Cascade Range. The railroad was to be called the Seattle, Walla Walla, and Baker City. The promotion did not get beyond the newspaper stage. It was rightly identified as a threat to wring concessions for Seattle from Northern Pacific President Henry Villard. In this it was successful, but the triumph was short lived, since Villard was forced out of the management of the Northern Pacific soon afterwards.

In 1885 a more ambitious scheme was promoted by Burke and a newcomer to Seattle, Daniel Gilman. Other Seattle residents were associated with the promotion, but Burke and Gilman led the project. This proposed railroad -- the Seattle, Lake Shore, and Eastern Railway Company -- was unique among the many paper railroads promoted to advance the fortunes of various townsites on Puget Sound in that it actually attracted Eastern capital and succeeded in building over 100 miles of operational line. Nonetheless, the railroad was not really a viable corporation because of the highly speculative nature of its financing and management, in which Burke and Gilman shared. Luckily for Burke, just as the Seattle, Lake Shore, and Eastern Railway Company was sinking in its own watered stock, he obtained help from a man who knew how to run financially sound operational railroads. James J. Hill, president of the Great Northern Railway, bought the Burke-Gilman venture and later made Seattle the western terminus of his railroad. Hill was impressed with the vigor and prospects of Seattle. He was equally impressed with Thomas Burke, who soon became Western Counsel for the Great Northern.

The Great Northern provided a direct link with the industrial and commercial centers of the East, securing Seattle’s position as the largest city on Puget Sound. Nonetheless, the railroads did not bring the manufacturing ventures and position of commercial dominance that Seattle pioneers had envisioned. Seattle grew in size, but it long remained an exporter of raw materials and an economic colony of Eastern capital.

Thomas Burke, however, adapted quite well to his new role as a satrap to the "Empire Builder," James J. Hill. Burke became Hill’s chief representative in Washington State. He successfully represented the Great Northern in a number of cases, and he beat back numerous legal and financial challenges to the substantial waterfront concessions that Seattle had granted the Great Northern. Burke’s power increased even more when Hill took control of the rival Northern Pacific system in the mid 1890s.

Burke’s connections with the railroads and with Hill offered him many opportunities to engage in profitable promotions. Burke led various efforts to develop mineral resources in Eastern Washington, and he vigorously promoted the Wenatchee townsite, which he and others had acquired during the Seattle, Lake Shore, and Eastern venture. Most of Burke’s speculations, however, centered in Seattle. With Daniel Gilman and others, he was involved in buying and promoting property in areas that are today known as Ballard, Interbay, Fremont, Lake Washington, and West Seattle. Burke accumulated over a million dollars in these and other Seattle real estate ventures. These successes allowed him to survive financial disasters, such as his failed West Street and North End Street Railway, built to tie Ballard to Seattle, and his purchase of the Seattle Telegraph, a daily newspaper meant to promote the viewpoints of Burke and Hill.

Burke retired from his position as Western Counsel for the Great Northern in 1902, although he continued occasionally to represent the interests of Hill and other clients, such as the utility combine of Stone and Webster and the Seattle Gas and Electric Company. After 1902, however, he primarily devoted himself to the management of his properties and to public affairs. In 1896 Burke had repudiated the Democratic Party on the Free Silver question and become a Republican. In 1910 he entered the Republican primary for an open U.S. Senate seat. Burke was identified with the Taft administration and the “Standpat Republican” position. Miles Poindexter of Spokane, a Progressive Republican, overwhelmed Burke and the other candidates.

During the fifty years of Burke’s residence in Seattle, he forcefully supported or opposed practically every issue of public interest. For example, he took a prominent part in opposing the Anti-Chinese Riots in Seattle in 1886. Burke's opinions carried weight and were repeated respectfully by the conservative press. Not surprisingly, Burke’s papers form a vital part of the record of many important political and economic developments on Puget Sound: the decisions to regrade Seattle’s hills and reclaim its tidelands; the building of the Lake Washington Ship Canal, the Bremerton Navy Yard, and Fort Lawton; the creation of Railroad Avenue; the establishment of the Port of Seattle; the consolidation of the Seattle street railways; the creation of City Light; and the emergence of the issue of municipal ownership of the Seattle water and transit systems. The growth of sentiment for public ownership outraged Burke, who repeatedly fought for private control. Burke, however, advocated certain public works projects, such as the Lake Washington Ship Canal, which could improve Seattle’s economy and enhance the value of his nearby properties.

Burke also took part in many charitable endeavors. He served on the Whitman College board of overseers for over a decade and was a patron of both Whitman College and the University of Washington. Andrew Carnegie in 1910 asked Burke to act as a trustee of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. This was one of Burke’s most important duties and platforms during the remaining fifteen years of his life. Burke was stricken and fell dead while addressing the trustees of the endowment on December 4, 1925. His rich collection of personal papers, along with a substantial gift from his estate for the construction of the Burke Museum on the University of Washington campus, are among his bequests to succeeding generations.

From the guide to the Thomas Burke papers, 1875-1925, (University of Washington Libraries Special Collections)

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
creatorOf Hill family. Hill family collection, 1739-1995 (bulk 1850-1960). Minnesota Historical Society Library
creatorOf Burke, Thomas, 1849-1925. Thomas Burke papers, 1875-1925. University of Washington. Libraries
referencedIn Chittenden, Hiram Martin, 1858-1917. Papers, [185-]-1962. Washington State Historical Society
creatorOf Burke, Thomas, 1849-1925. Scrapbook with obituaries and other clippings on John Beard Allen, 1903-1915. University of Washington. Libraries
referencedIn James J. Hill papers., 1823-1985 (bulk 1860-1916). Minnesota Historical Society
referencedIn Hill Family Collection., 1739-1995 (bulk 1850-1960). Minnesota Historical Society
creatorOf Thomas Burke papers, 1875-1925 University of Washington Libraries Special Collections
referencedIn Conover, Charles Tallmadge, 1862-1961. Charles Tallmadge Conover papers, 1889-1956. University of Washington. Libraries
creatorOf Burke, Thomas, 1849-1925. Thomas Burke scrapbook, 1910. University of Washington. Libraries
Role Title Holding Repository
Relation Name
associatedWith Ballinger, Harry, 1869-1965. person
associatedWith Broderick, Henry person
associatedWith Broderick, Henry. person
correspondedWith Chittenden, Hiram Martin, 1858-1917. person
correspondedWith Conover, Charles Tallmadge, 1862-1961. person
associatedWith Cushman, Francis W., 1867-1909. person
associatedWith Democratic Party (Wash.) corporateBody
associatedWith General Electric Company. corporateBody
associatedWith Gilman, Daniel H. person
associatedWith Gilman, Daniel H. person
associatedWith Great Northern Railway Company (U.S.) corporateBody
associatedWith Hadley, Lindley H. (Lindley Hoag), 1861-1948. person
associatedWith Hill family. family
associatedWith Hill Family. family
associatedWith Hill, James Jerome, 1838-1916. person
associatedWith Hill, Samuel, 1857-1931. person
associatedWith Japan Society of Seattle. corporateBody
associatedWith Jones, Wesley Livsey, 1863-1932. person
associatedWith McGraw, John Harte, d. 1910. person
associatedWith National Economic League (U.S.) corporateBody
associatedWith Pacific Coast Company. corporateBody
associatedWith Rainier National Park Company. corporateBody
associatedWith Rice, Edmund, 1819-1889. person
associatedWith Rockefeller, John D. (John Davison), 1839-1937. person
associatedWith Schulze, Paul, fl. 1889-1894. person
associatedWith Seattle Chamber of Commerce. corporateBody
associatedWith Seattle Golf Club. corporateBody
associatedWith Seattle, Lake Shore, and Eastern Railway Company. corporateBody
associatedWith Squire, Watson C. (Watson Carvosso), 1838-1926. person
Place Name Admin Code Country
Washington (State)--Seattle
Northwest, Pacific
Seattle (Wash.)
Northwest, Pacific
Washington (State)
Washington (State)
Seattle (Wash.)
Washington (State)
Subject
Banks and banking
Banks and banking
Business law
Business law
Businessmen
Businessmen
Political candidates
Capitalists and financiers
Capitalists and financiers
Chinese
Chinese
Chinese Americans
Chinese Americans
City promotion
City promotion
Civic leaders
Civic leaders
Elections
Law firms
Law firms
Law firms
Lawyers
Lawyers
Mining corporations
Mining corporations
Pioneers
Pioneers
Place marketing
Place marketing
Real property
Real property
Railroads
Railroads
Street-railroads
Street railroads
Occupation
Activity

Person

Birth 1849-12-22

Death 1925-12-04

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