Skip to content

How Knute Berger Regained his Neighborhood Pride

This third-generation Seattleite admits to a little ZIP code chagrin

By Seattle Mag February 12, 2014

0314graymatters

This article originally appeared in the March 2014 issue of Seattle magazine.

!–paging_filter–pWhen I tell people I live in Madison Park, I frequently have the urge to qualify it by saying something like, “I’m doing my best to bring down the demographics.” brbrThere’s no doubt about it, I live in a part of town that is white, rich and a shade more conservative than Seattle political norms. brbrThis is a neighborhood where George W. Bush bumper stickers remain undefaced and Broadmoor, its gated residential community, is the only precinct in the city that went for Mitt Romney. brbrThere are lots of empty nesters here—dual-income couples and the well-to-do retired who fill lakefront condominiums. Think: Jaguars and walkers. According to the real estate columnist for Madison Park Times, at the end of 2013 the median price of a home listed for sale in the Madison Park market was $2.45 million.brbrLife on the ground is a bit more complex. There are actually market-rate apartments, and a (diminishing) number of the old bungalows that once defined parts of this former working-class community. Neighboring Madison Valley, built on old wetlands, represents the northern reach of the Central District. The Madison Park business district, once a resort community and ferry stop, still sees itself as a village. There’s Bert’s grocery, Madison Park Hardware, old pubs, even a family-owned ice cream shop. It’s walkable; there are high-rises and direct bus service going downtown. It has the urban amenities planners say they want everywhere.brbrLiving here is not the first time I’ve felt touched by neighborhood shame. When I lived in Kirkland, I often felt compelled to describe my neighborhood as an affordable Ravenna. Seattleites with an anti-Eastside prejudice tend to suspend judgment a bit about Kirkland, as if it is a wayward Seattle neighborhood that accidentally floated to the wrong side of the lake, but I often got a dose of Seattle snobbery when I admitted to being an Eastsider.brbrMy first experience with feeling the need to explain where I lived was in high school. I was a third-generation Mount Baker resident, and we lived just a few blocks off Rainier Avenue. I assumed all neighborhoods were like mine. The schools were integrated, at least by Seattle standards. Rich, poor and those in between all lived together; so too whites, blacks, Asians and Native Americans. brbrIn high school, I was sent north of the Ship Canal, and for the first time I began to feel embarrassed about where I came from. I had an “ethnic” name, Knute—who can pronounce that? I was at Lakeside, a school literally on the northern border of the city where guys had names like Worthington and Corbett. For junior high, I had attended Asa Mercer on Beacon Hill, which was a chaotic, violent mess on a remote rump of town. I went to Lakeside in 1968 as part of the Lakeside Educational Enrichment Program to help inner-city students. (LEEP celebrates its 50th year this May.) I thought that Lakesiders saw themselves as missionaries and that I was among those who needed to be saved by virtue of my home address. brbrIt took time for me to regain neighborhood pride. I found that some kids from Laurelhurst and Bellevue envied what I had. Mount Baker had genuine Olmsted boulevard parks. We had that aged ballpark wonder, Sicks’ Stadium, which experienced in its twilight years some coolness as a rock concert venue for the likes of Jimi Hendrix and Janis Joplin. (It’s now a Lowe’s.) I was astonished to meet kids from the North End who had never even been in a classroom with an African-American. I took pride in our diversity. brbrAs for Madison Park, the village life here suits me. We rent an older apartment that keeps us close to the lake. My embrace of diversity now includes people who are wealthier than I will ever be. That’s part of the legacy of a Lakeside education, and a useful skill to have in contemporary Seattle./p

 

Follow Us

Studio Sessions: Jo Cosme

Studio Sessions: Jo Cosme

The Seattle-based multimedia artist and 2026 Neddy Award winner challenges the postcard version of Puerto Rico and centers the persistence of its people.

Jo Cosme knows how seductive a postcard can be. The Seattle-based Boricua (Puerto Rican) multimedia artist works across photography, installation, video, sound, and interactive elements to examine and pull apart how Puerto Rico is seen, sold, and misunderstood from the outside. Trained in photojournalism, with a BFA in photography from Puerto Rico School of Fine…

Seattle's Drag Brunch Has History

Seattle’s Drag Brunch Has History

The city’s Sunday shows started long before the mimosas got bottomless.

There was a time not too long ago, when drag performances—now a mainstay of Seattle’s queer scene—were kept under wraps. And when brunches, complete with singing and dancing queens dressed in dazzling drag as you sipped mimosas, weren’t a Sunday staple.  During the 1940s and ‘50s, an era largely shaped by restrictive laws and bias…

Studio Sessions: Sangram Majumdar

Studio Sessions: Sangram Majumdar

Working at the confluence of history, culture, and various painting traditions, UW associate professor Sangram Majumdar is one of this year’s Neddy Artist Award winners.

Discover the art of UW professor Sangram Majumdar, a 2026 Neddy Artist Award winner. Learn about his inspiration and upcoming Seattle exhibition at Cornish.

Rearview Mirror: A Georgian Dinner, Sidewalk Sips, and One-of-a-Kind Clothing

Rearview Mirror: A Georgian Dinner, Sidewalk Sips, and One-of-a-Kind Clothing

Things I did, saw, ate, learned, or read in the past week (or so).

A new life for old clothes To celebrate one year in its current studio, the FXRY—a clothing repair service available via in-person appointments, home pickup, or mail-in drop off—is dropping its first collection. A small batch of reworked pieces, Second Mark will feature 13 vintage barn jackets, cropped, chain-stitched, and renewed into a completely unique, one-of-one…