Enumclaw Plateau Historical Society Museum

Enumclaw Plateau Historical Society Museum Our purpose is to preserve, document, and educate the Enumclaw Plateau community through visual displays and historic artifacts held at our museum.

We are a volunteer organization with a large photo collection, family genealogies, and publications. The Enumclaw History Museum is located at 1837 Marion St, in Enumclaw in a building that was originally built in 1909 as the Enumclaw Masonic Hall. The building was listed on the "Washington Heritage Register" in 2003. The museum features displays of items and photographs of people, places, and his

tory from the late 1800s to the present, and includes a collection of more than 1,300 historic local photographs. The photos are indexed and are in albums available for viewing. You may also purchase prints. There are many records of births, deaths, weddings, plus business and catalogued family histories that visitors are welcome to view. We are open on Thursdays and Sundays from 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m., except on holidays. The volunteer staff members are from the Enumclaw Plateau Historical Society and they are more than happy to show you around and answer your questions about the items on display. We welcome visitors of all ages. Arrangements can be made for special tours by appointment. We have enjoyed sharing our local history with schools, churches, Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts, and many other civic organizations. Please call 360-825-3356 and leave a message to make arrangements for your group or send an email to
[email protected]. The second floor of the museum is accessible by elevator, with comfortable seating areas on both floors. Our friendly and knowledgeable docents are happy to assist you in your research and answer questions. There is no fee for visiting the museum but donations are always welcome and help us meet the operational costs. For those wanting to support the museum and the preservation of plateau history, please mail checks to: EPHS, 1837 Marion St., Enumclaw, WA 98022. Contributions are tax-deductible as EPHS is a 501(c)(3) corporation.

Lady Dyar’s Little Lake Ranch – It’s one of King County’s newest protected forests, but in its day, Lady Dyar’s Little L...
06/24/2026

Lady Dyar’s Little Lake Ranch – It’s one of King County’s newest protected forests, but in its day, Lady Dyar’s Little Lake Ranch was a Wedding Wonderland like no other. Over 30+ years, this secluded site in the foothills east of Enumclaw hosted thousands of weddings, co-witnessed by the swans, peacocks, and frogs that called “Little Lake” home.

In the early years, the property was owned by the William and Theresia Moeller family, who emigrated from Austria in 1887. Theresia’s mother, Mrs. Schafer, bought the 160-acre homestead claim for $100, 120 acres of which were given to the Moellers. The property was located in the North quarter of Section 20, Township 20 North, Range 7 East.

By 1905, the Moellers completed construction of several impressive farm buildings and a 1,344-sf home. As William’s health began to fail, the Moellers sold the property in 1917, after their boys enlisted for World War I. All of their sons, Emil, William, Joseph, Arthur, and Louis, eventually worked for the nearby White River Lumber Company, though Art and Louis Moeller later bought a farm they named Good Hope Dairy, located near the present-day Safeway.

The 1926 Metsker maps show the property owned by I.J. and Harvey McCoy. By 1936, the 120 acres were held by the Federal Land Bank. Fifteen years later, Ralph Maynard Dyar, a former rancher and banker, and his first wife purchased the property and built a new 752-sf rambler. Dyar was born in Michigan in 1874 and was 77 years old when he and Mrs. Dyar retired and moved to Enumclaw in 1951. Soon after its acquisition, Ralph M. Dyar posted a notice in the Enumclaw Courier-Herald, “No Hunting or Fishing at Little Lake Ranch,” adding the property was formerly named Gilbert’s Game Farm.

It isn’t clear when Ralph Dyar’s first wife died, but in July 1959, he married Vera Josephine Mary Bankes of Victoria, British Columbia. Judge Duane Radliff officiated the ceremony held at his Little Lake home. It was witnessed by Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Moore. Ralph Dyar was 85, with a daughter from his first marriage, Mrs. George King of Lewiston, plus two grandsons. Vera Proudfoot was 36. She was previously married to James Proudfoot in 1950.

Ralph died three years later on December 23, 1962, and is buried in the local Evergreen Memorial Cemetery. After Mr. Dyar’s death, the vivacious Vera found things too quiet around the ranch and began advertising her site for weddings. The first nuptials mentioned in a newspaper clipping occurred in 1968.

Lady Dyar, as she came to be known, regularly invited reporters to her weddings. An early story appeared in the June 21, 1972, issue of the Oshawa Times, when Lady Dyar admitted that she wasn’t really a Lady – it was just a nickname that originated during her days in British Columbia when she played the part of a Lady in a school play.

Business boomed, and four years later, another article about Lady Dyar’s “Wedding Wonderland” was featured in the July 29, 1976, Enumclaw Courier-Herald. By then, over 500 weddings had been held.

In 1975, Vera married Gale Leroy Zerba, who had previously worked as a groundskeeper for the Dyars. The pond had been turned into a 9-acre lake with an island in the middle. The couple installed attractive features like a waterfall, the remnants of which are still visible on the northeast shore of the lake. Little Lake’s picturesque setting was advertised as a venue where couples could get married by lake’s edge, under a gazebo, in a canoe, inside the barn, on horseback, or in a horse-drawn buggy, while wearing turn-of-the-century garb, blue jeans, or nothing at all. Such was its free-spirit reputation.

Lady Dyar told a reporter, “I like the excitement, the loveliness of the bride.” And further confessed, “I get caught up in the emotions of the parents and brides and often feel teardrops in my eyes.” But Vera made clear there was one thing she couldn’t guarantee: “Success of the marriage – that’s outside my department.

In the 1990s, Little Lake regularly hosted weddings and sourced its catering needs from the nearby Baumgartner Delicatessen, whose bread came from the famed Rainier Natural Foods Bakery on the Auburn-Enumclaw Highway. A 1991 Seattle Times article perhaps overestimated that Lady Dyar’s Wedding Ranch had hosted the hitching of 6,000 couples.

As Vera Dyar aged, her wedding business slowed down. In 1999, she sold 5 acres of her estate to Dale and Laurie Eaton, who built a nearby home in 2002. By 2017, a deal was made with the Muckleshoot Tribe, King County Parks, Forterra Northwest, and Vera Dyar Zerba to preserve the remaining 155 acres as a permanent forested park, called Little Lake Forest. Lady Dyar was represented by the Farr Law Group of Enumclaw. The sales price was $1.57 million. Vera “Lady Dyar” Zerba passed away on February 2, 2020, at age 96.

In 2026, King County Parks completed construction of a parking lot with a dozen paved spaces, ample room for horse trailers, plus a portable toilet. The Little Lake Forest trailhead is located at 29900 S.E. 435th Place and reached by driving east on Battersby Avenue past the modern King County garbage and recycle transfer station and the fully reclaimed former Enumclaw municipal dump.

This column is indebted to Miss Skookum and her Northwest Past blog for the photo of an unidentified bride taken by Doug Tiedeman. It was used on a postcard, the back of which read, “Weddings at Little Lake Ranch, Lady Dyar, TA5-3879. Have your outdoor wedding held in a jewel-like setting amidst tall firs, strutting peacocks, and magnificent floral baskets. All this and more beside a shimmering 14-acre lake. Every Bride’s dream. Indoor weddings and catering are also available. Very reasonable rates.” Genealogical information was provided by Donna Brathovde, a Ravensdale research specialist. JoAnne Matsumura, an Issaquah historian, contributed.

Publishing this article in the month of June was no coincidence. The tradition of the June nuptials dates to the early Roman Empire. June is named for Juno, the Roman goddess of marriage, home, and childbirth. Romans believed that couples who married in June were under Juno’s direct protection, bringing prosperity, fertility, and long-lasting happiness to the marital union.

“When Coal Was King” is published weekly in the Voice of the Valley. This column appeared in the June 23, 2026, edition.

During the 1960s and 1970s, two of Enumclaw High School students' favorite after-school shacks were the Hornet's Nest (n...
05/07/2026

During the 1960s and 1970s, two of Enumclaw High School students' favorite after-school shacks were the Hornet's Nest (near where SR 169 intersects the Franklin-Enumclaw Road) and Viz's (in Buckley). From the Feb. 5, 1971, Hornet student newspaper.

GEORGE COPPIN, Assistant-Chief Flight Engineer, as profiled in the June 5, 1958, Enumclaw Courier-Herald. Dad will be Ki...
04/29/2026

GEORGE COPPIN, Assistant-Chief Flight Engineer, as profiled in the June 5, 1958, Enumclaw Courier-Herald.

Dad will be King for the day in thousands of homes throughout the country on June 15th this year, but in Enumclaw lives a dad who considers himself just a little bit luckier than the average dad. "You see, I'm sort of a King all year around," confided George Coppin. "I've got a wonderful wife, eight wonderful children and a wonderful mother-in-law. What more could you ask for?"

George Coppin was born in Chicago, where he attended grade and high school. In 1943, he received his degree in Aeronautical Engineering at Notre Dame and since that time has been with Pan American Airways, where he presently holds the position of Sector Assistant-Chief Flight Engineer. From 1943 to 1949, he was stationed at San Francisco, and it was here that he met Jane Gallagher, a Link Trainer instructor in the Waves. The two were married on July 20, 1945.

Your reporter soon discovered one of the reasons Coppin is treated like a King all year around—he knows the birth dates and birth places of all the children—we settled for just the place of birth.

The eldest son, Blaine, was born in Whittier, California. Number two son, Danny, was born in Hayward, California. Timothy was born in Philadelphia, the family by this time having been transferred to the East Coast. Paul was born in Rockville Center, New York, and Christopher, in Amityville, New York. Next came a transfer to Seattle where their sixth son, Edward was born. Daughter Ann made her welcome appearance at Kirkland and was joined by sister Mary in Enumclaw*.

It was quite by chance that the Coppins came to make Enumclaw their home. "We've made it a family tradition to celebrate the birthday anniversary of our Number Two son with a picnic at the Dalles," said Coppin. "In the summer of '55 as we drove through Enumclaw enroute to the Dalles, we happened to see a 'For Sale' sign on a big, white Colonial house . . . the kind of a house we had always dreamed of owning." A short time later the dream became a reality when the Coppins moved into the former residence of Dr. and Mrs. Leonard Asmundson (at 1610 Griffin Avenue at the corner of Franklin Street).

There's never any lack of excitement in the big white Colonial house where the youngsters share the work as well as the fun. The Coppins take an active part in their church work, opening their home twice a month to the Catholic Youth Organization of which they are adult advisors. Recently George has devoted much of his spare time in a program spearheaded by he and Peter Kranz to restore Holy Cross Cemetery. He is also active in Cana Club and Cub Scout Work.

"I'd like to have golf as a hobby, but I don't seem to have much spare time," confided the young father who had just finished a stint of baby-sitting.

By Betty Wiebe, Enumclaw Courier-Herald

* Note: four additional children would be born to George and Betty Coppin – Beth, Alice, Mike, and Kathleen.

George Albert Coppin died at age 79, on March 29, 2002, in Clyde Park, Montana. He was preceded in death by his wife, Betty Jane Coppin in 1999.

CLASS OF 1946 REUNION from the August 11, 1966, Enumclaw Courier-HeraldMembers of the 1946 Enumclaw High Schol graduatin...
04/24/2026

CLASS OF 1946 REUNION from the August 11, 1966, Enumclaw Courier-Herald

Members of the 1946 Enumclaw High Schol graduating class and their husbands and wives enjoyed a class reunion at the Veterans of Foreign Wars Hall on the evening of June 25. Committee members planning the twentieth anniversary celebration were Carolyn Dieringer, Erna Jean Schauers, Thelma Wiley, Sam Fletcher, Ronald Steiner, Beverly Schweikl, Lorene Grennan and Beverly Schoonover.

First row – L to R: Ronald Steiner, Cliff Hash, Arnold Klimke, Rudy Carlson, Tom Morris, Roger Wiley.

Second row: Caroline (Engebrigtsen) Dieringer, Mary Ann (Omana) Hammer, Lorene (Fugate) Grennan, Bill Hickenbottom, Georgia (Tack) Olive, Thelma (Minckler) Wiley, Beverly (Geelhart) Schweikl, Merle (Griffel) Holdener.

Third row: Howard Kertis, LaVerne (Gravesgaard) Nearhood, Lorraine (Walker) Winsor, Barbara (Gray) Frank, Esther (Baker) Workman, Beverly (Rocca) Schoonover, Erna Jean (Williams) Schauers, Lois (Buck) Hamilton, Beverly (Lafromboise) Carlson, Teresa (Sasek) Johnson, Doris Mae (Hansen) Beach, Steffie (Mantel) Van Wieringen, Marilyn (Ebling) Jorgensen, Robert Stewart.

Fourth row: Clinton Hergert, Jim Beyer, Sam Fletcher, Dick Sorenson, Russell Nielsen, Ga***rd Hallett, John McHugh, Joe Wilkening, Fred Bruhn, Jim Oien.

Enumclaw Plateau – Small Communities, Big DreamsEnumclaw is a city surrounded by a wide expanse of rural land called the...
04/21/2026

Enumclaw Plateau – Small Communities, Big Dreams

Enumclaw is a city surrounded by a wide expanse of rural land called the Enumclaw Plateau. The general boundaries of the plateau were formed following the Osceola mudflow about 5,600 years ago. That lahar from Mount Rainier sent millions of tons of mud that flowed like a river covering an area that stretches six miles north to south and eight miles east to west. As the centuries passed, a thick forest grew, interrupted by a few prairies maintained by ancestors of the Muckleshoot Tribe.

European settlers began homesteading the area in the 1850s. The first was Allen L. Porter, who homesteaded a prairie above White River near the intersection of S.E. 448th Street and 196th Ave. S.E. Subsequent settlers spawned small communities, the first of which were Fir Grove, Boise, and Osceola. From its earliest days, the plateau was a community of communities.

In 1885, the homestead of Frank and Mary (Fell) Stevenson was chosen as the site of the Northern Pacific Railroad depot. Locals wanted to name the town Stevensville, but Frank and Mary modestly refused the offer. That’s when Marion (Montgomery) Lee, the daughter-in-law of railroad engineer Charley Lee, suggested Enumclaw. It was the term local Native Americans called a sawed-off, rock-faced promontory to the northeast. Loosely translated, ‘Enumclaw’ means thundering noise, from tales and legends told by the Salish people. Over the next two decades, the town of Enumclaw increasingly overshadowed its country cousins, primarily due to the railroad and the White River Lumber Company.

Here are the origins and short descriptions of the communities that comprised the Enumclaw Plateau:

Birch was originally part of the Coal Creek District as was Veazie. It was a thriving community that sold produce to nearby coal mines. As it declined, buildings were moved or salvaged. The store’s lumber was reused when building the Danish Hall in Enumclaw.

Boise was settled along the meandering Boise Creek just above where it empties into the White River, adjacent to the Northern Pacific Railroad bridge crossing. Long before Boise, ancestors of the Muckleshoot Indians fashioned fishing weirs at the creek’s mouth.

Camp Ellenson was a logging community near the site of the White River Lumber mill, later acquired by Weyerhaeuser. By 1910, the Ellenson mill was connected by a wooden flume that floated logs to the White River planning mill in downtown Enumclaw. Owned primarily by the Hanson family, White River Lumber was known as a Swede company due to the large number of Swedish men working there. Ellenson was named for Ellen Hanson, the daughter of Carl Hanson, the company’s founder and a Swedish emigrant. Ellen married Louis Olson, the company’s original teamster and president in the 1920s.

Enumclaw’s success is credited to the Stevenson family, who offered free land to the Northern Pacific Railroad for rail sidings and a depot built near the present-day site of the library. The Stevensons platted town lots in anticipation of the prosperity soon delivered by the railroad. Frank and Mary Stevenson also donated land for churches, schools, and a cemetery. Scandinavian immigrants made up the bulk of Enumclaw’s early residents. Commercial establishments, along Griffin Ave. and Cole Street, and near the rail depot, helped cement Enumclaw’s rise to prominence.

Fir Grove was settled by French homesteaders in the 1870s, including the Courvilles, Forgets, Gauthiers, and Cotas families. A school was built around 1888 on a slight hill near 196th Ave. and 416th Street. It was the westernmost settlement and nearest to the Muckleshoot Reservation.

Flensted was dominated by the Sorensens, Rasmussens, and other Danish families. It was named for a town in Denmark, from which many of them emigrated. S.L. Sorensen began making pottery at Flensted but soon moved on to bigger things, founding the Farmers Mutual Insurance Company, which eventually became Mutual of Enumclaw.

Krain means “foot of the hill” as it reminded its Slovenian founders of the region called Carnolia, whose German spelling is Krain. At the time, Slovenia was part of the Austrian Empire, so most emigrants arrived with Austrian passports. Slovenian names typically end in –ic, sometimes spelled –ich or –itch, like two of the earliest families, Malneritch and Paschich.

Muckleshoot Reservation was established in 1857. Among Puget Sound Tribes, the Muckleshoot Tribe possesses unique rights under two treaties: the Treaty of Point Elliott and the Treaty of Medicine Creek. Yakima Indians often came west over Naches Pass to trade with the Coastal Salish tribes, including Nisqually, Puyallup, and Muckleshoot.

Osceola became the plateau’s oldest recognized community after establishing the area’s first post office in 1875. Osceola’s first and second school buildings still stand today. Each summer Osceola hosted the annual Farmer’s Picnic, the area’s biggest celebration held across from the Enumclaw Sales Pavilion. Osceola was also the center of a hop-growing boom in the 1890s.

Veazie was largely settled by German farmers who sold produce to the local coal mining communities. It was named for Tom Veazie, a logger with the Veazie & Russell Logging Company. Veazie’s partner, John Russell, was its first Postmaster. Newaukum Creek is a major tributary that flows through Veazie and much of the plateau before entering the Green River, about a mile west of Flaming Geyser. To the east of Veazie, Mount Enumclaw rises 1,700 feet above the valley floor.

Wabash received a school district in 1883 covering an area from S.E. 416th to the Green River Valley. Early settlers included the Jones, Marshall, and Newman families. The Newaukum school district was carved from North Wabash in 1914 and was the last of the plateau schools to be absorbed by the Enumclaw district.

As Enumclaw grew, its civic dominance was solidified after its school district began absorbing the smaller plateau schools. The Enumclaw School District eventually absorbed Black Diamond, Cumberland, Selleck, and even Lester, a railroad town 14 miles upstream from the Howard Hanson Dam on the Green River. Today the Enumclaw School District No. 216 stretches over 35 miles east to west, from the banks of the White River to Stampede Pass on the Kittitas County border. The school district is one of Western Washington’s largest in land area.

This map and column were adapted and updated from a 2023 flyer undertaken by Donna Hogerhuis for the Enumclaw Plateau Historical Museum. The Museum is located at 1837 Marion Street and open from 1 pm to 4 pm on Thursdays and Sundays.

“When Coal Was King” is published weekly in the Voice of the Valley. This column appeared in the April 21, 2026, edition.

How Enumclaw Came To Be - a presentation by Rich Elfers.  Saturday, April 18, from 2-4 pm, at the Museum, 1837 Marion St...
04/18/2026

How Enumclaw Came To Be - a presentation by Rich Elfers.
Saturday, April 18, from 2-4 pm, at the Museum, 1837 Marion St, Enumclaw, WA, 98010. Please join us!

ARLEENE HALL, 20, center, was chosen as 1958 Naches Trail Days queen at colorful ceremonies during a formal ball held at...
04/02/2026

ARLEENE HALL, 20, center, was chosen as 1958 Naches Trail Days queen at colorful ceremonies during a formal ball held at Recreation Park fieldhouse last Friday night. Chosen as princesses to rule with the queen are Wanda Carlson, left, and Diane Lofgren. The queen and princesses were selected from among ten beautiful young women of the community who were candidates for the queen's crown. - Photo by Bannister Studios

This story appeared on the front page of the July 7, 1957, Enumclaw Courier-Herald.

Arleene Hall Named Queen of Trail Days

Arleene Hall, 20, gracefully tall, pleasingly regal, "pretty as a picture" and possessing a charm of personality that has endeared her to the community where she was born and reared, was chosen 1958 queen of the Naches Trail Days celebration at a formal ball held in the big fieldhouse at Recreation Park last Friday night.

Her candidacy sponsored by the Enumclaw Lions Club, Miss Hall was chosen from among ten contestants who aspired to wear the coveted crown and wield the golden scepter of royalty. Chosen by the three judges as princesses in the queen's court were Wanda Carlson and Diane Lofgren.

MISS CARLSON was the candidate of the Enumclaw Kiwanis Club while the Enumclaw Saddle Club sponsored Miss Lofgren's candidacy in the contest that has waxed warmer and warmer in the community for the past several weeks.

The three judges who frankly admitted that they were hard put to pick the queen and her court from among the dazzling array of loveliness were Howard O'Dell, King County Commissioner and former head football coach at the University of Washington; Bill O'Mara, KING TV sports announcer, and Bob Kull, assistant director of tourist promotion for the state of Washington.
Mrs. Caroline Dieringer is chairman of the queen committee and Don Pohlman acted as master of ceremonies at the Colorful ball. Gordon Greene's orchestra of Spanish Castle fame furnished the music during the evening.

The seven other lovely young women who were queen candidates besides the three winners are Chee Chee Hackman, Judy Hansen, Judy Noble, Murial McGee, Mary Mitchell, Sandra Fell and Sylvia Shaffer.

Address

1837 Marion Street
Enumclaw, WA
98022

Opening Hours

Thursday 1pm - 4pm
Sunday 1pm - 4pm

Telephone

(360) 825-3356

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