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There's a lot going on beneath the streets of America

Ted1 Landphair | Washington, DC 01 June 2010


The United States has an underground movement. It's not a resistance group or a radical2 organization. It's a trail of hidden historical delights.

One of the most famous examples is the Seattle Underground in Washington State's biggest city. In 1889, just as that seaport3 was beginning to thrive, a fire started by an overturned glue pot destroyed 25 blocks of wooden buildings. Instead of restoring the town, Seattle's leaders decided4 to make a new, mostly brick downtown a couple of stories higher than the original street grade.

 

It's fascinating to walk beneath the streets of Seattle and see remnants of an earlier age that were simply buried and abandoned beneath a whole new streetscape after a fire.

That left a vast assortment5 of rubble6 and passageways beneath Seattle's Pioneer Square. And more than a century later, after descending7 a narrow, dark staircase, one can tour these spooky catacombs.

There's a similar story in Atlanta, Georgia. In the 1920s, the city constructed overhead viaducts to carry train and automobile8 traffic, and pretty soon the surrounding terrain9 was raised to meet it.

That left urban caverns10 that lay empty for decades. In 1960, the city helped fill them with what was envisioned as a row of trendy stores and night spots.

 

There's a netherworld of sunken storefronts right below Seattle's beautiful Pioneer Square.
But a rash of petty crimes there, and the growth of new entertainment districts elsewhere, doomed11 the project, and Underground Atlanta closed in 1980.

Since cleaned up and reopened, it is more popular with tourists than locals.

Washington, D.C., touts12 its underground, too, but the term is meant figuratively.

Historical organizations direct visitors to obscure sites that have archaeological significance. 

Washington, D.C.'s poor people eked13 out an existence in the places like De Frees Alley14, photographed in 1941. They were underground in the metaphorical15, not literal, sense.

They include Slate16 Alley, one of what were once hundreds of alleys17 in which poor people built makeshift homes and little businesses out of cardboard and tin. In one of them, someone made buttons out of discarded bones.

There are many other surprising destinations in Underground America.  Some are so well concealed that many of those who walk above or past them

 


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