Sequim's landmark grain elevator is for sale until April 27

Sequim's landmark grain elevator is for sale until April 27

Sequim’s landmark grain elevator for sale; headed for auction block if no buyer is found

SEQUIM –– Now is your chance to own the most prominent piece of Sequim’s skyline.

Having closed its El Cazador restaurant March 3, the Mount Vernon firm that owns the historic Clallam Co-op grain elevator is looking for buyers for the 85-foot-tall landmark.

The building, which was home to the Mexican restaurant on the ground floor and has several pieces of communications equipment posted at its peak, is listed for $600,000, according to Gary Morgan, accountant for El Cazador.

If no buyers are found before April 27, the property will go up for a public auction as a trustees sale.

“If we had our way, we would sell it before that,” Morgan said.

“This is not something we wanted to do,” Morgan said.

El Cazador, which has other restaurants in Oak Harbor and Mount Vernon, had occupied the ground floor of the landmark since 1981.

It was closed because of dwindling revenues, Morgan said.

The Mexican restaurant was one of the many uses for the lot that was once bisected by the Seattle, Port Angeles and Western Railroad, a subsidiary of the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul & Pacific.

The elevator is the largest landmark of Sequim’s rich agricultural history.

It was featured prominently in the city’s centennial logo.

It also is one of many memorable granaries depicted in the 2002 book Old Time Grain Elevators: Stories and Photography from a Vanishing Way of Life, written by Bruce and Barbara Selyem of Bozeman, Mont.

Peninsula Grain Co. built a shed by the train tracks that was used to store farm produce before it was shipped out on the railroad, according to the Selyems’ book.

In 1944, according to records from the Clallam County Assessor’s Office, Clallam Cooperative built on the spot a wood-cribbed elevator to store corn, beans and wheat that was imported for use as cattle feed by area dairies.

“We’d drive up there — before I even had a license — and the guys working there would sack up grain for us in these 100-pound bags,” remembered Jeff Brown, who operated Dungeness Valley Creamery before turning the operation over to his daughter and son-in-law.

A faded advertisement for the co-op still graces the granary’s west face.

A grass seed boom that hit the valley in the late 1960s created a new use for the elevator as grass farmers formed Dungeness Agricultural Supply and bought the granary to store seed.

Eugene and Dorothy Saxton bought the elevator after its agricultural use ended in 1977.

The railroad failed in 1985, and much of its bed is now the Olympic Discovery Trail, though much of the section that ran through Sequim was built over after the tracks were pulled up.

The Saxtons divided the building’s warehouse into shops they then rented out to a number of businesses as the Landmark Mall.

In 1988, Hilda Rodriguez and Arturo Briseno leased the space in 1988 to open El Cazador, which would serve as a popular gathering spot for Sequim until its closure in March.

As the city’s highest building, the granary drew the interest of a growing telecommunications industry in the late 1990s.

Chuck Beaudette, general manager of OlyPen, said his company put its first wireless Internet broadcaster atop the elevator in 2000.

“There was no Internet infrastructure on the Peninsula at all in 2000,” Beaudette said. “We saw it and thought it would be perfect for putting a signal out there.”

Cellphone companies followed, with Verizon Wireless the first to join OlyPen’s transmitters.

________

Sequim-Dungeness Valley Editor Joe Smillie can be reached at 360-681-2390, ext. 5052, or at jsmillie@peninsuladailynews.com.

More in News

Increased police presence expected at Port Angeles High School on Friday

An increased police presence is expected at Port Angeles… Continue reading

Clallam County Superior Court Judge Elizabeth Stanley is sworn in by Judge Simon Barnhart on Thursday at the Clallam County Courthouse. Stanley, elected in November to Position 1, takes the role left by Judge Lauren Erickson, who retired. Barnhart and Judge Brent Basden also were elected in November. All three ran unopposed. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Judge sworn in

Clallam County Superior Court Judge Elizabeth Stanley is sworn in by Judge… Continue reading

Clallam trending toward more blue

Most precincts supported Harris in 2024

Landon Smith, 19, is waiting for a heart transplant at Children’s Hospital of Seattle. (Michelle Smith)
Teenager awaits heart transplant in Seattle

Being in the hospital increases his chances, mom says

Port, Lower Elwha approve agreement

Land exchange contains three stormwater ponds for infrastructure

Clallam County lodging tax funds awarded

$1.39 million to be provided to four organizations

Forks DSHS outstation updates service hours

The state Department of Social and Health Services has announced… Continue reading

A 65-foot-long historic tug rests in the Port of Port Townsend Boat Haven Marina’s 300-ton marine lift as workers use pressure washers to blast years of barnacles and other marine life off the hull. The tug was built for the U.S. Army at Peterson SB in Tacoma in 1944. Originally designated TP-133, it is currently named Island Champion after going through several owners since the army sold it in 1947. It is now owned by Debbie Wright of Everett, who uses it as a liveaboard. The all-wood tug is the last of its kind and could possibly be entered in the 2025 Wooden Boat Festival.(Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Wooden wonder

A 65-foot-long historic tug rests in the Port of Port Townsend Boat… Continue reading

Mark Nichols.
Petition filed in murder case

Clallam asks appeals court to reconsider

A 35-year-old man was taken by Life Flight Network to Harborview Medical Center following a Coast Guard rescue on Monday. (U.S. Coast Guard Air Station Port Angeles via Facebook)
Injured man rescued from remote Hoh Valley

Location requires precision 180-foot hoist

Kevin Russell, right, with his wife Niamh Prossor, after Russell was inducted into the Building Industry Association of Washington’s Hall of Fame in November.
Building association’s priorities advocate for housing

Port Angeles contractor inducted into BIAW hall of fame

Crew members from the USS Pomfret, including Lt. Jimmy Carter, who would go on to become the 39th president of the United States, visit the Elks Lodge in Port Angeles in October 1949. (Beegee Capos)
Former President Carter once visited Port Angeles

Former mayor recalls memories of Jimmy Carter