| history - burton
Burton
compiled
from Columbian archives
Where Burton
is we know, but who was he?
Mr. Burton whoever you were
and wherever you are now, be assured your name lives on.
It is perpetuated in the Burton
School and Burton Road, in subdivisions with names like Burtonwood, and
in the history of a huge wartime housing project called Burton Homes.
The Burton area lies along
Northeast Burton Road and Northeast 28th Street, east of Andresen road
and west of Northeast 162nd Avenue. There was once a Burton School District,
swallowed up when the sprawling Evergreen district was formed.
One of the earliest mentions
of Burton was in the Vancouver Columbian of May 18,1901: "At a school
election and by a vote of 15 to 14, the new school house in the Pucker
Brush community was named Burton." Another item in this edition noted
there would be no further news datelined Pucker Brush, but news of the
Burton area would be forthcoming.
There is no mention, however,
of why the school and community were named Burton. Was Burton a pioneer
resident of the area? No one seems to know. The name does not appear on
maps showing early property owners.
Burton Homes was a huge complex
of wartime housing units built at the beginning of World War II. It consisted
of 1,500 two-bedroom dwellings and was located north of Northeast Burton
Road.
Before the war ended, the layoffs
began at the shipyards and Burton Homes was closed. These were row houses
built only 18 months before but already they had started to fall apart.
On Sept. 20, 1944, the first
contract for removing the rows of houses was let. The first 34 homes were
dismantled and shipped to Morton, Wash.
On Oct. 13, 1945, the end came
when the Vancouver Housing Authority checked out the last three tenants
from Burton Homes.
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