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I was just now recalling the old Ben Paris, which was addressed at 1609 Westlake (with another entrance on Fourth Avenue, directly across from the Bon Marche, which is now Macy's), and which was, to my way of seeing, the coolest thing Seattle had to offer. The building was torn down, along with a bunch of other cool stuff, to make way for the Westlake Center.
When I first came to Seattle, in 1968, my brother and I would cut classes and go hang out downtown, so of course Ben Paris was on our list of places we just had to haunt. It was first and foremost a guy's place -- a combination coffee shop (with a horseshoe-shaped counter)/proper sit-down restaurant/bar/sporting goods store/shoeshine stand/barbershop/pool hall/smoke shop/newsstand. The joint even had a pond, in which live trout were kept.
A cursory web search turns up a brief biography of Ben Paris himself, and one photo -- an exterior shot of the Fourth Avenue entrance. There's a page that tells what sort of material on Mr. Paris and his business establishments might be found at the Museum of History and Industry (the photo library there is a fabulous resource, by the way; I found there some great shots of old Seattle ballparks -- Sick's Stadium, Dugdale Park etc.-- and had prints made).
Any of you other Seattle-area folks recall the place? Got any tales to tell?
When I first came to Seattle, in 1968, my brother and I would cut classes and go hang out downtown, so of course Ben Paris was on our list of places we just had to haunt. It was first and foremost a guy's place -- a combination coffee shop (with a horseshoe-shaped counter)/proper sit-down restaurant/bar/sporting goods store/shoeshine stand/barbershop/pool hall/smoke shop/newsstand. The joint even had a pond, in which live trout were kept.
A cursory web search turns up a brief biography of Ben Paris himself, and one photo -- an exterior shot of the Fourth Avenue entrance. There's a page that tells what sort of material on Mr. Paris and his business establishments might be found at the Museum of History and Industry (the photo library there is a fabulous resource, by the way; I found there some great shots of old Seattle ballparks -- Sick's Stadium, Dugdale Park etc.-- and had prints made).
Any of you other Seattle-area folks recall the place? Got any tales to tell?