Ainsworth, Washington
Ainsworth, Washington, was a ghost town in Franklin County, Washington. The town was on the northern bank of the mouth of the Snake River, in what is now Pasco, Washington.
Ainsworth was built as a depot on the Northern Pacific Railroad, and named after John C. Ainsworth, president of the Oregon Steam Navigation Company. The town was platted in 1879. Thomas Symons, the US Army engineer at the site commented at the time,
Ainsworth is one of the most uncomfortable, abominable places in America to live in. You can scan the horizon in vain for a tree or anything resembling one. The heat through the summer is excessive, and high winds prevail and blow the sands about into everything. By the glare of the sun and the flying sands, one's eyes are in a constant state of winking, blinking, and torment, if nothing more serious results.[1]
When Franklin County was created from Whitman County in 1883, Ainsworth was named county seat. At the time, there were also a number of Chinese laborers who lived in Ainsworth - many of whom worked for the railroad, and the remainder of which operated businesses in town.
In 1884, a railroad bridge across the Snake river was completed. By 1885, many of the buildings in Ainsworth had either been dismantled or moved to Pasco. The Chinese laborers also moved to the new town, and established their own district, but most of them left when the railroad work was completed and the work let up. In 1885, the State Legislature officially moved the county seat to Pasco.[2][3]
Over the years, Pasco has increased in size and engulfed the original townsite.
Notes and references
- ↑ Washington Territory, Robert E. Ficken, p.134, Washington State University Press, Pullman, WA, ISBN 0-87422-249-4
- ↑ http://historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&file_id=7452
- ↑ http://historylink.org/index.cfm?DisplayPage=output.cfm&file_id=8604
Coordinates: 46°13′01″N 119°01′37″W / 46.217°N 119.027°W