Commercial Club say’s let’s be Snoqualmie Falls
Published 2:52 pm Thursday, October 2, 2008
The Snoqualmie Commercial Club formally proposed last week that the Town of Snoqualmie change
its name to Snoqualmie Falls.
In a letter to the Town Council and Mayor, Don Moller, president of the Commercial Club, asked
that the club be advised of the steps necessary in having
the name changed and set forth the club’s reasons for
seeking the change.
The council had already discussed the proposal
informally, and sentiment among its members had
been against any change. Moller took that into
consideration in his letter.
“Though there has, apparently, been some
reluctance on the part of the Town Council to consider a change
in name, it is a matter in which the Commercial Club has
a deep and serious interest,” Moller said.
“We do not deprecate in any way the title that
has long been used and respected for our town,” Moller said.
“We do seek, however, to complete what to us is
the logical name for the town by adding to it the word `Falls.’
“Thus, it is not a change in the designation for
our town we seek, so much as it is simply the fulfillment
of it.”
There was apparent historic purpose in
distinguishing the areas of Snoqualmie and Snoqualmie Falls,
and applying the name Snoqualmie to the present
town, Moller said.
“The decrease in residency in the area known
as Snoqualmie Falls, however, and the continuing
growth of Snoqualmie has nearly eliminated any need for
this delineation between areas,” Moller said.
“This being the case,” he said, “we sincerely
believe that a great deal of state-wide, and perhaps
nation-wide, confusion over where the Town of Snoqualmie is,
could be eliminated by the simple expedient of making
the town’s name Snoqualmie Falls.”
Anyone who doesn’t happen to live in or near Snoqualmie nearly always has difficulty placing
the Town of Snoqualmie, and very often winds up
identifying it as being somewhere near North Bend,
Moller pointed out.
“But hardly anyone who reads the newspapers,
travel brochures or history books has any trouble
identifying the locale of the Falls that are our major tourist
attraction,” he continued.
“By becoming Snoqualmie Falls, the town of Snoqualmie would be doing a service to itself and
its residents, and to every potential visitor,” Moller’s
letter said.
Moller pointed out that the reactivated
Snoqualmie Commercial Club has a deep interest in seeing the
town develop as best it can to remain a good community
to live in, and one that adequately serves it residents
and its surrounding area.
“It seems to us inevitable that more and more
tourists will come to the Valley, and that the town must
be better prepared to serve and care for them, if we are
to have any kind of orderly commerce,” Moller said.
“To that end, having the town named
Snoqualmie Falls would erase a thousand potential points of
confusion, and make the dissemination of information
about our area far, far easier and more effective,” he said.
“We do not seek a sudden or groundless change
in the name,” Moller concluded. “We ask neither the
Mayor or Council or the people of Snoqualmie to act hastily.
“We do believe, however, that deliberation will
convince a majority, as we are convinced, that
making Snoqualmie Falls the name of our town would
have advantages that would in no way detract from the
town’s respected history, but would add measurably to its
advantages in the future.”
Moller asked for a place on the agenda at a
future Council meeting to discuss the proposal in more detail.
