| |
|
Overview

How to Find Foreclosure Listings
The
process of Foreclosures is usually a lender, obtains a court ordered
termination of a mortgagor's equitable right of redemption. The lender
cannot secure that they can successfully repossess the property when this
equitable rights exists, so the lender seeks to foreclose the equitable
right of redemption. It begins when a borrower/owner fails on loan payments
usually mortgage payments and the lender files a public default notice.
This year Foreclosures in the Seattle area are increasing but were still
below foreclosure figures in other cities, according the one of the leading
foreclosure property marketer. By hiring and training thousands of new
employees, loan servicer's are trying to catch up to the overwhelming
customer's request. Through customer financial hardships banks are also
trying to sort it.
View Listings-->
About Beacon Hill Foreclosure
Hill and Beacon Hill is a neighborhood in south Seattle, Washington. The rural municipality government to distribute it in North Beacon Hill, Mid-Beacon Hill, Holly Park, and South Beacon Hill, [1], although the majority of the people who live there describe their neighborhood as simply "Beacon Hill." Home to the world headquarters of Amazon.com and the Seattle Department of Veterans Affairs Puget Sound Department of the health care system, the hill offers views of downtown, Industrial District, Elliott Bay, First Hill, Rainier Valley, and if the weather is good, Mount Rainier and the Olympic mountains. It is bounded on the west by Interstate 5, north of Interstate 90, east of Rainier Avenue S., Cheasty Boulevard S., and Martin Luther King Jr. Way S., Seattle, and in the south city limits. Northern hill homes were mostly built in the early 1900s, and both the North Beacon Hill contains a lot of great examples of skilled workers and Bungalows "Seattle box houses" (a local variant of the strong style).
History
The hill was originally called the Holgate and Hanford Hill, after two early settlers, John and Edward Holgate Hanford, who settled the area of the 1850s [2] and to this day commemorated the South Holgate and Hanford Streets in North Beacon Hill. Later arrival, M. Young Harwood, named after the hill in his hometown in Beacon Hill, Boston, Massachusetts.
Demographics
Beacon Hill, throughout its history has been home to successive waves of immigrants. In the mid to late 20th century, the county was primarily in Asia and has been able to see today, many Chinese, Vietnamese, Japanese and Filipino stores, restaurants and other businesses that line Beacon Avenue South. According to 2000 U.S. Census, the population is 22,300, and Beacon Hill is racially diverse: 51% Asian, 20% white, 13% black, 9% Hispanic / Latino, and 7% other. [3]
Landmarks and Institutions
* Jefferson Park: Golf, lawn bowling, open space
* Dr. José Rizal Park: views overlooking downtown [4]
* El Centro de la raza, the former Beacon Hill School [5]
* Beacon Hill First Baptist Church [6]: the designated historic landmark, is a Tudor Revival building constructed in 1910, which aims to notable architect Ellsworth Storey
* Frank D. Black Property: cobblestone designated landmark structures built in 1914
* Cheasty Greenbelt / Cheasty Boulevard Trail
Nearby neighborhoods
* Columbia City
* Downtown Seattle
* First Hill
* Georgetown
* Industrial District (see also Sodo)
* International District / Chinatown
* Judkins Park
* Mount Baker
* Rainier Valley
* Sodo
Notes
1. ^ Beacon Hill. Seattle City Secretary's Neighborhood Map Atlas. City Secretary's Office, City of Seattle. Retrieved on 2005/09/03.
2. ^ George Lange (10 November 2000). John Holgate Duwamish River has been examined in the canoe, but do not stake King County land claim during the summer 1850. Essay 1749. HistoryLink.org. Retrieved on 2005/09/03.
3. ^ 2000 census data: Beacon Hill. Retrieved on 2005/09/03.
4. ^ David Wilma (5 April 2001). Rizal Park. Essay 3168, Online Encyclopedia of Washington State history. Retrieved on 2005/09/03.
5. ^ David Wilma (August 2, 2000). Chicano activists occupy abandoned school that becomes El Centro on October 11, 1972. Essay in 2588, Online Encyclopedia of Washington State history. HistoryLink.org. Retrieved on 2005/09/03.
6. ^ David Wilma (April 17, 2002). Seattle Landmarks: Beacon Hill First Baptist Church (1910). Essay 3216, Online Encyclopedia of Washington State history. HistoryLink.org. Retrieved on 2005/09/03.
7. ^ David Wilma (April 23, 2001). Seattle Landmarks: Frank D. Black Property (1914). Essay 3226, Online Encyclopedia of Washington State history. HistoryLink.org. Retrieved on 2005/09/03.
|
|