In 1865, Job Carr paddled a canoe to his new homestead on a small harbor
that would become Old Tacoma. The area's notorious reputation--as The
Wildest Port North of San Francisco's Barbary Coast--haunted it for
decades after the tall-masted schooners, sailors, brothels, and saloons
were gone. Situated on the deepwater shoreline of Commencement Bay to
ship timber from the vast tracts surrounding it, Old Tacoma was bypassed
by the Northern Pacific terminus in favor of New Tacoma a few miles
away. Settled by waves of Scandinavian and Croatian immigrants to work
the mills and purse seiners, Old Tacoma became an isolated community.
Though industry, shipbuilding, and timber mills gave way to commerce and
recreation, the community of Old Tacoma still retains the unique flavor
of its colorful past.