by Trevor Bond
 Silver Lake is the most fondly remembered spot on campus that isn't
here anymore. The 1.6-acre man-made lake and The Tanglewood park that
surrounded it were covered over in the late 1920s to make room for the
Hollingbery Field House and an adjoining track. Images courtesy WSU
Manuscripts, Archives, & Special Collections.
Imagine having a campus lake to skate on in the winter or, in
fairer seasons, to picnic by. Washington State College had
one: a small man-made pond in the area now occupied by Mooberry
Track and the Hollingbery Field House. Officially called Silver
Lake, it was informally known as Lake de Puddle.
Silver Lake became part of the College in 1899 as part of six
acres purchased for $275. The school used the low-lying area
to carve out a 1.6-acre water feature. Our earliest photographs of
Silver Lake, such as those in President Bryan’s Historical
Sketch of the State College of Washington, show the pond
bordered on the east by a few shrubs. Not long after,
Professor Balmer from the School of Forestry directed the
transplanting on the site of some 6,000 trees and shrubs. Over the
years, these plants grew into a dense thicket called The
Tanglewood. A rustic wooden bridge and a series of private
paths completed what must have been a lovely retreat. According
to William Stimson, if students wished to meet secretly for a
little “fussing” or kissing, they chose Silver Lake and the privacy
afforded by The Tanglewood as their main romantic retreat.
We can further glimpse the importance of Silver Lake from “A
trip though Cougarville,” a charming series of charcoal drawings
and captions published in the 1926 Chinook yearbook. “In the
spring and fall we have tennis and golf and in the winter skiing
and skating. Silver Lake, over there on the border of the field,
freezes over every year, providing a fine place for our winter
sports. An occasional hole in the ice adds variety and
interest without being dangerous. No one has ever been known
to drown in Silver Lake.”
As the tour continues, we see an image of The Tanglewood and its
rustic bridge. “This little bridge over the lake adds the note of
rustic beauty desirable in the humblest of country clubs. Unlike
other little rustic bridges, it does not sag with the weight of
many small boys with fishing poles, for no fish pollute the waters
of Silver Lake. It is used purely for ornament and to furnish
water through which the sophomores may drag the freshmen in their
annual tug-of-war... Need I mention the manifold uses to which an
oasis such as this is put in a college town? It serves as an
outdoor auditorium and a scene of many Cougarville revels as well
as fulfilling its humbler duty as general picnic
grounds and strolling park.”
Unfortunately, the “proper atmosphere” of Silver Lake
occupied precious space bordering the College’s athletic
facilities. If ice skating and strolling along the lake sound
idyllic, practicing football and other sports outside in the snow
does not. The demise of Silver Lake and The Tanglewood came in the
late 1920s with the creation of the Field House, the financing of
which came through student fees. In fact, you can see the
contract for its construction in Manuscripts, Archives, and Special
Collections, signed by the dashing student-body president, Ed
Murrow.
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