South Puget Sound holds a secret about our local character. We are not a monolith; we are the result of decades of pragmatic decisions resulting from a slow-motion collision. To understand why Washington works the way it does, you have to look past the modern Evergreen progressivism. You have to see the ghosts of two rival civilizations, New England and Appalachia, fighting it out over decades and finding ways to make peace. This dualism of the region is best described by Colin Woodard’s American Nations in his description of the Left Coast region.
Our regional identity is defined by a specific, recurring deal. It’s a truce between the institutional, moralizing drive of the New Englander and the fierce, reactive independence of the Scots-Irish borderer.
This synthesis created a unique form of Western whiteness. It’s pragmatic, corporate, and deeply exclusionary. It’s a culture that prioritizes the peace of the collective and the space of the individual, provided both parties are part of the original cultural contract.
Wealth over the Lash
In 1844, the Oregon Trail was less a path to freedom and more a filter for racial purity. When George Washington Bush reached the Willamette Valley, he was met with the Lash Laws. These weren’t mere suggestions. They were mandates for public whippings every six months for any Black person who refused to leave. This was the raw, Appalachian side of the frontier. It was a warrior ethic designed to protect white labor from any perceived competition, including enslaved peoples.
Bush’s response highlights the first major workaround in our history. He was a Black frontiersman of immense skill and even greater fortune. Rather than submit to the lash or return to Missouri, Bush used his wealth to lead five white families north of the Columbia River. He carried several thousand dollars in silver ingots. By settling in what would become Tumwater, he entered a geopolitical gray zone disputed between the U.S. and Great Britain. Bush was a seasoned veteran of the fur trade who had worked for the Hudson’s Bay Company. He knew the terrain. He knew the British authorities at Fort Vancouver. He knew how to navigate the cracks between empires.
The pragmatism of the early Washington establishment soon became clear. Federal laws like the Donation Land Claim Act of 1850 technically barred Black settlers from owning land. However, the local white leadership saw a different calculation. Bush wasn’t just a neighbor. He was the wealthiest man on the frontier. He had financed the region’s first gristmill and sawmill. During the grain shortage of 1852, he refused to sell his wheat to speculators for a profit. Instead, he shared it freely with hungry white settlers. He only asked for repayment when they were able.
To the Yankee-minded legislators in the new Washington Territory, Bush was an asset to the order they wished to build. In 1855, the Washington Territorial Legislature unanimously petitioned Congress to grant him a special legal title to his 640-acre farm. They didn’t do this to challenge white supremacy. They did it because Bush’s wealth and conduct aligned with the Yankee desire for a stable, prosperous society. The deal was struck. The rules would be bent for the wealthy and the useful, even as exclusion remained the baseline for everyone else. This established a precedent that remains a cornerstone of our regional psyche.
The law is a tool for stability. Stability often requires the pragmatic absorption of exceptional outsiders who bolster the existing order.
The Olympia Method
The tension between these two nations reached a fever pitch in the 1880s during the Chinese expulsion craze. Across the Pacific Northwest, white labor was in revolt. In Tacoma and Seattle, the Appalachian impulse for direct action took over. Mobs led by the Knights of Labor burned Chinatowns and forced residents onto steamers at gunpoint. This was called the Tacoma Method. It was a visceral, populist purging of outsiders to protect the sovereignty of the white worker.
Olympia faced the same pressure on February 9, 1886. A radical mob gathered at the sound of the city’s fire bell. They intended to drive the Chinese population out of their homes on Fourth Avenue. But here, the Yankee impulse for institutional order stood its ground. Sheriff William Billings and 62 leading citizens didn’t step in because they were radicals for equality. In fact, a formal resolution from the Billings group in 1885 showed that the majority of Olympia’s white residents wanted the Chinese gone. They just disagreed on the method.
To the business elite, a riot was godless anarchy. It would ruin the town’s reputation and scare off investors from the East Coast. They were decidedly opposed to expulsion by force because it threatened the fabric of the New England on the Pacific they were trying to build. Under the protection of these deputies, the leaders of the mob were arrested and tried. They were eventually sentenced to prison at McNeil Island. This was a clear message from the Yankee leadership. The warrior ethic of the mob would not dictate the terms of society in the capital.
The law and order faction essentially told the mob that they agreed the Chinese should go, but they wouldn’t have a riot in the capital. They protected the Chinese residents from violence to preserve the sanctity of the law. This created a relative safety for Chinese merchants like Sam Fun Locke. He remained in Olympia for decades. He paid tribute to the Sheriff’s family every Lunar New Year in gratitude for the protection of the state. It was a pragmatic peace. The elite maintained the rule of law. Meanwhile, the white workers were eventually pacified by the slow, legalistic exclusion of Chinese labor through federal acts rather than street brawls.
The Two Nations
To understand why these events played out this way, we have to look at the two distinct parent nations that settled this place.
First, there is Yankeedom. According to Woodard, these settlers came largely by sea. They were the descendants of Puritans who believed in social engineering and the perfectibility of society. They viewed government as a tool to create a moral and highly regulated community. In their view, the collective had a responsibility to oversee the behavior of its members. Theirs was a missionary impulse to bring order to the wilderness.
Then there is Greater Appalachia. These settlers arrived overland via the Oregon Trail. They were the Highlanders of the American South and the Borderlands. Their culture was forged in centuries of constant warfare on the fringes of the British Isles. They were a heritage of border raiders who learned early on that the state was usually an enemy. They brought a warrior ethic and a deep, bone-deep suspicion of any authority that tried to tell them how to live. To them, personal sovereignty and the protection of kith and kin were the only true laws.
The Pacific Northwest became a battlefield where these two cultures collided. The Yankee wanted to build a schoolhouse and a tax system. The Appalachian wanted to be left alone on his prairie with his gun and his family. We see this battle time and time again in our state. In the battle between the Grange and the railroads, fostering the creation of port districts. And then the later subversion of port districts by corporate interests.
The resulting Left Coast culture is a bipolar soul. It is a place that loves regulation but demands individual self-expression and freedom from constraint. The peace between them is maintained by the Yankee side, promising to manage the logistics of the world. They handle the schools, the roads, and the corporate legalities so the Appalachian side can feel free. It is the pragmatism of Yankeedom easing the libertarian needs of the Appalachians. If you need space, they will engineer a way for you to have it, as long as you play by the institutional rules.
The Sawdust Aristocracy
This peace found an economic engine in the timber industry of the early 1900s. The conflict here was between the Industrial Workers of the World and the American Federation of Labor. The IWW, or Wobblies, were the true radicals. They wanted one big union that included everyone. They welcomed workers from different ethnic backgrounds and unskilled laborers. They represented a threat to the racial and social order of the region because they rejected the idea of a cultural contract based on race or skill.
In contrast, the craft unions of the AFL were the aristocrats of labor. They were overwhelmingly white. They bridged the gap between Appalachian Free Labor and corporate interests from New England. They focused on protecting their narrow privileges as skilled workers. As historian Aaron Goings observes, the timber barons found it much easier to deal with the AFL. The corporations and the white craft unions entered an alliance of convenience. The timber barons would grant modest wage increases and better conditions to the white skilled workers. In return, those workers would help the corporations and local vigilante groups purge the militant Wobblies.
This was a classic Yankee-Appalachian deal. The corporate interests provided the structure and the wages. The white workers provided the warrior ethic to keep the radicals at bay. The creation of the Loyal Legion of Loggers and Lumbermen during World War I was the ultimate expression of this deal. It was a company-funded union that combined patriotism with a partnership between capital and white labor. This was the regional identity in its final form. It was a peace between corporations and white workers. They agreed to exclude outsiders as long as it protected the peace and profits of the insiders. The Yankee corporate interest got the stability it needed to grow. The Appalachian descended worker got his sovereignty and his respectable wage. He got the comfort of knowing he was part of the aristocracy of labor.
This is the situation we see reflected in our current landscape. We create a world of high regulation and good government. They are the heirs to the leading citizens who deputized themselves in 1886 to keep the peace.
But to keep the peace, they must buy off the libertarian needs of the regional population. This is done by creating a framework where personal freedom is framed through the lens of corporate access and lifestyle choice. We see the cooperation between people who are deeply attached to kith and kin and the corporate interests that need a predictable environment for capital to thrive. The deal is the same as it was in the timber woods. The corporations provide the order and the space. The people provide the peace.
The whiteness of the region is the silent glue of this deal. It is a majority-white culture that has agreed on a synthesis. We will follow the rules as long as the rules protect our space and our sovereignty. This creates a region that is superficially progressive but deeply exclusionary in practice. We will exclude the outsider if their presence threatens the peace of our corporate labor compact.
Ultimately, our regional identity is a pragmatic one. We are a people who say that if you’re going to get all worked up about needing some space, we’ll figure out a way to get you some space. This is the true meaning of the Left Coast. It is a land where the order is designed to keep the freedom profitable.
The freedom is designed to keep the order from being overthrown. It is a truce written in silver ingots, fire bells, and timber contracts. It is a deal that ensures the aristocrats of labor and the barons of industry can coexist in a quiet, white-washed peace. We have built a world where the pragmatic decision is almost always to protect the status quo of the insiders, even if it means ignoring the ghosts of those who were never invited to the table.
