The Neighbors project was published weekly in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer from 1996 to 2000. This page remains available for archival purposes only and the information it contains may be outdated. For more updated information, please visit our Webtowns section.
 
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Fall City & Preston
Photo of girl with cat climbing over her shoulder

Community ties are close in small towns

By JACK HOPKINS Mail Author
SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER REPORTER

Residents of the Fall City-Preston area enjoy the comfortable feeling of being part of a laid-back, close-knit, caring community.

"I like the smallness of it. You know a lot of people," says Debbie Arenth.

She credits Fall City Elementary School administrators and staff members with nurturing the town's community spirit and keeping its focus on helping one another. "They encourage you to come down to the school and walk into the classrooms. People get used to seeing each other and that causes an energy that builds on itself.

"We still go to the annual spaghetti feed at the elementary school even though (Drew) hasn't been a student there for years."

Fall City and Preston share that sense of community spirit.

Connie Brown lives in Redmond but works as a teacher in a cooperative pre-school program sponsored by Bellevue Community College in the historic Preston Field House across from the site of the old Preston Mill.

Most of the 24 children who attend the preschool come from Fall City and Preston, and their parents are deeply involved in its activities.

"I love the parents and families in the Snoqualmie Valley," says Brown. "They are really interested in their children and involved in their community. They seem to be more grounded and a little more down to earth."

Preston Baptist Church pastor Gary Moen has experienced the same feeling of community since his arrival in town almost 12 years ago.

"We moved here from Minnesota by way of Idaho. And I had an immediate feeling of being 'home' as soon as I came here. There was a warm, loving feeling that permeated the community," says Moen.

That hasn't changed in the ensuing years, he adds. "The people here still care for each other. And if someone is hurting or needs help, they still rally together."

The challenge will be to keep that community spirit as the population swells.

"The growth is coming our way," says Moen. "People are trying to slow it, but it's coming."

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HEADLINES
Saturday, December 5, 1998

Pastoral rural communities hear footsteps of growth

Lumber mill set the stage 100 years ago

Young families bringing new blood to old towns

Community ties are close in small towns

Area has fought to keep development at bay

Jon Hahn: Land sacred to Snoqualmies reveals a history gathered piece by piece

Things to do while you're here

Scenes of Fall City & Preston

Fall City & Preston historical album

Fall City & Preston by the numbers


Nearby communities:

Carnation

Issaquah

Sammamish Plateau

Snoqualmie Pass

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