In 1868, Ferry and his in-laws bought a piece of land on the east shore of
Puget Sound, northeast of
Olympia. The place they believed to have potential started to develop, and in 1873, the family came there to settle. Ferry, along with his father-in-law
General Matthew Morton McCarver, was credited for giving it the name
Tacoma. In Tacoma, Ferry kept investing in real-estate, accumulating considerable property. A patriot of the city, he dedicated most of his time to social and administrative improvements. Aside from being invested in the city's development on the national level, Ferry was interested in its internal establishment, creating parks, sidewalks, and the whole city's layout. On May 14, 1883, he donated a half-acre plot of land that later became
Ferry Park. In 1902 he ordered 5 statues including a sphinx, 2 griffins, and one titled the Lioness and Her Cubs. Through the efforts of Ferry and his father-in-law, Tacoma became the western terminus of the newly built
Northern Pacific Railroad. However, later, due to the failing economy and the panic it caused, the railroad company closed. Ferry tried to bring the business back by working as a chief clerk, cashier, salesman, bookkeeper, and other positions at both the Northern Pacific Railroad Company and the Tacoma Land Company. He didn't have much success, and decided to retire and go to
San Francisco. By 1888, as Ferry had expected, business and development in Tacoma improved. However, he wasn't ready to return home yet.
Travels and foundation of the Ferry Museum Travelling through Europe, Ferry visited the Paris Exposition as the
Washington Territory representative, though his personal agenda was to gather relics and works of art and bring them home to make Tacoma "the center of art in the northwest." Before his return to Tacoma in 1893, he lived in
Geneva, Switzerland, collecting art pieces. Ferry donated his collection of art and historic relics to Tacoma, and on June 16, 1893, it was officially registered as the Ferry Museum of Art. William B. Blackwell,
Henry Drum, Clinton P. Ferry,
James G. Swan, and Samuel Collyer were listed as trustees. A collaboration between the Tacoma Academy of Sciences, the Tacoma Art League (later
Tacoma Art Museum), and the
Washington State Historical Society, the Ferry Museum opened on October 28, 1893, in the new Tacoma county courthouse. It moved to another site on June 25, 1895. Providing the resources to study local and worldwide history, geography, and culture, the museum's collection consisted of native and natural history showpieces, architectural casts, paintings, copies of European pottery, a collection of photographs and
etchings, historical books, and an ax used to erect the first house in Tacoma. Besides displays, museum provided free art classes once a week. In 1911, the museum, in association with the
Washington State Historical Society, moved its collections to the
Tacoma City Hall and the Pierce County courthouse. Afterwards, it was moved to the Washington State Historical Society building. Keeping the relationship tight, in 1931 the Ferry Museum made a big donation to the Society, which included the Historical Building south wing, the site for additional construction, a museum collection valued at approximately $100,000 ($2,644,000 in 2020 dollars), and a $10,000 ($264,000) transfer of the Frank B. Cole Endowment Fund, the income of which was to be spent only on the museum. The first building that the Ferry Museum owned itself was erected in 1915, with money provided by Ferry's estate after his death and funds donated by other citizens. File:Rummage sale collector for the Ferry Museum, Tacoma, Washington, ca 1898 (HESTER 87).jpeg|Rummage sale collector for the Ferry Museum, Tacoma, Washington, ca 1898 File:Interior of museum showing Northwest coast Native American artifacts, Washington, ca 1905 (BAR 88).jpeg|Interior of museum showing Northwest coast Native American artifacts, Washington, ca 1905 File:Interior of Ferry Museum showing Native American artifacts, Tacoma, Washington, ca 1911 (BAR 258).jpeg|Interior of Ferry Museum showing Native American artifacts, Tacoma, Washington, ca 1911 File:Interior of Ferry Museum showing shelves with papers and newspapers, Tacoma, Washington (BAR 145).jpeg|Interior of Ferry Museum showing shelves with papers and newspapers, Tacoma, Washington, ca 1911 ==Secondary positions and political views==