The area around the Sultan and Skykomish rivers was occupied by the
Skykomish, a branch of the
Snohomish people, prior to the arrival of American settlers. The Skykomish had a permanent village at the confluence named , along with a nearby
fishery named . Following the discovery of a rich
gold vein along the Sultan River, the land around the confluence was
claimed for a
homestead by John Nailor and his wife in 1880. Among the first arrivals to the area were
Chinese prospectors, who later settled the land but were evicted in 1885. Nailor built a small
store and hotel to serve miners and loggers, eventually serving as the first
postmaster after the settlement received a
post office in 1885. The town and river were named "Sultan", an
anglicization of (also known as Tseul-dan), then chief of the Skykomish tribe. The Nailors sold of their homestead to William B. Stevens in 1889, who filed the first
plat for Sultan City that October. The
Great Northern Railway placed a
supply depot for its railroad workers in Sultan in 1891, meeting river
steamboats and contributing to the town's early growth. Sultan gained its first
sawmill in 1891 and a
shingle mill in 1895, as the local economy transitioned away from mining and towards logging. Sultan was officially incorporated as a city on June 28, 1905. By 1912, the city had a
public library, electrical service, paved streets, and was considering a plan to build a
hydroelectric dam that would also provide
municipal water service. A bridge across the Skykomish River was built in 1908 to connect to new farms on the south bank. An economic slowdown after
World War I led to a population decrease in the Skykomish Valley, causing Sultan voters to approve a reduction in the city's size in June 1920. The area also experienced an economic downturn during the
Great Depression and was home to a
Civilian Conservation Corps camp that primarily dealt with firefighting and forest management. The
Works Progress Administration also completed several projects in the city, including two expansions of the
high school and its gymnasium in 1929 and 1939. Several major fires struck Sultan in the 1940s, including one in October 1945 that destroyed a block of buildings on Main Street and another in 1947 that decimated the Sultan Union High School. Sultan residents participated a civic improvement program during the 1950s and 1960s that upgraded or replaced several major facilities, often with assistance from the state government. A new
city hall was opened in 1954, the elementary school was expanded in 1957, and a new
landing field for airplanes and helicopters opened in 1958. The city annexed of rural land to the southeast in 1958 and it was subsequently developed for housing. The Skykomish River Bridge was also replaced by a new span in 1961. The
Snohomish County Public Utility District (PUD) constructed the
Culmback Dam on the Sultan River, creating the
Spada Lake reservoir and providing electricity and drinking water for
Everett and much of the county beginning in 1965. The
Sky River Rock Festival and Lighter Than Air Fair, one of the first outdoor U.S. music festivals, was hosted at a
raspberry farm south of Sultan beginning August 30, 1968. The three-day festival, organized by radio station
KRAB and the
Helix newspaper, attracted an estimated 20,000
hippies, of whom 13,000 had paid tickets, and was considered to be a forerunner for later festivals like
Woodstock. Musical acts at the festival included
Santana, the
Grateful Dead,
Country Joe McDonald,
Muddy Waters,
Buffy St. Marie, and
John Fahey, among others. The Sultan city government declined to allow the festival to return the following year due to the traffic and logistical issues that were experienced, including the venue running out of
drinking water. Several suburban
subdivisions were built in the 1990s and early 2000s, contributing to a population boom and political strife over the area's rural and small-town character. The
Department of Veteran Affairs considered the Sultan area for a new
national military cemetery, but ultimately chose a site near
Kent. Sultan celebrated its centennial in 2005 with several festivals and the dedication of a new visitor center. Despite the population growth, the city's traditional businesses have left Sultan and caused a decline in local employment options. During the
2007 financial crisis, a
Monroe city councilmember unsuccessfully suggested merging the two cities to resolve development issues and Sultan's city budget shortfall. The Sultan city government instead began outsourcing its policing and library services to county agencies while undergoing other reforms. The city government has endorsed schemes to lure new industries, including offering tracts of land and opening new parks and a
shooting range in a bid to appeal to outdoor recreation companies. ==Geography==