Like the red 50-foot "RAY'S" sign near its front door, Ray's Boathouse has become a Seattle icon that has changed the way the Northwest eats seafood. What began as a dockside cafe known for its home-cooked meals has become a must-visit restaurant with a majestic view of Puget Sound and rugged Olympic Mountains with a rare mix of dining elegance and hospitality. Its international reputation for seafood draws raves from publications like the New York Times, Gourmet Magazine, Chicago Tribune and Food & Wine.
In 1939 the original owner, Ray Lichtenberger, moved his growing boat rental and bait house to the current location and in 1945 opened a coffee house. By 1952, he'd built the neon sign that flashes "RAY'S" in bold, red letters on the dock overlooking Shilshole Bay at the crossing point to Puget Sound and the Hiram M. Chittenden Locks leading to Lake Washington.
Through the 1960's Ray's operated as both a casual fish-and-chips cafe and boat rental. In 1973 Russ Wohlers, Earl Lasher and Duke Moscrip bought Ray's Boathouse and quickly refurbished the structure, transforming into a nationally respected seafood restaurant while maintaining its cordial, glad-to-see-you atmosphere. While Moscrip left to pursue other restaurant ventures, Elizabeth Gingrich joined the owner team in 1975 and former Seattle Sonic Jack Sikma joined in 1986.
Under Wohlers guidance, Ray's built its reputation on seasonal dishes prepared simply to highlight the flavors of impeccably fresh seafood and the freshest locally grown produce. Ray's became part of what has been called a food revolution in the Pacific Northwest, helping to introduce a fashionable and distinctive regional cuisine built around Northwest products, microbrews and wines. Ray's was the first to reintroduce to Seattleites Olympia oysters, the region's only native oyster, and heralded Northwest delicacies such as singing scallops, Loughborough Inlet spot prawns, Copper River Salmon, Bruce Gore "frozen at sea" salmon and the concept of red wine with fish. In 1976, Ray's was also the first local restaurant to purchase its own wholesale fish buyer's license, allowing it to buy directly from the fishermen, ensuring the freshest catch.

