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Fort Townsend State Park The state park occupies a third of the site of the original Fort Townsend built in 1856. The park includes 3,960 feet (1,210 m) of shoreline on Port Townsend Bay , picnicking and camping areas, 6.5 miles (10.5 km) of hiking trails, and facilities for boating, fishing, and crabbing.
Corner of Polk and Washington Sts. Port Townsend: Is on the Washington Trust for Historic Preservation's Most Endangered Historic Properties List. [8] 19: Gagen-Sherlock House: Gagen-Sherlock House: March 19, 1982 : 1906 Cherry St.
Port Townsend is located on the Quimper Peninsula which extends out of the extreme northeastern end of the Olympic Peninsula, on the north end of a large, semi-protected bay. Port Townsend is adjacent to the Admiralty Inlet and a trio of state parks built on retired artillery installations (Fort Worden, Fort Casey, and Fort Flagler).
Fort Worden was an active United States Army base from 1902 to 1953. Most of it was purchased by the Port of Port Townsend in 1956 and sold to the State of Washington in 1957 to house a juvenile detention facility (the Port retained ownership of the beach from the entrance of the Fort to approximately the pier).
This range is the second largest in Washington State. Its highest peak is Mt. Olympus . A major effort called the Wild Olympics campaign is under way to protect additional wilderness areas on the Olympic Peninsula, protect salmon streams under the Wild and Scenic River Act and provide a means for Olympic National Park to offer to buy land ...
Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap. Download coordinates as: KML; GPX (all coordinates) ... Fort Taylor (Washington) Fort Townsend State Park; Fort Dent; V.
Fort Simcoe Historical State Park: Yakima: 200 81 1850s-era military installation on the Yakama Indian Reservation with army and Native American interpretive displays Fort Townsend Historical State Park: Jefferson: 367 149 Boating, camping, and trails at the northeastern extreme of the Olympic Peninsula: Fort Worden Historical State Park ...
State Route 19 (SR 19) is a 14.09-mile-long (22.68 km) state highway serving rural Jefferson County on the Olympic Peninsula in the U.S. state of Washington.The highway travels from SR 104 south of Port Ludlow and travels north through Chimacum and Port Hadlock-Irondale, intersecting SR 116, to end at SR 20 southwest of Port Townsend near the Jefferson County International Airport.