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Illahee State Park is an 82-acre (33 ha) Washington state park located in the hamlet of Illahee, just north of East Bremerton, on Port Orchard Bay, part of Puget Sound. The word "Illahee" means earth or country in the Native language Chinuk Wawa. The park was established when Kitsap County donated 13 acres to the state in 1934.
Illahee is an unincorporated community in Kitsap County, Washington, United States, [1] between Bremerton and Silverdale. It is home to Illahee State Park and other local parks. The word "Illahee" means earth or country in the pidgin language Chinuk Wawa , commonly spoken in the area until the early twentieth century.
Troy Barnhart, program manager with Serco, is towed in a kayak behind the ARCHER Environmental unmanned surface vehicle as it heads for the Port of Illahee Pier on Wednesday, Oct. 25, 2023.
From 1951 to 1968, the main ferry on the route was the Illahee which ran along with the Quinault (1951–1953), Evergreen State (1954–1959), and Tillikum (1959–1968), with the steam ferry San Mateo occasionally running as an extra boat. [1] In 1950, the Agate Pass Bridge opened, connecting the north end of Bainbridge Island to the Kitsap ...
The MV Illahee was a Steel Electric-class ferry operated by Washington State Ferries. Originally built as the MV Lake Tahoe in Oakland, California for the Southern Pacific Railroad , she started out serving on SP's Golden Gate Ferries subsidiary on San Francisco Bay .
The treadmill provides the same opportunity that walking across the parking lot offers; and swimming or rowing a boat works many of the same muscles that weightlifters target with dumbbells and ...
The region is geologically active. [1] The Manette Peninsula is part of the Puget Sound Lowlands; the lands formed of accumulated sediments from glaciers during the pleistocene epoch [2] and deposited into the Puget Trough, which is the subduction trough where the Juan de Fuca Plate sinks below the American Continental Plate.
Illahe was the first of three post offices established in the late 19th and early 20th centuries along the canyon of the lower Rogue River between Marial and Agness. After the Rogue River Wars of 1855–56 and the forced removal of most of the Takelma and other native people who lived along the river, a small number of newcomers began to settle along or near the canyon.