Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This map shows the incorporated and unincorporated areas in Chelan County, Washington, highlighting Chelan in red. It was created with a custom script with US Census Bureau data and modified with Inkscape. Date: 26 October 2007: Source: My own work, based on public domain information. Based on similar map concepts by Ixnayonthetimmay: Author ...
English: This is a locator map showing Chelan County in Washington. For more information, see Commons:United States county locator maps. Date: 12 February 2006: Source:
Mount Bigelow is set on the boundary of the Lake Chelan-Sawtooth Wilderness, on land managed by the Okanogan–Wenatchee National Forest. The peak is the southernmost point in the wilderness. Bigelow ranks as the fifth-highest peak on Sawtooth Ridge, 10th-highest peak in the Methow Mountains, and the 67th-highest in Washington. [3]
Interactive map of Agnes Mountain: Location: Chelan County, Washington, U.S. Parent range: North Cascades: Topo map: USGS Agnes Mountain: Climbing; First ascent: 1936 by W. Ronald Frazier and Dan O'Brien: Easiest route: Northeast/South Ridge Route, class 5.6
Pinnacle Mountain is an 8,400-foot (2,560-metre) granitic multi-peak massif located in the Chelan Mountains, in Chelan County of Washington state. [5] The mountain is situated in the Glacier Peak Wilderness of the North Cascades, on land managed by Wenatchee National Forest.
Buck Mountain is an 8,534-foot (2,601-metre) mountain summit in the Glacier Peak Wilderness of the North Cascades in Washington state. [4] The mountain is located in Chelan County, in the Wenatchee National Forest.
Cutthroat Peak is an 8,066-foot-elevation (2,459-meter) granitic mountain located on the boundary of Chelan County and Skagit County, in Washington state. [4] The mountain is part of the Okanagan Range which is a subrange of the Cascade Range, and it is situated within the Okanogan–Wenatchee National Forest.
The county was created out of Okanogan and Kittitas Counties on March 13, 1899. [3] [4] It derives its name from a Chelan Indian word meaning "deep water," likely a reference to 55-mile (89 km)-long Lake Chelan, which reaches a maximum depth of 1,486 feet (453 m). Chelan County is part of the Wenatchee, Washington, Metropolitan Statistical Area.