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Magnuson Park (Seattle)

Warren G. Magnuson Park
Magnuson Park-2.jpg
Magnuson Park and Lake Washington
Magnuson Park is located in Seattle
Magnuson Park
Location of Magnuson Park in Seattle
Type Urban park
Location Seattle, Washington
Coordinates 47°40′51″N 122°14′53″W / 47.6808°N 122.2481°W / 47.6808; -122.2481Coordinates: 47°40′51″N 122°14′53″W / 47.6808°N 122.2481°W / 47.6808; -122.2481
Area 350 acres (1.4 km2)
Created 1900 (1900) (military use 1922-1975)
Operated by City of Seattle
Status Open year round
Website Official website

Magnuson Park is a 350 acres (140 ha) park on Sand Point at Pontiac Bay, Lake Washington, in the Sand Point neighborhood of Seattle, Washington. The park is the second largest in Seattle, after 534 acres (2.16 km2) Discovery Park in Magnolia. It is located on the spot of the former Naval Station Puget Sound. Sand Point is the peninsula with Pontiac and Wolf bays that juts into Lake Washington in northeast Seattle.

Sand Point is a peninsula that juts into Lake Washington between Wolf Bay and Pontiac Bay. It is occupied by Magnuson Park, parts of View Ridge, Windermere and gives its name to the Sand Point neighborhood to the west. Formerly the easternmost point was Naval Air Station-Sand Point; the former military base is now mostly public park with a portion occupied by the NOAA western regional center and by city housing.

The area has been inhabited since the end of the last glacial period (c. 8,000 BCE—10,000 years ago). Prairie or tall grassland areas (anthropogenic grasslands) were maintained along what is now Sand Point Way NE (map [1]), among numerous locations in what is now Seattle. The Xacuabš (Xachua'bsh or hah-choo-AHBSH, "the People of the Large Lake", now of the Duwamish tribe) had the village of TLEHLS ("minnows" or "shiners") on the shores of what is now called Wolf Bay in Windermere, on Lake Washington south of SqWsEb, now called Sand Point-Magnuson Park. BEbqwa'bEks ("small prairie"—anthropogenic grassland) was near what is now Windermere. One or three sizable longhouses have been documented. Villages were diffuse. These people may have been associated with the hloo-weelh-AHBSH of Union Bay. Just on the other side of Sand Point, the village of too-HOO-beed was of the too-oh-beh-DAHBSH extended family, near what is now called Thornton Creek at what is now Matthews Beach, so Sand Point was their shared "side yard".


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