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Tonasket, Washington

Tonasket
City
Tonasket, Washington
Location of Tonasket, Washington
Location of Tonasket, Washington
Coordinates: 48°42′20″N 119°26′19″W / 48.70556°N 119.43861°W / 48.70556; -119.43861Coordinates: 48°42′20″N 119°26′19″W / 48.70556°N 119.43861°W / 48.70556; -119.43861
Country United States
State Washington
County Okanogan
Government
 • Mayor Patrick Plumb
Area
 • Total 0.80 sq mi (2.07 km2)
 • Land 0.80 sq mi (2.07 km2)
 • Water 0 sq mi (0 km2)
Elevation 919 ft (280 m)
Population (2010)
 • Total 1,032
 • Estimate (2015) 1,016
 • Density 1,290.0/sq mi (498.1/km2)
Time zone Pacific (PST) (UTC-8)
 • Summer (DST) PDT (UTC-7)
ZIP code 98855
Area code(s) 509
FIPS code 53-71890
GNIS feature ID 1527301
Website City of Tonasket

Tonasket is a city in Okanogan County, Washington, United States. The population was 1,032 at the 2010 census.

Tonasket was officially incorporated on December 16, 1927. It is named after Chief Tonasket of the Okanogan people, a local leader from this area who assumed the status of grand chief of the American Okanogan after the drawing of the Canada–United States border by the Oregon Treaty of 1846, assuming a leadership role in Okanogan territory formerly held by Chief Nicola who lived north of the border.

Tonasket is a city located along the eastern bank of the Okanogan River in north-central Okanogan County, Washington. U.S. Highway 97, the main north-south highway through central Washington, bisects the city on its way north to the Canada–US border approximately twenty miles away. Washington State Route 20 breaks east of 97, running across the state. The city, with an elevation 900 feet above sea level, is bordered on the north by Siwash Creek, and the south by Bonaparte Creek.

Tonasket, which has been the site of a U.S. post office since 1901, was platted in 1910 and incorporated in 1927. It serves as a hub for agricultural and forestry industries in north central Okanogan County. It is the location of three major fruit storage and processing facilities and the offices of the Tonasket Ranger District of the Okanogan National Forest.

Many descendants of pioneer families still reside in Tonasket and the surrounding areas and are interested in preserving and sharing the history of their heritage. A son of one of those pioneer families, Walter H. Brattain, grew up on a cattle ranch near Tonasket, attended Tonasket schools and shared the 1956 Nobel Prize for Physics (with William Shockley and John Bardeen) for the invention of the transistor.


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