Deception Pass State Park


Deception Pass State Park is a nearly state park in Washington state. It is located on nine islands—principally Whidbey and Fidalgo islands—on either side of Deception Pass, the waterway connecting the Strait of Juan de Fuca with Skagit Bay. It includes numerous bays, inlets and other waterways that provide home for a variety of marine life and coastal Pacific Northwest flora, and the park's undersea natural resources are protected as part of the National System of Marine Protected Areas. The park's two sections, like its two main islands, are connected by the two spans of the Deception Pass Bridge, completed in 1934.
The park's original land was a military reserve prior to its sale to the state in 1922. The park was first developed in the 1930s by crews of the Civilian Conservation Corps, who constructed a number of buildings, installations and landscape features in the National Park Service rustic style. Many of these facilities are recognized on the National Register of Historic Places. Since its establishment, with its proximity to the Seattle area and its suburbs, the park has consistently ranked as the most-visited park in the Washington State Parks system, drawing 3.4 million visitors in 2023. With more than 3 million visitors annually, it rivals some of the most popular U.S. national parks in visitors.

Geography

The park encompasses on nine islands. In addition to the sections on Whidbey and Fidalgo, Northwest Island, Deception Island, Pass Island, Strawberry Island, and portions of Ben Ure Island are included in the park. The park also administers state parkland on Hope Island and Skagit Island in Skagit Bay and a portion of Kiket Island, which it manages jointly with the Swinomish Indian Tribal Community.
Four freshwater lakes are included in the park boundaries: Cranberry Lake on Whidbey and Pass, Campbell and Heart lakes on Fidalgo. Heart Lake is located in a non-contiguous section of the park in Anacortes that includes old-growth forest in a state-designated natural forest area.
The park's of shoreline include rocky beaches, sand spits, bluffs and headlands characteristic of the Puget Sound coastline. The park's diverse landscape also includes wetlands around Cranberry Lake. Lush forested shorelines extend between beaches and rocky outcroppings. The hill north of Bowman Bay, points on the west side of Whidbey and on the south side of islands feature drier upland forests. West Beach also includes the only sand dunes of significance on Puget Sound. At, Goose Hill within the park boundaries is the highest point on Whidbey Island.

History

Prior to World War I, the U.S. military used much of the land surrounding Deception Pass as part of the coastal defenses of Puget Sound. Some land was used for recreational purposes; Rosario Beach was a destination for steamship day trips from Seattle, and Ben Ure ran a saloon and smuggling den on his namesake island during Prohibition. From 1909 to 1914, the state ran a quarry with convict labor on Fidalgo Island just east of the pass.
With the coming of aerial warfare, fewer coastal defenses were needed, and the military sold land around the pass to Washington state in 1922. The park was established on April 17, 2022, one of Washington's oldest state parks. At the time, there was no bridge across the pass; road traffic was handled by a small ferry whose operator strenuously opposed the construction of a bridge. The park's initial were dedicated in a ceremony on Whidbey Island on July 20, 1922.
While the park welcomed more than 20,000 visitors in 1924, development of the park did not begin until the 1930s, when during the Great Depression Civilian Conservation Corps crews were set to work on recreational facilities, buildings and roads, including the approaches to the planned Deception Pass Bridge. CCC corps members initially worked on the park installations on Fidalgo Island; one the bridge was completed, they finished structures and development on the Whidbey Island side. During this time, the National Park Service briefly considered bringing the park into its system.
By 1964, the park spanned. It expanded with the addition of Hoypus Hill on Whidbey Island east of Cornet Bay in 1991. The tract was transferred from the state Department of Natural Resources and included old-growth forest.
In 1983, the park erected a two-sided wooden "story pole" at Rosario Beach that recounts the Samish legend of Ko-kwal-alwoot, the so-called "Maiden of Deception Pass". The statue was erected on the site of Coast Salish longhouses and potlatches.
In the early 1990s, the park notched more than five million visitors each year. By the 2020s, the park received more than three million visitors each year, notching 3.8 million in 2021 and 3.4 million in 2023. Washington residents account for three-fourths of the visitors, but the remainder come from the rest of the United States and foreign locations. Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, up to 40% of campers at the park were from Canada.

Recreation

The park includes 40 miles of trails. Trails cover a wide range of landscapes, including mountains, cliffs, beaches, wetlands and forests. Biking and horseback riding are available. Camping at 317 campsites is offered at Cranberry Lake, Cornet Bay and Bowman Bay. A retreat center at Cornet Bay accommodates 190.
Paddling is available in freshwater lakes and in protected bays, while the turbulent waters of Deception Pass provide the most challenging saltwater paddling in Washington state. Cranberry Lake offers swimming and boat rentals. Pass Lake provides fishing, while Campbell Lake provides access to motorized watercraft.

Flora and fauna

Flora in the park includes several old-growth stands of coastal Washington's prominent trees: Douglas firs, Western redcedar and Western hemlock. The oldest trees are older than 450 years old, with another batch more than 250 years old. One gnarled fir tree is estimated to be over 900 years old. Skagit Island was at one point the location of the largest Rocky Mountain juniper in Washington, standing tall and wide.
In addition to Douglas fir, cedar and hemlock, trees found in shoreline forests at Deception Pass State Park include alder, big-leaf maple, grand fir and spruce. With rockier, drier soil, the hilltop areas feature grassy and brushy areas with abundant wildflowers in spring. Trees in the upland areas include madrone and smaller Douglas fir specimens. Upland shrubs are snowberry, salal, Oregon grape, thimbleberry and Nootka rose. The wetlands are home to Nootka rose, salmonberry, red elderberry, Pacific willow, sword fern and skunk cabbage. Large kelp beds grow off of Rosario Head.
Fauna in the park include whales, bald eagles, loons and alligator lizards. Elephant seals frequent Bowman Bay, and Rosario Beach's tide pools provide habitat for sea cucumbers, crabs, snails and chitons.

Conservation

In the 1970s, several of the CCC-built structures were painted dark green and brown to make them uniform with other park facilities in the state. Decades later, volunteers stripped the paint to restore the buildings to their original rustic appearance. The park was nominated for the National Register of Historic Places in 2012. In 2019, several sections and facilities in the park were listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Several former CCC corps members helped the park create an interpretive center for the CCC heritage at Bowman Bay in 1988.
Since 2009, undersea resources have been protected as Deception Pass Underwater Park as part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's National System of Marine Protected Areas. Wildlife in Rosario Beach's tide pools, which are underwater at different times of day, have suffered from visitors walking through the area at low tide. To preserve and restore the tide pool habitat, park volunteers have created designated walkways using ropes.
In 2012 and 2015, respectively, the park removed creosote-coated wood and sea walls—originally built for long-defunct fish hatcheries—from Cornet Bay and Bowman Bay. Riprap was also removed from Bowman Bay beach. These artificial features hindered intertidal sea life.

Historic sites

Deception Pass State Park includes six historic districts or individually listed properties on the National Register of Historic Places. These properties were listed in 2019 as part of the Historic Park Landscapes in National and State Parks Multiple Property Submission.

Cornet Bay Fire Circle

The Cornet Bay Fire Circle was built on Whidbey Island at CCC Camp SP-3 in 1934–1935. It is a semi-circular enclosure with -tall, -thick walls extending out from a -high, -foot-wide stone and brick reflector. Altogether the fire circle spans feet and is paved with flagstones.
The fire circle is one of only a few installations in the park that were built expressly for the CCC worker camps. The camp area was converted and redeveloped for group camping and environmental learning in the 1950s and 1960s. The fire circle remained a focal point of the camping area. While the NRHP nomination form noted that the redevelopment has compromised the fire circle's setting, it retained sufficient integrity to be included in the multiple property listing for Deception Pass State Park sites.

Cornet Bay Incinerator

Located at the northeast end of the clearing where Camp SP-3 was sited, the incinerator was one of two built in the park for disposal of garbage. It was built of granite with a fire brick lining and iron doors and stands tall, deep and wide, a design typical of CCC-constructed incinerators in Washington. The incinerator has been minimally altered. It is surrounded by a log fence for the protection of youth at the nearby campground.

Cranberry Lake Bathing and Picnic Area

Cranberry Lake is located at the northwest end of Whidbey Island and was initially the only freshwater lake in the park. The historic district, located near Highway 20 at the east end of the lake, contains six CCC-constructed buildings: three kitchens, two comfort stations and a pump house. CCC workers from Company 266, based at Camp SP-3, graded and cleared the area to create an open grassy zone in front of the lake with mature evergreens studding the landscape. Only one CCC-era building has been removed, and the dock has been replaced, but the rest of the area retains its CCC-era character. Of the trees marked in the master plan for the parking area, 90 percent remained as of 2019 when the district was listed on the National Register.
Contributing structures in the district include a "combination" building used for cooking with a triple stove and a large fireplace; a shelter kitchen overlooking Cranberry Lake; a campstove shelter ; a pump house; a comfort station since transformed to house a transformer and generator; and a latrine. Sheltered campstoves were considered necessary in the rainy Pacific Northwest. Other contributing features of the historic district are the parking area, which has been updated only in its paving; a stone seawall that defined the swimming area in the lake; a drinking fountain; and the general landscaping of the lakefront beach and picnic area. The architect for the structures in this area is unknown.