Parks and recreation in Chehalis, Washington
Parks and recreation in Chehalis, Washington is administered by the Chehalis Parks and Recreation Department. Trails that connect Chehalis with locations beyond the city limits are maintained in conjunction with other local jurisdictions, state government agencies, and/or local non-profit groups and volunteers.
The city contains eleven parks, many of which were created on land donated by local citizens. Millett Field, begun in 1898, is the oldest park still in use. The newest addition to the city's park and recreation program, Stan Hedwall Park, was acquired in 2014. A large donation in 2004 to restore Alexander Park has led to more than half of the parks being renovated or rebuilt, almost exclusively by volunteer efforts. Funding for this undertaking was secured thru government grants, charitable acts of local businesses, and citizen fundraising.
Residents and visitors have access to approximately of parks built for leisure, children's activities, water access, or athletics, along with numerous trails and footpaths providing over of walking, hiking, horse riding, and biking recreation. Chehalis provides 4 times the minimal, satisfactory levels for park acreage for a community similar to that of the city's population.
Parks
The city, incorporated since 1883, had been without a city park from its inception and throughout the remainder of the 19th century. Despite sporting events taking place as early as 1896 on grounds that would become Millett Field, and attempts to donate Duffy Park in the 1880s, no official park yet existed. In 1898, an opinion piece in the town newspaper, The Chehalis Bee, coupled with a request from the city council for landowners to donate parcels for recreation purposes, helped to start a community parks program.Chehalis has a long tradition of citizen fundraising to purchase, build, and maintain its parks. Early parks were funded via a subscription service. A long serving parks superintendent, Stan Hedwall, was known as "Mr. Sign Man" due to his nature of building signage for existing parks during his oversight in the mid-20th century. Hedwall published a book in 1962 to promote the Chehalis park system and community pool. Titled, Why Battle Seattle? 90 Minutes To The Fair. Relax In Chehalis, it was provided to visitors during the 1962 Seattle World's Fair.
In the 21st century, a collaboration of Chehalis residents, the city government, various service clubs, and local organizations such as the Chehalis Foundation, the Lewis County Community Trails Association, and Experience Chehalis, have spearheaded endeavors to restore and renovate several of the parks.
The Chehalis Parks Department received $100,000 in funding from the Washington State Recreation and Conservation Office in late 2023. The grant is to be used to procure machinery to maintain the fields and turf areas of Lintott-Alexander and Stan Hedwall parks, and to renovate the restrooms on the grounds of the Recreation Park Complex, also known as the Chehalis Sports Complex.
| Name | Image | Established | Location | Size | Description |
| Chet and Henrietta Rhodes Spray Park | 2007 | South Market district | Replaced a wading pool from the original 1959 aquatic center | ||
| Gail and Carolyn Shaw Aquatics Center | 2014 | South Market district | Replaced the 1959 Chehalis Community Pool | ||
| Henderson Park | 1962 | South Market district | Used as a command center for the city during emergencies | ||
| John Dobson Park | 1908 | Hillside District | Trailhead for the Dobson-McFadden Trail is located near the Troop 373 and 7373 Scout Lodge | ||
| Lintott-Alexander Park | ca. 1920 | Confluence of Chehalis and Newaukum Rivers | Originally named Alexander Park, it was renovated in the early 2000's after a long closure | ||
| McFadden Park | 1912 | Hillside District | Named after Obadiah B. McFadden | ||
| Millett Field | 1898 | South Market District | Home to the Chehalis Gophers | ||
| Penny Playground | 1993 | South Market District | Complete renovation and reopening, 2021 | ||
| Recreation Park | 1954 | South Market District | Major renovation and reopening, 2021 | ||
| Stan Hedwall Park | 2014 | West Chehalis | Largest park in Chehalis | ||
| Westside Park | ca. 1949 | Pennsylvania Avenue-West Side Historic District | Originally a playground for an elementary school that was razed due to damages from the 1949 Olympia earthquake |
Trails
Outside of the Dobson-McFadden Trail, the trails at Stan Hedwall, and footpaths located within the Recreation Park complex, the city has three significant trails, two of which extend beyond the municipality. A non-profit group, the Lewis County Community Trails Association, was organized in 2006 to help coordinate the creation of trails within the city and Lewis County. There were plans to create a trail connecting the Port of Chehalis to Stan Hedwall Park and nearby tourist locations in the 2000s, but despite a small feasibility study, the project did not proceed. Future plans include linking recreational areas in Chehalis to parks and trails in Centralia, ultimately connecting the entire system with the Willapa Hills Trail.Airport Levee Trail
The trail is mixed paved-gravel built atop a levee and loops for around the Chehalis-Centralia Airport and Twin City Town Center. Built in large part by community efforts and $300,000 in funding from TransAlta, the trail was first available for use in 2010. The trail provides views of the Riverside Golf Course, airport, and farmland, with views of the Chehalis River.Airport Road Trail
The mixed-use paved trail is and runs parallel to Interstate 5 to the east, with farmland and close views of the Chehalis River to the west. Completed in 2014, the south trailhead links with the Airport Levee Trail and continues north, passing over Salzer Creek and into Centralia, officially terminating at the Twin Transit Mellen Street station. Future plans include building ramps to an existing pedestrian portion of the I-5 bridge over the Skookumchuck River which would link the trail to Fort Borst Park and other recreational areas in Centralia.Willapa Hills Trail
At, the intercounty trail is part of the Willapa Hills State Park and stretches from Chehalis to South Bend, Washington. It is built over a decommissioned railroad. The trail journeys near or thru such Lewis County towns as Adna, Claquato, Ceres, Doty, and McCormick, while passing by the ghost town of Walville. A spur allows users to traverse thru Rainbow Falls State Park near Dryad. Mostly complete within Lewis County, with a mix of pavement and compact gravel, the trail is considered unimproved for large stretches in Pacific County. The trail is under the maintenance auspices of the Washington State Park System and is open for non-motorized activities year round to hikers, bicyclists, and horse riding.Defunct and extinct parks
Chehalis Band Park
The park began in 1904 under the purchase and operation of a local organized band, the Chehalis Concert Band. It was located near the northern city limits on National Avenue and was split by the connecting road and railroad tracks leading to Centralia. Listed as in size, the east portion of the park had an fence. Funding to purchase the land and make improvements was collected by band performances, including the presentations of minstrel shows. Subsequent funding was provided with concerts and dances at the park. The park had plans to include a covered pavilion with a band stage and dance floor. In late 1905, a portion of the park was purchased for use as a foundry and machine shop and the pavilion was enclosed and utilized as part of the iron works plant.The remaining park grounds began to be referred to as Twin City Park by 1910, due to its location on the border of Chehalis and Centralia. By 1911, a hall had been built but used sparingly, and a grandstand had been constructed. The park was sold in November 1911 to the Liederkranz society, a local German social organization, and the property converted into a mixed-use theater and dance hall. After the construction of the Liederkranz Hall, the grounds were occasionally alluded to as a park or treated as such, and in some cases the site was given the name Recreation Park. The last newspaper report to allude to Twin City Park was in 1916.
During spring 1918, coinciding with the involvement of the United States in World War I, the German Liederkranz Hall was demanded to be renamed by a local Chehalis citizen's club; the hall became known as the Chehalis Auditorium. Months later, the venue suffered severe damages due to arson. The auditorium was renamed the Liberty Hall shortly thereafter but fell into decay and the park grounds went unused. The building that was once the Liederkranz Hall was condemned and destroyed completely after a fire in February 1926.
Chehalis Municipal Rose Garden
The Chehalis Municipal Rose Garden was an accredited test garden for the commercial viability of certain rose species. It was located between the Chehalis city hall and library, near the present day site of the Vernetta Smith Chehalis Timberland Library. The grounds were created in 1934. Annual gardening events and competitions for roses have been held in the city since then although the garden was not officially considered created until the late 1940s. By 1960, the nursery was one of only 51 test gardens for roses in the United States.The rose garden was an important part of the city's nickname, "The Rose City", which was chosen in 2000. The grounds contained 75 varieties of roses, some of which were national prize winners of the All-America Rose Selections. A total of 300 rose bushes were listed as being planted in the space by the turn of the 21st century. The garden was removed during the demolition of the previous library in 2007. The rose bushes were transplanted to Henderson Park but did not thrive. A year before the removal, the Chehalis Municipal Rose Garden was one of six accredited AARS gardens in the state and one of 138 in the nation.