Wah-Sha-She Park
Wah-Sha-She Park, formerly named Wah-Sha-She State Park, is on the shore of Hulah Lake in Osage County, Oklahoma. The park offers recreational activities including boating, fishing, swimming and camping. Hunting is allowed in the adjacent Wildlife Management Area. There is also a Waterfowl Refuge where birdwatching is allowed.
Regarding the name, one version has it coming from the Osage language, meaning "the water people." Another version claims the tribe called itself Wah-Zha-Zhe when French explorer Jacques Marquette encountered them in the 17th century. The map he produced in 1673 translated the name into the French as Ouchage. In effect, the park is named for the Osage people.
History
This park was established in 1973. It is northwest of Pawhuska, Oklahoma, on Oklahoma State Highway 99, then east on State Highway 10. It is west of Copan, Oklahoma, on Oklahoma State Highway 10.Closure threatened
In 2011, the state announced its intention to close Wah-Sha-She State Park as part of its budget-cutting program. That Labor Day, the Osage Nation took over management of the park, which is owned by the United States Army Corps of Engineers.Chief John Red Eagle said,
"The Osage people have made it clear that one of their priorities is to expand and improve water recreation on the reservation, including swimming, boating, camping and fishing. This one step enables the Osage Nation to begin realizing that goal."
Chief John Red Eagle of the Osage Nation signed a management agreement with the Corps of Engineers in May 2012, although the Osage legislative branch had previously voted down funding the take-over. The agreement extends through 2016, at which time the Osage Nation will reevaluate whether to extend it.
A news report in 2013 indicated that the tribe had upgraded the park. It attracted 15,000 visitors in 2012 and the number in mid 2013 had surpassed that of the previous year.
Unfortunately, revenues declined in 2014 to $24,000 from $50,000 in 2013. Operating expenses rose from $140,000 in 2014 to about $150,000 in 2015. Principal Chief Geoffrey Standing Bear notified the Corps of Engineers that the Osage Nation would terminate its lease for the park.