The State Washington State
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A REPORT ON WASHINGTON STATE
BY KATRINA SCHOLD
The State of Washington is located in the far northwest corner of the United States. It has 66,582 square miles between the Pacific Ocean on the west and the Idaho boarder to the east. Washington borders Canada on the north and Oregon on the south along the Columbia River.
Washington is the 20th largest state and has very different western and eastern natural environments, which are divided by the Cascade Range. It is home to 6 million residents (2001 census estimate) who are employed in a diverse economy dominated by aviation; software and other technological enterprises; wheat, apples, beans, and other agriculture; forest products; and fishing. The state is a major exporter of manufactured goods, foodstuffs, raw materials, and hydroelectricity, and it is a popular tourist destination.
Today Washington is home to numerous Native American tribes and has been for at least 10,000 years. The first European explorers and traders visited in the late 1700s. Lewis and Clark followed the Snake River and Columbia River to arrive at the Pacific Ocean by what is known as Long Beach today, in November 1805. The Hudsons Bay Company had major forts and trading stations in the early 1800s, along with American fur traders, settlers, and missionaries.
Great Britain and the United States together occupied the area between 1818 and 1846. Then Britain gave the Pacific Northwest below the 49th parallel to the U.S. Two years later, the U.S. created Oregon Territory, which included the future states of Oregon, Washington, and Idaho and part of Montana. Washington Territory, which included Idaho and western Montana until 1863 was separated from Oregon on March 2,1853, and gained statehood on November 11, 1889.
Olympia has been the capital of Washington Territory and State since 1853. Seattle is the states most populous city with a population of 563,000 in 2000, followed in rank by Spokane, Tacoma, Vancouver, Bellevue, and Everett.
Political History
The federal government created Oregon Territory on August 14, 1848. The area of the new jurisdiction included what we know as Oregon, Washington, Idaho, and western Montana today. Finding gold in California in 1848 started a large migration westward of people, and the settlement of Oregon Territory was promoted by the passage of the Donation Land Claims Act of 1850, which gave 160 acres to any U.S. citizen who agreed to stay on his or her land for five years.
On August 29, 1851, 27 male settlers met at Cowlitz Landing to ask Congress for a separate “Columbia Territory” that would cover the area between the Columbia River and 49th parallel. 44 delegates who met in Monticello on November 25, 1852 reaffirmed the petition. Congress approved the new territory on February 10, 1853, but changed the name to “Washington.”
President Millard Fillmore signed the bill on March 2, 1853, and Olympia was became the Territorial Capital. President Frankly Pierce named Isaac I. Stevens to be the first governor of the area that included northern Idaho and western Montana until President Abraham Lincoln established Idaho Territory on March 4, 1863.
Washingtons non-native population grew steadily to more than 300,000 over the following decades. The residents began petitioning for statehood in 1881, and President Benjamin Harris admitted Washington to the Union on November 11, 1889.
Political Organization
Thirty federally recognized sovereign Indian tribes and reservations occupy substantial areas in Washington, plus an additional seven unrecognized but culturally distinct tribes.
Washington has a two chamber Legislature and is divided into 49 Legislative Districts, each of which elects one Senator to a four-year term, and two Representatives to two-year terms. The Governor, Lieutenant Governor, Secretary of State, Attorney General, Auditor, Treasurer, Commissioner of Public Lands, Superintendent of Public Instruction, and Insurance Commissioner are elected statewide to four-year terms. The nine members of the State Supreme Court are elected statewide to six-year terms. Washingtons State Constitution has been substantially amended since 1889, and has authorized citizen initiatives and referenda since 1912.
Washington currently has 39 counties, and hundreds of incorporated cities and other special districts responsible for local government and services. Voters elect Members of Congress from nine districts as well as two United States Senators representing the entire state.
State Emblems and Anthems
State Motto: The word “Alki,” pronounced “AL-kee,” means “by and by” in the Chinook trading jargon used by the early Euro-American traders and Native Americans in the Pacific Northwest. Charles Terry first used it in 1852 to name his settlement, originally called “New York” after his native state, on present-day Alki Beach in West Seattle. Alki was used in the original Territorial Seal, which also shows a representation of the “Goddess of Good Hope,” an anchor, and a depiction of buildings in a forest.
State Seal: The official State Seal shows an image of President George Washington adapted in 1967 by graphic designer Richard Nelms from the famous Gilbert Stuart portrait. The first 1889 version of the seal was created by jeweler George Talcott, who placed a postage stamp bearing Washingtons picture inside two rings which was traced from an ink bottle and a silver dollar. Talcotts brothers then wrote “Great Seal of the State of Washington 1889” between the two circles, and cut a die for printing.
State Flag: Washington adopted its official flag, featuring the State Seal on a green background, in 1923.
State Nickname: The phrase “The Evergreen State” appears on Washington license plates and in many official and unofficial uses, but it has never been formally adopted. Historian and journalist C. T. Connover is credited with coining it.
State Song: Washingtons official anthem is the highly forgettable ditty, “Washington, My Home,” with lyrics by Helen Davis and music by Stuart Churchill. Adopted in 1959, the song succeeded the unofficial anthem “Washington Beloved,” penned by University of Washington professor Edmund