Eastsound, Washington Eastsound Eastsound is positioned in Washington (state) Eastsound - Eastsound Location in the state of Washington State Washington County San Juan Emmanuel Episcopal Church (Eastsound, Washington) Constructed 1885, listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Eastsound (not to be confused with East Sound, which is the body of water adjoining Eastsound) is an unincorporated improve on Orcas Island in San Juan County, Washington, United States.

Eastsound is the biggest population center on Orcas Island, the second-most populated (after San Juan Island) and physically biggest of the San Juan Islands.

Eastsound comprises of a several hotels and a several restaurants, t stores, a large downtown grocery store, natural food store, hardware store, pharmacy, airport, and a several churches.

Indian Island is just offshore Eastsound's enhance beach.

Eastsound's scenic locale makes it a prominent tourist destination.

Eastsound, Washington is known for its improve affairs, recreation and tourism.

Half a mile north of Eastsound is Orcas Island Airport, with scheduled service to Seattle, Bellingham, Anacortes, Friday Harbor and Lopez Island and unscheduled service to many other locations.

Moran State Park is positioned nearby.

The first inhabitants of Eastsound were the Lummi tribe, who were often raided by the warlike Haida, who traveled from Southeast Alaska in massive war canoes to attack the Lummis, for the purpose of slaving.

One of the first European pioneer of Eastsound was Charles Shattuck, who assembled a log cabin and directed a store in the late 1850s.

Belle Langell was the first white child born on Orcas, the daughter of Ephraim and Rosa Langell, who homesteaded near Michael Adams in present-day Eastsound.

The Emmanuel Episcopal Church (Eastsound, Washington) was the first church on Orcas Island, was assembled in 1885, by the Reverend Sidney Robert Spencer Gray, on a plot of territory deeded from Charles Shattuck.

Steamboats of the Puget Sound Mosquito Fleet used to dock at East Sound, one such vessel was the Sioux, a steel steamship assembled in 1910 and running out of Bellingham under the ownership of the Black Ball Line. Climate data for Eastsound, Washington Wikimedia Commons has media related to Eastsound, Washington.

Eastsound travel guide from Wikivoyage Municipalities and communities of San Juan County, Washington, United States Steamboats of Puget Sound and Washington State

Categories:
Unincorporated communities in San Juan County, Washington - Unincorporated communities in Washington (state)