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Founded in 1882 and platted in 1889, Reardan was named for Central Washington Railroad engineer C.F. Reardan. [5] Reardan was incorporated on April 14, 1903. The town is home to the elementary/middle/high school serving the Reardan-Edwall School District, covering over 360 square miles (930 km 2 ) in Lincoln and Spokane counties.
Reardan-Edwall School District is a school district in Washington, headquartered in Reardan. [1] It serves Reardan and Edwall . Its schools are Reardan Elementary School and Reardan Middle/High School.
Edwall is a small unincorporated community located about 35 miles from the city of Spokane in Lincoln County, Washington, United States. Edwall is part of the Reardan-Edwall School District. The former Edwall School is now owned by the Parks and Recreation District and leased to Christian Heritage School, a private non-denominational school.
The Spokane River Bridge at Long Lake Dam, at Long Lake Dam near Reardan, Washington, is a historic 486-foot (148 m) concrete bridge that was built in 1949.It was a work of the State Department of Highways and of Henry Hagman.
State Route 231 (SR 231) is a 74.97-mile (120.65 km) long state highway in the U.S. state of Washington serving communities in Lincoln and Stevens counties. The highway, located entirely west of Spokane in the Inland Empire, serves Sprague, Edwall, Reardan, Springdale, Valley and Chewelah.
South Fork Deep Creek rises two miles south of Reardan [5] and flows in a "U" shape first south-southeast before turning to the northeast at Willon Springs. [ 6 ] About one mile downstream of the confluence the stream turns to the northwest and begins paralleling a nearly 200-foot-tall hillside where the deep nature of the name begins to become ...
Reardan,_Washington,_ca_1910_(WASTATE_304).jpeg (768 × 474 pixels, file size: 66 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
Out of over 90,000 National Register sites nationwide, [2] Washington is home to approximately 1,500, [3] and 11 of those are found partially or wholly in Lincoln County. This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted November 29, 2024.