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Magnuson Park is a park in the Sand Point neighborhood of Seattle, Washington, United States. At 350 acres (140 ha) it is the second-largest park in Seattle, after Discovery Park in Magnolia (which covers 534 acres (2.16 km 2 )).
Straight Shot is a 2007 public art work at the Sand Point calibration baseline in Magnuson Park, Seattle.It was created by Seattle artist Perri Lynch, and funded by the City of Seattle's 1% for Art program, [1] Trimble and the Washington Surveyors Association.
A Sound Garden is an outdoor public art work in Seattle, Washington, United States.It is one of six such works on the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) campus, which lies adjacent to Warren G. Magnuson Park on the northwestern shore of Lake Washington.
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The Seafair Pirates, depicted here at White Center Jubilee Days (2007) just south of Seattle, are longstanding fixtures of Seattle's Seafair-sanctioned parades. Seattle, Washington, United States has almost twenty neighborhoods that host one or more street fairs and/or parades.
Date Event December 30, 2000 Foundation poured. December 31, 2000 Monolith erected. [1] January 3, 2001 Monolith taken by unknown persons and moved to Duck Island in Seattle's Green Lake. [2] [3] January 5, 2001 A group calling themselves "Some People" come forth to claim the Monolith from Duck Island.
The area around Sand Point and Pontiac Bay was donated to the Seattle city government in 1918 by Morgan J. Carkeek to form a new city park, which was named Carkeek Park. The 23-acre (9.3 ha) park was condemned by the federal government in 1926 for use as a naval air station ; a $25,000 payment was used to establish new Carkeek Park on the west ...
The entertainments in Seattle in its first decade were typical of similar frontier towns. [3] The first established place of entertainment was Henry Yesler's one-story 30 feet (9.1 m) x 100 feet (30.5 m) hall (built 1865), which hosted monologuists, Swiss bellringers, phrenologists and the like.