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Seattle Parks and Recreation. Lincoln Park is a 135 acres (0.55 km 2) park in West Seattle alongside Puget Sound. The park's attractions include forest trails, a paved walkway along the beach, athletic fields, picnic shelters, and a heated saltwater swimming pool which is open during the summer. The park is adjacent to the Fauntleroy neighborhood.
West Seattle. Coordinates: 47°33′40″N 122°23′12″W. West Seattle. West Seattle is a conglomeration of neighborhoods in Seattle, Washington, United States. It comprises two of the thirteen districts, Delridge and Southwest, and encompasses all of Seattle west of the Duwamish River. It was incorporated as an independent town in 1902 ...
The water tower on the horizon is in Volunteer Park. George Floyd memorial graffiti at Lincoln Reservoir in Cal Anderson Park on June 25, 2020, during CHAZ/CHOP occupation of the park and surrounding area. Lincoln Reservoir was begun in 1889, in response to the Great Seattle Fire of the same year, and was completed in 1901. A parcel just south of
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Fauntleroy is a neighborhood in the southwest corner of Seattle, Washington. Part of West Seattle and situated on Puget Sound 's Fauntleroy Cove (into which Fauntleroy Creek flows from its source in Fauntleroy Park ), it faces Vashon Island, Blake Island, and the Kitsap Peninsula to the west. On sunny days, many locations in the neighborhood ...
Lincoln Park / Lincoln Reservoir and Bobby Morris Playfield (now Cal Anderson Park) 1000 E. Pine Street: More images: liq'ted (Licton) Springs Park: 9536 Ashworth Ave. N, Seattle, WA 98103: More images: 2019: Lloyd Building: 601 Stewart Street
Parks administered by Seattle Parks and Recreation. 12th Ave. Square Park. 12th West & West Howe Park. 14th Avenue NW Boat Ramp. 3001 E Madison Park. 32nd Ave W Boat Launch. 6th Avenue NW Pocket Park. A. B. Ernst Park. Adams Street Boat Ramp.
Location. Seattle, Washington. Opened. 1907. Closed. 1913. Luna Park was an amusement park in Seattle, Washington that operated from 1907 until 1913. Designed by famed carousel carver Charles I. D. Looff, who carved and installed Coney Island's very first carousel, Luna Park took its name from Coney Island's Luna Park.