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Encompassing 184,674 sq km (71,303 sq mi), Washington ranks 18th among the states in land area and, with 4,866,692 inhabitants (1990 census), 18th in population. The population is increasing at a greater rate than the national average. Thousands of years of occupancy by American Indians were interrupted during the late 18th century by the arrival of European and American explorers and traders. The ensuing fur trade gave way to permanent white settlement during the 1840s. Washington, with its capital at OLYMPIA, became a territory in 1853 and in 1889 became the 42d state. Long noted for its abundant natural resources of water, timber, and fish, today Washington is a leader in the aerospace industry, international trade, and tourism.
Washington is characterized by greatly varying relief and scenery. Although the rough outline of Washington's coast totals only 253 km (157 mi), the actual coastline is 4,870 km (3,026 mi) because of the many inlets and small islands in PUGET SOUND. The Strait of JUAN DE FUCA and the adjoining Puget Sound and Strait of Georgia separate the Olympic Mountains (highest peak, Mount Olympus, at 2,428 m/7,965 ft) on the Olympic Peninsula from British Columbia's Vancouver Island. To the east and southeast of the sound is a coastal plain, the Puget Sound lowland. To the east the lowland gives way to the CASCADE RANGE (highest peak, Mount Rainier, at 4,392 m/14,410 ft). Scarred and sculpted by glaciers and ice sheets, the Cascades are dominated by dormant volcanoes, in addition to Mount Rainier (including Adams, Baker, and Glacier). Another volcano in the Cascades, Mount St. Helens--dormant since 1857--erupted in 1980, causing extensive damage mostly from volcanic ash. To the far east lie the lower slopes of the ROCKY MOUNTAINS. In the north are the Okanogan Highlands. Enclosed by the mountains (except in the southeast) lies the roughly triangular-shaped Columbia Basin, which incorporates incised coulees, lava plateaus, and undulating hills. The Columbia Basin and the Puget Sound lowland constitute Washington's only extensive level areas. Climate Tourism
American Indians have inhabited Washington for more than 10,000 years and developed life-styles that remained little changed until the arrival of European explorers 2 centuries ago. Archaeological evidence found at Marmes Cave, North Bonneville, and elsewhere have provided significant archaeological evidence. The settled Coast Salish bands of western Washington--including the CHINOOK, NISQUALLY, and PUYALLUP--lived in cedar lodges, had salmon and shellfish as their staples, and developed elaborate POTLATCH ceremonies. The plateau Indians of the interior--including the NEZ PERCE, OKANOGAN, SPOKAN, and YAKIMA--were nomadic hunters who eventually lived in skin tepees and depended on the horse for their peripatetic life-style. Exploration and Confrontation Coastal exploration by the Spanish began during the 16th century. The first landing was made in 1775, by Bruno Heceta and Juan Francisco de la Bodega y Quadra, near Point Grenville, to forestall Russian expansion southward from Alaska. The English captain James Cook sailed along the coast in 1778, and the American captain Robert GRAY discovered the Columbia River in 1792. The same year, Capt. George VANCOUVER completed the first mapping of the entire coastline. Overland exploration, initiated by the LEWIS AND CLARK EXPEDITION in 1805-06, was completed within a decade by David THOMPSON and various fur traders. The Fur Trade and White Settlement An influx of American missionaries, led by Marcus WHITMAN and Jason Lee, into the Oregon country during the 1830s was followed in the next decade by the first rush--5,000 strong--of American settlers, and the competing British and U.S. claims quickly came to a climax. British preference for the Columbia River and America's political slogan of "Fifty-four forty or fight!" (referring to the latitude 54 deg 40') gave way to compromise, however, when, in 1846, the 49th parallel was chosen as the boundary between Canada and the United States (see OREGON QUESTION). Through the 1850s, Oregon's Willamette River valley drew most of the Northwest's new settlers. In eastern Washington, the Whitman massacre at Waiilatpu in 1847 was followed by protracted Indian wars that lasted throughout the next decade and delayed occupation of the Columbia Basin. Meanwhile, settlements were established around Puget Sound--Olympia in 1846, Seattle and Port Townsend in 1851, and Whatcom (later Bellingham) in 1852. Economic Growth and Statehood Development was slow during the 1850s, but by 1860 the white population numbered 12,000. During the next three decades lumbering operations proliferated along Puget Sound. Coal and gold were discovered and mined, salmon canning begun, the Palouse River valley occupied and the so-called inland wheat empire established, irrigation of parts of the Columbia Basin attempted, and railroad lines built, notably the Northern Pacific and the Great Northern. By 1880 the population exceeded 75,000, and by 1890 it had reached 357,000. Seattle, Spokane, and Tacoma had emerged as major urban centers. In 1889, Washington became the 42d state. Elisha Ferry was elected as the first governor. 20th Century
Area: 184,674 sq km (71,303 sq mi); rank: 18th.
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