File #: 22-0262    Version: 1
Type: public hearing Status: Filed
File created: 3/10/2022 In control: Parks and Recreation Advisory Committee
Agenda date: 3/17/2022 Final action: 3/17/2022
Title: Public Hearing for Proposed Renaming of Priest Point Park to Squaxin Park
Attachments: 1. Resolution 21-74 of the Squaxin Island Tribal Council, 2. Squaxin Accord 2021
Related files: 22-0352
Title
Public Hearing for Proposed Renaming of Priest Point Park to Squaxin Park

Recommended Action
Hold the public hearing and make a recommendation to the City Council to approve the proposed name of "Squaxin Park" for Priest Point Park.

Report
Issue:
This is an opportunity for PRAC to hear from the public and consider the Squaxin Island Tribe's proposed name of "Squaxin Park" for the 314 acre park known as Priest Point Park located at 2600 East Bay Drive NE.

Staff Contact:
Sylvana Niehuser, Director of Parks Planning and Maintenance, Parks, Arts and Recreation, 360.753.8068

Presenter(s):
Sylvana Niehuser, Director of Parks Planning and Maintenance, Parks, Arts and Recreation, 360.753.8068

Background and Analysis:
The Squaxin Island Tribe's habitation of what is now Olympia spans thousands of years. The ancestral families who lived and thrived here named the area Steh-Chass and occupied prosperous villages all along the shores and inlets of lower Puget Sound. Archeological findings of ancestral artifacts in the area suggest habitation by Squaxin ancestors since the retreat of the glaciers during the last Ice Age.

Squaxin Island history also indicates that the Tribe valued the area that is now Priest Point Park for ready access to fresh and salt water, the abundant salmon from the creeks, and rich clam beds. The Tribe frequented the shorelines and woods to gather, meet, and trade with other Tribes and Coast Salish peoples from the many inlets and waterways of Puget Sound. The Tribe's concern for stewardship of the park's natural and cultural resources continues today.

Despite its importance to the Squaxin Island Tribe for thousands of years, Priest Point Park was named after a small group of Catholic missionaries, the Oblate Fathers, who came to the area in 1848. They cleared the land, planted a large garden, built a chapel, and established the St. Joseph d'Olympia mission. The mission operated for just 12 years, until 1860.

Renaming Priest Point...

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