Wonderful Point Defiance Park

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    Wonderful Point Defiance Park

    Tacoma, Washington

    Paul Richardson

    2012

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    Sometimes you are just lucky, I guess. We were looking for somewhere not

    far away to go on a pretty Sunday afternoon in September and found a

    report in the AAA guidebook for Point Defiance Park in Tacoma, just across

    the sound from our base in Federal Way. Of course without a boat we had

    to drive a ways but when we arrived we saw the descriptions didnt do itjustice. I am hoping that including some pictures will give you a feeling of

    this being a place you should visit if the opportunity arises. The first

    impression is a beautiful one of the large flower garden. The northwest is

    great for growing roses and they have a big display of them but also huge

    Dahlias and other beautiful flowers.

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    Puget Sound

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    Fort Nisqually is a living history museum. In the spring of 1832, during a

    routine trip between Fort Langley and Fort Vancouver, Chief Trader

    Archibald McDonald of the London-based Hudsons BayCompany (HBC)paused for a few days on the Nisqually River. Under orders to find a

    suitable location for the establishment of a post in the lower Puget Sound

    region, McDonald supervised the construction of a storehouse and left

    several servants in charge with a couple of kegs of potatoes, garden seeds

    and blankets for trade.

    The following spring McDonald oversaw the construction of a large walled

    wooden fortification a short distance inland on the grassy plateau east of

    the original landing site. For the next six years, Fort Nisqually was anoutpost of the fur trade that drove the HBC across the North American

    continent in pursuit of beaver pelts. The main suppliers of the furs were

    local native tribes who took a fancy to the wool blankets, guns and other

    manufactured goods offered by the HBC.

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    The decline of the fur trade in the late 1830s and the high cost of supplying

    the distant HBC operations spurred the Company to look for new sources of

    revenue. Fort Nisqually became the headquarters of a subsidiary called the

    Puget Sound Agricultural Company, formed to oversea the production of

    grain, produce and livestock for local consumption, as well as export up anddown the West Coast. To take advantage of more open land and fresh

    water, Fort Nisqually was moved inland a mile from its original site in the

    early 1840s. The fort standing today in Point Defiance Park is a

    reproduction of this second site.

    A treaty between the United States and Great Britain, signed in 1846,

    extended a border along the 49th parallel to the Pacific Ocean and left the

    HBC operating on foreign soil and contending with the influx of American

    settlers. By the late 1860s marginal profits no longer compensated for themounting harassment from American revenue agents, tax collectors and

    settlers. In 1869, Fort Nisqually was closed. In the following years only the

    Factors House and the Granary avoided disrepair and decay that befell the

    rest of the structures. The fort was rebuilt in the 1930s on land owned by

    the Metropolitan Park District.

    From the entrance through the Mens Dwelling House

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    Factors House, only building not in hewn log construction

    In large store haranguing ladies that they need to ditch the man pants

    (jeans) and be outfitted in proper ladies attire for $3.20.

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    Store Goods, including the famous Hudson Bay wool blankets, with points.

    Fur pelts taken in trade

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    Smithy

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    Back of Factors House, the bake oven, kitchen and wash house

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    Sparse sleeping quarters, easy to clean if have few belongings

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    Kitchen

    Wash house

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    Factors dining room

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    It wouldnt be British without Punch and Judy

    There is also a zoo & aquarium in Point Defiance Park which we didnt visit.

    As to the Point Defiance name: Point Defiance Park began as a militaryreservation after theWilkes Expeditionvisited Puget Sound in the 1840s to

    map the bays and estuaries. Wilkes is thought to have noted that with a fort

    positioned at the point, and at Gig Harbor across the narrows, one could

    "Defy" the world.[2]The high cliffs and prominent location were never used

    for military operations.

    As you can see Point Defiance Park is impossible to cover adequately in

    one visit. Thus, it is a source of ongoing pleasure for those who visit.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Wilkeshttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Wilkeshttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Wilkeshttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Point_Defiance_Park#cite_note-1http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Point_Defiance_Park#cite_note-1http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Point_Defiance_Park#cite_note-1http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Point_Defiance_Park#cite_note-1http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Wilkes