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Ebey's Landing National Historical Reserve

Ebey’s Landing is the nation’s first historical reserve, created in 1978 to protect a rural working landscape & community on Central Whidbey Island. The reserve contains 17,500 acres, 18 working farms, 400 historical structures, native prairies, two state parks, miles of shoreline, a network of trails and the second oldest town in Washington. The Reserve is managed by a 9-member Trust Board.

 
Ebey's Forever Conference Poster

A Success - Ebey's Forever Conference 2009!

A big thanks to all who helped make Ebey’s Forever Conference and Community Event - November 6 & 7, 2009 - a great success!

This event included over 250 participants, 60 speakers, 35 organizations, all contributing to field trips, workshops, music and food. We appreciate all of the voices and contributions to the cooperative management of a changing community and cultivating rural roots. We hope to see you next year!

More information: e-mail us, www.ebeysforever.com

 
Ebey's Landing

Rural America of the Last Century

The reserve was set aside by Congress in 1978 to preserve and protect a rural community—a cultural landscape—that is a laboratory of Pacific Northwest history. Today, historic land uses continue, with the rich prairie soils still being farmed, the forests being harvested, and century-old buildings being used as homes or places of business.

 
Coupeville Cafe

Stories within a Cultural Landscape

Some of the important stories the reserve interprets to the public are those of Isaac Ebey, a person significant in early territorial government and the first European-American settler to claim land on Central Whidbey island before Washington became a state; the story of settlement under the Donation Land Claim Act between 1850 and 1855; the explorations of Captain George Vancouver in 1792; and the development and growth of the historic town of Coupeville.

 
Smith Farm

A Unique Partnership

The reserve is a non-traditional unit of the National Park system. It is the first unit of its kind in the system, with most of the land under private ownership. A unit of local government, the Trust Board of Ebey's Landing National Historical Reserve, is charged with management as called for in the legislation creating the Reserve. The Trust Board is a partnership of local, state and federal governments working collaboratively to ensure the historic and natural resources of the reserve are protected for future generations to enjoy and experience.

 

Write to

Reserve Manager
P.O. Box 774
162 Cemetery Road
Coupeville, WA 98239

Phone

Visitor Information
(360) 678-6084

Fax

(360) 678-2246

Climate

View current conditions and a multi-day forecast at Coupeville, Washington from the National Weather Service in Seattle.
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Hedgerows  

Did You Know?
Hedgerows function as fences, property lines, important cultural ties with the past, and extremely valuable wildlife habitat. In the Reserve, hedgerows define historic cultural land use patterns dating back to early Euro-American settlement in the 1850s.

Last Updated: November 10, 2009 at 12:29 EST