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8th Ave S & S King St, Seattle

The Wing Luke Museum Mission: We connect everyone to the dynamic history, cultures, and art of Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians, and Pacific Islanders through vivid storytelling and inspiring experiences to advance racial and social equity. Located in Seattle’s Chinatown-International District, the Museum contains galleries, hosts tours, and conducts programs telling the stories of these...

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10 Pass Life Way, # 2,

The Washington State Ski and Snowboard Museum honors Washington’s ski and snowboard legends, preserves this state’s ski and snowboard history, educates visitors about this rich sports story and inspires future participation in Washington State’s many and varied ski and snowboard opportunities.

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165 SE Andrews Street, Issaquah

This museum has an exhibit of photographs, artifacts, and interactive elements exploring aspects of Issaquah’s past. It also has a hands-on kitchen exhibit with cooking implements, and a two-celled concrete jail that was used from 1914 until 1930.

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5011 Bernie Whitebear Way, Seattle

Daybreak Star, an event and conference space and a major nucleus of Native American cultural activity in its region, functions as a conference center, a location for pow wows, and more.

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UW Campus, 17th Ave NE and NE 45th St, Seattle

The Burke features the natural and cultural history of the Pacific Northwest – birds, fossils, logging tools – you name it, and one of the Burke’s education programs or exhibits can tell you about it. Located in the University District, the museum always has something new to teach, in an afternoon or a week-long...

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19901 Cedar Falls Rd SE,

The Cedar River Watershed provides the majority of Seattle’s and King County’s drinking water, with 90,050 acres of forest land preserved for the municipal water supply. School children participate in watershed field trips to learn how clean water comes to their homes. A visitors center includes interpretive displays, a garden with rain drums and...

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125 W. Sunset Way, Issaquah

The Issaquah Salmon Hatchery is the most visited of the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife’s hatcheries.  The grounds of the hatchery contain numerous informational displays about salmon.  In addition, the Friends of the Issaquah Hatchery offer various educational programming and opportunities for a variety of age levels.

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Spring Chinook Rd,

This facility combines traditional hatchery operations with research into rearing techniques that better mimic the natural environment. The facility has a viewing area, information kiosk, and volunteer host who can answer questions about the operations. At the time of the Yakama Treaty of 1855, 200,000 spring Chinook returned annually to the Yakima subbasin via...