Shaw Island
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Shaw Island is the smallest of the four San Juan Islands served by the Washington State Ferries. The island has a land area of Template:Convert and a small year-round population of 188<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> (2020 census). During the summer time, weekends swell with other residents and the occasional tourist.
History

The island is within the historical territory of the Lummi Nation. The United States obtained Shaw Island and the rest of the San Juan archipelago by treaty in 1855, but Lummi retained certain cultural and resource rights, including fishing.
The Wilkes Expedition, in 1841, named the island after John Shaw, a United States Naval Officer. According to Bill Tsilixw James, hereditary chief of the Lummi Nation, the Lummi know the island as Sq'emenen. A San Juan Island resident proposed to the state Board of Geographic Names in 2015 that Squaw Bay be renamed Sq'emenen Bay; that proposal generated a compromise proposal from the Shaw Island Historical Society to rename the bay Reef Net Bay, in recognition of the reef net fishing historically and currently done there. The name "Reef Net Bay" was adopted.
History of nuns
There have been three Catholic religious institutes of nuns on Shaw Island. Benedictine nuns established a monastery on Template:Convert in the 1970s; while the Sisters of Mercy have owned an unofficial retreat on the island since the 1980s.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Nuns of the Franciscan Sisters of the Eucharist ran the island's only store and the ferry terminal for almost 3 decades, until 2004, when they relocated elsewhere.<ref name="HistoryLink2005"/>
Island infrastructure and amenities

Shaw Island has a county park, a historic general store open all year, and a post office at the ferry landing. A member-supported library and historical museum are located near the middle of the island.<ref name="HistoryLink2005">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="GoNW">Template:Cite web</ref>
The University of Washington also owns property throughout the island, notably the Cedar Rock Preserve on the south side of the island, a gift from Robert H. Ellis, Jr. The stated vision for these properties is "to maintain and restore native biodiversity and ecosystem function and to facilitate education and research that is consistent with these goals" and "to maintain important parts of the cultural landscape."<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Shoreline access is best at the Shaw Island County Park, due to its vast beachline. There are Template:Convert of asphalt and Template:Convert of gravel public roads on Shaw. The primary roads are three loops in the interior of the island, with branches to the ferry dock, Shaw Island County Park, Neck Point, and part-way to the private property of Broken Point.Template:Citation needed
Arts and culture
Historical structures


Shaw Island School District #10, has an operational historic one-room school (although a second room was later added), with classes for kindergarten through eighth grade students. Known as the Little Red Schoolhouse, it has been in continuous use since it was built in 1891 and is the longest-running school in the State of Washington.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The building is listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places.<ref name="Avalontravel">Template:Cite book</ref>
Shaw Island also has a small membership funded library and historical museum.<ref name="GoNW"/><ref name="Avalontravel"/>
Popular culture
Shaw Island was featured during the fifth-season episode "Access" of the political drama The West Wing as the site of a standoff between terrorist suspects and the US government, similar to the Waco, Texas Branch Davidian standoff.Template:Citation needed Shaw Island was mentioned in the movie Glory.
Cartoonist Zach Stroum drew an online comic strip named "Shaw Island" from 2000 to 2006, before retiring his online presence. The strip featured characters living on and around the island, including a hamster society that was often used to parody popular video games and anime series of the time.
Tourism
Businesses pertaining to tourism are required to maintain the character of the island as a small-scale, rural, and agricultural community through the Shaw Subarea Plan of Washington State's Growth Management Act. These include commercial recreational facilities; transient accommodations by themselves or in combination with any commercial use, food service facilities, and transient moorage and dry storage facilities.
References
External links
- Official Guide to the San Juan Islands
- Non-profit island improvement organization
- Facts and pictures (pre-sale-of-store)
- Franciscan Sisters of the Eucharist
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