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Spokane, Washington

Spokane (/spˈkæn/ (listen) spoh-KAN)[7] is the largest city and county seat of Spokane County, Washington, United States. It is in eastern Washington, along the Spokane River, adjacent to the Selkirk Mountains, and west of the Rocky Mountain foothills, 92 miles (148 km) south of the Canadian border, 18 miles (30 km) west of the Washington–Idaho border, and 279 miles (449 km)[8] east of Seattle, along I-90.

Spokane, Washington
Nickname: 
The Lilac City
Motto: 
Creative by Nature
Coordinates: 47°39′32″N 117°25′30″W / 47.65889°N 117.42500°W / 47.65889; -117.42500Coordinates: 47°39′32″N 117°25′30″W / 47.65889°N 117.42500°W / 47.65889; -117.42500
CountryUnited States
StateWashington
CountySpokane
Founded1873[1]
IncorporatedNovember 29, 1881
Founded byJames Glover[1]
Named forSpokane people
Government
 • TypeMayor–council
 • BodySpokane City Council
 • MayorNadine Woodward (R)
Area
 • City69.50 sq mi (179.99 km2)
 • Land68.76 sq mi (178.09 km2)
 • Water0.74 sq mi (1.91 km2)  1.28%
Elevation
1,843 ft (562 m)
Population
 • City228,989
 • Estimate 
(2021)[4]
229,071
 • RankUS: 96th
 • Density3,300/sq mi (1,300/km2)
 • Urban
447,279 (US: 90th)
 • Urban density2,605.4/sq mi (1,006.0/km2)
 • Metro
593,466 (US: 98th)
 • CSA
757,146 (US: 70th)
DemonymSpokanite
Time zoneUTC-8 (PST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC-7 (PDT)
ZIP Codes
Zip codes[5]
Area code509
Official treePonderosa Pine
GNIS feature ID1512683[6]
Websitemy.spokanecity.org

Spokane is the economic and cultural center of the Spokane metropolitan area, the Spokane–Coeur d'Alene combined statistical area, and the Inland Northwest. It is known as the birthplace of Father's Day, and locally by the nickname of "Lilac City".[9] Officially, Spokane goes by the nickname of Hooptown USA, due to Spokane annually hosting Spokane Hoopfest, the world's largest basketball tournament.[10] The city and the wider Inland Northwest area are served by Spokane International Airport, 5 miles (8 km) west of Downtown Spokane. According to the 2010 census, Spokane had a population of 208,916,[11] making it the second-largest city in Washington,[12] and the 101st-largest city in the United States.[13] At the 2020 census, Spokane's population was 228,989.[3] A 2021 estimate sets the population of the Spokane Metropolitan Area at 593,466.[14]

The first people to live in the area, the Spokane tribe (their name meaning "children of the sun" in Salishan), lived off plentiful game. David Thompson explored the area with the westward expansion and establishment of the North West Company's Spokane House in 1810. This trading post was the first long-term European settlement in Washington. Completion of the Northern Pacific Railway in 1881 brought settlers to the Spokane area. The same year it was officially incorporated as a city under the name of Spokane Falls (it was re-incorporated under its current name ten years later).[15] In the late 19th century, gold and silver were discovered in the Inland Northwest. The local economy depended on mining, timber, and agriculture until the 1980s. Spokane hosted the first environmentally themed World's fair at Expo '74.

Many of the downtown area's older Romanesque Revival-style buildings were designed by architect Kirtland Kelsey Cutter after the Great Fire of 1889. The city is also home to the Riverfront and Manito parks, the Smithsonian-affiliated Northwest Museum of Arts and Culture, the Davenport Hotel, and the Fox and Bing Crosby theaters.

The Cathedral of Our Lady of Lourdes is the seat of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Spokane, and the Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist serves as that of the Episcopal Diocese of Spokane. The Spokane Washington Temple in the east of the county serves the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Gonzaga University was established in 1887 by the Jesuits, and the private Presbyterian Whitworth University was founded three years later and moved to north Spokane in 1914.

The city's western suburb of Airway Heights is home to Fairchild Air Force Base as well as two large casino hotels.

In sports, the region's professional and semi-professional sports teams include the Spokane Indians in Minor League Baseball and Spokane Chiefs in junior ice hockey. The Gonzaga Bulldogs collegiate basketball team competes at the Division I level. As of 2010, Spokane's major daily newspaper, The Spokesman-Review, had a daily circulation of over 76,000.

History

 

The first humans to live in the Spokane area were hunter-gatherers that lived off plentiful fish and game; early human remains have been dated to 8,000 to 13,000 years ago.[16] The Spokane tribe, after which the city is named (the name meaning "children of the sun" or "sun people" in Salishan),[17][18][a] are believed to be either their direct descendants, or descendants of people from the Great Plains.[19] When asked by early white explorers, the Spokanes said their ancestors came from "up North."[16] Early in the 19th century, the Northwest Fur Company sent two white fur trappers west of the Rocky Mountains to search for fur.[20] These were the first white men met by the Spokanes, who believed they were sacred, and set the trappers up in the Colville River valley for the winter.[21]

Trading post

The explorer-geographer David Thompson, working as head of the North West Company's Columbia Department, became the first European to explore the Inland Empire (now called the Inland Northwest).[22] Crossing what is now the Canada–US border from British Columbia, Thompson wanted to expand the North West Company further south in search of furs. After establishing the Kullyspell House and Saleesh House trading posts in what are now Idaho and Montana, Thompson then attempted to expand further west. He sent out two trappers, Jacques Raphael Finlay and Finan McDonald, to construct a fur trading post on the Spokane River, which flows west from Lake Coeur d'Alene to the Columbia River, and trade with the local Indians.[23] This post was established in 1810, at the confluence of the Little Spokane and Spokane rivers, becoming the first enduring European settlement of significance in what later became Washington state.[22] Known as the Spokane House, or simply "Spokane", it was in operation from 1810 to 1826.[17] Operations were run by the British North West Company and later the Hudson's Bay Company, and the post was the headquarters of the fur trade between the Rocky and Cascade mountains for 16 years. After the latter business absorbed the North West Company in 1821, the major operations at the Spokane House were eventually shifted north to Fort Colville, reducing the post's significance.[24]

In 1836, Reverend Samuel Parker visited the area and reported that around 800 Native Americans were living in Spokane Falls.[25] A medical mission was established by Marcus and Narcissa Whitman to cater for Cayuse Indians and hikers of the Oregon Trail at Walla Walla in the south.[26] After the Whitmans were killed by Indians in 1847, Reverend Cushing Eells established Whitman College in their memory, also setting up the first church in the Spokane area.[26]

In 1853, two years after the establishment of the Washington Territory, the first governor, Isaac Stevens, made an initial effort to make a treaty with Chief Garry and the Spokanes at Antoine Plantes' Ferry, not far from Millwood.[27][28] After the last campaign of the Yakima Indian War, the Coeur d'Alene War of 1858 was brought to a close by the actions of Col. George Wright, who won decisive victories against a confederation of tribes in engagements at the battles of Four Lakes and Spokane Plains.[29] The cessation of hostilities opened the inter-mountain valley of the Pacific Northwest to safe habitation by settlers.[30][31]

American settlement

 
Spokane Falls, 1890

Joint American–British occupation of Oregon Country, in effect since the Treaty of 1818, eventually led to the Oregon Boundary Dispute after a large influx of American settlers along the Oregon Trail. Great Britain ceded its claims to lands in Puget Sound and the central and lower Columbia Basin by the Oregon Treaty of 1846 The Hudson's Bay Company wound up its operations in the area over the next few years.

In what is now Spokane, the first American settlers were J.J. Downing and S.R. Scranton, cattle ranchers who squatted and established a claim at Spokane Falls in 1871.[32] Together they built a small sawmill on a claim near the south bank of the falls.[32][33] James N. Glover and Jasper Matheney, Oregonians passing through the region in 1873, recognized the value of the Spokane River and its falls for the purpose of water power.[32] They realized the investment potential and bought the claims of 160 acres (65 ha) and the sawmill from Downing and Scranton for a total of $4,000.[34] Glover and Matheney knew that the Northern Pacific Railroad Company had received a government charter to build a main line across this northern route.[32] Amid many delays in construction and uncertainty over the completion of the railroad and its exact course, Matheney sold his interest in the claim to Glover.[35][b] Glover confidently held on to his claim and became a successful Spokane business owner and the city's second mayor.[36] He later came to be known as the "Father of Spokane".[37]

In 1880, Fort Spokane was established by U.S. Army troops under Lt. Col. Henry C. Merriam 56 miles (90 km) northwest of Spokane, at the junction of the Columbia and Spokane Rivers, to protect the construction of the Northern Pacific Railway and secure a place for U.S. settlement.[38] By June 30, 1881, the railway reached the city, bringing major European settlement to the area.[39][40] The city was officially incorporated with a population of about 1,000 residents on November 29, 1881.[41][42][c] When Spokane was officially incorporated in 1881, Robert W. Forrest was elected as the first mayor of the city, with a Council of seven, S.G. Havermale, A.M. Cannon, Dr. L.H. Whitehouse, L.W. Rima, F.R. Moore, George A. Davis, and W.C. Gray, all serving without pay.[41] The marketing campaigns of transportation companies with affordable fertile land to sell along their trade routes lured many settlers into the region they dubbed "Spokane Country".[43][44]

 
The makeshift Daily Chronicle office after The Great Fire

The 1883 discovery of gold, silver, and lead in the Coeur d'Alene region of northern Idaho lured prospectors.[45] The Inland Empire erupted with numerous mining rushes from 1883 to 1892.[46] Mining and smelting emerged as a major stimulus to Spokane. At the onset of the initial 1883 gold rush in the nearby Coeur d'Alene mining district, Spokane became popular with prospectors, offering low prices on everything "from a horse to a frying pan".[47] It would keep this status for subsequent rushes in the region due to its trade center status and accessibility to railroad infrastructure.[48][d]

Spokane's growth continued unabated until August 4, 1889, when a fire, now known as The Great Fire (not to be confused with the Great Fire of 1910, which happened nearby), began just after 6:00 p.m., and destroyed the city's downtown commercial district.[49] Due to technical problems with a pump station, there was no water pressure in the city when the fire started.[50] In a desperate bid to starve the fire, firefighters began razing buildings with dynamite. Eventually, the winds and the fire died down; 32 blocks of Spokane's downtown core had been destroyed and one person was killed.[49]

 
Spokane ca. 1895

Despite this catastrophe, and in part because of it, Spokane experienced a building boom.[51][e] The downtown was rebuilt, and the city was reincorporated under the present name of "Spokane" in 1891.[42] According to historian David H. Stratton, "From the late 1890s to about 1912, a great flurry of construction created a modern urban profile of office buildings, banks, department stores, hotels and other commercial institutions" which stretched from the Spokane River to the site of the Northern Pacific railroad tracks below the South Hill.[52] Yet the rebuilding and development of the city was far from smooth: between 1889 and 1896 alone, all six bridges over the Spokane River were destroyed by floods before their completion.[52] In the 1890s the city was subject to intrastate migration by African-Americans from Roslyn, looking for work after the closure of the area's mines. Two African-American churches, Calvary Baptist and Bethel African Methodist Episcopal, were founded in 1890.[53] Just three years after the fire, in 1892, James J. Hill's Great Northern Railway arrived in the chosen site for Hill's rail yards, the newly created township of Hillyard (annexed by Spokane in 1924).[54] Spokane became an important rail shipping and transportation hub for the Inland Empire, connecting mines in the Silver Valley with agricultural areas around the Palouse region.[44][55] The city's population ballooned to 19,922 in 1890, and to 36,848 in 1900 with the arrival of additional railroads.[51] By 1910 the population had hit 104,000, and Spokane eclipsed Walla Walla as the commercial center of the Inland Empire.[56] In time the city came to be known as the "capital" of the Inland Empire and the heart of a vast tributary region.[45][57] After the arrival of the Northern Pacific, Union Pacific, Great Northern, and Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific railroads, Spokane became one of the most important rail centers in the western U.S.[51][57][58][59]

Early 20th century

Expansion abruptly stopped in the 1910s and was followed by a period of population decline,[60] due in large part to Spokane's slowing economy. Control of regional mines and resources became increasingly dominated by national corporations rather than local people and organizations, diverting capital outside of Spokane and decreasing growth and investment opportunities in the city.[60] During this time of stagnation, unrest was prevalent among the area's unemployed, who became victimized by "job sharks", who charged a fee for signing up workers in the logging camps. Job sharks and employment agencies were known to cheat itinerant workers, sometimes paying bribes to periodically fire entire work crews, thus generating repetitive fees for themselves.[61] Crime spiked in the 1890s and 1900s,[62][63] with eruptions of violent activity involving unions such as the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), or "Wobblies" as they were often known, whose free speech fights had begun to garner national attention.[64] Now, with grievances concerning the unethical practices of the employment agencies, they initiated a free speech fight in September 1908 by purposely breaking a city ordinance on soapboxing.[64] With IWW encouragement, union members from many western states came to Spokane to take part in what had become a publicity stunt. Many Wobblies were incarcerated, including feminist labor leader Elizabeth Gurley Flynn, who published her account in the local Industrial Worker.[64]

 
Riverside Avenue c. 1923

After mining declined at the turn of the 20th century, agriculture and logging became the primary influences in the Spokane economy.[65] The population explosion and the building of homes, railroads, and mines in northern Idaho and southern British Columbia fueled the logging industry.[65] Although overshadowed in importance by the vast timbered areas on the coastal regions west of the Cascades, and burdened with monopolistic rail freight rates and stiff competition, Spokane became a noted leader in the manufacture of doors, window sashes, blinds, and other planing mill products.[66] Rail freight rates were much higher in Spokane than the rates in coastal seaport cities such as Seattle and Portland, so much so that Minneapolis merchants could ship goods first to Seattle and then back to Spokane for less than shipping directly to Spokane, even though the rail line ran through Spokane on the way to the coast.[57][67][f]

The Inland Northwest region has also long been associated with farming, especially wheat production.[68] Initially, the Palouse was thought to be unsuitable for wheat production due to the hilly terrain, believing wheat could not be cultivated on the tops of the hills, but the region showed great promise for wheat production when it began in the late 1850s in part due to the hilltops.[68] The Palouse was and still is a breadbasket and was able to develop and grow with the completion of several railroad networks as well as a highway system that began to center around the city of Spokane, aiding farmers from around the region in distributing their products to market.[69] Inland Empire farmers exported wheat, livestock and other agricultural products to ports such as New York, Liverpool and Tokyo.[70]

Local morale was affected for years by the collapse of the Division Street Bridge early in the morning on December 15, 1915, which killed five people and injured over 20, but a new bridge was built (eventually replaced in 1994).[71] The 1920 census showed a net increase of just 35 individuals, which actually indicates that thousands left the city when considering the natural growth rate of a population.[60] Growth in the 1920s and 1930s remained slow but less drastically so, forcing city boosters to market the city as a quiet, comfortable place suitable for raising a family rather than a dynamic community full of opportunity.[72] The Inland Empire was heavily dependent on natural resources and extractive goods produced from mines, forests, and farms, which experienced a fall in demand.[73] The situation improved slightly with the start of World War II as aluminum production commenced in Spokane due to the area's cheap electricity (produced from regional dams) and the increased demand for airplanes.[73]

Second half of the 20th century

 
The Great Northern clock tower and former Expo '74 Washington State Pavilion in Riverfront Park

After decades of stagnation and slow growth, Spokane businessmen formed Spokane Unlimited in the early 1960s, an organization that sought to revitalize downtown Spokane.[74] A recreation park showcasing the Spokane Falls was the preferred option, and after successful negotiation to relocate the railroad facilities on Havermale Island,[75] they executed on a proposal to host the first environmentally themed World's Fair in Expo '74 on May 4, becoming the smallest city at the time to host a World's Fair.[76][77] This event transformed Spokane's downtown, removing a century of railroad infrastructure and re-inventing the urban core. After Expo '74, the fairgrounds became the 100-acre (40 ha) Riverfront Park.[78]

The growth witnessed in the late 1970s and early 1980s was interrupted by another U.S. recession in 1981, in which silver, timber, and farm prices dropped.[79] The period of decline for the city lasted into the 1990s and was also marked by a loss of many steady family-wage jobs in the manufacturing sector.[80] At this time, market forces began to impact the local Kaiser Aluminum plant and layoffs, pension cuts, a 1998-1999 labor strike, and eventually bankruptcy in 2002 followed.[81][80] Although this was a tough period, Spokane's economy had started to benefit from some measure of economic diversification; growing companies such as Key Tronic and other research, marketing, and assembly plants for technology companies helped lessen Spokane's dependence on natural resources.[79]

21st century

 
Spokane has an extensive Skywalk network

As of 2014, Spokane is still trying to make the transition to a more service-oriented economy in the face of a less prominent manufacturing sector.[80] Developing the city's strength in the medical and health sciences fields has seen some success, resulting in the expansion of the University District with two medical school branches.[82][83][84] The city faces challenges such as a scarcity of high-paying jobs, pockets of poverty, and areas of high crime.[80]

The opening of the River Park Square in 1999 served as a catalyst and sparked a downtown rebirth that included the building of the Spokane Arena and expansion of the Spokane Convention Center.[80][85] Other major projects include the building of the Big Easy concert house (now the Knitting Factory) and renovation of the historic Montvale Hotel, the Kirtland Cutter-designed Davenport Hotel (after being vacant for over 20 years), the Fox Theater (now home to the Spokane Symphony)[86][87] as well as the completion of the WSU Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Sciences Building in 2013 and the Davenport Grand Hotel in 2015, Ridpath Hotel in 2018 and the ongoing renovation of Riverfront Park (as of May 2019).[88][89][90] The Kendall Yards development on the west side of downtown Spokane is one of the largest construction projects in the city's history. Directly across the Spokane River from downtown, it will blend residential and retail space with plazas and walking trails.[80]

Geography

Topography

 
Spokane at night from the west, with Krell Hill silhouetted by radio antennas

Spokane is located on the Spokane River in eastern Washington at an elevation of 1,843 feet (562 m) above sea level,[91] about 18 miles (29 km) from Idaho, 92 miles (148 km) south of the Canadian border, 229 miles (369 km) due east of Seattle, and 279 miles (449 km) southwest of Calgary.[92] The lowest elevation in the city of Spokane is the northernmost point of the Spokane River within city limits (in Riverside State Park) at 1,608 feet (490 m); the highest elevation is on the northeast side, near the community of Hillyard (though closer to Beacon Hill and the North Hill Reservoir) at 2,591 feet (790 m).[93] Spokane is part of the Inland Northwest region, consisting of eastern Washington, north Idaho, northwestern Montana, and northeastern Oregon.[94] The city has a total area of 60.02 square miles (155.45 km2), of which 59.25 square miles (153.46 km2) is land and 0.77 square miles (1.99 km2) is water.[95]

 
The Upper Spokane Falls of the Spokane River flowing by Canada Island

Spokane lies mostly within the Spokane Valley Outwash Plains at the periphery of the North Central Rockies forests ecoregion and partly within the eastern edge of the basaltic Channeled Scablands steppe of the Columbia Plateau ecoregion, a plain that eventually rises sharply to the east towards the rugged, timbered Selkirk Mountains.[96][97] The foothills of the Rockies—the Coeur d'Alene Mountains—rise about 25 miles (40 km) to the east in north Idaho. The city is in a transition area between the barren landscape of the Columbia Basin and the coniferous forests to the east; to the south are the lush prairies and rolling hills of the Palouse.[97] The highest peak in Spokane County is Mount Spokane, at an elevation of 5,883 feet (1,793 m), on the eastern side of the Selkirk Mountains.[98] The Spokane River is the area's most prominent water feature, a 111-mile (179 km) tributary of the Columbia River, originating from Lake Coeur d'Alene in northern Idaho.[99] The river flows west across the Washington state line through downtown Spokane, meeting Latah Creek, then turns to the northwest, where it is joined by the Little Spokane River on its way to the Columbia River, north of Davenport.[99] The Channeled Scablands and many of the area's numerous large lakes, such as Lake Coeur d'Alene and Lake Pend Oreille, were formed by the Missoula Floods after the ice-dammed Glacial Lake Missoula ruptured at the end of the last ice age.[100] The Turnbull National Wildlife Refuge south of Cheney is the closest natural reserve, the closest National Forest is the Colville National Forest, the closest National Recreation Area is the Lake Roosevelt National Recreation Area and the closest national park is Mount Rainier National Park, approximately a four-and-a-half hour drive from Spokane.

Flora and fauna

 
Urban-dwelling yellow bellied marmots are resident in the city, although the rodents typically inhabit remote, mountainous locations.[101]

The area supports an abundance of wildlife in part because of its varied geology and natural history. The area contains a wide range of vegetation, from densely wooded coniferous forests to rolling grassy hills and meadows.[102] Ponderosa pine and Douglas fir are common in the drier and lower elevation areas throughout the region. The ponderosa pine is the official tree of the City of Spokane, which is where specimens were first collected by botanist David Douglas in 1826.[103][104][g]

The Canadian Rockies ecoregion supports 70 mammals, 16 reptiles and amphibians, 168 birds, and 41 fish species.[105] There is a high concentration of raptors in the area, bald eagles are a common sight near Lake Coeur d'Alene in December and January when kokanee spawn.[106] The most common fish present in area lakes is the Washington-native rainbow trout, which is the official fish of Washington state.[107] Big game common in eastern Washington include black and grizzly bears, caribou, Rocky Mountain elk, bighorn sheep, and cougar.[108] Whitetail deer, mule deer, and moose are also found in abundance. The gray wolf population has been making a recovery in the Inland Northwest. As of June 2016, there are 16 wolf packs in eastern Washington.[109] In August 2016, photo evidence confirmed a solitary wolf in Mount Spokane State Park.[110]

Although the ecoregion remains ecologically intact, it faces conservation challenges that include the negative effects of certain forestry management and logging practices, higher risks of forest fires due to the alteration of the trees that make up the forest composition, and habitat fragmentation as a result of urban sprawl and development, which endangers the long-term survival of vulnerable species such as mountain caribou and the Northern goshawk.[111]

 
The Lincoln statue on a clear day

Climate

Spokane has a warm-summer humid continental climate (Dsb under the Köppen classification),[112] a rare climate due to its elevation and significant winter precipitation; Spokane, however, is adjacent to and sometimes even classified as a warm-summer Mediterranean climate (Csb) because the average temperature for the coldest month is over 26.6 °F (−3 °C),[113] though in the US this threshold is often defined to be 32 °F (0 °C).[114]

The area typically has a warm, arid climate during the summer months, bracketed by short spring and fall seasons. On average, the warmest month is July and the coolest month is December; July averages 71.0 °F (21.7 °C), while December averages 29.1 °F (−1.6 °C).[113][h] Daily temperature ranges are large during the summer, often exceeding 30 °F (17 °C), and small during the winter, with a range just above 10 °F (5.6 °C). The record high and low are 112 °F (44 °C)[115][116] and −30 °F (−34 °C), but temperatures of more than 100 °F (38 °C) or less than −5 °F (−21 °C) are rare. Temperatures of 90 °F (32 °C)+ occur an average of 21 days annually, temperatures of 100 °F (38 °C)+ occur an average of only 1 day annually, and those at or below 0 °F (−18 °C) average 2.2 days a year.[116]

Spokane's location, between the Cascades Range to the west and the Rocky Mountains to the east and north, protects it from weather patterns experienced in other parts of the Pacific Northwest. The Cascade Mountains form a barrier to the eastward flow of moist and relatively mild air from the Pacific Ocean in winter and cool air in summer.[117] As a result of the rain shadow effect of the Cascades, the Spokane area has 16.5 inches (420 mm) average annual precipitation, less than half of Seattle's 39.3 inches (1,000 mm).[118] Precipitation peaks in December, and summer is the driest time of the year. The Rockies shield Spokane from some of the winter season's coldest air masses traveling southward across Canada.[117]

Climate data for Spokane (Spokane Int'l), 1991–2020 normals,[i] extremes 1881–present[ii]
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 62
(17)
63
(17)
74
(23)
90
(32)
97
(36)
109
(43)
108
(42)
108
(42)
98
(37)
87
(31)
70
(21)
60
(16)
109
(43)
Mean maximum °F (°C) 48.2
(9.0)
51.1
(10.6)
63.0
(17.2)
73.9
(23.3)
84.0
(28.9)
90.5
(32.5)
97.5
(36.4)
97.0
(36.1)
89.2
(31.8)
74.6
(23.7)
56.4
(13.6)
48.0
(8.9)
99.1
(37.3)
Average high °F (°C) 34.5
(1.4)
39.5
(4.2)
48.6
(9.2)
56.9
(13.8)
67.1
(19.5)
73.7
(23.2)
84.4
(29.1)
83.8
(28.8)
73.6
(23.1)
57.7
(14.3)
42.3
(5.7)
33.8
(1.0)
58.0
(14.4)
Daily mean °F (°C) 29.6
(−1.3)
32.9
(0.5)
40.0
(4.4)
47.0
(8.3)
56.0
(13.3)
62.3
(16.8)
71.0
(21.7)
70.3
(21.3)
61.1
(16.2)
47.9
(8.8)
36.3
(2.4)
29.1
(−1.6)
48.6
(9.2)
Average low °F (°C) 24.7
(−4.1)
26.3
(−3.2)
31.5
(−0.3)
37.0
(2.8)
44.9
(7.2)
50.8
(10.4)
57.6
(14.2)
56.7
(13.7)
48.6
(9.2)
38.0
(3.3)
30.3
(−0.9)
24.3
(−4.3)
39.2
(4.0)
Mean minimum °F (°C) 4.4
(−15.3)
9.8
(−12.3)
18.5
(−7.5)
26.4
(−3.1)
32.7
(0.4)
40.2
(4.6)
45.9
(7.7)
45.6
(7.6)
35.4
(1.9)
23.2
(−4.9)
14.1
(−9.9)
7.1
(−13.8)
−3.0
(−19.4)
Record low °F (°C) −30
(−34)
−24
(−31)
−10
(−23)
14
(−10)
24
(−4)
33
(1)
37
(3)
35
(2)
22
(−6)
7
(−14)
−21
(−29)
−25
(−32)
−30
(−34)
Average precipitation inches (mm) 1.97
(50)
1.44
(37)
1.83
(46)
1.25
(32)
1.55
(39)
1.17
(30)
0.42
(11)
0.47
(12)
0.58
(15)
1.37
(35)
2.06
(52)
2.34
(59)
16.45
(418)
Average snowfall inches (cm) 12.3
(31)
7.8
(20)
3.9
(9.9)
0.7
(1.8)
0.1
(0.25)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.1
(0.25)
0.5
(1.3)
6.2
(16)
13.8
(35)
45.4
(115)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.01 in) 14.2 10.9 11.8 10.3 9.7 7.8 4.0 3.2 4.7 8.9 13.4 13.8 112.7
Average snowy days (≥ 0.1 in) 9.5 5.7 4.0 1.0 0.3 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.1 0.3 4.3 9.5 34.7
Average relative humidity (%) 82.5 79.1 70.3 61.0 58.2 53.9 44.0 45.0 53.9 66.6 82.7 85.5 65.2
Mean monthly sunshine hours 78.3 118.0 199.3 242.3 296.7 322.8 382.4 340.4 271.2 191.0 73.8 59.1 2,575.3
Percent possible sunshine 28 41 54 59 63 68 79 77 72 57 26 22 54
Source: NOAA (relative humidity and sun 1961–1990)[116][113][120]
Climate data for Spokane (Riverside), 1953–1983 normals and extremes
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 58
(14)
64
(18)
75
(24)
89
(32)
97
(36)
101
(38)
106
(41)
109
(43)
97
(36)
87
(31)
70
(21)
59
(15)
109
(43)
Mean maximum °F (°C) 48.3
(9.1)
54.3
(12.4)
64.3
(17.9)
75.1
(23.9)
86.0
(30.0)
92.8
(33.8)
99.5
(37.5)
98.3
(36.8)
89.7
(32.1)
76.6
(24.8)
57.0
(13.9)
50.4
(10.2)
100.8
(38.2)
Average high °F (°C) 34.5
(1.4)
42.5
(5.8)
49.6
(9.8)
59.2
(15.1)
68.8
(20.4)
76.8
(24.9)
85.8
(29.9)
84.5
(29.2)
74.4
(23.6)
60.3
(15.7)
44.0
(6.7)
37.1
(2.8)
59.8
(15.4)
Average low °F (°C) 23.9
(−4.5)
28.8
(−1.8)
31.2
(−0.4)
36.8
(2.7)
44.3
(6.8)
51.2
(10.7)
56.0
(13.3)
54.7
(12.6)
47.2
(8.4)
38.4
(3.6)
31.5
(−0.3)
27.2
(−2.7)
39.3
(4.0)
Mean minimum °F (°C) 2.9
(−16.2)
13.8
(−10.1)
18.2
(−7.7)
27.2
(−2.7)
33.4
(0.8)
41.6
(5.3)
45.5
(7.5)
44.2
(6.8)
35.0
(1.7)
27.0
(−2.8)
17.4
(−8.1)
8.4
(−13.1)
−5.6
(−20.9)
Record low °F (°C) −22
(−30)
−7
(−22)
−1
(−18)
20
(−7)
26
(−3)
35
(2)
39
(4)
30
(−1)
29
(−2)
19
(−7)
5
(−15)
−20
(−29)
−22
(−30)
Average precipitation inches (mm) 2.24
(57)
1.65
(42)
1.56
(40)
1.25
(32)
1.52
(39)
1.33
(34)
0.56
(14)
0.79
(20)
0.86
(22)
1.13
(29)
2.16
(55)
2.58
(66)
17.63
(450)
Average snowfall inches (cm) 8.3
(21)
1.4
(3.6)
0.1
(0.25)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.1
(0.25)
0.9
(2.3)
10.7
(27)
21.5
(54.4)
Source: [121]
Climate data for Spokane (Felts Field), 1991–2020 normals,[iii] extremes 1998[iv]–present
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 59
(15)
64
(18)
74
(23)
87
(31)
94
(34)
113
(45)
106
(41)
107
(42)
97
(36)
86
(30)
69
(21)
63
(17)
113
(45)
Mean maximum °F (°C) 51.8
(11.0)
53.7
(12.1)
65.0
(18.3)
76.5
(24.7)
86.7
(30.4)
93.0
(33.9)
99.8
(37.7)
99.1
(37.3)
90.7
(32.6)
75.5
(24.2)
59.8
(15.4)
51.9
(11.1)
101.4
(38.6)
Average high °F (°C) 37.8
(3.2)
42.5
(5.8)
51.3
(10.7)
59.6
(15.3)
69.7
(20.9)
75.8
(24.3)
87.1
(30.6)
86.2
(30.1)
76.0
(24.4)
60.3
(15.7)
45.1
(7.3)
36.9
(2.7)
60.7
(15.9)
Daily mean °F (°C) 31.8
(−0.1)
34.6
(1.4)
41.5
(5.3)
48.1
(8.9)
56.9
(13.8)
63.1
(17.3)
71.5
(21.9)
70.4
(21.3)
61.4
(16.3)
49.1
(9.5)
37.9
(3.3)
31.3
(−0.4)
49.8
(9.9)
Average low °F (°C) 25.8
(−3.4)
26.7
(−2.9)
31.7
(−0.2)
36.6
(2.6)
44.1
(6.7)
50.4
(10.2)
56.0
(13.3)
54.5
(12.5)
46.8
(8.2)
38.0
(3.3)
30.7
(−0.7)
25.7
(−3.5)
38.9
(3.8)
Mean minimum °F (°C) 9.9
(−12.3)
13.5
(−10.3)
19.6
(−6.9)
26.8
(−2.9)
32.5
(0.3)
41.4
(5.2)
46.5
(8.1)
45.7
(7.6)
36.3
(2.4)
25.0
(−3.9)
17.6
(−8.0)
10.3
(−12.1)
3.2
(−16.0)
Record low °F (°C) −10
(−23)
−3
(−19)
2
(−17)
24
(−4)
28
(−2)
37
(3)
39
(4)
40
(4)
26
(−3)
12
(−11)
−2
(−19)
−10
(−23)
−10
(−23)
Average precipitation inches (mm) 2.00
(51)
1.32
(34)
1.82
(46)
1.50
(38)
1.70
(43)
1.48
(38)
0.67
(17)
0.54
(14)
0.68
(17)
1.46
(37)
2.01
(51)
2.18
(55)
17.36
(441)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.01 in) 14.6 11.6 13.1 11.0 10.0 8.9 3.0 3.4 5.3 10.4 13.5 14.5 119.3
Source: NOAA[116][122]

Government and politics

 
Spokane City Hall

The City of Spokane operates under a mayor–council form of government, with executive and legislative branches that are elected in non-partisan elections.[123] David Condon was elected mayor in November 2011 and took office on the last business day of the year.[124] The previous mayor was Mary Verner, who succeeded Dennis P. Hession who himself succeeded the recalled James "Jim" West. The city elected James Everett Chase as its first African-American mayor in 1981, and after his retirement, elected the city's first woman mayor, Vicki McNeil.[125] Spokane is the county seat of Spokane County, a position it wrested from Cheney in 1886.[126][127] Spokane is a part of Washington's 3rd legislative district, which is represented in the Washington State Senate by Andy Billig.[128] The 3rd Legislative District is represented in the Washington House of Representatives by Marcus Riccelli and Timm Ormsby.[128]

Federally, Spokane is within Washington's 5th congressional district, and has been represented in the House of Representatives by Republican Cathy McMorris Rodgers since 2004.[129] Washington State is represented nationally in the Senate by Democrat Patty Murray and Democrat Maria Cantwell.[129] In the 2012 general election, Spokane County favored Mitt Romney for president over Barack Obama by 51.5 to 45.7 percent; on the state ballot, the county supported the legalization of recreational marijuana ballot measure by 52.2 to 47.9 percent but opposed the legalization of same-sex marriage by 55.9 to 44.1 percent.[130] Spokane native Tom Foley was a Democratic Speaker of the House and served as a representative of Washington's 5th district for 30 years, enjoying large support from Spokane, until his narrow defeat in the "Republican Revolution" of 1994,[131][132] the only time U.S. voters have turned out a sitting Speaker of the House since 1860.[133]

Crime

Spokane
Crime rates* (2017)
Violent crimes
Homicide6
Rape238
Robbery229
Aggravated assault887
Total violent crime1,360
Property crimes
Burglary2,221
Larceny-theft11,739
Motor vehicle theft1,737
Arson50
Total property crime15,697
Notes

*Number of reported crimes per 100,000 population.

2017 population: 217,066

Source: 2017 FBI UCR Data

The crime rate per 1,000 people in the Spokane metropolitan area (Spokane County) was 64.8 in 2012, higher than the Washington state average of 38.3; the violent crime rate of 3.8 and property crime rate of 61 also exceed the statewide averages of 2.5 and 35.8, respectively.[134] NeighborhoodScout describes Spokane as "Safer than 2% of U.S. Cities".[135]

 
Spokane County Courthouse

Half of all property crimes are localized in about 6.5 percent of the city.[136] Spokane had the fourth-highest rate of auto theft in the U.S. in 2010 and 2011, according to the National Insurance Crime Bureau.[136] Drive-by shootings and drug use, particularly crack cocaine use, became worse in the early 1990s, and four drive-by shootings were recorded in December 1993 alone.[137] In the 1990s, the Spokane Police Department (SPD) established a special gang unit, with an officer "collecting intelligence on gang activity and disseminating it to street officers".[137] The 1990s also saw Spokane's most prolific serial killer, Robert Lee Yates, who killed thirteen prostitutes in Spokane's East Sprague red light district and confessed to two others in Tacoma, Washington.[138] The transition of the Spokane Police Department to a community-policing precinct model has helped curb crime rates since its introduction downtown, and has been expanded citywide.[139] The crime woes are possibly due in part to an imbalance that Spokane County prisons receive of pre-release and work-release prisoners; An investigation by the Tacoma News Tribune found that while Spokane County accounts for 6.21 percent of the inmates in state prisons, it receives a disproportionate 16.73 percent of the inmate population to be released into the general population.[140]

Spokane and the Spokane Police Department have received national publicity and scrutiny in the 2000s and 2010s due to many officer-involved shootings and allegations of excessive force. The most high-profile of these incidents was the 2006 death of Otto Zehm, a mentally challenged man who was initially suspected of theft at a convenience store.[141] Zehm was later found to have committed no crime, but was struck with batons by several officers and tasered.[142] The increased pressure on the SPD prompted an independent review by a commission of the organization's use-of-force policies, an internal culture audit, and the purchase of body cameras.[143]

Demographics

Historical population
Census Pop.
1880350
189019,9225,592.0%
190036,84885.0%
1910104,402183.3%
1920104,4370.0%
1930115,51410.6%
1940122,0015.6%
1950161,72132.6%
1960181,60812.3%
1970170,516−6.1%
1980171,3000.5%
1990177,1653.4%
2000195,62910.4%
2010208,9166.8%
2020228,9899.6%
2021 (est.)229,071[4]0.0%
U.S. Decennial Census[144][145][146][147][148][3]

According to the American Community Survey, the median income for a household in Spokane in 2012 was $42,274, and the median income for a family was $50,268. Males had a median income of $42,693 and females had a median income of $34,795. The per capita income for the city was $24,034. About 13.3% of families and 18.7% of the population were below the poverty line, including 23.8% of those under the age of 18 and 10.8% of those aged 65 and older.[149]

At the 2010 census, there were 208,916 people, 87,271 households, and 49,204 families residing in the city. The population density was 3,526.0 inhabitants per square mile (1,361.4/km2). There were 94,291 housing units at an average density of 1,591.4 per square mile (614.4/km2). The racial make-up of the city was 86.7% White, 2.6% Asian, 2.3% African American, 2.0% Native American, 0.6% Pacific Islander, and 1.3% from other races.[149] 5.0% of residents were of Hispanics or Latinos heritage, of any race.

There were 87,271 households, of which 28.9% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 38.5% were married couples living together, 12.9% had a female householder with no husband present, 5.0% had a male householder with no wife present, and 43.6% were non-families. In 2010, 34.2% of all households were made up of individuals, and 11% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.31 and the average family size was 2.97.[149]

The median age in the city was 35 years. In Spokane, 22.4% of residents were under the age of 18, 12.3% were between the ages of 18 and 24, 27.6% were from 25 to 44, 25.1% were from 45 to 64, and 12.8% were 65 years of age or older. The gender make-up of the city was 48.8% male and 51.2% female.[149]

According to the Association of Religion Data Archives' 2010 Metro Area Membership Report, the denominational affiliations of the Spokane MSA are 64,277 Evangelical Protestant, 682 Black Protestant, 24,826 Mainline Protestant, 754 Orthodox, 66,202 Catholic, 31,674 Other, and 339,338 Unclaimed.[150] As of 2016, there are also at least three Jewish congregations.[151][152][153]

The Emanu-El congregation erected the first synagogue in Spokane and the state of Washington on September 14, 1892.[154] The city's first mosque opened in 2009 as the Spokane Islamic Center.[155] Spokane, like Washington and the Pacific Northwest region as a whole, is part of the Unchurched Belt, a region characterized by low church membership rates and religious participation.[156] The city serves as the seat of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Spokane, which was established in 1913,[157] and the Episcopal Diocese of Spokane, established in 1929.[158] The Spokane Washington Temple, established in 1999, serves Latter-day Saints from the east of the county.[159]

Spokane has hosted an annual multicultural celebration, Unity in the Community, since 1995.[160][161] The city has become more diverse in recent decades. People from countries in the former Soviet Union (especially Russians and Ukrainians) form a comparatively large demographic in Spokane and Spokane County, the result of a large influx of immigrants and their families after the collapse of the USSR in 1991.[162][163] According to the 2000 Census, the number of people of Russian or Ukrainian ancestry in Spokane County was reported to be 7,700 (4,900 residing in the city of Spokane), amounting to two percent of the county.[163] Among the fastest-growing demographics in Spokane is the Pacific Islander ethnic group, which is estimated to be the third-largest minority group in the county, after the Russian and Ukrainian community and Latinos.[164] Spokane was once home to a sizable Asian community, mostly Japanese, centered in a district called Chinatown from the early days of the city until 1974.[165][166] As in many western railway towns, the Asian community started off as an encampment for migrant laborers working on the railroads. The Chinatown Asian community thrived until the 1940s and experienced a population boom during WWII as Japanese families fled the exclusion zones along the coast, after which its population decreased and became integrated and dispersed, losing its Asian character; urban blight and the preparations leading up to Expo '74 led to Chinatown's eventual demolition.[165]

 
Demographic map of the Spokane metro area. Each dot is 25 people.  White  Black  Asian  Hispanic  Other

Metropolitan area

The Spokane metropolitan area consists of Spokane County. As of the 2018 census estimates, the Spokane metropolitan area had a population of 573,493.[14] Directly east of Spokane County is the Coeur d'Alene Metropolitan Statistical Area, which consists of Kootenai County, Idaho, anchored by the city of Coeur d'Alene. The urban areas of the two MSAs largely follow the path of Interstate 90 between Spokane and Coeur d'Alene. The Spokane area has suffered from suburbanization and urban sprawl in past decades, despite Washington's use of urban growth boundaries; the city ranks low among major Northwest cities in population density and smart growth according to the Sightline Institute, however Smart Growth America in a 2014 study ranked the census defined MSA as the 22nd most compact and connected in the nation using their Sprawl Index factors: development density, land use mix, activity centering, and street accessibility.[167][168] The Spokane and Coeur d'Alene Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSA) are now included in a single Combined Statistical Area (CSA) by the Office of Management and Budget.[169] The Spokane–Coeur d'Alene CSA had around 721,873 residents in 2017.[169]

Cityscape

 
Panorama of Downtown Spokane looking north from the Deaconess Medical Center parking garage.
 
Panorama of Downtown Spokane looking north from Cliff Drive.

Neighborhoods

 
Monroe Street corridor and surrounding Emerson/Garfield neighborhood

Spokane's neighborhoods range from the Victorian-style South Hill and Browne's Addition, to the Davenport District of Downtown, to the more contemporary neighborhoods of north Spokane. Spokane's neighborhoods are gaining attention for their history, as illustrated by the city being home to 18 recognized National Register Historical Districts.[77][170][171]

Some of Spokane's best-known neighborhoods are Riverside, Browne's Addition, and Hillyard. The Riverside neighborhood consists primarily of downtown Spokane and is the central business district of Spokane. The neighborhoods south of downtown Spokane are collectively known as the South Hill. Downtown Spokane contains many of the city's public facilities, including City Hall, Riverfront Park (site of Expo '74), and the Spokane Convention Center, First Interstate Center for the Arts and Spokane Arena. The Spokane County Courthouse and public safety campus is adjacent to downtown in the historic West Central neighborhood. To the east of downtown is East Central and the adjacent University District and budding "International District". To the west of downtown is one of Spokane's oldest and densest neighborhoods, Browne's Addition.

A National Historic District west of Downtown, Browne's Addition was Spokane's first prestigious address, notable for its array of old mansions built by Spokane's early elite in the Queen Anne and early American Craftsman styles.[172] The area houses the Northwest Museum of Arts and Culture. In northeast Spokane, the Hillyard neighborhood began in 1892 as the chosen site for James J. Hill's Great Northern Railway yard, placed outside Spokane city limits to avoid "burdensome taxes".[54] The downtown Hillyard Business District, located on Market Street, was the first Spokane neighborhood listed in the National Register of Historic Places.[54] Many of the former town's houses were built to house railroad workers, mainly immigrant laborers working in the local yard, who gave Hillyard an independent, blue-collar character.[54] Hillyard has become a home for much of Spokane's growing Russian, Ukrainian, and Southeast Asian communities.[54][162][164]

Architecture

Commercial and public buildings

 
The Romanesque Revival-style Cathedral of Our Lady of Lourdes

Spokane neighborhoods contain a patchwork of architectural styles that give them a distinct identity and illustrate the changes throughout the city's history.[173] Most of Spokane's notable buildings and landmarks are in the Riverside neighborhood and the downtown commercial district, where many of the buildings were rebuilt after the Great Fire of 1889 in the Romanesque Revival style.[49] Examples include the Great Northern clock tower, Review Building, Cathedral of Our Lady of Lourdes, First Congregational Church, Washington Water Power Post Street substation, Peyton Building, and The Carlyle.[174]

The principal architect of many buildings of this period was Kirtland Kelsey Cutter.[80] Self-taught, he came to Spokane in 1886, and began by designing "Chalet Hohenstein" for himself and other residences for his family, while also working as a bank teller.[175] Other structures designed by Cutter include the Spokane Club, Washington Water Power Substation, Monroe Street Bridge (featured in the city seal), the Steam Plant, and the Davenport Hotel. Built in renaissance and Spanish Revival style, the Davenport Hotel cost two million dollars to complete and included new technologies at the time of its opening in September 1914, such as chilled water, elevators, and air cooling.[86]

In contemporary times, one of the city's foremost and influential architects has been Warren C. Heylman, who helped give the city a great breadth of mid-century architecture.[176] Heylman's career was most prolific during the 1960s and 1970s where his main body of work was done in the modernist style, designing numerous residential houses, apartment buildings, and architectural embellishments.[177] Some of his most noteworthy works in Spokane include The Parkade, Spokane International Airport, Spokane Regional Health Building, and the Burlington Northern Latah Creek Bridge over Hangman Valley.[177]

 
The Renaissance Revival-style Davenport Hotel designed by Kirtland Cutter

Other well-represented architectural styles downtown include Art Deco (Spokane City Hall, Paulsen Center, Fox Theater, John R. Rogers High School, City Ramp Garage), Renaissance Revival (Steam Plant Square, Thomas S. Foley Courthouse, Legion Building, San Marco), Neoclassical (Masonic Center, Hutton Building, Bing Crosby Theater), Chicago School (U.S. Bank Building, Liberty Building, Old City Hall) and Modernist (The Parkade, Ridpath Hotel, Bank of America Financial Center).[174] The tallest building in the city, at 288 feet (88 m), is the Bank of America Financial Center.[174] Also of note is the Spokane County Courthouse in West Central (the building on the seal of Spokane County), the Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist in Rockwood, the Benewah Milk Bottles in Riverside and Garland, Mount Saint Michael in Hillyard, and the Cambern Dutch Shop Windmill in South Perry.

Residential

 
Patsy Clark Mansion in Browne's Addition

As an early affluent Spokane neighborhood, the Browne's Addition neighborhood and residences contain the largest variety of residential architecture in the city.[172] These residences are lavish and personalized, featuring many architectural styles that were popular and trendy in the Pacific Northwest from the late 19th century to 1930, such as the Victorian and Queen Anne styles.[178] In high demand following his firms' design of the Idaho Building at the Chicago World's Fair in 1893, Cutter found work constructing many mansions for mining and railroad tycoons such as Patrick "Patsy" Clark and Daniel C. Corbin and son Austin.[179]

The older neighborhoods of the early 20th century, such as West Central, East Central, Logan, Hillyard, and much of the lower South Hill, feature a large concentration of American Craftsman style bungalows. In Hillyard, the most architecturally intact neighborhood in Spokane, 85 percent of these buildings are historic.[180] As the city expanded mainly to the north in the middle of the 20th century, the bungalows in the "minimal traditional" style commonplace from the 1930s to the 1950s tend to predominate in the Northwest, North Hill, and Bemiss neighborhoods. This architectural style occupies the neighborhoods where the integrity of Spokane's street grid pattern is largely intact (especially the areas north of downtown and south of Francis Ave.), and the houses have backyard alleys for carports, deliveries, and refuse collection. Contemporary suburbs and architecture are prevalent at the north and south edges of Spokane as well as in the new Kendall Yards neighborhood north of downtown.[181]

Parks and recreation

 
Duncan Garden at Manito Park

In 1907, Spokane's board of park commissioners retained the services of the Olmsted Brothers to draw up a plan for Spokane's parks.[182] Much of Spokane's park land was acquired by the city prior to World War I, establishing it early on as a leader among Western cities in the development of a citywide park system.[183][184] Spokane has a system of over 87 parks totaling 4,100 acres (17 km2) and includes six neighborhood aquatic centers.[185][186] Some of the most notable parks in Spokane's system are Riverfront Park, Manito Park and Botanical Gardens, Riverside State Park, Mount Spokane State Park, Saint Michael's Mission State Park, Plantes Ferry Recreation Park, John A. Finch Arboretum, and the Dishman Hills Conservation Area.

Riverfront Park, created after Expo '74 and occupying the same site, is 100 acres (40 ha) in downtown Spokane and the site of some of Spokane's largest events.[187] The park has views of the Spokane Falls and holds a number of civic attractions, including a skyride, a rebuilt gondola lift that carries visitors across the falls from high above the river gorge.[187] The park also includes the historic hand-carved Riverfront Park Looff carousel created in 1909 by Charles I. D. Looff.[187] Riverfront Park is currently being renovated and modernized (as of October 2016).[90] Manito Park and Botanical Gardens on Spokane's South Hill features the Duncan Gardens, a classical European Renaissance-style garden and the Nishinomiya Japanese Garden designed by Nagao Sakurai. Riverside State Park, close to downtown, is a site for outdoor activities such as hiking, mountain biking, and horse riding.[188]

The Spokane area has many trails and rail trails, the most notable of which is the Spokane River Centennial Trail, which features over 37.5 miles (60.4 km) of paved trails running along the Spokane River from Spokane to the Idaho border.[189] This trail continues on towards Coeur d'Alene for 24 miles (39 km) as the North Idaho Centennial Trail and is often used for alternative transportation and recreational use. In the summer, it has long been popular to visit North Idaho's "Lake Country", such as Lake Coeur d'Alene, Lake Pend Oreille, Priest Lake, or one of the other nearby bodies of water and beaches.[80][190] In the winter, the public has access to five ski resorts within a couple hours of the city. The closest of these is the Mt. Spokane Ski and Snowboard Park,[191] which has trails for cross-country skiing, snowshoeing, snowmobiling, and dog sledding.[192]

Zoological parks in Spokane include Cat Tales Zoological Park, a wildlife sanctuary primarily for big cats and the Blue Zoo an interactive aquarium in the NorthTown Mall.[193][194]

Economy

 
The Spokane Stock Exchange once occupied the Peyton Building

Spokane became an important rail and shipping center because of its location between mining and farming areas.[44][55] In the early 1880s, gold and silver were discovered in the Inland Empire; as a regional shipping center, the city furnished supplies to the miners who passed through on their way to the mineral-rich Coeur d'Alene, Colville and Kootenay districts.[45] The mining districts are still considered among the most productive in North America.[195]

Natural resources have historically been the foundation of Spokane's economy, with the mining, logging, and agriculture industries providing much of the region's economic activity. After mining declined at the turn of the 20th century, agriculture and logging replaced mining as the primary influences in the economy.[65] Lumberjacks and millmen working in the hundreds of mills along the railroads, rivers, and lakes of northern Washington and Idaho were provisioning themselves in Spokane.[196] Agriculture has always been an important sector in the local economy. The surrounding area, especially to the south is the Palouse,[197] a region that has long been associated with farming, especially wheat production where it is one of the largest wheat producing regions in the United States.[68][198] As with the mining industry in the late 1880s, Spokane was an important agricultural market and trade center. Inland Empire farmers exported wheat, livestock and other agricultural products to the ports such as New York, Liverpool and Tokyo.[70] Today, a large share of the wheat produced in the region is shipped to Far East markets.[199] The Inland Northwest also supports many vineyards and microbreweries as well.[200][201] By the early 20th century Spokane was primarily a commercial center rather than an industrial center.[202]

In Spokane, wood and food processing, printing and publishing, primary metal refining and fabrication, electrical and computer equipment, and transportation equipment are leaders in the manufacturing sector.[203] Gold mining company Gold Reserve, and Fortune 1000 company Potlatch Corporation – a forest products company that operates as a real estate investment trust – are headquartered in the city proper.[204][205] Mining, forestry, and agribusiness remain important to the local and regional economy, but Spokane's economy has diversified to include other industries, including the high-tech and biotech sectors.[79] Spokane is becoming a more service-oriented economy in the face of a less prominent manufacturing sector which declined in the 1980s, particularly as a medical and biotechnology center;[80] Fortune 1000 technology company Itron, for instance, is headquartered in the area.[206] Avista Corporation, the holding company of Avista Utilities, is the only company in Spokane that has been listed in the Fortune 500, ranked 299 on the list in 2002.[207] Other companies with head offices in the Spokane area include technology company Key Tronic, vacation rental provider Stay Alfred, and microcar maker Commuter Cars.[208][209][210] Despite diversification to new industries, Spokane's economy has struggled in recent decades. Spokane was ranked the #1 "Worst City For Jobs" in America in both 2012[211] and 2015,[212] while also ranking #4 in 2014.[213] Additionally, Forbes named Spokane the "Scam Capital of America" in 2009[214] due to widespread business fraud. Trends of fraud were noted as far back as 1988,[215] again in 2002,[216] and continuing through 2011.[215]

As of 2013, the top five employers in Spokane are the State of Washington, Spokane Public Schools, Providence Sacred Heart Medical Center and Children's Hospital, the 92d Air Refueling Wing, and Spokane County.[217] The largest military facility and employer, the 92d Air Refueling Wing, was stationed at Fairchild Air Force Base near Airway Heights. The leading industries in Spokane for the employed population 16 years and older were educational services, health care, and social assistance (26.5 percent), retail trade (12.7 percent), and arts, entertainment, recreation, and accommodation food services (10.4 percent).[149] As the metropolitan center of the Inland Northwest, as well as parts of southern British Columbia and Alberta, Spokane serves as a commercial, manufacturing, transportation, medical, shopping, and entertainment hub.[203][218] In 2017, the Spokane–Spokane Valley MSA had a gross metropolitan product of $25.5 billion while the Coeur d'Alene metropolitan area was $5.93 billion.[219]

As of 2014, economic development in the Spokane area primarily focuses on promoting the following industries: manufacturing (especially aerospace manufacturing), health sciences, professional services, information science and technology, finance and insurance as well as clean technology, and digital media.[220][221] To aid economic development, the eastern branch of Innovate Washington, a state-supported business incubator was placed in the city.[222]

In recent years, Spokane has become a growing technology hub for both established companies and startups. Fortune 1000 cybersecurity leader, F5, Inc., has two offices in the area with over 250 employees whom are focused on hardware product development, software engineering, global services support, and digital sales.[223][224] Other established firms are moving to Spokane, such as Remitly, an app-based financial services corporation, which was founded by Josh Hug, a Whitworth University graduate.[225][226] Ignite Northwest, led by Silicon Valley entrepreneur Tom Simpson, has invested over $100 million through the Spokane Angel Alliance and Ignite to fund and support early stage companies.[227]

Culture

 
The art deco interior of the Fox Theater

Arts and theater

Spokane's main art districts are located in the Davenport Arts District, the Garland Business District, and East Sprague.[228] The First Friday Artwalk, which occurs the first Friday of every month, is dedicated to local vendors and performers displaying art around downtown.[229] The two most important Artwalk dates (the first Friday of February and October) attract large crowds to the art districts. The Davenport Arts District has the largest concentration of art galleries and is home to many of Spokane's main performing arts venues, including the Knitting Factory, Fox Theater, and Bing Crosby Theater. The Knitting Factory is a concert house that serves as a setting for many mainstream touring musicians and acts. The Martin Woldson Theater at the Fox, restored to its original 1931 Art Deco state after years of being derelict,[87] is home to the Spokane Symphony Orchestra. The Metropolitan Performing Arts Center was restored in 1988 and renamed the Bing Crosby Theater in 2006 to honor the former Spokanite.[230] Touring stand-up comedians are hosted by the Spokane Comedy Club.[231] Theater is provided by Spokane's only resident professional company, The Modern Theater,[232] though there are also the Spokane Civic Theatre and several other amateur community theaters and smaller groups. The First Interstate Center for the Arts often hosts large traveling exhibitions, shows, and tours. Spokane was awarded the All-America City Award by the National Civic League in 1974, 2004, and 2015.[233]

Spokane offers an array of musical performances catering to a variety of interests. Spokane's local music scene, however, is considered somewhat lacking by the Spokane All-Ages Music Initiative and other critics, who have identified a need for a legitimate all-ages venue for music performances.[234] The Spokane Symphony presents a full season of classical music, and the Spokane Jazz Orchestra, a full season of jazz music.[235] The Spokane Jazz Orchestra, formed in 1962, is a 70-piece orchestra and non-profit organization.[236]

Museums

 
Northwest Museum of Arts and Culture

There are several museums in the city, most notably the Northwest Museum of Arts and Culture, located a few blocks from the center of downtown in Browne's Addition, amid the mansions of Spokane's late 19th-century "Age of Elegance". A Smithsonian affiliate museum, it houses a large collection of Native American artifacts as well as regional and national traveling art exhibits.[237][238]

The Mobius Science Center and the related Mobius Kid's Museum in downtown Spokane seek to generate interest in science, technology, engineering, and math among the youth in a hands-on experience.[239] The Jundt Art Museum at Gonzaga University features 2,800 square feet (260 m2) of exhibition space and contains sizable collections of prints from the Bolker, Baruch, Jacobs, and Corita Kent collections.[240][241] The museum houses glass art by Dale Chihuly, bronze sculptures by Auguste Rodin, tapestries, paintings, ceramics, photographs, and a wide range of gifts, including from the Iris and B. Gerald Cantor Foundation and Collections.[240] On the campus of Gonzaga University, the Crosby House, Bing Crosby's childhood home, houses the Bing Crosby Memorabilia Room, the world's largest Crosby collection with around 200 pieces.[242] A museum of flight showcasing historic airplanes and curated by the Historic Flight Foundation is located at Felts Field.[243]

Events and activities

Spokane is known as the birthplace of the national movement started by Sonora Smart Dodd that led to the proposal and the eventual establishment of Father's Day as a national holiday in the U.S.[244] The first observation of Father's Day in Spokane was on June 19, 1910.[245] Sonora conceived the idea in Spokane's Central Methodist Episcopal Church, while listening to a Mother's Day sermon.[246]

 
Lilac Bloomsday Run
 
Spokane Falls Skyride Tour

The Lilac Bloomsday Run, held in the spring on the first Sunday of May, is a 7.46-mile (12.01 km) race for competitive runners as well as walkers that attracts international competition.[247] Also in May is the Lilac Festival which honors the military, celebrates youth, and showcases the region.[248] Spokane's unofficial nickname, the "Lilac City", refers to a flowering shrub that has flourished since its introduction to the area in the early 20th century.[249] In June the city hosts Spokane Hoopfest, a 3-on-3 basketball tournament, among the largest of its kind.[250] One of Spokane's most popular local events is Pig Out in the Park, an annual six-day food and entertainment festival where attendees may eat a variety of foods and listen to free live music concerts featuring local, regional, and national recording artists in Riverfront Park.[251]

The Spokane International Film Festival, held every February, is a small, juried festival that features documentaries and shorts from around the world.[252] The Spokane Gay & Lesbian Film Festival, held every November, features contemporary, independent films of interest to the GLBT community.[253]

Other notable events in the Spokane region include the Spokane County Interstate Fair, Japan Week, Spokane Pride Parade and the Lilac City Comicon. The Spokane County Interstate Fair is held annually in September at the Spokane County Fair and Expo Center in Spokane Valley.[254] Japan Week is held in April and celebrates the sister-city relationship with Nishinomiya, Hyogo, demonstrating the many commonalities shared between the two cities.[255] Students from the Spokane campus of Mukogawa Fort Wright Institute, Gonzaga, Whitworth, and other area schools organize an array of Japanese cultural events. The gay and lesbian Spokane Pride Parade is held each June.[256] There is an annual Renaissance fair and Civil War reenactment as well.[257][258]

Education

 
St. Aloysius Church at Gonzaga University

Serving the general educational needs of the local population are two public library districts, the Spokane Public Library (within city limits) and the Spokane County Library District. Founded in 1904 with funding from philanthropist Andrew Carnegie, the Spokane Public Library system comprises a downtown library overlooking the Spokane Falls and five branch libraries.[259] Special collections focus on Inland Pacific Northwest history and include reference books, periodicals, maps, photographs, and other archival materials and government documents.[260]

Public and Private schools

Spokane Public Schools (District 81) was organized in 1889, and is the largest public school system in Spokane, and the second-largest in the state, as of 2014, serving roughly 30,000 students in six high schools, six middle schools, and thirty-four elementary schools.[261][262] Other public school districts in the Spokane area include the Mead School District in north Spokane County, outside city limits. A variety of state-approved, independent charter schools and private and parochial elementary and secondary schools augment the public school system. The Roman Catholic Diocese of Spokane manages ten such schools in & around the area.[263]

Higher Education

Spokane is home to many higher education institutions. They include the private universities Gonzaga and Whitworth, and the public Community Colleges of Spokane system (Spokane Community College and Spokane Falls Community College) as well as a variety of technical institutes. Gonzaga University and Law School were founded by the Italian-born priest Joseph Cataldo and the Jesuits in 1887.[264] Whitworth was founded in Tacoma, Washington in 1890 and moved to its present location in 1914.[265] It is affiliated with the Presbyterian Church and had 2,500 students studying in 53 different undergraduate and degree programs as of 2011.[266] While Spokane is one of the larger cities in the U.S. to lack a main campus of a state-supported university within its city limits, Eastern Washington University (EWU) and Washington State University (WSU) have operations at the Riverpoint Campus in the University District, just adjacent to downtown and across the Spokane River from the Gonzaga campus.[267][268] Washington State University Spokane is WSU's health sciences campus and houses the school's College of Nursing, College of Pharmacy, and Elson S. Floyd College of Medicine.[83][269] The main EWU campus is located 15 miles (24 km) southwest of Spokane in nearby Cheney, and WSU is located 65 miles (105 km) to the south in Pullman. In addition to WSU's health science presence in Spokane, there is also a four-year medical school branch affiliated with the University of Washington's WWAMI program.[82] An international branch campus of the Mukogawa Women's University, the Mukogawa Fort Wright Institute, is located in Spokane.[270]

Sports

 
The Spokane Veterans Memorial Arena

Spokane is close to dozens of lakes and rivers for outdoor sports and recreation. People use these for swimming, boating, kayaking, rafting, and fishing. Nearby mountains provide for skiing, hiking, biking and sightseeing.[271] The Spokane region's professional and semi-professional sports teams include the Spokane Indians in Minor League Baseball and the Spokane Chiefs in junior ice hockey.[272] Collegiate sports in Spokane focus on the local teams such as the Gonzaga Bulldogs who compete in the NCAA's Division I West Coast Conference and the Whitworth Pirates playing in the Division III Northwest Conference and local media covers other regional teams, including the Eastern Washington Eagles, Washington State Cougars, and the Idaho Vandals.[272]

Baseball

The Spokane Indians located in the suburb Spokane Valley, are a Class High-A baseball team in the Northwest League (NWL) and have been a farm team of the Colorado Rockies since 2021.[273] The Indians play their home games at the 6,803-seat Avista Stadium and have won seven NWL titles since their Short-Season-A debut in 1982. Prior to 1982, the Indians played at the Triple-A level. The team achieved considerable success in the early 1970s, winning the Pacific Coast League championship in 1970, and having a 94–52 record.[274] In the 1920s and 1930s the Spokane City League, a semiprofessional baseball league of teams of the Inland Empire, reached its peak.[275]

Hockey

The Spokane Chiefs are a junior ice hockey team that play in the Canadian Hockey League's Western Hockey League.[276] They play their home games in the Spokane Arena and have a regional rivalry with the Tri-City Americans. They have won the CHL's top prize, the Memorial Cup, two times in club history, first in 1991 and again in 2008.[276]

Major Sporting events

The Spokane Arena is the city's premier sports venue. In the years since the Spokane Arena opened, it has played host to several major sporting events. The first major event was the 1998 Memorial Cup, the championship game of the Canadian Hockey League.[277] Four years later in 2002, the city hosted the 2002 Skate America figure skating competition[278] and then the 2007 U.S. Figure Skating Championships in the Spokane Arena.[279] The latter event set an attendance record, selling nearly 155,000 tickets. Spokane later hosted the 2010 U.S. Figure Skating Championships[279] – ending eighteen days before the start of the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, British Columbia and then the 2016 Team Challenge Cup.[280]

Infrastructure

 
Street layout of Spokane city center

Transportation

City streets

Spokane's streets use a grid plan that is oriented to the four cardinal directions; generally, the east–west roads are designated as avenues, and the north–south roads are referred to as streets. Major east–west thoroughfares in the city include Francis, Wellesley, Mission, Sprague, and 29th Avenues. Major north–south thoroughfares include Maple–Ash, Monroe, Division, Hamilton, Greene–Market (north of I-90), and Ray–Freya (south of I-90) Streets. Division Street divides the city into East and West, while Sprague Avenue splits the city into North and South.[281] Division Street is Spokane's major retail corridor; Sprague Avenue serves the same purpose in Spokane Valley. With over 40,000 vehicles per day in average daily traffic from Interstate 90 north to the US 2–US 395 junction, North Division is Spokane's busiest corridor.[282]

Spokane's extensive skywalk system covers thirteen blocks in the downtown area and is among the largest in the United States; it is used for pedestrian travel in cold and inclement weather and retail space as well.[283][284] Despite this, the city has an average Walk Score of 49 as of 2020, indicating that most errands require a car. Its average Bike Score is 52.[285]

Mass transportation

 
The STA Plaza in Downtown Spokane

Before the influx of automobiles, Spokane's electric streetcar and interurban lines played a dominant role in moving people and goods around Spokane. Streetcars were installed as early as 1888, when they were pulled by horses.[286] Many older side streets in Spokane still have visible streetcar rails embedded in them. Streetcar service was reduced due to declining ridership beginning in 1922, and by August 1936, all lines had been abandoned or converted to motor buses.[287] Mass transportation throughout the Spokane area is provided by the Spokane Transit Authority (STA), which operates a fleet of 156 buses. Its service area covers roughly 248 square miles (640 km2) and reaches 85 percent of the county's population.[288] A large percentage of STA bus routes originate from the central hub, the STA Plaza in downtown Spokane. Spokane has a Transit Score of 35.4 on Walk Score.[285] Spokane has intercity rail and bus service provided by Amtrak, Greyhound, Flixbus and Jefferson Lines via the Spokane Intermodal Center. The city is a stop for Amtrak's Empire Builder on its way to and from Chicago's Union Station en route to Seattle and Portland.[289] Amtrak's through service to Seattle and Portland is a legacy of BNSF Railway's old Spokane, Portland and Seattle Railway trackage.[290] Spokane is a major railway junction for the BNSF Railway and the Union Pacific Railroad and is the western terminus for the Montana Rail Link.[290]

Freeways and highways

 
Overlooking Spokane from Sunset Hill

Interstate 90 (I-90) runs east–west from Seattle, through downtown Spokane, and eastward through Spokane Valley, Liberty Lake, and onward to Coeur d'Alene and then Missoula.[291] Although they are not limited access highways like I-90, US 2 and US 395 enter Spokane from the west via I-90 and continue north through Spokane via Division Street. The two highways share the same route until they reach "The Y", a fork where US 395 continues northward to Deer Park, Colville then onward to Canada, and US 2 branches off to the northeast, continuing to Mead, Newport, and Sandpoint. US 195, also known as the Inland Empire Highway, connects to Interstate 90 west of Spokane near Latah Creek and travels south through the Palouse.[291]

The Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT) is tasked with improving local highways to keep up with the region's growth and to try to prevent congestion problems that plague many larger cities. The WSDOT is constructing the North Spokane Corridor. When completed, the corridor will be a 10.5-mile-long (16.9 km) limited-access highway that will run from I-90, in the vicinity of the Thor/Freya interchange, northward through Spokane, meeting the existing US 395 just south of the Wandermere Golf Course.[292]

Airports

 
Concourse C, Spokane International Airport

Spokane International Airport (IATA: GEG, ICAO: KGEG) serves as the primary commercial airport for Spokane, Eastern Washington, and Northern Idaho. It is the second-largest airport in the state of Washington, and is recognized by the Federal Aviation Administration as a small hub, with service from nine passenger and five cargo airlines.[293] The 4,800-acre (19.42 km2) airport is located 5 miles (8.0 km) west of downtown Spokane and is approximately a 10-minute drive away. The international airport's three-letter designation is "GEG", a result and legacy of the Geiger Field days prior to 1960, when the airport was named after Army aviator Major Harold Geiger in 1941.[294]

Felts Field is a general aviation airport serving the Spokane area and is located in east Spokane along the south bank of the Spokane River. Aviation at Felts Field dates back to 1913 and the strip served as Spokane's primary airport until commercial air traffic was redirected to Geiger Field after World War II.[294] In 1927, the strip was one of the first in the western U.S. to receive official recognition as an airport by the U.S. Department of Commerce and is now named in honor of James Buell Felts, a Washington Air National Guard pilot.[294]

Healthcare

 
Deaconess Medical Center

The Spokane area has six major hospitals, four of which are full-service facilities.[295] The health-care industry is a large and increasingly important industry in Spokane; the city provides specialized care to many patients from the surrounding Inland Northwest and as far north as the Canada–US border.[296] The city's health-care needs are served primarily by non-profit Seattle-based Providence Health & Services and non-profit Tacoma-based Multicare Health System, which run the two biggest hospitals, Sacred Heart Medical Center, and Deaconess Hospital, respectively.[297] These two hospitals, the 102-bed St. Luke's Rehabilitation Institute,[298] 100-bed Inland Northwest Behavioral Health,[299] and most of Spokane's major health-care facilities, are located on Spokane's Lower-South Hill, just south of downtown, in what is known as the "Medical District" of Spokane.[300] Sacred Heart Hospital opened originally with just 31 beds[301] on Spokane Falls Boulevard on January 27, 1887, but later moved to its present location at 101 West Eighth Avenue.[302] As of 2014 it had 642 beds, with 28,319 admissions, 71,543 emergency room visits, and 2,982 births annually, and a full-time staff of 29 doctors and dentists and 583 registered nurses.[303] Deaconess Medical Center, the smaller of the two main hospitals, had 388 beds as of 2014.[304] Other hospitals in the area include the Spokane Veterans Affairs Medical Center in the northwest part of town, Providence Holy Family Hospital on the north side, and MultiCare Valley Hospital in the Spokane Valley. One of 20 specialty orthopedic Shriners Hospitals in the U.S. is also located in Spokane.[305] One of Washington's two state psychiatric hospitals, Eastern State Hospital, is located 15 miles (24 km) away in Medical Lake.[306]

Utilities

 
Monroe Street Dam

The City of Spokane provides municipal water, wastewater management, and solid waste management.[307] Spokane operates Washington's only waste-to-energy plant as well as two solid waste transfer stations as part of the Spokane Regional Solid Waste System, a collaboration between the City of Spokane and Spokane County.[308] Electricity generated by the waste-to-energy plant is used to operate the facility, with excess energy being sold to Puget Sound Energy.[308] Spokane draws its water from the Spokane Valley–Rathdrum Prairie Aquifer; this 370-square-mile (958 km2) "sole source aquifer" is the only water supply for Spokane County in Washington, and for Kootenai and Bonner counties in Idaho.[309] Serving over 500,000 people, the aquifer is distinguished in being one of the largest aquifers in the country at 10 trillion gallons, as well as having one of the fastest flow rates in the country at 60 feet (18 m) per day, and for its purity.[310][i]

Natural gas and electricity are provided by the local utility, Avista Utilities, while CenturyLink and Comcast provide television, internet, and telephone service. Spokane hosts three hydroelectric generation facilities on the Spokane River: the Upriver Dam, the Upper Falls Dam, and the Monroe Street Dam. The Upriver Dam is owned and operated by the City of Spokane, and generates the electricity needed to operate the municipal water supply's pressure pumps.[311] The power generated in excess of that is sold to Avista Utilities.[311] The Upper Falls and Monroe Street dams are owned and operated by Avista Utilities, and have respective generation capacities of 10 and 15 MW.[312]

Media

 
The Review Building

Print

Newspaper service in Spokane is provided by its only major daily newspaper, The Spokesman-Review, which has a daily circulation of 76,291 and Sunday circulation of 95,939.[313][314] The Spokesman-Review was formed from the merger of the Spokane Falls Review (1883–1894) and the Spokesman (1890–1893) in 1893 and was first published under the present name on June 29, 1894.[315][316] It later absorbed the competing afternoon paper The Spokane Daily Chronicle, a significant newspaper that existed from 1881 until 1982 and returned in 2021.[317][318][j] More specialized publications include the weekly alternative newspaper The Pacific Northwest Inlander,[319] the bi-weekly Spokane Journal of Business,[320] and the student-run Gonzaga Bulletin.[321] Monthly publications include The Black Lens, an African American community newspaper,[322] a newspaper for parents, Kids Newspaper,[323] and a home and lifestyle magazine, Spokane Coeur d'Alene Living.[324]

Radio

According to Arbitron, Spokane is the 94th-largest radio market in the U.S., with 532,100 listeners aged 12 and over.[325] There are 28 AM and FM radio stations broadcast in the city.[326] The five most listened-to stations are KKZX-FM (classic rock), KQNT-AM (news/talk), KXLY-FM (country), KISC-FM (adult contemporary), and KZZU-FM (Hot AC).[327] Spokane's primary sources of non-commercial and community radio include Spokane's NPR-affiliate station KPBX-FM and KYRS, a full-power community radio station.[328]

Television

Spokane is the 73rd-largest television market in the U.S., accounting for 0.366% of the total TV households in the U.S.[329] The city has six television stations, representing the major commercial networks and public television.[330] Spokane is the television broadcast center for much of eastern Washington (except the Yakima and Tri-Cities area), northern Idaho, northwestern Montana, northeastern Oregon, and parts of southern Canada (by cable television). Spokane receives broadcasts in the Pacific Time Zone, with weekday prime time beginning at 8 pm. Montana and Alberta, Canada are in the Mountain Time Zone and receive Spokane broadcasts one hour later by their local time. The major network television affiliates include KREM (TV) 2 (CBS), KXLY-TV 4 (ABC), KHQ-TV 6 (NBC; Spokane's first television station, on air on December 20, 1952), KAYU 28 (FOX), KSKN 22 (The CW), KSPS-TV 7 (PBS), and KCDT-TV 26 (PBS; operating out of Coeur d'Alene, Idaho).[330]

Notable people

Sister cities

Spokane has six current sister cities, as designated by Sister Cities International:[331]

See also

  United States portal

Notes

^[a] The name is said to derive from Spukcane, the vocalization of a sound made by a snake which the Chief of the Spokanes came to call "power from the brain" after pondering it made his head vibrate. It is unknown when the present meaning of the word, "Sun People" replaced this earlier meaning.[18]
^[b] Unbeknownst to them, the Spokane Valley was the only area within 200 miles that could provide passage to the Inland Empire through the Rockies at a reasonable grade.[32]
^[c] The present name, set forth by an 1891 charter reincorporated the city under the name "Spokane Falls", stating: "The corporate name of the city is Spokane Falls, and by that name shall have perpetual succession" (Charter, Article I). However, a later article in that same charter which was voted on concurrently changed the name to "Spokane".[332]
^[d] Secretary of the Spokane chamber of commerce, John R. Reavis tells of Spokane's significance to the Inland Northwest region as an entrepôt distributing center (largely the city's raison d'être) in his 1891 Annual Report, writing: "By reason of her geographical position and railroad connections Spokane is fitted as no other city is, or ever can be, to be the distributing center of all that country within a radius of 150 miles, and in some instances territory much farther away. There is no point 150 miles from Spokane that is not at least 225 miles from any other city of 10,000 population. We have about us a territory of 60,000 square miles in extent, to every point of which we are nearer than any other city, to every point of which we have better railroad connections and easier grades than any other city ... We have eight lines of railroad that radiate out in all directions through it, so that shipments made here in the morning can reach any point within its borders by nightfall. We have a telephone system connecting us with almost every shipping town and shipping station within its borders. Goods may be ordered, shipped and received, in most instances, within one day. Never was a city more intimately knit to its surrounding territory than Spokane, and never was one more free from a legitimate rival in trade ..."[333]

^[e] The financing for rebuilding the downtown core came in large part from the infusion of investment from Dutch bankers; this investment was so deep that by 1896, one prominent Dutch mortgage company, the Northwestern and Pacific Hypotheekbank owned a quarter of the city.[334]
^[f] In 1892, the Interstate Commerce Commission agreed with the city after it filed a complaint about these practices, but that decision was struck down by a federal court. In 1906, Spokane sued under the newly passed Hepburn Act, and won on July 24, 1911.[335]
^[g] The exact circumstances and sequence of events regarding the discovery of the tree are obscure due to conflicting accounts.
^[h] Average monthly temperatures obtained by summing the average monthly highs and lows then dividing by 2.
^[i] A study published in The Spokesman-Review on May 6, 1909, by City bacteriologist, Frank Rose found only seven or eight germs per cubic centimeter of water. As a standard, "water that contains 100 germs per cubic centimeter is considered comparatively pure".[310]
^[j] The Spokesman-Review has been a family-owned newspaper since 1894. The Cowles family also owns the city's NBC affiliate, KHQ-TV.[317]

  1. ^ Mean maxima and minima (i.e., the highest and lowest temperature readings during an entire month or year) calculated based on data at said location from 1991 to 2020.
  2. ^ Official records for Spokane kept at Spokane Weather Bureau Office from February 1881 to July 1889, and at Spokane International Airport since August 1889.[119]
  3. ^ Mean maxima and minima calculated based on data from November 1998 to December 2020 for months and 1999 to 2020 for years.
  4. ^ Starting on October 14, 1998.

References

  1. ^ a b "Spokane History". City of Spokane. Retrieved February 26, 2018.
  2. ^ "2019 U.S. Gazetteer Files". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved August 7, 2020.
  3. ^ a b c "QuickFacts: Spokane city, Washington". census.gov. Retrieved December 27, 2021.
  4. ^ a b "City and Town Population Totals: 2020-2021". United States Census Bureau. May 29, 2022. Retrieved May 31, 2022.
  5. ^ . United States Postal Service. Archived from the original on January 1, 2008. Retrieved December 7, 2014.
  6. ^ "US Board on Geographic Names". United States Geological Survey. October 25, 2007. Retrieved January 1, 2014.
  7. ^ "Spokane". Merriam-Webster, Incorporated. Retrieved September 4, 2017.
  8. ^ "Seattle, Washington to Spokane, Washington - Google Maps".
  9. ^ Prager, Mike (April 24, 2008). "A designer bloom for Lilac City". The Spokesman-Review. Retrieved May 18, 2019.
  10. ^ Tiernan, Colin (June 8, 2021). "Slam dunk nickname: City Council designates Spokane "Hooptown USA"". The Spokesman-Review. Retrieved June 9, 2021.
  11. ^ "U.S. Census Bureau QuickFacts - Population, Census, April 1, 2010 - Spokane city, Washington".
  12. ^ "Census.gov: Rank by 2010 Population and Housing Units: 2000 and 2010" (PDF).
  13. ^ "Census.gov: Rank of Places of 100,000 or More by 2010 Population: 1790 to 2010; and Number of Housing Units: 1940 to 2010" (PDF).
  14. ^ a b "Population and Housing Unit Estimates Tables". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved June 13, 2019.
  15. ^ Laura Arksey (October 3, 2009), "Spokane Falls (later renamed Spokane) is incorporated as a first-class city on November 29, 1881.", HistoryLink, Seattle: History Ink, The original Act of Incorporation spelled the city's name correctly, but the territorial printing office incorrectly spelled it Spokan Falls, a phonetic spelling that was used elsewhere during the period, including on the 1880 census. This spelling was also used for Spokane's first newspaper, the Spokan Times.
  16. ^ a b Ruby & Brown (2006), p. 5
  17. ^ a b Phillips (1971), pp. 134–135
  18. ^ a b Ruby & Brown (2006), pp. 7–8
  19. ^ Ruby & Brown (2006), pp. 5–6
  20. ^ Ruby & Brown (2006), p. 34
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spokane, washington, spokane, redirects, here, other, uses, spokane, disambiguation, spokane, listen, spoh, largest, city, county, seat, spokane, county, washington, united, states, eastern, washington, along, spokane, river, adjacent, selkirk, mountains, west. Spokane redirects here For other uses see Spokane disambiguation Spokane s p oʊ ˈ k ae n listen spoh KAN 7 is the largest city and county seat of Spokane County Washington United States It is in eastern Washington along the Spokane River adjacent to the Selkirk Mountains and west of the Rocky Mountain foothills 92 miles 148 km south of the Canadian border 18 miles 30 km west of the Washington Idaho border and 279 miles 449 km 8 east of Seattle along I 90 Spokane WashingtonCityDowntown Spokane skylineUpper Spokane FallsSpokane River Centennial TrailRiverfront ParkManito ParkMonroe Street BridgeFlagLogoNickname The Lilac CityMotto Creative by NatureShow SpokaneShow Spokane CountyShow WashingtonShow the United StatesCoordinates 47 39 32 N 117 25 30 W 47 65889 N 117 42500 W 47 65889 117 42500 Coordinates 47 39 32 N 117 25 30 W 47 65889 N 117 42500 W 47 65889 117 42500CountryUnited StatesStateWashingtonCountySpokaneFounded1873 1 IncorporatedNovember 29 1881Founded byJames Glover 1 Named forSpokane peopleGovernment TypeMayor council BodySpokane City Council MayorNadine Woodward R Area 2 City69 50 sq mi 179 99 km2 Land68 76 sq mi 178 09 km2 Water0 74 sq mi 1 91 km2 1 28 Elevation1 843 ft 562 m Population 2020 3 City228 989 Estimate 2021 4 229 071 RankUS 96th Density3 300 sq mi 1 300 km2 Urban447 279 US 90th Urban density2 605 4 sq mi 1 006 0 km2 Metro593 466 US 98th CSA757 146 US 70th DemonymSpokaniteTime zoneUTC 8 PST Summer DST UTC 7 PDT ZIP CodesZip codes 5 99201 99202 99203 99204 99205 99206 99207 99208 99209 PO BOX 99210 PO BOX 99211 PO BOX 99212 99213 PO BOX 99214 PO BOX 99215 PO BOX 99216 99217 99218 99219 PO BOX 99220 PO BOX 99223 99224 99228 PO BOX 99251 99252 99256 99258 99260 99299Area code509Official treePonderosa PineGNIS feature ID1512683 6 Websitemy spokanecity orgSpokane is the economic and cultural center of the Spokane metropolitan area the Spokane Coeur d Alene combined statistical area and the Inland Northwest It is known as the birthplace of Father s Day and locally by the nickname of Lilac City 9 Officially Spokane goes by the nickname of Hooptown USA due to Spokane annually hosting Spokane Hoopfest the world s largest basketball tournament 10 The city and the wider Inland Northwest area are served by Spokane International Airport 5 miles 8 km west of Downtown Spokane According to the 2010 census Spokane had a population of 208 916 11 making it the second largest city in Washington 12 and the 101st largest city in the United States 13 At the 2020 census Spokane s population was 228 989 3 A 2021 estimate sets the population of the Spokane Metropolitan Area at 593 466 14 The first people to live in the area the Spokane tribe their name meaning children of the sun in Salishan lived off plentiful game David Thompson explored the area with the westward expansion and establishment of the North West Company s Spokane House in 1810 This trading post was the first long term European settlement in Washington Completion of the Northern Pacific Railway in 1881 brought settlers to the Spokane area The same year it was officially incorporated as a city under the name of Spokane Falls it was re incorporated under its current name ten years later 15 In the late 19th century gold and silver were discovered in the Inland Northwest The local economy depended on mining timber and agriculture until the 1980s Spokane hosted the first environmentally themed World s fair at Expo 74 Many of the downtown area s older Romanesque Revival style buildings were designed by architect Kirtland Kelsey Cutter after the Great Fire of 1889 The city is also home to the Riverfront and Manito parks the Smithsonian affiliated Northwest Museum of Arts and Culture the Davenport Hotel and the Fox and Bing Crosby theaters The Cathedral of Our Lady of Lourdes is the seat of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Spokane and the Cathedral of St John the Evangelist serves as that of the Episcopal Diocese of Spokane The Spokane Washington Temple in the east of the county serves the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints Gonzaga University was established in 1887 by the Jesuits and the private Presbyterian Whitworth University was founded three years later and moved to north Spokane in 1914 The city s western suburb of Airway Heights is home to Fairchild Air Force Base as well as two large casino hotels In sports the region s professional and semi professional sports teams include the Spokane Indians in Minor League Baseball and Spokane Chiefs in junior ice hockey The Gonzaga Bulldogs collegiate basketball team competes at the Division I level As of 2010 Spokane s major daily newspaper The Spokesman Review had a daily circulation of over 76 000 Contents 1 History 1 1 Trading post 1 2 American settlement 1 3 Early 20th century 1 4 Second half of the 20th century 1 5 21st century 2 Geography 2 1 Topography 2 2 Flora and fauna 2 3 Climate 3 Government and politics 3 1 Crime 4 Demographics 4 1 Metropolitan area 5 Cityscape 5 1 Neighborhoods 5 2 Architecture 5 2 1 Commercial and public buildings 5 2 2 Residential 5 3 Parks and recreation 6 Economy 7 Culture 7 1 Arts and theater 7 2 Museums 7 3 Events and activities 8 Education 8 1 Public and Private schools 8 2 Higher Education 9 Sports 9 1 Baseball 9 2 Hockey 9 3 Major Sporting events 10 Infrastructure 10 1 Transportation 10 1 1 City streets 10 1 2 Mass transportation 10 1 3 Freeways and highways 10 1 4 Airports 10 2 Healthcare 10 3 Utilities 11 Media 11 1 Print 11 2 Radio 11 3 Television 12 Notable people 13 Sister cities 14 See also 15 Notes 16 References 16 1 Bibliography 17 Further reading 18 External linksHistory EditMain articles History of Spokane Washington and Timeline of Spokane Washington Spokane Falls in 1888 The first humans to live in the Spokane area were hunter gatherers that lived off plentiful fish and game early human remains have been dated to 8 000 to 13 000 years ago 16 The Spokane tribe after which the city is named the name meaning children of the sun or sun people in Salishan 17 18 a are believed to be either their direct descendants or descendants of people from the Great Plains 19 When asked by early white explorers the Spokanes said their ancestors came from up North 16 Early in the 19th century the Northwest Fur Company sent two white fur trappers west of the Rocky Mountains to search for fur 20 These were the first white men met by the Spokanes who believed they were sacred and set the trappers up in the Colville River valley for the winter 21 Trading post Edit The explorer geographer David Thompson working as head of the North West Company s Columbia Department became the first European to explore the Inland Empire now called the Inland Northwest 22 Crossing what is now the Canada US border from British Columbia Thompson wanted to expand the North West Company further south in search of furs After establishing the Kullyspell House and Saleesh House trading posts in what are now Idaho and Montana Thompson then attempted to expand further west He sent out two trappers Jacques Raphael Finlay and Finan McDonald to construct a fur trading post on the Spokane River which flows west from Lake Coeur d Alene to the Columbia River and trade with the local Indians 23 This post was established in 1810 at the confluence of the Little Spokane and Spokane rivers becoming the first enduring European settlement of significance in what later became Washington state 22 Known as the Spokane House or simply Spokane it was in operation from 1810 to 1826 17 Operations were run by the British North West Company and later the Hudson s Bay Company and the post was the headquarters of the fur trade between the Rocky and Cascade mountains for 16 years After the latter business absorbed the North West Company in 1821 the major operations at the Spokane House were eventually shifted north to Fort Colville reducing the post s significance 24 In 1836 Reverend Samuel Parker visited the area and reported that around 800 Native Americans were living in Spokane Falls 25 A medical mission was established by Marcus and Narcissa Whitman to cater for Cayuse Indians and hikers of the Oregon Trail at Walla Walla in the south 26 After the Whitmans were killed by Indians in 1847 Reverend Cushing Eells established Whitman College in their memory also setting up the first church in the Spokane area 26 In 1853 two years after the establishment of the Washington Territory the first governor Isaac Stevens made an initial effort to make a treaty with Chief Garry and the Spokanes at Antoine Plantes Ferry not far from Millwood 27 28 After the last campaign of the Yakima Indian War the Coeur d Alene War of 1858 was brought to a close by the actions of Col George Wright who won decisive victories against a confederation of tribes in engagements at the battles of Four Lakes and Spokane Plains 29 The cessation of hostilities opened the inter mountain valley of the Pacific Northwest to safe habitation by settlers 30 31 American settlement Edit Spokane Falls 1890 Joint American British occupation of Oregon Country in effect since the Treaty of 1818 eventually led to the Oregon Boundary Dispute after a large influx of American settlers along the Oregon Trail Great Britain ceded its claims to lands in Puget Sound and the central and lower Columbia Basin by the Oregon Treaty of 1846 The Hudson s Bay Company wound up its operations in the area over the next few years In what is now Spokane the first American settlers were J J Downing and S R Scranton cattle ranchers who squatted and established a claim at Spokane Falls in 1871 32 Together they built a small sawmill on a claim near the south bank of the falls 32 33 James N Glover and Jasper Matheney Oregonians passing through the region in 1873 recognized the value of the Spokane River and its falls for the purpose of water power 32 They realized the investment potential and bought the claims of 160 acres 65 ha and the sawmill from Downing and Scranton for a total of 4 000 34 Glover and Matheney knew that the Northern Pacific Railroad Company had received a government charter to build a main line across this northern route 32 Amid many delays in construction and uncertainty over the completion of the railroad and its exact course Matheney sold his interest in the claim to Glover 35 b Glover confidently held on to his claim and became a successful Spokane business owner and the city s second mayor 36 He later came to be known as the Father of Spokane 37 In 1880 Fort Spokane was established by U S Army troops under Lt Col Henry C Merriam 56 miles 90 km northwest of Spokane at the junction of the Columbia and Spokane Rivers to protect the construction of the Northern Pacific Railway and secure a place for U S settlement 38 By June 30 1881 the railway reached the city bringing major European settlement to the area 39 40 The city was officially incorporated with a population of about 1 000 residents on November 29 1881 41 42 c When Spokane was officially incorporated in 1881 Robert W Forrest was elected as the first mayor of the city with a Council of seven S G Havermale A M Cannon Dr L H Whitehouse L W Rima F R Moore George A Davis and W C Gray all serving without pay 41 The marketing campaigns of transportation companies with affordable fertile land to sell along their trade routes lured many settlers into the region they dubbed Spokane Country 43 44 The makeshift Daily Chronicle office after The Great Fire The 1883 discovery of gold silver and lead in the Coeur d Alene region of northern Idaho lured prospectors 45 The Inland Empire erupted with numerous mining rushes from 1883 to 1892 46 Mining and smelting emerged as a major stimulus to Spokane At the onset of the initial 1883 gold rush in the nearby Coeur d Alene mining district Spokane became popular with prospectors offering low prices on everything from a horse to a frying pan 47 It would keep this status for subsequent rushes in the region due to its trade center status and accessibility to railroad infrastructure 48 d Spokane s growth continued unabated until August 4 1889 when a fire now known as The Great Fire not to be confused with the Great Fire of 1910 which happened nearby began just after 6 00 p m and destroyed the city s downtown commercial district 49 Due to technical problems with a pump station there was no water pressure in the city when the fire started 50 In a desperate bid to starve the fire firefighters began razing buildings with dynamite Eventually the winds and the fire died down 32 blocks of Spokane s downtown core had been destroyed and one person was killed 49 Spokane ca 1895 Despite this catastrophe and in part because of it Spokane experienced a building boom 51 e The downtown was rebuilt and the city was reincorporated under the present name of Spokane in 1891 42 According to historian David H Stratton From the late 1890s to about 1912 a great flurry of construction created a modern urban profile of office buildings banks department stores hotels and other commercial institutions which stretched from the Spokane River to the site of the Northern Pacific railroad tracks below the South Hill 52 Yet the rebuilding and development of the city was far from smooth between 1889 and 1896 alone all six bridges over the Spokane River were destroyed by floods before their completion 52 In the 1890s the city was subject to intrastate migration by African Americans from Roslyn looking for work after the closure of the area s mines Two African American churches Calvary Baptist and Bethel African Methodist Episcopal were founded in 1890 53 Just three years after the fire in 1892 James J Hill s Great Northern Railway arrived in the chosen site for Hill s rail yards the newly created township of Hillyard annexed by Spokane in 1924 54 Spokane became an important rail shipping and transportation hub for the Inland Empire connecting mines in the Silver Valley with agricultural areas around the Palouse region 44 55 The city s population ballooned to 19 922 in 1890 and to 36 848 in 1900 with the arrival of additional railroads 51 By 1910 the population had hit 104 000 and Spokane eclipsed Walla Walla as the commercial center of the Inland Empire 56 In time the city came to be known as the capital of the Inland Empire and the heart of a vast tributary region 45 57 After the arrival of the Northern Pacific Union Pacific Great Northern and Chicago Milwaukee St Paul and Pacific railroads Spokane became one of the most important rail centers in the western U S 51 57 58 59 Early 20th century Edit The Monroe Street Bridge 1911 Expansion abruptly stopped in the 1910s and was followed by a period of population decline 60 due in large part to Spokane s slowing economy Control of regional mines and resources became increasingly dominated by national corporations rather than local people and organizations diverting capital outside of Spokane and decreasing growth and investment opportunities in the city 60 During this time of stagnation unrest was prevalent among the area s unemployed who became victimized by job sharks who charged a fee for signing up workers in the logging camps Job sharks and employment agencies were known to cheat itinerant workers sometimes paying bribes to periodically fire entire work crews thus generating repetitive fees for themselves 61 Crime spiked in the 1890s and 1900s 62 63 with eruptions of violent activity involving unions such as the Industrial Workers of the World IWW or Wobblies as they were often known whose free speech fights had begun to garner national attention 64 Now with grievances concerning the unethical practices of the employment agencies they initiated a free speech fight in September 1908 by purposely breaking a city ordinance on soapboxing 64 With IWW encouragement union members from many western states came to Spokane to take part in what had become a publicity stunt Many Wobblies were incarcerated including feminist labor leader Elizabeth Gurley Flynn who published her account in the local Industrial Worker 64 Riverside Avenue c 1923 After mining declined at the turn of the 20th century agriculture and logging became the primary influences in the Spokane economy 65 The population explosion and the building of homes railroads and mines in northern Idaho and southern British Columbia fueled the logging industry 65 Although overshadowed in importance by the vast timbered areas on the coastal regions west of the Cascades and burdened with monopolistic rail freight rates and stiff competition Spokane became a noted leader in the manufacture of doors window sashes blinds and other planing mill products 66 Rail freight rates were much higher in Spokane than the rates in coastal seaport cities such as Seattle and Portland so much so that Minneapolis merchants could ship goods first to Seattle and then back to Spokane for less than shipping directly to Spokane even though the rail line ran through Spokane on the way to the coast 57 67 f The Inland Northwest region has also long been associated with farming especially wheat production 68 Initially the Palouse was thought to be unsuitable for wheat production due to the hilly terrain believing wheat could not be cultivated on the tops of the hills but the region showed great promise for wheat production when it began in the late 1850s in part due to the hilltops 68 The Palouse was and still is a breadbasket and was able to develop and grow with the completion of several railroad networks as well as a highway system that began to center around the city of Spokane aiding farmers from around the region in distributing their products to market 69 Inland Empire farmers exported wheat livestock and other agricultural products to ports such as New York Liverpool and Tokyo 70 Local morale was affected for years by the collapse of the Division Street Bridge early in the morning on December 15 1915 which killed five people and injured over 20 but a new bridge was built eventually replaced in 1994 71 The 1920 census showed a net increase of just 35 individuals which actually indicates that thousands left the city when considering the natural growth rate of a population 60 Growth in the 1920s and 1930s remained slow but less drastically so forcing city boosters to market the city as a quiet comfortable place suitable for raising a family rather than a dynamic community full of opportunity 72 The Inland Empire was heavily dependent on natural resources and extractive goods produced from mines forests and farms which experienced a fall in demand 73 The situation improved slightly with the start of World War II as aluminum production commenced in Spokane due to the area s cheap electricity produced from regional dams and the increased demand for airplanes 73 Second half of the 20th century Edit The Great Northern clock tower and former Expo 74 Washington State Pavilion in Riverfront Park After decades of stagnation and slow growth Spokane businessmen formed Spokane Unlimited in the early 1960s an organization that sought to revitalize downtown Spokane 74 A recreation park showcasing the Spokane Falls was the preferred option and after successful negotiation to relocate the railroad facilities on Havermale Island 75 they executed on a proposal to host the first environmentally themed World s Fair in Expo 74 on May 4 becoming the smallest city at the time to host a World s Fair 76 77 This event transformed Spokane s downtown removing a century of railroad infrastructure and re inventing the urban core After Expo 74 the fairgrounds became the 100 acre 40 ha Riverfront Park 78 The growth witnessed in the late 1970s and early 1980s was interrupted by another U S recession in 1981 in which silver timber and farm prices dropped 79 The period of decline for the city lasted into the 1990s and was also marked by a loss of many steady family wage jobs in the manufacturing sector 80 At this time market forces began to impact the local Kaiser Aluminum plant and layoffs pension cuts a 1998 1999 labor strike and eventually bankruptcy in 2002 followed 81 80 Although this was a tough period Spokane s economy had started to benefit from some measure of economic diversification growing companies such as Key Tronic and other research marketing and assembly plants for technology companies helped lessen Spokane s dependence on natural resources 79 21st century Edit Spokane has an extensive Skywalk network As of 2014 Spokane is still trying to make the transition to a more service oriented economy in the face of a less prominent manufacturing sector 80 Developing the city s strength in the medical and health sciences fields has seen some success resulting in the expansion of the University District with two medical school branches 82 83 84 The city faces challenges such as a scarcity of high paying jobs pockets of poverty and areas of high crime 80 The opening of the River Park Square in 1999 served as a catalyst and sparked a downtown rebirth that included the building of the Spokane Arena and expansion of the Spokane Convention Center 80 85 Other major projects include the building of the Big Easy concert house now the Knitting Factory and renovation of the historic Montvale Hotel the Kirtland Cutter designed Davenport Hotel after being vacant for over 20 years the Fox Theater now home to the Spokane Symphony 86 87 as well as the completion of the WSU Pharmaceutical and Biomedical Sciences Building in 2013 and the Davenport Grand Hotel in 2015 Ridpath Hotel in 2018 and the ongoing renovation of Riverfront Park as of May 2019 88 89 90 The Kendall Yards development on the west side of downtown Spokane is one of the largest construction projects in the city s history Directly across the Spokane River from downtown it will blend residential and retail space with plazas and walking trails 80 Geography EditTopography Edit Spokane at night from the west with Krell Hill silhouetted by radio antennas Spokane is located on the Spokane River in eastern Washington at an elevation of 1 843 feet 562 m above sea level 91 about 18 miles 29 km from Idaho 92 miles 148 km south of the Canadian border 229 miles 369 km due east of Seattle and 279 miles 449 km southwest of Calgary 92 The lowest elevation in the city of Spokane is the northernmost point of the Spokane River within city limits in Riverside State Park at 1 608 feet 490 m the highest elevation is on the northeast side near the community of Hillyard though closer to Beacon Hill and the North Hill Reservoir at 2 591 feet 790 m 93 Spokane is part of the Inland Northwest region consisting of eastern Washington north Idaho northwestern Montana and northeastern Oregon 94 The city has a total area of 60 02 square miles 155 45 km2 of which 59 25 square miles 153 46 km2 is land and 0 77 square miles 1 99 km2 is water 95 The Upper Spokane Falls of the Spokane River flowing by Canada Island Spokane lies mostly within the Spokane Valley Outwash Plains at the periphery of the North Central Rockies forests ecoregion and partly within the eastern edge of the basaltic Channeled Scablands steppe of the Columbia Plateau ecoregion a plain that eventually rises sharply to the east towards the rugged timbered Selkirk Mountains 96 97 The foothills of the Rockies the Coeur d Alene Mountains rise about 25 miles 40 km to the east in north Idaho The city is in a transition area between the barren landscape of the Columbia Basin and the coniferous forests to the east to the south are the lush prairies and rolling hills of the Palouse 97 The highest peak in Spokane County is Mount Spokane at an elevation of 5 883 feet 1 793 m on the eastern side of the Selkirk Mountains 98 The Spokane River is the area s most prominent water feature a 111 mile 179 km tributary of the Columbia River originating from Lake Coeur d Alene in northern Idaho 99 The river flows west across the Washington state line through downtown Spokane meeting Latah Creek then turns to the northwest where it is joined by the Little Spokane River on its way to the Columbia River north of Davenport 99 The Channeled Scablands and many of the area s numerous large lakes such as Lake Coeur d Alene and Lake Pend Oreille were formed by the Missoula Floods after the ice dammed Glacial Lake Missoula ruptured at the end of the last ice age 100 The Turnbull National Wildlife Refuge south of Cheney is the closest natural reserve the closest National Forest is the Colville National Forest the closest National Recreation Area is the Lake Roosevelt National Recreation Area and the closest national park is Mount Rainier National Park approximately a four and a half hour drive from Spokane Flora and fauna Edit Urban dwelling yellow bellied marmots are resident in the city although the rodents typically inhabit remote mountainous locations 101 The area supports an abundance of wildlife in part because of its varied geology and natural history The area contains a wide range of vegetation from densely wooded coniferous forests to rolling grassy hills and meadows 102 Ponderosa pine and Douglas fir are common in the drier and lower elevation areas throughout the region The ponderosa pine is the official tree of the City of Spokane which is where specimens were first collected by botanist David Douglas in 1826 103 104 g The Canadian Rockies ecoregion supports 70 mammals 16 reptiles and amphibians 168 birds and 41 fish species 105 There is a high concentration of raptors in the area bald eagles are a common sight near Lake Coeur d Alene in December and January when kokanee spawn 106 The most common fish present in area lakes is the Washington native rainbow trout which is the official fish of Washington state 107 Big game common in eastern Washington include black and grizzly bears caribou Rocky Mountain elk bighorn sheep and cougar 108 Whitetail deer mule deer and moose are also found in abundance The gray wolf population has been making a recovery in the Inland Northwest As of June 2016 there are 16 wolf packs in eastern Washington 109 In August 2016 photo evidence confirmed a solitary wolf in Mount Spokane State Park 110 Although the ecoregion remains ecologically intact it faces conservation challenges that include the negative effects of certain forestry management and logging practices higher risks of forest fires due to the alteration of the trees that make up the forest composition and habitat fragmentation as a result of urban sprawl and development which endangers the long term survival of vulnerable species such as mountain caribou and the Northern goshawk 111 The Lincoln statue on a clear day Climate Edit Spokane has a warm summer humid continental climate Dsb under the Koppen classification 112 a rare climate due to its elevation and significant winter precipitation Spokane however is adjacent to and sometimes even classified as a warm summer Mediterranean climate Csb because the average temperature for the coldest month is over 26 6 F 3 C 113 though in the US this threshold is often defined to be 32 F 0 C 114 The area typically has a warm arid climate during the summer months bracketed by short spring and fall seasons On average the warmest month is July and the coolest month is December July averages 71 0 F 21 7 C while December averages 29 1 F 1 6 C 113 h Daily temperature ranges are large during the summer often exceeding 30 F 17 C and small during the winter with a range just above 10 F 5 6 C The record high and low are 112 F 44 C 115 116 and 30 F 34 C but temperatures of more than 100 F 38 C or less than 5 F 21 C are rare Temperatures of 90 F 32 C occur an average of 21 days annually temperatures of 100 F 38 C occur an average of only 1 day annually and those at or below 0 F 18 C average 2 2 days a year 116 Spokane s location between the Cascades Range to the west and the Rocky Mountains to the east and north protects it from weather patterns experienced in other parts of the Pacific Northwest The Cascade Mountains form a barrier to the eastward flow of moist and relatively mild air from the Pacific Ocean in winter and cool air in summer 117 As a result of the rain shadow effect of the Cascades the Spokane area has 16 5 inches 420 mm average annual precipitation less than half of Seattle s 39 3 inches 1 000 mm 118 Precipitation peaks in December and summer is the driest time of the year The Rockies shield Spokane from some of the winter season s coldest air masses traveling southward across Canada 117 Climate data for Spokane Spokane Int l 1991 2020 normals i extremes 1881 present ii Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high F C 62 17 63 17 74 23 90 32 97 36 109 43 108 42 108 42 98 37 87 31 70 21 60 16 109 43 Mean maximum F C 48 2 9 0 51 1 10 6 63 0 17 2 73 9 23 3 84 0 28 9 90 5 32 5 97 5 36 4 97 0 36 1 89 2 31 8 74 6 23 7 56 4 13 6 48 0 8 9 99 1 37 3 Average high F C 34 5 1 4 39 5 4 2 48 6 9 2 56 9 13 8 67 1 19 5 73 7 23 2 84 4 29 1 83 8 28 8 73 6 23 1 57 7 14 3 42 3 5 7 33 8 1 0 58 0 14 4 Daily mean F C 29 6 1 3 32 9 0 5 40 0 4 4 47 0 8 3 56 0 13 3 62 3 16 8 71 0 21 7 70 3 21 3 61 1 16 2 47 9 8 8 36 3 2 4 29 1 1 6 48 6 9 2 Average low F C 24 7 4 1 26 3 3 2 31 5 0 3 37 0 2 8 44 9 7 2 50 8 10 4 57 6 14 2 56 7 13 7 48 6 9 2 38 0 3 3 30 3 0 9 24 3 4 3 39 2 4 0 Mean minimum F C 4 4 15 3 9 8 12 3 18 5 7 5 26 4 3 1 32 7 0 4 40 2 4 6 45 9 7 7 45 6 7 6 35 4 1 9 23 2 4 9 14 1 9 9 7 1 13 8 3 0 19 4 Record low F C 30 34 24 31 10 23 14 10 24 4 33 1 37 3 35 2 22 6 7 14 21 29 25 32 30 34 Average precipitation inches mm 1 97 50 1 44 37 1 83 46 1 25 32 1 55 39 1 17 30 0 42 11 0 47 12 0 58 15 1 37 35 2 06 52 2 34 59 16 45 418 Average snowfall inches cm 12 3 31 7 8 20 3 9 9 9 0 7 1 8 0 1 0 25 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 25 0 5 1 3 6 2 16 13 8 35 45 4 115 Average precipitation days 0 01 in 14 2 10 9 11 8 10 3 9 7 7 8 4 0 3 2 4 7 8 9 13 4 13 8 112 7Average snowy days 0 1 in 9 5 5 7 4 0 1 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 3 4 3 9 5 34 7Average relative humidity 82 5 79 1 70 3 61 0 58 2 53 9 44 0 45 0 53 9 66 6 82 7 85 5 65 2Mean monthly sunshine hours 78 3 118 0 199 3 242 3 296 7 322 8 382 4 340 4 271 2 191 0 73 8 59 1 2 575 3Percent possible sunshine 28 41 54 59 63 68 79 77 72 57 26 22 54Source NOAA relative humidity and sun 1961 1990 116 113 120 Climate data for Spokane Riverside 1953 1983 normals and extremesMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high F C 58 14 64 18 75 24 89 32 97 36 101 38 106 41 109 43 97 36 87 31 70 21 59 15 109 43 Mean maximum F C 48 3 9 1 54 3 12 4 64 3 17 9 75 1 23 9 86 0 30 0 92 8 33 8 99 5 37 5 98 3 36 8 89 7 32 1 76 6 24 8 57 0 13 9 50 4 10 2 100 8 38 2 Average high F C 34 5 1 4 42 5 5 8 49 6 9 8 59 2 15 1 68 8 20 4 76 8 24 9 85 8 29 9 84 5 29 2 74 4 23 6 60 3 15 7 44 0 6 7 37 1 2 8 59 8 15 4 Average low F C 23 9 4 5 28 8 1 8 31 2 0 4 36 8 2 7 44 3 6 8 51 2 10 7 56 0 13 3 54 7 12 6 47 2 8 4 38 4 3 6 31 5 0 3 27 2 2 7 39 3 4 0 Mean minimum F C 2 9 16 2 13 8 10 1 18 2 7 7 27 2 2 7 33 4 0 8 41 6 5 3 45 5 7 5 44 2 6 8 35 0 1 7 27 0 2 8 17 4 8 1 8 4 13 1 5 6 20 9 Record low F C 22 30 7 22 1 18 20 7 26 3 35 2 39 4 30 1 29 2 19 7 5 15 20 29 22 30 Average precipitation inches mm 2 24 57 1 65 42 1 56 40 1 25 32 1 52 39 1 33 34 0 56 14 0 79 20 0 86 22 1 13 29 2 16 55 2 58 66 17 63 450 Average snowfall inches cm 8 3 21 1 4 3 6 0 1 0 25 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 25 0 9 2 3 10 7 27 21 5 54 4 Source 121 Climate data for Spokane Felts Field 1991 2020 normals iii extremes 1998 iv presentMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high F C 59 15 64 18 74 23 87 31 94 34 113 45 106 41 107 42 97 36 86 30 69 21 63 17 113 45 Mean maximum F C 51 8 11 0 53 7 12 1 65 0 18 3 76 5 24 7 86 7 30 4 93 0 33 9 99 8 37 7 99 1 37 3 90 7 32 6 75 5 24 2 59 8 15 4 51 9 11 1 101 4 38 6 Average high F C 37 8 3 2 42 5 5 8 51 3 10 7 59 6 15 3 69 7 20 9 75 8 24 3 87 1 30 6 86 2 30 1 76 0 24 4 60 3 15 7 45 1 7 3 36 9 2 7 60 7 15 9 Daily mean F C 31 8 0 1 34 6 1 4 41 5 5 3 48 1 8 9 56 9 13 8 63 1 17 3 71 5 21 9 70 4 21 3 61 4 16 3 49 1 9 5 37 9 3 3 31 3 0 4 49 8 9 9 Average low F C 25 8 3 4 26 7 2 9 31 7 0 2 36 6 2 6 44 1 6 7 50 4 10 2 56 0 13 3 54 5 12 5 46 8 8 2 38 0 3 3 30 7 0 7 25 7 3 5 38 9 3 8 Mean minimum F C 9 9 12 3 13 5 10 3 19 6 6 9 26 8 2 9 32 5 0 3 41 4 5 2 46 5 8 1 45 7 7 6 36 3 2 4 25 0 3 9 17 6 8 0 10 3 12 1 3 2 16 0 Record low F C 10 23 3 19 2 17 24 4 28 2 37 3 39 4 40 4 26 3 12 11 2 19 10 23 10 23 Average precipitation inches mm 2 00 51 1 32 34 1 82 46 1 50 38 1 70 43 1 48 38 0 67 17 0 54 14 0 68 17 1 46 37 2 01 51 2 18 55 17 36 441 Average precipitation days 0 01 in 14 6 11 6 13 1 11 0 10 0 8 9 3 0 3 4 5 3 10 4 13 5 14 5 119 3Source NOAA 116 122 Government and politics EditSee also Government of Washington state and List of mayors of Spokane Washington Spokane City Hall The City of Spokane operates under a mayor council form of government with executive and legislative branches that are elected in non partisan elections 123 David Condon was elected mayor in November 2011 and took office on the last business day of the year 124 The previous mayor was Mary Verner who succeeded Dennis P Hession who himself succeeded the recalled James Jim West The city elected James Everett Chase as its first African American mayor in 1981 and after his retirement elected the city s first woman mayor Vicki McNeil 125 Spokane is the county seat of Spokane County a position it wrested from Cheney in 1886 126 127 Spokane is a part of Washington s 3rd legislative district which is represented in the Washington State Senate by Andy Billig 128 The 3rd Legislative District is represented in the Washington House of Representatives by Marcus Riccelli and Timm Ormsby 128 Federally Spokane is within Washington s 5th congressional district and has been represented in the House of Representatives by Republican Cathy McMorris Rodgers since 2004 129 Washington State is represented nationally in the Senate by Democrat Patty Murray and Democrat Maria Cantwell 129 In the 2012 general election Spokane County favored Mitt Romney for president over Barack Obama by 51 5 to 45 7 percent on the state ballot the county supported the legalization of recreational marijuana ballot measure by 52 2 to 47 9 percent but opposed the legalization of same sex marriage by 55 9 to 44 1 percent 130 Spokane native Tom Foley was a Democratic Speaker of the House and served as a representative of Washington s 5th district for 30 years enjoying large support from Spokane until his narrow defeat in the Republican Revolution of 1994 131 132 the only time U S voters have turned out a sitting Speaker of the House since 1860 133 Crime Edit Further information Spokane Police Department SpokaneCrime rates 2017 Violent crimesHomicide6Rape238Robbery229Aggravated assault887Total violent crime1 360Property crimesBurglary2 221Larceny theft11 739Motor vehicle theft1 737Arson50Total property crime15 697Notes Number of reported crimes per 100 000 population 2017 population 217 066Source 2017 FBI UCR DataThe crime rate per 1 000 people in the Spokane metropolitan area Spokane County was 64 8 in 2012 higher than the Washington state average of 38 3 the violent crime rate of 3 8 and property crime rate of 61 also exceed the statewide averages of 2 5 and 35 8 respectively 134 NeighborhoodScout describes Spokane as Safer than 2 of U S Cities 135 Spokane County Courthouse Half of all property crimes are localized in about 6 5 percent of the city 136 Spokane had the fourth highest rate of auto theft in the U S in 2010 and 2011 according to the National Insurance Crime Bureau 136 Drive by shootings and drug use particularly crack cocaine use became worse in the early 1990s and four drive by shootings were recorded in December 1993 alone 137 In the 1990s the Spokane Police Department SPD established a special gang unit with an officer collecting intelligence on gang activity and disseminating it to street officers 137 The 1990s also saw Spokane s most prolific serial killer Robert Lee Yates who killed thirteen prostitutes in Spokane s East Sprague red light district and confessed to two others in Tacoma Washington 138 The transition of the Spokane Police Department to a community policing precinct model has helped curb crime rates since its introduction downtown and has been expanded citywide 139 The crime woes are possibly due in part to an imbalance that Spokane County prisons receive of pre release and work release prisoners An investigation by the Tacoma News Tribune found that while Spokane County accounts for 6 21 percent of the inmates in state prisons it receives a disproportionate 16 73 percent of the inmate population to be released into the general population 140 Spokane and the Spokane Police Department have received national publicity and scrutiny in the 2000s and 2010s due to many officer involved shootings and allegations of excessive force The most high profile of these incidents was the 2006 death of Otto Zehm a mentally challenged man who was initially suspected of theft at a convenience store 141 Zehm was later found to have committed no crime but was struck with batons by several officers and tasered 142 The increased pressure on the SPD prompted an independent review by a commission of the organization s use of force policies an internal culture audit and the purchase of body cameras 143 Demographics EditHistorical populationCensus Pop 1880350 189019 9225 592 0 190036 84885 0 1910104 402183 3 1920104 4370 0 1930115 51410 6 1940122 0015 6 1950161 72132 6 1960181 60812 3 1970170 516 6 1 1980171 3000 5 1990177 1653 4 2000195 62910 4 2010208 9166 8 2020228 9899 6 2021 est 229 071 4 0 0 U S Decennial Census 144 145 146 147 148 3 According to the American Community Survey the median income for a household in Spokane in 2012 was 42 274 and the median income for a family was 50 268 Males had a median income of 42 693 and females had a median income of 34 795 The per capita income for the city was 24 034 About 13 3 of families and 18 7 of the population were below the poverty line including 23 8 of those under the age of 18 and 10 8 of those aged 65 and older 149 At the 2010 census there were 208 916 people 87 271 households and 49 204 families residing in the city The population density was 3 526 0 inhabitants per square mile 1 361 4 km2 There were 94 291 housing units at an average density of 1 591 4 per square mile 614 4 km2 The racial make up of the city was 86 7 White 2 6 Asian 2 3 African American 2 0 Native American 0 6 Pacific Islander and 1 3 from other races 149 5 0 of residents were of Hispanics or Latinos heritage of any race There were 87 271 households of which 28 9 had children under the age of 18 living with them 38 5 were married couples living together 12 9 had a female householder with no husband present 5 0 had a male householder with no wife present and 43 6 were non families In 2010 34 2 of all households were made up of individuals and 11 had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older The average household size was 2 31 and the average family size was 2 97 149 The median age in the city was 35 years In Spokane 22 4 of residents were under the age of 18 12 3 were between the ages of 18 and 24 27 6 were from 25 to 44 25 1 were from 45 to 64 and 12 8 were 65 years of age or older The gender make up of the city was 48 8 male and 51 2 female 149 Cathedral of St John the Evangelist According to the Association of Religion Data Archives 2010 Metro Area Membership Report the denominational affiliations of the Spokane MSA are 64 277 Evangelical Protestant 682 Black Protestant 24 826 Mainline Protestant 754 Orthodox 66 202 Catholic 31 674 Other and 339 338 Unclaimed 150 As of 2016 there are also at least three Jewish congregations 151 152 153 The Emanu El congregation erected the first synagogue in Spokane and the state of Washington on September 14 1892 154 The city s first mosque opened in 2009 as the Spokane Islamic Center 155 Spokane like Washington and the Pacific Northwest region as a whole is part of the Unchurched Belt a region characterized by low church membership rates and religious participation 156 The city serves as the seat of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Spokane which was established in 1913 157 and the Episcopal Diocese of Spokane established in 1929 158 The Spokane Washington Temple established in 1999 serves Latter day Saints from the east of the county 159 Spokane has hosted an annual multicultural celebration Unity in the Community since 1995 160 161 The city has become more diverse in recent decades People from countries in the former Soviet Union especially Russians and Ukrainians form a comparatively large demographic in Spokane and Spokane County the result of a large influx of immigrants and their families after the collapse of the USSR in 1991 162 163 According to the 2000 Census the number of people of Russian or Ukrainian ancestry in Spokane County was reported to be 7 700 4 900 residing in the city of Spokane amounting to two percent of the county 163 Among the fastest growing demographics in Spokane is the Pacific Islander ethnic group which is estimated to be the third largest minority group in the county after the Russian and Ukrainian community and Latinos 164 Spokane was once home to a sizable Asian community mostly Japanese centered in a district called Chinatown from the early days of the city until 1974 165 166 As in many western railway towns the Asian community started off as an encampment for migrant laborers working on the railroads The Chinatown Asian community thrived until the 1940s and experienced a population boom during WWII as Japanese families fled the exclusion zones along the coast after which its population decreased and became integrated and dispersed losing its Asian character urban blight and the preparations leading up to Expo 74 led to Chinatown s eventual demolition 165 Demographic map of the Spokane metro area Each dot is 25 people White Black Asian Hispanic Other Metropolitan area Edit Main article Spokane metropolitan area The Spokane metropolitan area consists of Spokane County As of the 2018 census estimates the Spokane metropolitan area had a population of 573 493 14 Directly east of Spokane County is the Coeur d Alene Metropolitan Statistical Area which consists of Kootenai County Idaho anchored by the city of Coeur d Alene The urban areas of the two MSAs largely follow the path of Interstate 90 between Spokane and Coeur d Alene The Spokane area has suffered from suburbanization and urban sprawl in past decades despite Washington s use of urban growth boundaries the city ranks low among major Northwest cities in population density and smart growth according to the Sightline Institute however Smart Growth America in a 2014 study ranked the census defined MSA as the 22nd most compact and connected in the nation using their Sprawl Index factors development density land use mix activity centering and street accessibility 167 168 The Spokane and Coeur d Alene Metropolitan Statistical Areas MSA are now included in a single Combined Statistical Area CSA by the Office of Management and Budget 169 The Spokane Coeur d Alene CSA had around 721 873 residents in 2017 169 Cityscape Edit Panorama of Downtown Spokane looking north from the Deaconess Medical Center parking garage Panorama of Downtown Spokane looking north from Cliff Drive Neighborhoods Edit Main articles Neighborhoods in Spokane Washington and Downtown Spokane Monroe Street corridor and surrounding Emerson Garfield neighborhood Spokane s neighborhoods range from the Victorian style South Hill and Browne s Addition to the Davenport District of Downtown to the more contemporary neighborhoods of north Spokane Spokane s neighborhoods are gaining attention for their history as illustrated by the city being home to 18 recognized National Register Historical Districts 77 170 171 Some of Spokane s best known neighborhoods are Riverside Browne s Addition and Hillyard The Riverside neighborhood consists primarily of downtown Spokane and is the central business district of Spokane The neighborhoods south of downtown Spokane are collectively known as the South Hill Downtown Spokane contains many of the city s public facilities including City Hall Riverfront Park site of Expo 74 and the Spokane Convention Center First Interstate Center for the Arts and Spokane Arena The Spokane County Courthouse and public safety campus is adjacent to downtown in the historic West Central neighborhood To the east of downtown is East Central and the adjacent University District and budding International District To the west of downtown is one of Spokane s oldest and densest neighborhoods Browne s Addition A National Historic District west of Downtown Browne s Addition was Spokane s first prestigious address notable for its array of old mansions built by Spokane s early elite in the Queen Anne and early American Craftsman styles 172 The area houses the Northwest Museum of Arts and Culture In northeast Spokane the Hillyard neighborhood began in 1892 as the chosen site for James J Hill s Great Northern Railway yard placed outside Spokane city limits to avoid burdensome taxes 54 The downtown Hillyard Business District located on Market Street was the first Spokane neighborhood listed in the National Register of Historic Places 54 Many of the former town s houses were built to house railroad workers mainly immigrant laborers working in the local yard who gave Hillyard an independent blue collar character 54 Hillyard has become a home for much of Spokane s growing Russian Ukrainian and Southeast Asian communities 54 162 164 Architecture Edit Main article Architecture of Spokane Washington Commercial and public buildings Edit The Romanesque Revival style Cathedral of Our Lady of Lourdes Spokane neighborhoods contain a patchwork of architectural styles that give them a distinct identity and illustrate the changes throughout the city s history 173 Most of Spokane s notable buildings and landmarks are in the Riverside neighborhood and the downtown commercial district where many of the buildings were rebuilt after the Great Fire of 1889 in the Romanesque Revival style 49 Examples include the Great Northern clock tower Review Building Cathedral of Our Lady of Lourdes First Congregational Church Washington Water Power Post Street substation Peyton Building and The Carlyle 174 The principal architect of many buildings of this period was Kirtland Kelsey Cutter 80 Self taught he came to Spokane in 1886 and began by designing Chalet Hohenstein for himself and other residences for his family while also working as a bank teller 175 Other structures designed by Cutter include the Spokane Club Washington Water Power Substation Monroe Street Bridge featured in the city seal the Steam Plant and the Davenport Hotel Built in renaissance and Spanish Revival style the Davenport Hotel cost two million dollars to complete and included new technologies at the time of its opening in September 1914 such as chilled water elevators and air cooling 86 In contemporary times one of the city s foremost and influential architects has been Warren C Heylman who helped give the city a great breadth of mid century architecture 176 Heylman s career was most prolific during the 1960s and 1970s where his main body of work was done in the modernist style designing numerous residential houses apartment buildings and architectural embellishments 177 Some of his most noteworthy works in Spokane include The Parkade Spokane International Airport Spokane Regional Health Building and the Burlington Northern Latah Creek Bridge over Hangman Valley 177 The Renaissance Revival style Davenport Hotel designed by Kirtland Cutter Other well represented architectural styles downtown include Art Deco Spokane City Hall Paulsen Center Fox Theater John R Rogers High School City Ramp Garage Renaissance Revival Steam Plant Square Thomas S Foley Courthouse Legion Building San Marco Neoclassical Masonic Center Hutton Building Bing Crosby Theater Chicago School U S Bank Building Liberty Building Old City Hall and Modernist The Parkade Ridpath Hotel Bank of America Financial Center 174 The tallest building in the city at 288 feet 88 m is the Bank of America Financial Center 174 Also of note is the Spokane County Courthouse in West Central the building on the seal of Spokane County the Cathedral of St John the Evangelist in Rockwood the Benewah Milk Bottles in Riverside and Garland Mount Saint Michael in Hillyard and the Cambern Dutch Shop Windmill in South Perry Residential Edit Patsy Clark Mansion in Browne s Addition As an early affluent Spokane neighborhood the Browne s Addition neighborhood and residences contain the largest variety of residential architecture in the city 172 These residences are lavish and personalized featuring many architectural styles that were popular and trendy in the Pacific Northwest from the late 19th century to 1930 such as the Victorian and Queen Anne styles 178 In high demand following his firms design of the Idaho Building at the Chicago World s Fair in 1893 Cutter found work constructing many mansions for mining and railroad tycoons such as Patrick Patsy Clark and Daniel C Corbin and son Austin 179 The older neighborhoods of the early 20th century such as West Central East Central Logan Hillyard and much of the lower South Hill feature a large concentration of American Craftsman style bungalows In Hillyard the most architecturally intact neighborhood in Spokane 85 percent of these buildings are historic 180 As the city expanded mainly to the north in the middle of the 20th century the bungalows in the minimal traditional style commonplace from the 1930s to the 1950s tend to predominate in the Northwest North Hill and Bemiss neighborhoods This architectural style occupies the neighborhoods where the integrity of Spokane s street grid pattern is largely intact especially the areas north of downtown and south of Francis Ave and the houses have backyard alleys for carports deliveries and refuse collection Contemporary suburbs and architecture are prevalent at the north and south edges of Spokane as well as in the new Kendall Yards neighborhood north of downtown 181 Parks and recreation Edit Duncan Garden at Manito Park In 1907 Spokane s board of park commissioners retained the services of the Olmsted Brothers to draw up a plan for Spokane s parks 182 Much of Spokane s park land was acquired by the city prior to World War I establishing it early on as a leader among Western cities in the development of a citywide park system 183 184 Spokane has a system of over 87 parks totaling 4 100 acres 17 km2 and includes six neighborhood aquatic centers 185 186 Some of the most notable parks in Spokane s system are Riverfront Park Manito Park and Botanical Gardens Riverside State Park Mount Spokane State Park Saint Michael s Mission State Park Plantes Ferry Recreation Park John A Finch Arboretum and the Dishman Hills Conservation Area Riverfront Park created after Expo 74 and occupying the same site is 100 acres 40 ha in downtown Spokane and the site of some of Spokane s largest events 187 The park has views of the Spokane Falls and holds a number of civic attractions including a skyride a rebuilt gondola lift that carries visitors across the falls from high above the river gorge 187 The park also includes the historic hand carved Riverfront Park Looff carousel created in 1909 by Charles I D Looff 187 Riverfront Park is currently being renovated and modernized as of October 2016 90 Manito Park and Botanical Gardens on Spokane s South Hill features the Duncan Gardens a classical European Renaissance style garden and the Nishinomiya Japanese Garden designed by Nagao Sakurai Riverside State Park close to downtown is a site for outdoor activities such as hiking mountain biking and horse riding 188 The Spokane area has many trails and rail trails the most notable of which is the Spokane River Centennial Trail which features over 37 5 miles 60 4 km of paved trails running along the Spokane River from Spokane to the Idaho border 189 This trail continues on towards Coeur d Alene for 24 miles 39 km as the North Idaho Centennial Trail and is often used for alternative transportation and recreational use In the summer it has long been popular to visit North Idaho s Lake Country such as Lake Coeur d Alene Lake Pend Oreille Priest Lake or one of the other nearby bodies of water and beaches 80 190 In the winter the public has access to five ski resorts within a couple hours of the city The closest of these is the Mt Spokane Ski and Snowboard Park 191 which has trails for cross country skiing snowshoeing snowmobiling and dog sledding 192 Zoological parks in Spokane include Cat Tales Zoological Park a wildlife sanctuary primarily for big cats and the Blue Zoo an interactive aquarium in the NorthTown Mall 193 194 Economy EditMain article Economy of Spokane Washington The Spokane Stock Exchange once occupied the Peyton Building Spokane became an important rail and shipping center because of its location between mining and farming areas 44 55 In the early 1880s gold and silver were discovered in the Inland Empire as a regional shipping center the city furnished supplies to the miners who passed through on their way to the mineral rich Coeur d Alene Colville and Kootenay districts 45 The mining districts are still considered among the most productive in North America 195 Natural resources have historically been the foundation of Spokane s economy with the mining logging and agriculture industries providing much of the region s economic activity After mining declined at the turn of the 20th century agriculture and logging replaced mining as the primary influences in the economy 65 Lumberjacks and millmen working in the hundreds of mills along the railroads rivers and lakes of northern Washington and Idaho were provisioning themselves in Spokane 196 Agriculture has always been an important sector in the local economy The surrounding area especially to the south is the Palouse 197 a region that has long been associated with farming especially wheat production where it is one of the largest wheat producing regions in the United States 68 198 As with the mining industry in the late 1880s Spokane was an important agricultural market and trade center Inland Empire farmers exported wheat livestock and other agricultural products to the ports such as New York Liverpool and Tokyo 70 Today a large share of the wheat produced in the region is shipped to Far East markets 199 The Inland Northwest also supports many vineyards and microbreweries as well 200 201 By the early 20th century Spokane was primarily a commercial center rather than an industrial center 202 The Old National Bank Building In Spokane wood and food processing printing and publishing primary metal refining and fabrication electrical and computer equipment and transportation equipment are leaders in the manufacturing sector 203 Gold mining company Gold Reserve and Fortune 1000 company Potlatch Corporation a forest products company that operates as a real estate investment trust are headquartered in the city proper 204 205 Mining forestry and agribusiness remain important to the local and regional economy but Spokane s economy has diversified to include other industries including the high tech and biotech sectors 79 Spokane is becoming a more service oriented economy in the face of a less prominent manufacturing sector which declined in the 1980s particularly as a medical and biotechnology center 80 Fortune 1000 technology company Itron for instance is headquartered in the area 206 Avista Corporation the holding company of Avista Utilities is the only company in Spokane that has been listed in the Fortune 500 ranked 299 on the list in 2002 207 Other companies with head offices in the Spokane area include technology company Key Tronic vacation rental provider Stay Alfred and microcar maker Commuter Cars 208 209 210 Despite diversification to new industries Spokane s economy has struggled in recent decades Spokane was ranked the 1 Worst City For Jobs in America in both 2012 211 and 2015 212 while also ranking 4 in 2014 213 Additionally Forbes named Spokane the Scam Capital of America in 2009 214 due to widespread business fraud Trends of fraud were noted as far back as 1988 215 again in 2002 216 and continuing through 2011 215 As of 2013 the top five employers in Spokane are the State of Washington Spokane Public Schools Providence Sacred Heart Medical Center and Children s Hospital the 92d Air Refueling Wing and Spokane County 217 The largest military facility and employer the 92d Air Refueling Wing was stationed at Fairchild Air Force Base near Airway Heights The leading industries in Spokane for the employed population 16 years and older were educational services health care and social assistance 26 5 percent retail trade 12 7 percent and arts entertainment recreation and accommodation food services 10 4 percent 149 As the metropolitan center of the Inland Northwest as well as parts of southern British Columbia and Alberta Spokane serves as a commercial manufacturing transportation medical shopping and entertainment hub 203 218 In 2017 the Spokane Spokane Valley MSA had a gross metropolitan product of 25 5 billion while the Coeur d Alene metropolitan area was 5 93 billion 219 As of 2014 economic development in the Spokane area primarily focuses on promoting the following industries manufacturing especially aerospace manufacturing health sciences professional services information science and technology finance and insurance as well as clean technology and digital media 220 221 To aid economic development the eastern branch of Innovate Washington a state supported business incubator was placed in the city 222 In recent years Spokane has become a growing technology hub for both established companies and startups Fortune 1000 cybersecurity leader F5 Inc has two offices in the area with over 250 employees whom are focused on hardware product development software engineering global services support and digital sales 223 224 Other established firms are moving to Spokane such as Remitly an app based financial services corporation which was founded by Josh Hug a Whitworth University graduate 225 226 Ignite Northwest led by Silicon Valley entrepreneur Tom Simpson has invested over 100 million through the Spokane Angel Alliance and Ignite to fund and support early stage companies 227 Culture Edit The art deco interior of the Fox Theater Arts and theater Edit Spokane s main art districts are located in the Davenport Arts District the Garland Business District and East Sprague 228 The First Friday Artwalk which occurs the first Friday of every month is dedicated to local vendors and performers displaying art around downtown 229 The two most important Artwalk dates the first Friday of February and October attract large crowds to the art districts The Davenport Arts District has the largest concentration of art galleries and is home to many of Spokane s main performing arts venues including the Knitting Factory Fox Theater and Bing Crosby Theater The Knitting Factory is a concert house that serves as a setting for many mainstream touring musicians and acts The Martin Woldson Theater at the Fox restored to its original 1931 Art Deco state after years of being derelict 87 is home to the Spokane Symphony Orchestra The Metropolitan Performing Arts Center was restored in 1988 and renamed the Bing Crosby Theater in 2006 to honor the former Spokanite 230 Touring stand up comedians are hosted by the Spokane Comedy Club 231 Theater is provided by Spokane s only resident professional company The Modern Theater 232 though there are also the Spokane Civic Theatre and several other amateur community theaters and smaller groups The First Interstate Center for the Arts often hosts large traveling exhibitions shows and tours Spokane was awarded the All America City Award by the National Civic League in 1974 2004 and 2015 233 Spokane offers an array of musical performances catering to a variety of interests Spokane s local music scene however is considered somewhat lacking by the Spokane All Ages Music Initiative and other critics who have identified a need for a legitimate all ages venue for music performances 234 The Spokane Symphony presents a full season of classical music and the Spokane Jazz Orchestra a full season of jazz music 235 The Spokane Jazz Orchestra formed in 1962 is a 70 piece orchestra and non profit organization 236 Museums Edit Northwest Museum of Arts and Culture There are several museums in the city most notably the Northwest Museum of Arts and Culture located a few blocks from the center of downtown in Browne s Addition amid the mansions of Spokane s late 19th century Age of Elegance A Smithsonian affiliate museum it houses a large collection of Native American artifacts as well as regional and national traveling art exhibits 237 238 The Mobius Science Center and the related Mobius Kid s Museum in downtown Spokane seek to generate interest in science technology engineering and math among the youth in a hands on experience 239 The Jundt Art Museum at Gonzaga University features 2 800 square feet 260 m2 of exhibition space and contains sizable collections of prints from the Bolker Baruch Jacobs and Corita Kent collections 240 241 The museum houses glass art by Dale Chihuly bronze sculptures by Auguste Rodin tapestries paintings ceramics photographs and a wide range of gifts including from the Iris and B Gerald Cantor Foundation and Collections 240 On the campus of Gonzaga University the Crosby House Bing Crosby s childhood home houses the Bing Crosby Memorabilia Room the world s largest Crosby collection with around 200 pieces 242 A museum of flight showcasing historic airplanes and curated by the Historic Flight Foundation is located at Felts Field 243 Events and activities Edit Spokane is known as the birthplace of the national movement started by Sonora Smart Dodd that led to the proposal and the eventual establishment of Father s Day as a national holiday in the U S 244 The first observation of Father s Day in Spokane was on June 19 1910 245 Sonora conceived the idea in Spokane s Central Methodist Episcopal Church while listening to a Mother s Day sermon 246 Lilac Bloomsday Run Spokane Falls Skyride Tour The Lilac Bloomsday Run held in the spring on the first Sunday of May is a 7 46 mile 12 01 km race for competitive runners as well as walkers that attracts international competition 247 Also in May is the Lilac Festival which honors the military celebrates youth and showcases the region 248 Spokane s unofficial nickname the Lilac City refers to a flowering shrub that has flourished since its introduction to the area in the early 20th century 249 In June the city hosts Spokane Hoopfest a 3 on 3 basketball tournament among the largest of its kind 250 One of Spokane s most popular local events is Pig Out in the Park an annual six day food and entertainment festival where attendees may eat a variety of foods and listen to free live music concerts featuring local regional and national recording artists in Riverfront Park 251 The Spokane International Film Festival held every February is a small juried festival that features documentaries and shorts from around the world 252 The Spokane Gay amp Lesbian Film Festival held every November features contemporary independent films of interest to the GLBT community 253 Other notable events in the Spokane region include the Spokane County Interstate Fair Japan Week Spokane Pride Parade and the Lilac City Comicon The Spokane County Interstate Fair is held annually in September at the Spokane County Fair and Expo Center in Spokane Valley 254 Japan Week is held in April and celebrates the sister city relationship with Nishinomiya Hyogo demonstrating the many commonalities shared between the two cities 255 Students from the Spokane campus of Mukogawa Fort Wright Institute Gonzaga Whitworth and other area schools organize an array of Japanese cultural events The gay and lesbian Spokane Pride Parade is held each June 256 There is an annual Renaissance fair and Civil War reenactment as well 257 258 Education EditMain article Education in Spokane Washington St Aloysius Church at Gonzaga University The WSU Health Sciences Spokane campus located in the University District Serving the general educational needs of the local population are two public library districts the Spokane Public Library within city limits and the Spokane County Library District Founded in 1904 with funding from philanthropist Andrew Carnegie the Spokane Public Library system comprises a downtown library overlooking the Spokane Falls and five branch libraries 259 Special collections focus on Inland Pacific Northwest history and include reference books periodicals maps photographs and other archival materials and government documents 260 Public and Private schools Edit Spokane Public Schools District 81 was organized in 1889 and is the largest public school system in Spokane and the second largest in the state as of 2014 serving roughly 30 000 students in six high schools six middle schools and thirty four elementary schools 261 262 Other public school districts in the Spokane area include the Mead School District in north Spokane County outside city limits A variety of state approved independent charter schools and private and parochial elementary and secondary schools augment the public school system The Roman Catholic Diocese of Spokane manages ten such schools in amp around the area 263 Higher Education Edit Spokane is home to many higher education institutions They include the private universities Gonzaga and Whitworth and the public Community Colleges of Spokane system Spokane Community College and Spokane Falls Community College as well as a variety of technical institutes Gonzaga University and Law School were founded by the Italian born priest Joseph Cataldo and the Jesuits in 1887 264 Whitworth was founded in Tacoma Washington in 1890 and moved to its present location in 1914 265 It is affiliated with the Presbyterian Church and had 2 500 students studying in 53 different undergraduate and degree programs as of 2011 266 While Spokane is one of the larger cities in the U S to lack a main campus of a state supported university within its city limits Eastern Washington University EWU and Washington State University WSU have operations at the Riverpoint Campus in the University District just adjacent to downtown and across the Spokane River from the Gonzaga campus 267 268 Washington State University Spokane is WSU s health sciences campus and houses the school s College of Nursing College of Pharmacy and Elson S Floyd College of Medicine 83 269 The main EWU campus is located 15 miles 24 km southwest of Spokane in nearby Cheney and WSU is located 65 miles 105 km to the south in Pullman In addition to WSU s health science presence in Spokane there is also a four year medical school branch affiliated with the University of Washington s WWAMI program 82 An international branch campus of the Mukogawa Women s University the Mukogawa Fort Wright Institute is located in Spokane 270 Sports EditMain article Sports in Spokane Washington The Spokane Veterans Memorial Arena Spokane is close to dozens of lakes and rivers for outdoor sports and recreation People use these for swimming boating kayaking rafting and fishing Nearby mountains provide for skiing hiking biking and sightseeing 271 The Spokane region s professional and semi professional sports teams include the Spokane Indians in Minor League Baseball and the Spokane Chiefs in junior ice hockey 272 Collegiate sports in Spokane focus on the local teams such as the Gonzaga Bulldogs who compete in the NCAA s Division I West Coast Conference and the Whitworth Pirates playing in the Division III Northwest Conference and local media covers other regional teams including the Eastern Washington Eagles Washington State Cougars and the Idaho Vandals 272 Baseball Edit The Spokane Indians located in the suburb Spokane Valley are a Class High A baseball team in the Northwest League NWL and have been a farm team of the Colorado Rockies since 2021 273 The Indians play their home games at the 6 803 seat Avista Stadium and have won seven NWL titles since their Short Season A debut in 1982 Prior to 1982 the Indians played at the Triple A level The team achieved considerable success in the early 1970s winning the Pacific Coast League championship in 1970 and having a 94 52 record 274 In the 1920s and 1930s the Spokane City League a semiprofessional baseball league of teams of the Inland Empire reached its peak 275 Hockey Edit The Spokane Chiefs are a junior ice hockey team that play in the Canadian Hockey League s Western Hockey League 276 They play their home games in the Spokane Arena and have a regional rivalry with the Tri City Americans They have won the CHL s top prize the Memorial Cup two times in club history first in 1991 and again in 2008 276 Major Sporting events Edit The Spokane Arena is the city s premier sports venue In the years since the Spokane Arena opened it has played host to several major sporting events The first major event was the 1998 Memorial Cup the championship game of the Canadian Hockey League 277 Four years later in 2002 the city hosted the 2002 Skate America figure skating competition 278 and then the 2007 U S Figure Skating Championships in the Spokane Arena 279 The latter event set an attendance record selling nearly 155 000 tickets Spokane later hosted the 2010 U S Figure Skating Championships 279 ending eighteen days before the start of the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver British Columbia and then the 2016 Team Challenge Cup 280 Infrastructure Edit Street layout of Spokane city center Transportation Edit City streets Edit Spokane s streets use a grid plan that is oriented to the four cardinal directions generally the east west roads are designated as avenues and the north south roads are referred to as streets Major east west thoroughfares in the city include Francis Wellesley Mission Sprague and 29th Avenues Major north south thoroughfares include Maple Ash Monroe Division Hamilton Greene Market north of I 90 and Ray Freya south of I 90 Streets Division Street divides the city into East and West while Sprague Avenue splits the city into North and South 281 Division Street is Spokane s major retail corridor Sprague Avenue serves the same purpose in Spokane Valley With over 40 000 vehicles per day in average daily traffic from Interstate 90 north to the US 2 US 395 junction North Division is Spokane s busiest corridor 282 Spokane s extensive skywalk system covers thirteen blocks in the downtown area and is among the largest in the United States it is used for pedestrian travel in cold and inclement weather and retail space as well 283 284 Despite this the city has an average Walk Score of 49 as of 2020 indicating that most errands require a car Its average Bike Score is 52 285 Mass transportation Edit The STA Plaza in Downtown Spokane Before the influx of automobiles Spokane s electric streetcar and interurban lines played a dominant role in moving people and goods around Spokane Streetcars were installed as early as 1888 when they were pulled by horses 286 Many older side streets in Spokane still have visible streetcar rails embedded in them Streetcar service was reduced due to declining ridership beginning in 1922 and by August 1936 all lines had been abandoned or converted to motor buses 287 Mass transportation throughout the Spokane area is provided by the Spokane Transit Authority STA which operates a fleet of 156 buses Its service area covers roughly 248 square miles 640 km2 and reaches 85 percent of the county s population 288 A large percentage of STA bus routes originate from the central hub the STA Plaza in downtown Spokane Spokane has a Transit Score of 35 4 on Walk Score 285 Spokane has intercity rail and bus service provided by Amtrak Greyhound Flixbus and Jefferson Lines via the Spokane Intermodal Center The city is a stop for Amtrak s Empire Builder on its way to and from Chicago s Union Station en route to Seattle and Portland 289 Amtrak s through service to Seattle and Portland is a legacy of BNSF Railway s old Spokane Portland and Seattle Railway trackage 290 Spokane is a major railway junction for the BNSF Railway and the Union Pacific Railroad and is the western terminus for the Montana Rail Link 290 Freeways and highways Edit Overlooking Spokane from Sunset Hill Interstate 90 I 90 runs east west from Seattle through downtown Spokane and eastward through Spokane Valley Liberty Lake and onward to Coeur d Alene and then Missoula 291 Although they are not limited access highways like I 90 US 2 and US 395 enter Spokane from the west via I 90 and continue north through Spokane via Division Street The two highways share the same route until they reach The Y a fork where US 395 continues northward to Deer Park Colville then onward to Canada and US 2 branches off to the northeast continuing to Mead Newport and Sandpoint US 195 also known as the Inland Empire Highway connects to Interstate 90 west of Spokane near Latah Creek and travels south through the Palouse 291 The Washington State Department of Transportation WSDOT is tasked with improving local highways to keep up with the region s growth and to try to prevent congestion problems that plague many larger cities The WSDOT is constructing the North Spokane Corridor When completed the corridor will be a 10 5 mile long 16 9 km limited access highway that will run from I 90 in the vicinity of the Thor Freya interchange northward through Spokane meeting the existing US 395 just south of the Wandermere Golf Course 292 Airports Edit Concourse C Spokane International Airport Spokane International Airport IATA GEG ICAO KGEG serves as the primary commercial airport for Spokane Eastern Washington and Northern Idaho It is the second largest airport in the state of Washington and is recognized by the Federal Aviation Administration as a small hub with service from nine passenger and five cargo airlines 293 The 4 800 acre 19 42 km2 airport is located 5 miles 8 0 km west of downtown Spokane and is approximately a 10 minute drive away The international airport s three letter designation is GEG a result and legacy of the Geiger Field days prior to 1960 when the airport was named after Army aviator Major Harold Geiger in 1941 294 Felts Field is a general aviation airport serving the Spokane area and is located in east Spokane along the south bank of the Spokane River Aviation at Felts Field dates back to 1913 and the strip served as Spokane s primary airport until commercial air traffic was redirected to Geiger Field after World War II 294 In 1927 the strip was one of the first in the western U S to receive official recognition as an airport by the U S Department of Commerce and is now named in honor of James Buell Felts a Washington Air National Guard pilot 294 Healthcare Edit Deaconess Medical Center The Spokane area has six major hospitals four of which are full service facilities 295 The health care industry is a large and increasingly important industry in Spokane the city provides specialized care to many patients from the surrounding Inland Northwest and as far north as the Canada US border 296 The city s health care needs are served primarily by non profit Seattle based Providence Health amp Services and non profit Tacoma based Multicare Health System which run the two biggest hospitals Sacred Heart Medical Center and Deaconess Hospital respectively 297 These two hospitals the 102 bed St Luke s Rehabilitation Institute 298 100 bed Inland Northwest Behavioral Health 299 and most of Spokane s major health care facilities are located on Spokane s Lower South Hill just south of downtown in what is known as the Medical District of Spokane 300 Sacred Heart Hospital opened originally with just 31 beds 301 on Spokane Falls Boulevard on January 27 1887 but later moved to its present location at 101 West Eighth Avenue 302 As of 2014 it had 642 beds with 28 319 admissions 71 543 emergency room visits and 2 982 births annually and a full time staff of 29 doctors and dentists and 583 registered nurses 303 Deaconess Medical Center the smaller of the two main hospitals had 388 beds as of 2014 304 Other hospitals in the area include the Spokane Veterans Affairs Medical Center in the northwest part of town Providence Holy Family Hospital on the north side and MultiCare Valley Hospital in the Spokane Valley One of 20 specialty orthopedic Shriners Hospitals in the U S is also located in Spokane 305 One of Washington s two state psychiatric hospitals Eastern State Hospital is located 15 miles 24 km away in Medical Lake 306 Utilities Edit Monroe Street Dam The City of Spokane provides municipal water wastewater management and solid waste management 307 Spokane operates Washington s only waste to energy plant as well as two solid waste transfer stations as part of the Spokane Regional Solid Waste System a collaboration between the City of Spokane and Spokane County 308 Electricity generated by the waste to energy plant is used to operate the facility with excess energy being sold to Puget Sound Energy 308 Spokane draws its water from the Spokane Valley Rathdrum Prairie Aquifer this 370 square mile 958 km2 sole source aquifer is the only water supply for Spokane County in Washington and for Kootenai and Bonner counties in Idaho 309 Serving over 500 000 people the aquifer is distinguished in being one of the largest aquifers in the country at 10 trillion gallons as well as having one of the fastest flow rates in the country at 60 feet 18 m per day and for its purity 310 i Natural gas and electricity are provided by the local utility Avista Utilities while CenturyLink and Comcast provide television internet and telephone service Spokane hosts three hydroelectric generation facilities on the Spokane River the Upriver Dam the Upper Falls Dam and the Monroe Street Dam The Upriver Dam is owned and operated by the City of Spokane and generates the electricity needed to operate the municipal water supply s pressure pumps 311 The power generated in excess of that is sold to Avista Utilities 311 The Upper Falls and Monroe Street dams are owned and operated by Avista Utilities and have respective generation capacities of 10 and 15 MW 312 Media EditSee also Category Mass media in Spokane Washington The Review Building Print Edit Newspaper service in Spokane is provided by its only major daily newspaper The Spokesman Review which has a daily circulation of 76 291 and Sunday circulation of 95 939 313 314 The Spokesman Review was formed from the merger of the Spokane Falls Review 1883 1894 and the Spokesman 1890 1893 in 1893 and was first published under the present name on June 29 1894 315 316 It later absorbed the competing afternoon paper The Spokane Daily Chronicle a significant newspaper that existed from 1881 until 1982 and returned in 2021 317 318 j More specialized publications include the weekly alternative newspaper The Pacific Northwest Inlander 319 the bi weekly Spokane Journal of Business 320 and the student run Gonzaga Bulletin 321 Monthly publications include The Black Lens an African American community newspaper 322 a newspaper for parents Kids Newspaper 323 and a home and lifestyle magazine Spokane Coeur d Alene Living 324 Radio Edit According to Arbitron Spokane is the 94th largest radio market in the U S with 532 100 listeners aged 12 and over 325 There are 28 AM and FM radio stations broadcast in the city 326 The five most listened to stations are KKZX FM classic rock KQNT AM news talk KXLY FM country KISC FM adult contemporary and KZZU FM Hot AC 327 Spokane s primary sources of non commercial and community radio include Spokane s NPR affiliate station KPBX FM and KYRS a full power community radio station 328 Television Edit Spokane is the 73rd largest television market in the U S accounting for 0 366 of the total TV households in the U S 329 The city has six television stations representing the major commercial networks and public television 330 Spokane is the television broadcast center for much of eastern Washington except the Yakima and Tri Cities area northern Idaho northwestern Montana northeastern Oregon and parts of southern Canada by cable television Spokane receives broadcasts in the Pacific Time Zone with weekday prime time beginning at 8 pm Montana and Alberta Canada are in the Mountain Time Zone and receive Spokane broadcasts one hour later by their local time The major network television affiliates include KREM TV 2 CBS KXLY TV 4 ABC KHQ TV 6 NBC Spokane s first television station on air on December 20 1952 KAYU 28 FOX KSKN 22 The CW KSPS TV 7 PBS and KCDT TV 26 PBS operating out of Coeur d Alene Idaho 330 Notable people EditMain article List of people from Spokane WashingtonSister cities EditSpokane has six current sister cities as designated by Sister Cities International 331 Nishinomiya Japan since September 1961 Spokane s first sister city Jecheon South Korea Jilin City China Limerick Republic of Ireland San Luis Potosi City Mexico Cagli Italy Makhachkala RussiaSee also Edit United States portalNotes Edit a The name is said to derive from Spukcane the vocalization of a sound made by a snake which the Chief of the Spokanes came to call power from the brain after pondering it made his head vibrate It is unknown when the present meaning of the word Sun People replaced this earlier meaning 18 b Unbeknownst to them the Spokane Valley was the only area within 200 miles that could provide passage to the Inland Empire through the Rockies at a reasonable grade 32 c The present name set forth by an 1891 charter reincorporated the city under the name Spokane Falls stating The corporate name of the city is Spokane Falls and by that name shall have perpetual succession Charter Article I However a later article in that same charter which was voted on concurrently changed the name to Spokane 332 d Secretary of the Spokane chamber of commerce John R Reavis tells of Spokane s significance to the Inland Northwest region as an entrepot distributing center largely the city s raison d etre in his 1891 Annual Report writing By reason of her geographical position and railroad connections Spokane is fitted as no other city is or ever can be to be the distributing center of all that country within a radius of 150 miles and in some instances territory much farther away There is no point 150 miles from Spokane that is not at least 225 miles from any other city of 10 000 population We have about us a territory of 60 000 square miles in extent to every point of which we are nearer than any other city to every point of which we have better railroad connections and easier grades than any other city We have eight lines of railroad that radiate out in all directions through it so that shipments made here in the morning can reach any point within its borders by nightfall We have a telephone system connecting us with almost every shipping town and shipping station within its borders Goods may be ordered shipped and received in most instances within one day Never was a city more intimately knit to its surrounding territory than Spokane and never was one more free from a legitimate rival in trade 333 e The financing for rebuilding the downtown core came in large part from the infusion of investment from Dutch bankers this investment was so deep that by 1896 one prominent Dutch mortgage company the Northwestern and Pacific Hypotheekbank owned a quarter of the city 334 f In 1892 the Interstate Commerce Commission agreed with the city after it filed a complaint about these practices but that decision was struck down by a federal court In 1906 Spokane sued under the newly passed Hepburn Act and won on July 24 1911 335 g The exact circumstances and sequence of events regarding the discovery of the tree are obscure due to conflicting accounts h Average monthly temperatures obtained by summing the average monthly highs and lows then dividing by 2 i A study published in The Spokesman Review on May 6 1909 by City bacteriologist Frank Rose found only seven or eight germs per cubic centimeter of water As a standard water that contains 100 germs per cubic centimeter is considered comparatively pure 310 j The Spokesman Review has been a family owned newspaper since 1894 The Cowles family also owns the city s NBC affiliate KHQ TV 317 Mean maxima and minima i e the highest and lowest temperature readings during an entire month or year calculated based on data at said location from 1991 to 2020 Official records for Spokane kept at Spokane Weather Bureau Office from February 1881 to July 1889 and at Spokane International Airport since August 1889 119 Mean maxima and minima calculated based on data from November 1998 to December 2020 for months and 1999 to 2020 for years Starting on October 14 1998 References Edit a b Spokane History City of Spokane Retrieved February 26 2018 2019 U S Gazetteer Files United States Census Bureau Retrieved August 7 2020 a b c QuickFacts Spokane city Washington census gov Retrieved December 27 2021 a b City and Town Population Totals 2020 2021 United States Census Bureau May 29 2022 Retrieved May 31 2022 Zip Code Lookup United States Postal Service Archived from the original on January 1 2008 Retrieved December 7 2014 US Board on Geographic Names United States Geological Survey October 25 2007 Retrieved January 1 2014 Spokane Merriam Webster Incorporated Retrieved September 4 2017 Seattle Washington to Spokane Washington Google Maps Prager Mike April 24 2008 A designer bloom for Lilac City The Spokesman Review Retrieved May 18 2019 Tiernan Colin June 8 2021 Slam dunk nickname City Council designates Spokane Hooptown USA The Spokesman Review Retrieved June 9 2021 U S Census Bureau QuickFacts Population Census April 1 2010 Spokane city Washington Census gov Rank by 2010 Population and Housing Units 2000 and 2010 PDF Census gov Rank of Places of 100 000 or More by 2010 Population 1790 to 2010 and Number of Housing Units 1940 to 2010 PDF a b Population and Housing Unit Estimates Tables United States Census Bureau Retrieved June 13 2019 Laura Arksey October 3 2009 Spokane Falls later renamed Spokane is incorporated as a first class city on November 29 1881 HistoryLink Seattle History Ink The original Act of Incorporation spelled the city s name correctly but the territorial printing office incorrectly spelled it Spokan Falls a phonetic spelling that was used elsewhere during the period including on the 1880 census This spelling was also used for Spokane s first newspaper the Spokan Times a b Ruby amp Brown 2006 p 5 a b Phillips 1971 pp 134 135 a b Ruby amp Brown 2006 pp 7 8 Ruby amp Brown 2006 pp 5 6 Ruby amp Brown 2006 p 34 Ruby amp Brown 2006 p 35 a b Stratton 2005 p 19 Oldham Kit January 23 2003 The North West Company establishes Spokane House in 1810 Essay 5099 HistoryLink Retrieved December 7 2014 Meinig 1993 p 69 Ruby 1988 p 75harvp error no target CITEREFRuby1988 help a b Tate Cassandra May 8 2014 Missionaries Marcus and Narcissa Whitman begin their journey to the Northwest one day after their wedding on February 19 1836 Essay 10777 HistoryLink Retrieved November 22 2014 Tate Cassandra April 3 2013 Cayuse Indians Essay 10365 HistoryLink Retrieved November 22 2014 Kershner Jim August 1 2008 Chief Spokane Garry ca 1811 1892 Essay 8713 HistoryLink Retrieved November 22 2014 Stratton 2005 pp 81 83 Stratton 2005 p 84 Wilma David January 29 2003 U S Army Colonel George Wright hangs Yakama and Palouse prisoners at the Ned Whauld River beginning on September 25 1858 Essay 5141 HistoryLink Retrieved December 7 2014 a b c d e Kensel 1971 p 19 Wilma David January 27 2003 J J Downing and S R Scranton file claims and build a sawmill at Spokane Falls in May 1871 Essay 5132 HistoryLink Retrieved December 7 2014 Schmeltzer 1988 p 39 Kensel 1971 p 20 Durham 1912 p 362 363 Schmeltzer 1988 p 40 Oldham Kit March 4 2003 U S Army establishes Fort Spokane at the junction of the Spokane and Columbia rivers in 1882 Essay 5358 HistoryLink Retrieved December 7 2014 Kensel 1971 p 23 Wilma David January 28 2003 First train arrives at Spokane Falls on June 25 1881 Essay 5137 HistoryLink a b Durham 1912 p 362 a b Arksey Laura October 3 2009 Spokane Falls later renamed Spokane is incorporated as a first class city on November 29 1881 Essay 9176 HistoryLink Retrieved December 7 2014 Kensel 1971 pp 22 23 a b c Stratton 2005 p 33 a b c Stratton 2005 p 28 Kensel 1969 pp 88 89 Kensel 1969 p 85 According to the Spokane Falls Review December 1 1883 edition Kensel 1969 pp 85 89 a b c Arksey Laura March 20 2006 Great Spokane Fire destroys downtown Spokane Falls on August 4 1889 Essay 7696 HistoryLink Retrieved December 7 2014 Schmeltzer 1988 pp 42 43 a b c Schmeltzer 1988 p 44 a b Creighton 2013 p 7 Williamson 2010 p 7 a b c d e Kershner Jim December 15 2007 Spokane Neighborhoods Hillyard Thumbnail History Essay 8406 HistoryLink Retrieved December 7 2014 a b Schmeltzer 1988 p 41 Stratton 2005 pp 29 30 32 33 a b c Malone 1996 p 201 Stratton 2005 p 32 Spokane Gateway City Metropolis of the Inland Empire Railway Employees Magazine and Journal San Francisco California Stanford University 6 1 2 October 1911 a b c Stratton 2005 p 35 Reider Ross June 22 2005 IWW formally begins Spokane free speech fight on November 2 1909 Essay 7357 HistoryLink Retrieved December 7 2014 Stratton 2005 pp 148 151 Kienholz 1999 p 209 210 a b c Stratton 2005 p 152 a b c Kensel 1968 p 25 Kensel 1968 pp 28 29 31 Durham 1912 p 598 a b c Stratton 2005 p 119 Stratton 2005 pp 126 127 a b Stratton 2005 p 127 Creighton 2013 p 82 Stratton 2005 p 35 36 a b Stratton 2005 p 38 Stratton 2005 pp 211 212 Stratton 2005 p 215 Stratton 2005 p 207 a b Berger Knute November 6 2012 Preserving state s heritage Why Spokane is central Crosscut Public Media Archived from the original on November 9 2012 Retrieved December 7 2014 Wilma David January 27 2003 Expo 74 Spokane World s Fair opens on May 4 1974 Essay 5133 HistoryLink Retrieved December 7 2014 a b c Schmeltzer 1988 p 87 a b c d e f g h i Arksey Laura September 4 2005 Spokane Thumbnail History Essay 7462 HistoryLink Retrieved December 7 2014 Kershner Jim May 25 2012 Spokane Valley Thumbnail History Essay 10119 HistoryLink Retrieved January 11 2019 a b UW Medicine Spokane University of Washington Retrieved October 9 2014 a b WSU Elson S Floyd College of Medicine Washington State University Retrieved August 12 2016 Geranios Nicholas K February 12 2017 With new school opening medical education surges in Spokane The Seattle Times Company Retrieved January 13 2018 Spirou 2010 p 210 a b Arksey Laura November 29 2005 Davenport Hotel Spokane Essay 7545 HistoryLink Retrieved December 7 2014 a b Kershner Jim July 2 2008 Restored Fox Theater in Spokane reopens as the Martin Woldson Theater at the Fox in a gala concert on November 17 2007 Essay 8681 HistoryLink Retrieved December 7 2014 Lawrence Turner Jody December 5 2013 WSU Spokane prepares to open pharmaceutical and biomedical sciences building The Spokesman Review Retrieved August 12 2016 Grand opening at the Davenport Grand Hotel The Spokesman Review June 18 2015 Retrieved August 12 2016 a b Riverfront Park Redevelopment City of Spokane Archived from the original on September 7 2015 Retrieved August 12 2016 NWS Spokane WA National Weather Service Retrieved December 7 2014 How Far is it Between Free Map Tools Retrieved March 31 2018 Delorme Topo USA 5 0 West Region CD ROM Map 5 0 ed 2004 DeLorme Inland Empire Merriam Webster Incorporated Retrieved December 7 2014 US Gazetteer files 2010 United States Census Bureau Archived from the original on July 2 2012 Retrieved December 19 2012 Station Information Data Sheet Spokane Washington National Weather Service April 2008 Retrieved December 7 2014 a b Ecoregions of the Pacific Northwest PDF U S Environmental Protection Agency Feature Detail Report for Mount Spokane United States Geological Survey Retrieved December 7 2014 a b Soltero et al 1992 p 460 Breckenridge Roy M May 1993 Glacial Lake Missoula and the Spokane Floods PDF Report GeoNotes Vol 26 Idaho Geological Survey Archived from the original PDF on April 26 2012 Retrieved July 7 2013 Gonzaga University August 6 2014 The Rise of the Urban Marmot Newswise Retrieved June 13 2021 Canadian Rocky Mountains Vegetation Landscope Retrieved August 6 2016 Wasson David April 22 2014 Ponderosa pine named Spokane s official city tree The Spokesman Review Retrieved August 6 2016 Callaham Robert Z September 2013 Pinus ponderosa A Taxonomic Review With Five Subspecies in the United States PDF RESEARCH PAPER PSW RP 264 United States Department of Agriculture Retrieved December 7 2014 Canadian Rocky Mountains Wildlife Landscope Retrieved August 6 2016 North Region City of Coeur d Alene Idaho Fish and Game Retrieved August 6 2016 Rainbow trout Information amp Facts Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife Retrieved August 6 2016 Eastern Region 1 Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife Archived from the original on August 9 2016 Retrieved August 6 2016 Wolf Packs in Washington Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife June 2016 Retrieved August 20 2016 Landers Rich August 20 2016 Wolf on Mount Spokane So what else is new The Spokesman Review Retrieved August 20 2016 Canadian Rocky Mountains Human Impact Landscope Retrieved August 6 2016 Peel M C and Finlayson B L and McMahon T A 2007 Updated world map of the Koppen Geiger climate classification Hydrol Earth Syst Sci 11 5 1633 1644 Bibcode 2007HESS 11 1633P doi 10 5194 hess 11 1633 2007 ISSN 1027 5606 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link direct Final Revised Paper a b c Summary of Monthly Normals SPOKANE INTL AP WA US USW00024157 1991 2020 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved October 18 2021 Kottek M J Grieser C Beck B Rudolf F Rubel 2006 World Map of the Koppen Geiger climate classification updated GIF Meteorol Z 15 3 259 263 Bibcode 2006MetZe 15 259K doi 10 1127 0941 2948 2006 0130 Retrieved December 7 2014 Dark Sky Tuesday Jun 29th 2021 a b c d NowData NOAA Online Weather Data National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved October 18 2021 a b Climate of Washington PDF Climates of the States Climatography of the United States No 60 National Weather Service Archived from the original PDF on February 11 2015 Retrieved December 7 2014 NowData NOAA Online Weather Data National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved October 18 2021 Threaded Station Extremes ThreadEx NOAA s National Centers for Environmental Information NCEI and the National Weather Service NWS the Northeast Regional Climate Center NRCC Retrieved October 18 2021 WMO climate normals for Spokane INTL WA 1961 1990 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved May 28 2014 SPOKANE WASHINGTON 457933 Western Regional Climate Center Retrieved June 15 2015 Summary of Monthly Normals SPOKANE FELTS FLD WA US USW00094176 1991 2020 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved October 18 2021 City Government City of Spokane January 1900 Retrieved December 7 2014 Brunt Jonathan November 10 2011 It s now Spokane Mayor Elect Condon The Spokesman Review Retrieved December 7 2014 Schmeltzer 1988 p 71 About Counties Washington National Organization of Counties Retrieved December 7 2014 Kershner Jim August 11 2007 Armed Cheney citizens forcibly remove the county seat from Spokane Falls to Cheney on March 21 1881 Essay 8249 HistoryLink Retrieved December 7 2014 a b House of Representatives Members Districts and Counties Members of the 66th Legislature 2019 2020 Washington State Legislature a b Find Your Legislator Washington State Legislature Retrieved December 7 2014 Spokane County Elections November 6 2012 General Election Washington Secretary of State Elections Division November 27 2012 Archived from the original on May 11 2019 Retrieved July 28 2021 Stratton 2005 pp 7 8 Oldham Kit August 19 2003 George Nethercutt running on term limit pledge defeats House Speaker Tom Foley on November 8 1994 Essay 5517 HistoryLink Retrieved December 7 2014 Stratton 2005 p 8 Statistical Analysis Center Uniform Crime Report Washington State Office of Financial Management November 30 2013 Archived from the original on November 28 2014 Retrieved December 7 2014 Spokane WA Crime Rates NeighborhoodScout Retrieved January 5 2020 a b Cuniff Meghann March 31 2012 Property crimes to get new focus The Spokesman Review Retrieved December 7 2014 a b Kienholz 1999 p 188 Fox et al 2014 pp 144 145 Jonathan Brunt October 22 2013 Spokane Police Department to open two new precincts The Spokesman Review Retrieved October 11 2014 Turner Joseph October 20 2006 Pierce County Dumping ground The News Tribune Retrieved August 6 2016 Clouse Thomas May 31 2006 Zehm death a homicide The Spokesman Review Archived from the original on June 26 2008 Retrieved November 21 2014 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint unfit URL link Geranios Nicholas November 16 2012 Otto Zehm Beating Officer Karl F Thompson Jr Sentenced In Death Of Man With Mental Disabilities The Huffington Post Retrieved November 21 2014 Deshais Nicholas August 22 2013 Police chief touts progress on Use of Force recommendations The Spokesman Review Retrieved November 21 2014 Census gov Decennial Census of Population and Housing Census gov Retrieved May 24 2014 Census Bulletin No 110 1891 Census gov Rank of Places of 100 000 or More by 2010 Population 1790 to 2010 1890 1960 PDF Census gov Rank of Places of 100 000 or More by 2010 Population 1790 to 2010 1970 2010 PDF U S Census Bureau QuickFacts Population Census April 1 2020 Spokane city Washington a b c d e U S Census website United States Census Bureau Retrieved December 7 2014 Spokane Spokane Valley WA Metro Area Membership Report The Association of Religion Data Archives Pennsylvania State University 2010 Retrieved January 2 2014 Temple Beth Shalom Temple Beth Shalom Retrieved December 21 2016 almost 200 member families Congregation Emanu El Congregation Emanu El Retrieved December 21 2016 Chabad of Spokane County Chabad of Spokane County Retrieved December 21 2016 Kershner Jim July 4 2008 Jewish Community of Spokane Essay 8640 HistoryLink Retrieved December 2 2014 Stamp Mary February 14 2009 Muslim mosque invites dialogue The Spokesman Review Retrieved December 2 2014 Finke Roger Scheitle Christopher 2005 Accounting for the Uncounted Computing Correctives for the 2000 RCMS Data Review of Religious Research 47 1 5 doi 10 2307 4148278 JSTOR 4148278 Archived from the original on February 4 2012 Retrieved December 7 2014 A Short History of the Diocese Diocese of Spokane Archived from the original on November 21 2014 Retrieved November 19 2014 Spokane Diocese of Episcopal Church Archived from the original on March 5 2014 Retrieved March 4 2014 Spokane Washington Temple LDSChurchTemples com Retrieved November 19 2014 Scott Chey August 14 2012 A Day for Diversity INLANDER Retrieved October 7 2014 Unity in the Community reflects commitment to diversity in the Inland Northwest The Fig Tree Retrieved October 5 2014 a b Ashton Linda January 30 1994 Spokane Is New Refugee Magnet For Ex Soviets Washington State Among The Country s Most Popular Destinations For Newcomers The Seattle Times Retrieved May 30 2014 a b City in eastern Washington state has become home to many Russians and Ukrainians Kyiv Post May 23 2002 Retrieved October 4 2014 a b Sowa Tom March 4 2012 Marshallese making a new life in Spokane The Spokesman Review Retrieved October 4 2014 a b Kershner Jim March 30 2007 Spokane Neighborhoods Old Chinatown Trent Alley Thumbnail History Essay 8120 HistoryLink Retrieved October 4 2014 Kershner Jim January 8 2007 Spokane s Japanese Community Essay 8048 HistoryLink Retrieved September 13 2014 Seven Northwest Cities The Smart Growth Ranking Sightline Institute Retrieved December 7 2014 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on August 12 2020 Retrieved June 19 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link a b Stucke John June 8 2011 Spokane Coeur d Alene now one statistical region The Spokesman Review Retrieved December 7 2014 Thousands of Preservationists Will Gather in Spokane Washington to Discuss the Power of Preservation to Create Jobs Enrich Communities and Drive Social Change National Trust for Historic Preservation September 13 2012 Retrieved December 7 2014 National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service July 9 2010 a b Stratton 2005 pp 168 169 Iannelli E J Kwak Young Spokane Style INLANDER Retrieved November 6 2016 a b c Spokane Emporis Archived from the original on October 6 2013 Retrieved November 3 2014 Arksey Laura March 23 2009 Cutter Kirtland Kelsey 1860 1939 Architect Essay 115 HistoryLink Retrieved November 2 2014 Schmeltzer Mike September 24 2017 Spokane a city of Modernist architectural gems The Spokesman Review Retrieved September 24 2017 a b Deshais Nicholas July 10 2016 Warren Heylman s architectural vision all over Spokane The Spokesman Review Retrieved November 6 2016 Historic Districts of Spokane Browne s Addition Historic District City County of Spokane Historic Preservation Office Retrieved November 3 2014 Stratton 2005 pp 167 173 Historic Hillyard The Spokesman Review September 20 2001 Retrieved November 2 2014 McLean Mike January 14 2010 Greenstone to jump start urban project Spokane Journal of Business Retrieved November 24 2014 Kershner Jim July 18 2007 Olmsted Parks in Spokane Essay 8218 HistoryLink Retrieved December 7 2014 Schmeltzer 1988 pp 64 65 Arksey Laura April 5 2010 Spokane Board of Park Commissioners begins its duties on June 1 1907 Essay 9387 HistoryLink Retrieved December 7 2014 Parks City of Spokane Parks amp Recreation Archived from the original on November 27 2013 Retrieved December 7 2014 Aquatics Facilities City of Spokane Parks amp Recreation Archived from the original on November 27 2013 Retrieved December 7 2014 a b c Kershner Jim May 28 2014 Expo 74 Spokane World s Fair Essay 10791 HistoryLink Retrieved October 9 2014 Landers 2003 pp 90 95 Mueller 2004 pp 270 274 Patterson Caroline June 2006 Idaho s Lake Country Vol 216 no 6 Sunset Retrieved December 7 2014 Mount Spokane Washington State Parks Archived from the original on October 17 2014 Retrieved October 9 2014 Arksey Laura August 2 2006 Mount 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