Osceola, Washington
Ghost town in Washington (state)
Ghost town in Washington, United States
47°11′42″N 122°02′14″W / 47.19500°N 122.03722°W / 47.19500; -122.03722Osceola was an unincorporated community that existed in King County, Washington, around the turn of the 20th century, about two miles southeast of Enumclaw. Today not much remains except the last surviving one-room schoolhouse on the Enumclaw plateau; it is now the Osceola Community Club, a women's social club. The Osceola Mudflow that spread from nearby Mount Rainier approximately 5,000 years ago forms much of the Enumclaw plateau, and was named after the community.[1][2][3]
References
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Municipalities and communities of King County, Washington, United States
County seat: Seattle
- Algona
- Auburn‡
- Bellevue
- Black Diamond
- Bothell‡
- Burien
- Carnation
- Clyde Hill
- Covington
- Des Moines
- Duvall
- Enumclaw
- Federal Way
- Issaquah
- Kenmore
- Kent
- Kirkland
- Lake Forest Park
- Maple Valley
- Medina
- Mercer Island
- Milton‡
- Newcastle
- Normandy Park
- North Bend
- Pacific‡
- Redmond
- Renton
- Sammamish
- SeaTac
- Seattle
- Shoreline
- Snoqualmie
- Tukwila
- Woodinville
- Ames Lake
- Baring
- Boulevard Park
- Bryn Mawr-Skyway
- Cottage Lake
- East Renton Highlands
- East Hill-Meridian
- Fairwood
- Fall City
- Hobart
- Klahanie
- Lake Holm
- Lake Marcel-Stillwater
- Lake Morton-Berrydale
- Lakeland North
- Lakeland South
- Maple Heights-Lake Desire
- Mirrormont
- Ravensdale
- Riverbend
- Riverpoint
- Riverton
- Shadow Lake
- Union Hill-Novelty Hill
- Vashon
- White Center
- Wilderness Rim
communities
‡This populated place also has portions in an adjacent county or counties
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