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San Juan Island National Historical ParkThe formal garden at English Camp.
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San Juan Island National Historical Park
General Management Plan
 
Laundress Quarters 2006
NPS Photo
Preservation of American Camp's laundress quarters and six other historic structures in the park requires the kind of long-range planning that only a General Management Plan can provide. 
 

A proposed new year-round visitor center at American Camp and the expansion of the English Camp boundary are among the highlights included in San Juan Island National Historical Park’s General Management Plan and Environmental Impact Statement released October 24, 2008.

Copies of the final GMP/EIS are available at park headquarters, 650 Mullis St., Suite 100, Friday Harbor; and at the American camp Visitor Center, 4668 Cattle Point Road. Electronic copies may be accessed via the park planning website, http://parkplanning.nps.gov/sajh.

In the development stage for more than six years, the document also identifies trails, programs and natural and cultural resource projects that will unite the park’s historical and natural themes, according to park superintendent Peter Dederich.

“This GMP essentially directs how the park will managed over the next 15 to 20 years,” Dederich said. “And that required guidance from San Juan Island residents and the general public. It was one of the keys to helping the park staff understand all the ramifications of any actions we might propose.”

Three well-attended public meetings were held in February, during which the park received more than 100 verbal comments. During the ensuing 60-day comment period, 30 letters were received noting issues and ideas. The meeting comments and letters resulted in a number of revisions to the final plan, Dederich said.

Of the three alternatives outlined in the draft GMP, the approved Alternative C provides a strong framework that builds on the inseparable relationships between the park’s rich cultural heritage and the natural resources, Dederich said. That plan includes, in addition to a new visitor center, continuing efforts to add to the park’s English Camp the 312 acres of Washington State Department of Natural Resources land on Mitchell Hill, enhanced interpretation programs that address history and nature as one, preservation of English Camp’s Garry oak woodland and prairie restoration at American Camp.

“As our visitors and park neighbors already know, this national park is composed of several, distinct natural environments, some of which, such as the native prairie at American Camp, are nearly extinct in the Pacific Northwest,” Dederich said. “This plan will help us restore and/or maintain them while developing new trails, facilities and programming that enhance visitor understanding.”

San Juan Island National Historical Park was authorized by an act of Congress on September 9, 1966 (Public Law 89-565) to commemorate the peaceful resolution of the Northwest Boundary Dispute (the so-called Pig War) and the 12-year peaceful joint military occupation of San Juan Island from 1860 to 1872. The last general management plan (GMP) was completed in 1979. Many changes have occurred since this time. Patterns and types of visitor use have changed, Dederich said. San Juan County is one of the fastest growing counties in the state. More than 250,000 annual park visitors have been recorded at American and English camps.

“This growth in local population and visitation has implications for management of the park’s resources,” Dederich said. ”As the population of the island has grown and the island has become more developed, the park has become an important refuge for natural resources such as prairie and Garry oak woodlands. Water has become a precious commodity.”

Each of these changes has major implications for how visitors access and use the park and the facilities needed to support these uses, how resources are managed, and how the National Park Service (NPS) manages its operations, he said.

This plan provides the overall context within which more detailed plans may be developed, Dederich said.

GMP Draft Cover
Final GMP/EIS
Read in-depth the final General Management Plan and Enivronmental Impact Statement
more...
GMP Newsletter
GMP Newsletter
Learn about the park's upcoming 20-year plan.
more...
Did You Know?  

Did You Know?
George E. Pickett, a West Pointer and Mexican War veteran, was the first U.S. commander on San Juan Island. He would resign his commission on San Juan and go on to lead his Confederate division in the climatic charge that bears his name at the Battle of Gettysburg.

Last Updated: October 24, 2008 at 16:39 EST