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Aberdeen, Washington

Aberdeen is a city in Grays Harbor County, Washington, United States. The population was 17,013 at the 2020 census. The city is the most populous in Grays Harbor County and the region's economic center, bordering the cities of Hoquiam and Cosmopolis. Aberdeen is occasionally referred to as the "Gateway to the Olympic Peninsula".

History
Samuel Benn, a New York City native, established a homestead on the Chehalis River in 1859 and later platted a town at the site named Aberdeen. According to accounts collected by historian Edmond S. Meany, the name has two possible origins: from the Ilwaco-based Aberdeen Packing Company, which opened a cannery on the homestead in 1873; Like the Scottish city, Aberdeen is a port settlement situated at the mouth of two rivers—the Chehalis and the Wishkah. Hoquiam and Aberdeen citizens together built a spur; in 1895, the line connected Northern Pacific tracks to Aberdeen. By 1900, Aberdeen had become home to many saloons, brothels, and gambling establishments. It was nicknamed "The Hellhole of the Pacific", as well as "The Port of Missing Men" due to its high murder rate. One notable resident was Billy Gohl, known locally as Billy "Ghoul", who was rumored to have killed at least 140 men, disposing of the bodies in the Wishkah River. Gohl was ultimately convicted of two murders. Aberdeen was hit hard during the Great Depression, with the number of major local sawmills reduced from 37 to 9. By the late 1970s, most of the area had been logged and the remaining mills closed during the next decade. By the early 1990s, the industry was decimated due to resource reduction. Local political and business leaders ignored this fact and did not pursue economic diversification. ==Geography==
Geography
Aberdeen is at the eastern end of Grays Harbor, near the mouth of the Chehalis River and southwest of the Olympic Mountains. Grays Harbor is notable as the northernmost ria on North America's Pacific Coast because it has remained free of glaciers throughout the Quaternary due to unfavorable topography and warm temperatures. It is thought that, during glacial periods of the Quaternary, the Chehalis River was a major refugium for aquatic species, as was the west coast from the Olympic Peninsula southward for plants that later formed the northern part of the Pacific temperate rainforest in formerly glaciated areas. According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of , of which is land and is water. Climate Aberdeen experiences a climate on the boundary between Mediterranean (Köppen Csb) and oceanic (Köppen Cfb). Although rainfall is extremely high between October and March, July and August still have a distinct excess of evaporation over rainfall. Temperatures are generally very mild due to the proximity of the Pacific Ocean. Snow is very common but usually light, with one exception being December 1964 during which fell. Occasionally, southeasterly winds can cause very high temperatures. For example, in August 1981, the temperature in Aberdeen reached . {{Weather box |width = 75% ==Demographics==
Demographics
Racial and ethnic composition 2020 census As of the 2020 census, there were 17,013 people, 6,449 households, and 3,881 families residing in the city. The population density was . There were 7,236 housing units at an average density of . The median age was 38.7 years. 6.2% of residents were under 5 years of age, 23.3% of residents were under the age of 18, and 17.4% were 65 years of age or older. For every 100 females there were 101.0 males, and for every 100 females age 18 and over there were 100.9 males age 18 and over. Of the 6,449 households, 29.5% had children under the age of 18 living in them. Of all households, 36.0% were married-couple households, 23.1% were households with a male householder and no spouse or partner present, and 29.8% were households with a female householder and no spouse or partner present. About 30.9% of all households were made up of individuals and 13.7% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The top five reported ancestries (people were allowed to report up to two ancestries, thus the figures will generally add to more than 100%) were English (83.7%), Spanish (14.1%), Other Indo-European (0.5%), Asian and Pacific Islander (0.9%), and Other (0.8%). Crime According to the Uniform Crime Report statistics compiled by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) in 2023, there were 77 violent crimes and 587 property crimes per 100,000 residents. Of these, the violent crimes consisted of 0 murders, 21 forcible rapes, 14 robberies and 42 aggravated assaults, while 82 burglaries, 435 larceny-thefts, 64 motor vehicle thefts and 6 acts of arson defined the property offenses. ==Economy==
Economy
Aberdeen and the rest of Grays Harbor remain dependent on timber, fishing, and tourism industries and as a regional service center for much of the Olympic Peninsula. Grays Harbor Community Hospital employees total more than 600 workers. Historically the area is dependent on harvesting and exporting natural resources. The Port of Grays Harbor is the largest coastal shipping port north of California. It is still a center for the export of logs on the west coast of the U.S. and has become one of the largest centers for the shipment of autos and grains to China and Korea. On December 19, 2005, Weyerhaeuser made plans to close the Aberdeen large-log sawmill and the Cosmopolis pulp mill, and the closures took effect in early 2006. This resulted in the loss of at least 342 jobs. In January 2009, Weyerhaeuser closed two additional plants in Aberdeen, resulting in another 221 lost jobs. In both cases many employees were not told by Weyerhaeuser management, but learned about the closures from local radio stations who received a press release prior to a scheduled press conference. Major employers in Grays Harbor include Westport Shipyard, Sierra Pacific Industries, the Quinault Indian Nation, The Simpson Door Company, Hoquiam Plywood, Pasha Automotive, Willis Enterprises, Ocean Gold Companies, Vaughn Company, and the Stafford Creek Corrections Center, a state prison which opened in 2000. Other significant employers include the cranberry-growing cooperative Ocean Spray, worldwide retailer Walmart, Sidhu & Sons Nursery USA, Inc. (AKA Briggs Nursery), Overstock.com, and Washington Crab Producers. In September 2010, the Weyerhaeuser Cosmopolis Pulp Mill was purchased by the Beverly Hills-based Gores Group and restarted as Cosmo Specialty Fibers, Inc. They started production of pulp on May 1, 2011. The mill closed in 2022 and was later fined $2.3 million for chemical leaks by the Department of Ecology. Retail The city had two indoor shopping malls that were developed in the 1970s and early 1980s. The Wishkah Mall east of downtown Aberdeen opened in August 1976 on the riverfront and was followed in August 1981 by the South Shore Mall, which was south of the Chehalis River. The newer South Shore Mall had and space for 80 retailers, including anchor tenants Sears and J.C. Penney following their relocation from downtown. It was renamed to the Shoppes at Riverside in 2016 and closed on February 13, 2021, following an engineering report that found the soil under the foundation had settled and would pose structural risks. A movie theater and fun center also closed later in two of the four anchor spaces at the mall, which is owned by Coming Attractions Theaters. ==Arts and culture==
Arts and culture
Aberdeen has the largest public library in Grays Harbor County, and is operated as part of the Timberland Regional Library system. The city originally had a Carnegie library that opened in 1908 and was replaced in 1966 by the current building. The Timberland Regional Library took over operations in 1969 and renovated the building in 2000. The city's museum was located in a historic armory built in 1922. The building and the museum's collections were destroyed in a fire in 2018. Aberdeen is also the home port of the tall ship Lady Washington, a reproduction of a smaller vessel used by the explorer Captain Robert Gray, featured in the Pirates of the Caribbean film The Curse of the Black Pearl. ==Parks and recreation==
Parks and recreation
features a quote from a Nirvana song. Kurt Cobain Memorial Park was established in 2011, near where musician Kurt Cobain lived in Aberdeen. The park features a plaque with a quote from the song "Come as You Are". ==Education==
Education
The city's school district has two high schools: J. M. Weatherwax High School, or Aberdeen High School as it is now called; and Harbor High School, an alternative high school with an enrollment exceeding 200 students. Aberdeen High has a long-time school sports rivalry with nearby Hoquiam High School. In 2002, the Weatherwax building of Aberdeen High School, built in 1909, burned to the ground in an act of arson. The new building was completed in 2007 and held its grand opening on August 25, 2007. Aberdeen School District also consists of one junior high: Miller Junior High; five elementary schools: Central Park Elementary, McDermoth Elementary, Stevens Elementary, AJ West Elementary and Robert Gray Elementary; and one Roman Catholic parochial school: St. Mary's Catholic School. Aberdeen is home to Grays Harbor College, located in south Aberdeen, and is represented by the Charlie Choker mascot. The college emphasizes student opportunities and has resources to help students transfer to a four-year college to complete a degree. ==Infrastructure==
Infrastructure
Transportation Aberdeen is the western terminus of U.S. Route 12, a major highway that crosses Washington state and continues east to Detroit, Michigan. The city is bisected by U.S. Route 101, which crosses the Chehalis River and connects southwestern Washington to the western and northern Olympic Peninsula. From Aberdeen, U.S. Route 101 continues south to Cosmopolis and west to Hoquiam; it intersects several other highways that provide access to the coast, including State Route 105 in southern Aberdeen. The city is also the hub for Grays Harbor Transit, which provides bus service for Aberdeen and surrounding cities. Its routes generally have trips that run every 30 minutes in Aberdeen and Hoquiam and at other frequencies between cities. Grays Harbor Transit also operates intercity routes to Olympia and has connections to other transit systems. Aberdeen Transit Center opened in March 1988 and was originally designed with a railroad depot motif. ==Notable people==
Notable people
Robert Arthur, actor, gay rights activist • Elton Bennett, artist • Mark Bruener, NFL football player • Trisha Brown, choreographer • Jeff Burlingame, author • Robert Cantwell, novelist • Colin Cowherd, sports media personality • Bryan Danielson, professional wrestler • Calvin Fixx, writer • Lee Friedlander, artist, photographer • Billy Gohl, labor organizer, alleged serial killer • Carrie Goldberg, attorney, author • Victor Grinich, pioneer of Silicon Valley • Gary Steven Krist, criminal (Barbara Mackle kidnapping) • Walt Morey, writer, creator of Gentle BenRobert Motherwell, painter of New York SchoolEd Murray, politician, Mayor of Seattle in 2014–17 • Peter Norton, author, computer programmer, founded Peter Norton Computing • Douglas Osheroff, winner of Nobel Prize in PhysicsCraig Raymond, basketball player, 12th pick of 1967 NBA draftWesley Carl Uhlman, politician • Hank Woon, author, game designer, screenwriter • John Workman, writer, artist • Yukon Eric, professional wrestler MusiciansKurt Cobain, of NirvanaDale Crover, of MelvinsChris Freeman, of Pansy DivisionMatt Lukin, of Melvins and MudhoneyKrist Novoselic, of NirvanaPatrick Simmons, of The Doobie BrothersKurdt Vanderhoof, of Metal Church, the Lewd, and Presto Ballet ==Sister cities==
Sister cities
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