Art Based on a plan approved by the city council in 2009, the Chehalis Community Renaissance Team (CCRT) was formed and implemented artistic improvements as part of long term revitalization project for downtown Chehalis. With funds provided by CCRT via community donations and various city, county, and state programs, local artists and business owners have produced artworks on utility boxes, trash can lids, and benches, along with additional murals and building façade renovations in the downtown and surrounding business districts. A rainbow painted fence, known as the Chehalis Friendship Fence, is located in the city's Pennsylvania-Westside district near Westside Park. It was first created in 2020 and is a show of support of
LGBTQ+ people and their rights. Sculptures located in Chehalis include
The Guardian, a bronze work situated at the Lewis County Law and Justice Center. Created to honor local police officers who lost their lives in the line of duty, the artwork depicts a little girl along with an officer and a
police dog. Four statues, portraying young children in various states of play, are located at the
Recreation Park Complex. A bronze sculpture of a little girl sitting on a bench reading a book is located at the Vernetta Smith Timberland Library. The book was stolen but replaced in 2021. A sculpture containing multiple
basalt columns is located at a commercial development near the I-5 exchange on Main Street known as Liberty Plaza. Created to honor American military veterans, the piece is part of a fountain. The artwork was dedicated in 2009 and features a column standing in height, at the time thought to be the tallest such type in the world. Chehalis is part of the ARTrails of Southwest Washington initiative. The cooperative, begun in 2003, showcases local artists, art studios and galleries throughout the region, and holds an annual autumnal studio tour that incorporates events in smaller towns within Lewis County. The Lewis County Historical Museum has hosted, since 2015, a permanent ARTrails gallery.
Charitable groups Among the earliest women's groups in Washington state, the St. Helen's Club of Chehalis was founded on February 5, 1895. The literary organization, a member of the
General Federation of Women's Clubs (GFWC) since 1896, has advocated for the importance of "literature, arts, science and vital issues of the day", a motto stretching back to the founding days of the club. The St. Helen's Club has invested in lobbying efforts focusing on issues of betterment for the state but mainly provides scholarships for high school and college women, including foreign-born students, attending colleges in the state. During the group's history, the women organized petitions in the early 1900s to demand clean streets and organized livestock drives within Chehalis, opened a women's rest stop in downtown, and planted what was referred to as "a mile of trees" at the fairgrounds. As part of a state-wide GFWC initiative, the St. Helen's Club helped to raise funds to purchase land for the
Federation Forest State Park near
Enumclaw, Washington during the late 1920s. and ''Mackinaw's'', which caters to fine dining, were featured in back-to-back episodes of the television show,
Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives. Mackinaw's, which was located at the Hotel Washington, was subjected to fines, loss of a liquor license, and eventual closure for failing to adhere to
COVID-19 protocols for restaurants. Another restaurant, ''Spiffy's'', continued indoor dining in 2020 during early lockdown laws amid the COVID-19 pandemic. The establishment was levied with $400,000 in fines and the restaurant, which existed for 50 years, shut down the following year.
Festivals and events The city hosts the Chehalis Farmers Market between June and October in the historic downtown core on Boistfort Street. Held every year since 2005, the market is part of a larger Lewis County farmers market initiative. It is opened on Tuesday afternoons with a once-a-month Saturday opening begun during the 20th anniversary year of the market. Locally grown fruits and vegetables, as well as prepared food and art wares from the area, are often the leading focus of the market. The history of farmers markets in the city date to 1928, when the community began its first public market at the Chehalis municipal auditorium; the market shifted to Boistfort Street later that year due to lack of shoppers. An annual, multi-day "ChehalisFest" is usually held at the end of July. Once titled, "Krazy Days", the early festival included a "saucer drop" of candy and gift-filled cardboard
flying saucers that celebrated the
1947 flying disc craze. The event is hosted by Experience Chehalis (previously the Chehalis Community Renaissance Team), and is centrally located in the historic downtown district but expands to local tourist locations, including the Chehalis-Centralia Airport and Veterans Memorial Museum. Food, music, child activities, art walks, sidewalk sales, and car shows are often the highlights of the festivities. A mid-summer Music in the Park free concert series takes place annually at Recreation Park. The event is typically held on three consecutive Fridays, with a different performer each evening. Based on local music demographics, country singers and
cover bands often headline the series. Chehalis borders the Southwest Washington Fairgrounds, which hosts an annual
state fair, usually in August. The Lewis County Fair first took place in the city in 1891 and continued to do so until 1909 when the fairgrounds began hosting the event after the site was constructed. In commemoration of the
Kenneth Arnold UFO sighting and the city's connection to the event, the downtown district hosts the "Chehalis Flying Saucer Party" which first began in 2019. and is usually a two-day, September celebration. It includes symposiums, a parade, musical performances, and UFO-themed activities in the city, with several exhibits about the sighting displayed at the Lewis County Historical Museum. In 2023, a
short film competition, the "Northwest Flying Saucer Film Fest", was introduced to the event. Chehalis's Santa Parade takes place in early December. A theme is chosen every year and local residents are selected as
grand marshals as recognition for their community service. The route courses through the historic downtown district with
floats and school marching bands highlighting the event. Held almost continuously since the 1940s, the parade celebrated its 75th year in 2025.
Historic buildings and sites The city began a historical commission in the 1980s to honor and recognize buildings in Chehalis for their historical importance as well as preservation efforts. Given the moniker, the Chehalis Historic Preservation Commission, the committee's largest listing was in 2005 with 37 homes recognized; all were located in NRHP districts in the community. Each home or building is given a plaque that lists the original construction date, and may contain dates and names regarding conservation efforts. The commission, in the mid-2000s, was responsible for the beginnings of restoration efforts in the downtown district, specifically programs to improve and revitalize building
façades. The
Chehalis Downtown Historic District was honored with placement on the
National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) in 1997, notably for its
Colonial Revival architecture. Two other NRHP district locations
registered within Chehalis include the
Hillside Historic District and the
Pennsylvania Avenue-West Side Historic District. NRHP-listed buildings include the
Chehalis Post Office, the
Lewis County Courthouse, the county museum once known as the
Burlington Northern Depot, the 1920s
St. Helens Hotel, and the
Troop 373 and 7373 Scout Lodge. The homes of
John R. Jackson,
O.B. McFadden, and
O.K. Palmer are also listed with the NRHP. Other historical buildings include the
Chehalis Theater, originally known as the Pix Theater when it was opened in 1938, but renamed in 1954. The building, constructed in 1923, was first home to a Ford car dealership. Across from the courthouse sits the Judge Seymour White House, a
Victorian house built in 1904 that was planned for demolition in 1986 after it was deemed a public nuisance. A public outcry saved the home. Given the nickname, "House of Ill Repute", it once was used as a
brothel. The 1889
Washington Hotel is situated in the downtown district and was restored by a local family in 1997 following a destructive fire. It served as a movie house and vaudeville theater, known as the
Dream Theater, and once hosted the
Vintage Motorcycle Museum. Chehalis is home to several barns listed on the
Washington State Heritage Barn Register. Registered buildings include the Henry and Flossie Lucas Barn, built 1912, and the Rosecrest Farm, erected in 1914. Other barns include the Homestead Farm, established in 1915, the Chehalis River Hatchery, constructed in 1918, and the Hamilton-Gleason Barn built in 1929. The oldest barns include Gregory Farms, built in 1894, and the VT Farm, constructed in 1900. To commemorate the 100th anniversary of
Ezra Meeker's journey on the
Oregon Trail, the city, by way of the Lewis County Historical Society, installed an historical marker at city hall. As part of a promise from towns along Meeker's trip to erect markers to honor the trail, Chehalis was one of the last areas to fulfill the obligation. Another marker was subsequently placed at
Claquato Church in the nearby neighborhood of Claquato, the oldest continuously used church in Washington state. The Vernetta Smith Chehalis Timberland Library, built in 2008 as a replacement of the city's 1910
Carnegie library, is operated by the
Timberland Regional Library and named in honor of the mother of former Chehalis resident,
Orin Smith.
Tourism Chehalis is home to the
Veterans Memorial Museum since it opened in 2005. The museum contains a gallery and visitors can participate in direct interactions with visiting United States war veterans. The museum's grounds exhibit several military aircraft and vehicles. The Chehalis-Centralia Railroad & Museum is located south of the veterans museum and hosts the
Chehalis–Centralia Railroad, a
heritage railroad which offers various passenger train rides that traverse through the Twin City corridor and the Chehalis River Valley. The train, known as the
Cowlitz, Chehalis and Cascade Railway 15, was once on display at Recreation Park and was restored in the mid-1980s. A
swap meet mall,
Yard Birds, is a local landmark known for its large, metal and wood sculpture of a black bird. The mall was permanently closed in 2022 and threatened to be condemned due to code compliance and safety issues but the order was lifted at the end of the year. , the attraction still remains. Located at the Lewis County Historical Museum is the
McKinley Stump, a replica of an tall remnant of a Douglas fir cut down in 1901 near
Pe Ell. It was meant to be used as a speech pedestal for
President William McKinley, but the event was cancelled.
Theodore Roosevelt used it two years later and
William H. Taft employed the stump as a podium in 1907. The stump, demolished after excessive rot and an infestation of carpenter ants, was replaced with a replica stump which was installed at the museum in 2008. ==Sports==