North End


Bothell:
Bothell was a popular steamboat stop along the Sammamish River when it became a town in 1908.  Read more

Brier:
Brier wants to be what it's always been: a basic, spacious and semirural wooded community.  Read more

City of Snohomish:
With its tree-lined streets and fine heritage houses, Snohomish has slowly evolved from agriculture center into pretty bedroom community for Everett and King County commuters.  Read more

Edmonds/Woodway:
Edmonds, with its small-town feel, European style and flower- and tree-lined walkways, is dubbed the "friendliest city" in Washington year after year.  Read more

Everett:
The city of Everett, founded in 1893, grew out of an industrial boomtown that sprang up around the lumber industry, ore refining and the railroad.  Read more

Lynnwood:
Just over a century ago, a densely wooded area that would become modern-day Lynnwood attracted a San Francisco company that began cutting timber.  Read more

Marysville:
In 1878, Marysville covered only 1,280 acres of land.  Read more

Mill Creek:
The tree-lined neighborhood streets, nature paths and natural trails of Mill Creek sprawl over 3.5 square miles in southern Snohomish County.  Read more

Monroe:
In 1864, Henry McClurg named the area that later became the city of Monroe “Park Place.” Loggers, farmers and fur traders traveled through the community, drawn by the railroad.  Read more

Mountlake Terrace:
Farmers and ranchers settled in the area that would later be called Mountlake Terrace to raise chickens, minks and chinchillas, a squirrel-like mammal native to South America.  Read more

Mukilteo:
In 1855, 22 tribal nations signed a peace treaty with the territorial governor, Isaac Stevens, ceding tribal lands in exchange for payments and reservation land. A monument erected at Third Street and Lincoln Avenue commemorates the treaty.  Read more

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