

Published in The Seattle Times online on April 6, 2025
and in PacificNW Magazine of the printed Times on April 3, 2025
Cruise along Chuckanut Drive – ‘an incomparable panorama’ since 1916
By Jean Sherrard
For my Grandpa Jean, a truck driver originally from Stillwater, Oklahoma, the journey was the destination.

In the 1930s, he crisscrossed Washington state in his trucks and was eager to share his scenic discoveries with a growing young family.
Hugging the steep sides of Chuckanut Mountain south

of Bellingham, Chuckanut Drive offered breathtaking vistas across Samish Bay and must have attracted the ex-Okie flatlander like a bee to honey.
Parking along the two-lane road and scrambling down to a small Pigeon Point cove for picnics became a family tradition. Sandy beaches, busy crab pots and massive Burlington Northern trains (and the pennies they flattened) colored childhood memories.
Chuckanut Drive has always taken the “drive” part of its name seriously. It can be traversed by car,

motorcycle or a particularly intrepid bicycle, but its narrow curves chiseled into precipitous sandstone cliffs leave scant margins for error (or photographers!). Likewise, its creation story boasts twists and turns worthy of dime-store novellas.
Primitive and undependable, the earliest north-south passages along the west side of Chuckanut Mountain were subject to falling rocks and high tides.

After the Great Northern Railway bought the right-of-way along the shoreline in 1893, road improvements were stalled to prevent landslides that might impede rail traffic.
In 1910, a nascent state highway department took control, hiring inexperienced convict crews to carve out stone ledges watched over by guards with shotguns. After 5.5 grueling miles, money ran out, and labor ground to a halt. With a further injection of state funding, contractors finally completed the task.
Hailed upon its spring 1916 opening, the road boasted a slew of firsts. A glowing Seattle Times account proclaimed it “the first link of the Pacific Highway from Vancouver B.C. to San Francisco to parallel salt water.” The route also handily connected Skagit Valley farms to Whatcom County ports, “proving its utilitarian value” while providing “an incomparable panorama of Western Washington.”

What’s more, Bellingham’s Charles Larrabee, encouraged by Gov. Ernest Lister, donated 20 acres of forested land along the road’s northern stretch, which became Washington’s first state park. Proclaimed the Times, “It will undoubtedly be appreciated by tourists desiring an ideal picnic spot.”
In 1919, Chuckanut Drive began to be paved and widened, attracting even more sightseers. By the mid-1920s, tourist-filled buses with observation windows shared the highway with Prohibition-skirting smugglers of liquor and drugs from Canada.
The Larrabee family gifted the state another 1,500 nearby acres in 1937. Today’s 2,683-acre Larrabee State Park is one of the state’s largest and most popular — and just one of the many hallmarks of spectacular Chuckanut Drive.
WEB EXTRAS
To view our narrated 360 degree video of this column, click right here.
And for ultimate enjoyment, check out this hand-tinted photo from the same prospect (but a different photog) supplied by the legendary Ron Edge.

Below, a few more photos of Larrabee State Park beach and environs.






Yes indeed, this drive exemplifies the grand and classic views and experiences to be enjoyed while taking a peaceful drive along Chuckanut Drive with the Salish Sea as a breathtaking backdrop. Been there a number of times and it is definitely time to revisit.