ABOUT the FRIENDS OF DISCOVERY PARK

The 1972 Master Plan, Discovery Park's guiding document, warns:

In years to come there will be almost irresistible pressures to carve out areas of the park for structures or activities, because it would provide "an ideal site at no cost." There must be a deep commitment to the belief that there is no more valuable use of this site than as an open space.

Friends of Discovery Park is an all-volunteer group formed in 1974 to defend the integrity of Discovery Park and to create and protect there an open space of quiet and tranquility, a sanctuary where the works of man are minimized. Over the years, FRIENDS has vigilantly resisted a host of proposals by various interests for "just a piece of Discovery Park." If only half of them had been successful, there would have been no park land left. Instead, this unique wild park would be a golf course or an anti-ballistic missile base.

The majority of FRIENDS' membership does not live in Magnolia. Folks from all over Seattle have been advocates for Discovery Park from its very beginnings. Of the 25 environmental, civic and community groups that made up Judge Voorhees' Citizens for Fort Lawton Park, only one was represented by a Magnolia resident. Those who worked tirelessly to create this park under nearly impossible odds included: Thomas O. Wimmer, Mike Ruby, Calhoun Dickinson, Edith Lobe, Pat Emerson, Tony Puma, Dr. Greg Dash, Brock Evans, Anne Mack, Max Hollenbeck and a host of others. Past presidents of the FRIENDS hail from Wallingford, South Seattle, Lake City, Ballard, Green Lake, and Capitol Hill.

The Board of Directors meets on the first Wednesday evening of the month at 7:00 pm. Visitors are welcome. Please email us if you would like to visit:
discoveryparkfriends@comcast.net

JOIN the FRIENDS!
(Print out this form and mail it in.)
1972 Master Plan/Ft. Lawton Park Plan
(Contains the Park's Guiding Principles)
 



© 2004-2008 Friends of Discovery Park
All Rights Reserved.