Shaw Island

Shaw Island is the smallest of the four San Juan Islands served by the Washington State Ferries.



Understand
The island has a land area of just under 20 km² (7.7 sq mi) and a small year-round population of 240 (2010). Summer time weekends swell with other residents and the occasional tourists. The Wilkes Expedition, in 1841, named the island after John Shaw, a United States Naval Officer.

There are two Catholic religious institutes of nuns on Shaw Island. Benedictine nuns established a monastery on 150 acres in the 1970s; while the Sisters of Mercy have owned an unofficial retreat on the island since the 1980s. Nuns of the Franciscan Sisters of the Eucharist ran the island's only store and the ferry terminal for more than two decades until 2004 where they could be seen in full habit directing ferry traffic.

Get around
Shoreline access is best at the Shaw County Park. There are 11.5 miles (18.5 km) of asphalt and 2.37 miles (3.81 km) of gravel public roads on Shaw. The primary roads are three loops in the interior of the island, with branches to the ferry dock, Shaw Island County Park, Neck Point, and Broken Point.

See
Shaw Island has a county park, a historic general store, and a post office at the ferry landing. A library and museum are located near the middle of the island. Shaw Island has an operational historic one-room school (although a second room was later added), with classes for elementary and middle school students. Known as the Little Red Schoolhouse, it has been in continuous use since it was built in 1890 and is the longest- running school in the state of Washington. The building is listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places.