John A. Finch Arboretum Explained

John A. Finch Arboretum
Type:Urban Park
Location:Spokane, Washington
Area:56.65acres
Operator:Spokane Parks and Recreation Department
Status:Open year round
Publictransit:Spokane Transit Authority

John A. Finch Arboretum is a public arboretum located at West 3404 Woodland Boulevard, Spokane, Washington, United States in the West Hills neighborhood. It is open daily without charge. Dogs are not allowed at the arboretum.[1]

The arboretum was established in 1949 after the last living executor of the John A. Finch estate released $250,000 for the purpose.[2] The landscape follows Garden Springs Creek, and now contains about 2,000 trees and shrubs, including 65 groups of lilacs, as well as a rhododendron grove, conifer and maple collections, and a nature trail. The arboretum lies in a small valley running southwest-to-northeast carved by the creek. I-90 and the Sunset Highway, which use the valley to descend into Spokane from the higher elevation of the Columbia Plateau, respectively form the southern and northern borders of the park.

The arboretum is home to the Touch and See Nature Trail, which is owned by the Girl Scout council in the area. It was refurbished by Darlea Chatburn in 2004 who received her Gold Award after the completion of the project.[3]

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Notes and References

  1. https://static.spokanecity.org/documents/parks/fincharboretum/finch-walking-guide.pdf
  2. Web site: Gift to fund establishment of Finch Arboretum (Spokane) is announced on February 9, 1947. - HistoryLink.org.
  3. News: Carper . Kandis . Girl Scout restores Finch’s nature trail for the blind . 11 June 2024 . The Spokesman-Review . 23 Dec 2004.