Dungeness Spit and National Wildlife Refuge
Nature & Parks· The Olympic Peninsula

Dungeness Spit and National Wildlife Refuge

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George Vancouver named it in 1792 after a headland in England, noting the resemblance. That comparison still holds: Dungeness Spit pushes approximately five miles into the Strait of Juan de Fuca from the northern edge of the Olympic Peninsula — the longest natural sand spit in the United States — and it keeps growing, adding roughly 15 feet per year. The New Dungeness Lighthouse stands at its end, maintained since 1994 by the New Dungeness Light Station Association. The spit is open year-round, and there is a campground with a bluff trail.

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Editorial content compiled with AI assistance. Place details verified against public records.