The Key Peninsula is a scenic finger of land that stretches south between Case and Carr Inlets in Washington State.
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Logging, orchards, and chicken farms supported these early pioneers.
Several communities, each with a unique history, took root near the various bays and inlets of the peninsula, and by the 1890s, many areas bustled with schools, post offices, mills, churches, and stores.
Few people lived there before 1850, although Native Americans fished and hunted from temporary villages.
The Key Peninsula is a scenic finger of land that stretches south between Case and Carr Inlets in Washington State