The second oldest town in Washington, the “Port of Sea Captains” was founded and laid out in 1852 by Capt. Thomas Coupe, the first man to sail through Deception Pass [1]. The protected harbor at Penn Cove was a perfect site for the village that became Coupeville, and timber from Whidbey Island [2] was shipped from here to San Francisco to feed the building boom created by the gold rush.
Today, modern businesses operate from Victorian-era buildings amidst the nation’s largest historical preservation district. Downtown has an immaculate cluster of false-fronted shops and restaurants right on the harbor and a long wharf that was once used to ship local produce and logs to the mainland. This is a cat-friendly town; perhaps half the downtown businesses have one inside.
Island Transit, (360/678-7771, or 800/240-8747, www.islandtransit.org [3]) has free bus service Mon.–Sat. throughout Whidbey. Whidbey Scenic Flights (360/678-8384) offers airplane flights over the island.
Links:
[1] http://www.moon.com/destinations/washington/north-puget-sound/whidbey-island/deception-pass-state-park
[2] http://www.moon.com/destinations/washington/north-puget-sound/whidbey-island
[3] http://www.islandtransit.org