Circus Drive-In finally leaving town?
Nov 9, 2020, 4:26 PM | Updated: 4:51 pm
The Circus Drive-In, the ruins of which have been a fixture along State Highway 20 east of downtown Anacortes in Skagit County for decades, is apparently finally being torn down.
The theatre closed in the 1980s, and the property has served as a storage lot for RVs and boats for many years. Earlier this year, that the Swinomish Tribe bought the seven-acre parcel with plans to build affordable housing on the site, which is adjacent to the tribe鈥檚 didgw谩li膷 Wellness Center.
成人X站 Radio reached tribal offices today, but the staff person who answered the phone was not able to confirm that the work underway 鈥 which appears to be preparation for demolition of the old drive-in 鈥 is related to the tribe鈥檚 plans.
Bret Lunsford, director of the , says he is eager to collect some tangible reminders of the theatre.
“My feelers sent out for CIRCUS artifacts have so far come to nothing,” Lunsford said in an email on Monday. “I hope something will find its way to the museum eventually under its own power.”
Speeding on Highway 20 past the old drive-in, with its remarkably intact screen, still-standing projection booth and concession stand 鈥 and, many years ago, assortment of brightly painted plywood two-dimensional clown heads 鈥 was a tradition for many travelers headed to Whidbey Island via Deception Pass, or to the San Juan Islands via the Washington State Ferry Terminal at Anacortes.
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