In 1943, Eva Brown was working as a young teacher in a small town in Arkansas when Navy recruitment posters caught her attention.
Leland Deutscher isn’t exactly sure what’s in all 300 cans of food his mom dropped off — but he does know this: He likes helping people.
After school on a dark, blustery afternoon earlier this month, a 9-year-old boy was hit by a car walking home from Broadview Elementary.
Just as Oak Harbor city leaders celebrated the groundbreaking for a new sewage treatment plant with matching blue shovels Tuesday, things were going very wrong at the old plant.
The city narrowly avoided dumping thousands of gallons of untreated waste into the harbor.
Emma Wezeman loves Cheerios — not honey nut, not multi-grain — the original.
Her favorite snack and her talent have propelled her into the national spotlight.
Veterans and their loved ones were treated to a moving program Wednesday at Oak Harbor High School that featured live music, singing and dancers swinging through a toe-tapping performance of “Boogie-Woogie Bugle Boy
An SUV hit a 9-year-old boy walking home from Broadview Elementary during the blustery storm Thursday afternoon.
Field Carrier Landing Practice operations for aircraft stationed at NAS Whidbey Island scheduled to occur at the Outlying Field in…
The driver of a semi truck is OK after his rig left Highway 20 at Dugualla Bay Farms Thursday morning.
Officials are still on the scene investigating and don’t know yet what caused the crash but the area is known for being a particularly windy stretch, said Mark Kirko, deputy fire chief for North Whidbey Fire and Rescue.
Field Carrier Landing Practice operations for aircraft stationed at NAS Whidbey Island are now scheduled to occur at the Outlying…
Blustery fall weather didn’t stop people from heading to downtown Oak Harbor Saturday to pay tribute to veterans.
It’s taken months, but they think they’ve finally found their man.
North Whidbey Parks and Recreation board hired Steve McCaslin to run the district.
Peter Hunt peered into the dark, murky depths of Rosario Strait.
It was August and the air was hot and still, the water a flat gray sheet.
His bones ached from hunching over a six-inch sonar screen on the dash of his powerboat, Sea Hunt. For hours, he’d slowly steered Sea Hunt over a search grid, eyes flicking up for only a few seconds at a time, lest he miss it.
He was on the hunt for his own white whale, an A-6E Intruder that crashed just after take-off from Whidbey Island Naval Air Station in 1989.