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University Place, Washington
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==History== University Place received its name in the 1800s when the [[University of Puget Sound]], a private liberal-arts college in North Tacoma, purchased land along the primary north–south route of Grandview Drive. The school sought to build a new campus there, but ended up selling the land back to the city for about $11,000. University Place remained an unincorporated part of Pierce County until the City of University Place was formed on August 31, 1995.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.cityofup.com/government/history|title=History {{!}} University Place|website=www.cityofup.com|access-date=June 16, 2019}}</ref> Today, University Place is largely suburban in character and functions as a mixed business and residential area with waterfront on the [[Puget Sound]]. The town is home to [[Curtis Senior High School]] and [[Charles Wright Academy]]. [[Chambers Bay]] golf course opened in 2007 to favorable reviews.<ref>[http://www.thenewstribune.com/news/local/story/94731.html "Chambers Bay first impressions: Wow!"], Brent Champaco, Tacoma ''The News Tribune'', June 24, 2007</ref> A [[Links (golf)|Scottish links]]-style course, Chambers Bay hosted the 2010 [[United States Amateur Championship (golf)|U.S. Amateur]] and the [[2015 U.S. Open (golf)|2015 U.S. Open]].<ref>[http://washingtonceo.com/home/story-display/article/259/chambers-bay.html "Chambers Bay: Links on Puget Sound Cause More than a Ripple"], Crai Bower, ''Washington CEO'', October 17, 2007</ref> University Place's news is primarily covered by ''[[The News Tribune]]'' (Tacoma), and is also covered by University Place Patch, a hyper-local news website that launched in October 2010, and sometimes by news media in Seattle. Earlier newspapers for the community were the weekly Suburban Times (1970s), published by Dave Sclair (who, starting in 1970, also published Western Flyer); and, in the 1980s, the Lakewood Press, published by Grace T. Eubanks and later Dane S. Claussen, which launched the University Place Press as a monthly and then biweekly before it folded in early 1989.
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