Hoquiam, Washington
| Hoquiam, Washington | |
|---|---|
| City of Hoquiam | |
| Downtown Hoquiam | |
| Location of Hoquiam, Washington | |
| Coordinates: 46°59′15″N 123°53′28″W / 46.98750°N 123.89111°W | |
| Country | United States | 
| State | Washington | 
| County | Grays Harbor | 
| Established | 1867 | 
| Incorporated | May 21, 1890 | 
| Area | |
| 16.42 sq mi (42.54 km2) | |
| • Land | 9.54 sq mi (24.72 km2) | 
| • Water | 6.88 sq mi (17.82 km2) | 
| Elevation | 13 ft (4 m) | 
| Population  (2020) | |
| 8,776 | |
|  • Estimate  (2022) | 8,798 | 
| • Density | 906.85/sq mi (350.15/km2) | 
| • Metro | 77,038 | 
| Time zone | UTC-8 (Pacific (PST)) | 
| • Summer (DST) | UTC-7 (PDT) | 
| ZIP code | 98550 | 
| Area code | 360 | 
| FIPS code | 53-32300 | 
| GNIS feature ID | 2410792 | 
| Website | cityofhoquiam.com | 
Hoquiam (/ˈhoʊkwiəm/ HOH-kwee-əm) is a city in Grays Harbor County, Washington, United States. It borders the city of Aberdeen at Myrtle Street, with Hoquiam to the west. The two cities share a common economic history in lumbering and exporting, but Hoquiam has maintained its independent identity. It shares a long rivalry with its more populated neighbor, especially in high school sports.
Hoquiam was incorporated on May 21, 1890. Its name comes from a Native-American word meaning "hungry for wood", from the great amount of driftwood at the mouth of the Hoquiam River. The population was 8,776 at the 2020 census.