Journey Through Time

By Sue

Neahkahnie Mountain

Went on a day trip with auntie. What a glorious day it was at the Oregon Coast. Warm, Sunny, Spectacular!! Lots of people on vacation and trips soaking up the beach. All of the beaches were being used and appreciated. The towns had a lot of people walking up and down, buying ice cream cones, walking the dogs (everybody takes their dog to the beach!) and playing with the kids. Wonderful day...


So what you are looking at here is Neahkahnie Mountain in North Tillamook County, Oregon. The community of Neahkahnie hugs the side of the mountain and the small town of Manzanita lies further to the south, from where I am taking the photo. We used to have a beach house in Manzanita and it is always fun to return there now. It was a very sleepy town when we first found it and it has grown quite a bit since then (1975ish). We actually hiked up that mountain once. Once! That's it for me! ha When we lived there, there was a man who spent a lot of time and money looking for the treasure supposedly buried on the mountain. He was convinced that it held so much more than treasure from one ship. Sadly, he died before striking it rich. This is the subject of the movie "Goonies", and the filming took place north of here in Astoria and Ecola State Park.

Wikipedia:

A legend, dating back to the mid-1800s and the first Hudson's Bay Co. employees to arrive in the area, claims the mountain conceals a lost treasure, hidden by Spanish sailors in the late 16th century.There are various versions of the legend, but the most common ones involve a group of sailors carrying a chest up the hillside, then digging a hole and lowering the treasure inside. As the story goes, one of the sailors then plunges his sword into one of the men with them, apparently an African slave, and his body was then thrown in on top of the treasure; the idea being, Native Americans would not disturb a man's grave, so keeping the treasure under a dead man would prevent the Native Americans who, in most versions of the story were watching the activity closely from nearby from digging it up.

The "lost treasure," subject of the 2006 movie Tillamook Treasure, has been searched for by hundreds of people over the years, some resorting to earth-moving equipment and others digging by hand. During the 1930s, two treasure hunters died when their excavation caved in on them.

Digging for treasure is prohibited on the portions of the mountain that are in the control of the Oregon Parks Service and is also prohibited on the beach, also part of the Oregon State parks. Some artifacts of possibly Spanish origin have been found on the mountain; notably, in the 1870s, a collection of stones with arrows marked on them and one with the letters D E W on it found by treasure hunter Pat Smith. But no treasure or evidence of treasure is known to have been found.

Spanish ships might have come to the area by the 16th century. Ships using the Manila galleon trade route usually made landfall on the southern California coast, but it is possible some made landfall as far north as Oregon. The 1543 voyage of Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo reached California and, under Bartolomé Ferrelo, might have reached the Oregon coast. The 1774 voyage of Juan Pérez was the first European voyage to have unquestionably reached the Oregon coast./i]

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