BEACH
NEWS YOU CAN USE
Covering 160 miles of Oregon coast
travel: Seaside, Cannon Beach, Manzanita, Nehalem, Wheeler, Rockaway,
Garibaldi, Tillamook, Oceanside, Pacific City, Lincoln City, Depoe
Bay, Newport, Wadport, Yachats & Florence.
Spring
Break is here. Are you ready? |
|
|
Oregon
Coast Travel: Life on Lighthouse Wasn't Easy
(Seaside,
Oregon) – It has been nicknamed “Terrible Tilly”
– and for more than a few good reasons.
For generations, the
Tillamook Rock Lighthouse has captured the imaginations of visitors
to Seaside and Cannon Beach, sitting a distant one-mile away and
remaining a mystery because it's the only Oregon lighthouse not
accessible by walking up to it. It often disappears into the mists
of the Pacific, given the right weather conditions, swallowed up
by fog. Then it reappears, adding to the legends and mysteries already
surrounding it, as new and old visitors conjure new tales to explain
this mystifying presence just offshore.
It
all began in the 1800’s, when the decision was finally made
to create this grandiose landmark. It took much wrangling and scientific
survey to come up with the location, as government officials decided
Tillamook Head itself would not be a good place for a lighthouse
for numerous reasons, including its blind spots on either side of
the point and for various technical issues. It was finally decided
that the lighthouse would be built upon a chunk of rock about a
mile offshore, which would require considerable blasting to flatten
its top.
Construction of the lighthouse
was terrifying. Crews had to endure insane tidal and wind conditions
as the waves slammed against the relatively small area. They lived
under soggy tents, even in these conditions. It is even rumored
that construction workers housed in Seaside, waiting to start work,
were sequestered from the rest of the population so they wouldn't
hear the horror stories of working on the rock.
The lighthouse went into
service in 1881, manned by four people at a time, stuck there for
months. A giant winch was used to bring supplies and personnel from
visiting ships to the rock, which was a dangerous and unwieldy endeavor
under even the best conditions. Numerous men were lost doing this.
During a storm
in 1896, a rock weighing 135 pounds crashed through the roof and
into the kitchen of the keeper’s quarters.
Living on the
rock meant being regularly attacked by enormous storms. Having boulders
and logs tossed through glass was not an irregular occurrence. One
rock, weighing 135 pounds, crashed through the roof during a storm
in 1896. Another tale has a giant bird slamming into the glass around
the holidays - when the men aboard were running low on supplies.
So, they turned the ill-fated winged beast into a holiday feast.
The
lighthouse was decommissioned in 1957.
One of the last lighthouse
keepers on Terrible Tilly was author Jim Gibbs, a U.S. Coast Guard
officer at the time, who later went on to write 21 books on maritime
history. In one interview in recent years, he said he often enjoyed
the solitude atop the scary place – the same solitude which
often drove other men mad.
In later years, Gibbs
went on to carry on the now-extinct job of lighthouse keeper, building
his own private lighthouse on his home just south of Yachats. The
light is visible 16 miles out to sea, and was designated an official
navigation landmark.
After the light went
out for the Tillamook Rock Lighthouse, it lay abandoned for two
decades. Eventually, it was purchased from the government and used
as a columbarium – a resting place for ashes of the dead.
For a time in
the 90’s, that company, Eternity
At Sea, ran strange ads in publications around the northwest
for perks such as free satellite TV and other goodies if you purchased
your resting place there ahead of time.
- Photos
courtesy Seaside Historical Museum. For more on the lighthouse,
visit them at 570 Necanicum Dr., Seaside. (503) 738-7065.
|