The Town That Fell Into the Sea - A Visit to Bayocean, Oregon
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- Опубліковано 30 січ 2024
- On the Oregon Coast, near the city of Tillamook, famous for its cheese, there is a peninsula where a town once stood that had plans to become the Atlantic City of the west. Instead, Bayocean lies under the sand and sea, having disappeared as if it were never there.
The town started in 1906 with a dream to have the premiere resort destination on the west coast, with major money being poured in and major construction projects taking place. The town featured four miles of paved roads, a hotel, a thousand seat theater, a dance hall, a massive indoor swimming pool, its own railroad, and electricity everywhere. Within 20 years, bad decisions brought the fury of the sea upon the town. The town's last building went into the sea in 1971.
In this video we head to the Bayocean Peninsula, talk about the history of the Tillamook Bay, and walk around where the town of Bayocean once stood.
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I'm a native Oregonian and have lived here all of my 60 years. I had never heard mention of Bayocean ever before this. Now I need to pay a visit to the Oregon Historical Society to see what more I can find out about it. Thank you for enlightening me.
Same!
I too am native. Been here over 70 yrs. Never heard about any of this.
Me too! I've lived in or near Eugene for 59 years and have taken kids and now grandchildren on dozens of coast trips over the years. I have never heard about this place! My wife and I are just about ready to retire and travel all over the country in our motorhome seeing "bucket list" locations!
Same!
It's a bunch of made up crap
Great video, Sidetrack! Thought you might be interested to know Bayocean's school and five houses were moved to the little settlement of Cape Meares, nearby on the mainland, shortly before the Bayocean Peninsula became an island in '52. One of the structures that was relocated is the rightmost house seen in the historic photo featured at 6:32. It was known as the "Hicks House" and was cut in half, moved across the water to the mainland on a barge, and then reassembled on its new site (reports make it sound like a second floor was added too). Four of the five moved houses still stand today (to my knowledge) and the school building now serves as the Cape Meares Community Center. Additionally, there's another house at Cape Meares that was built using lumber salvaged from the Bayocean Natatorium building. So, in this small way, the town of Bayocean lives on.
Very cool 😎 info,thankyou.😊
You know a channel is very good once you watched every single episode and literally wait for uploads!!!
Thank you.
I totally do the same thing
Exactly 👍.
Indeed. I think it's the only channel that I legitimately get excited about when I get a notification. Kudo's sir.
@SidetrackAdventures do you ever take requests/recommendations for excursions?
I road down the Oregon Coast, from Washington, into California. I've been around, but I'll admit. I kept looking out at coastline and thought. If, there is a heaven... This is what it would smell, feel and look like. 🏍️
The whole coast is amazing. Even when the weather isn't the best.
Its been taken over by Californians.....
@@SidetrackAdventures There's a whole category of sightseeing along the coast for stormwatching ;-)
Just don't go in the water unless you want to see the other end of that equation.
@@Scroll_Lock cold!
What a fascinating story - thanks for sharing!
Throughout the video I kept recalling Shelley's famous poem:
"My name is Ozymandias, king of kings:
Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!"
Nothing beside remains.
Several people have mentioned this! I never even thought of it before but now that you mention it...
@@SidetrackAdventuresI better give some of the credit to Mrs. Frye, my 11th Grade English teacher! 😅
@mozart2jazz I heard it on a TV poetry show. I hated poetry before that.
😂 😂
The hubris of man knows no bounds, until it is bounded by natural constraints.
It's kind of sad how so many towns and personal histories can be washed away by such a short period of time, tides, wind and rain. Thanks for honoring the people and place of Bayocean.
Sad? Iam continually surprised humans are so determined to have what they desire with no regard for nature
@@merryfergie no regard? They don't know what they don't know.
I'm from the UK, my uncle scooba dives and has a house on the coast. When he bought it, he already knew from reports that it would be underwater by 2040, but he's already nearing 80, so he's alright with that. Interestingly, on a smooth winter day he found a medieval town about a mile off the coast sheltered a bit by a peninsula. Hard to see in goodconditions but talked to local university about it. There are many thousands of settlements either lost to ecological disasters (coastal degradation example) or economic (competing village became chartered market town and left other village to collapse) or disease (plague wiped out 9/10's of the village). Shit happens. I remember seeing a line of my family lived in the same hamlet for about 6 generations and suddenly picked up and moved to Gloucester, couldn't find any indication that the hamlet existed outside of church registrations in closest village and people don't remember the 17th century very well 😂.
It's just impossible to foresee every issue. London was a mediocre Roman town that was abandoned for a long time. It wasn't some sort of foreshadowing, because it became a capital later.
The Oregon coast is simply gorgeous. We used to vacation north of Tillamook. The entire NEPAC (northeast Pacific) coastline is extremely vulnerable to weather and tsunamis. Thanks for the great vid.
The Tillamook Air Museum is worth a visit....if still open?
@@tonyfranks9551it is
@@tonyfranks9551yep.. that place is badass and always changes what's inside
That's where they keep The Spruce Goose!!
@@tonyfranks9551
Hahahah wtf you don't get out much do ya? Weather is normal an I can't even remember the last 'tsunami' we had lmao I think it was a 3 foot wave years ago lmao (I live 10 minutes from where bayocean is at lol)
So that's where my favorite cheese comes from! I never knew this. The ice cream is great too.
After we finished filming, despite it being so cold, we went to the Tillamook factory and sampled the ice cream actually!
@@SidetrackAdventures Exploring Tillamook right now on google maps. I just love rural US, would love to visit eventually.
Sorry that’s a fantasy. Tillamook is made with milk from the country’s largest dairy 3 mile canyon dairy in Boardman Oregon. Eastern Oregon
@@SidetrackAdventuresThe Tillamook Cheese Factory is pretty much a big expensive tourist trap. In the summertime the crowds are pretty much impossible as in the parking. The best time to go is in December and January. Hardly any crowds and decent parking, but it is still expensive.
Everything Tillamook makes is so good! My favorite cheese as well. Buy some 10yr aged stuff and make broccoli soup mmmmmmmm.
At night, the waves are so loud there. One of my dear friends took me here about 15 years ago. I could understand wanting to live there. The beach sand is pleasantly soft on your feet.
I spent a winter working on a motel in Ocean Beach, Oregon. The whole time I kept thinking about how one good wave could wipe the town out of existence.
This is kind of what I imagined.
Nice video, very enjoyable history there.
I only learned about Bayocean recently and my family has a house that looks directly at the peninsula at the entrance to the bay at Barview jetty. I’m not at all surprised the ocean eliminated the entire city. It’s treacherous to this day. The water there seethes and roils as it forces itself between the two jetties. I’ve never seen water behave that way before. It heaves and sinks, pushes and pulls, seems to be moving in every direction at once. I once watched a coast guard rescue in the entrance to the bay. An experienced fishing crew was smashed against the jetty and ended up in the churning, ice cold water. At least one person died. The others were taken to hospital, hypothermic and clinging to life. The whole thing was terrifying. The Oregon coast is staggeringly beautiful. Just stay out of the water and never turn your back on it. Sneaker waves are very real
Neat, small world. My dad has a friend 5hat lives near the barview jetty store before you go into the campground
Although we live east of Atlanta, we love the Oregon coast. Really enjoyed your piece on Bayocean. I read about the history a few years ago. Before the highway washed out, we used to take the road to Cape Mears and stop as the road elevation went up and looked out where Bayocean was 100 years ago. Thanks for doing this. very nice to see things up close.
They recently finished repairing that stretch of road that wash out after like 15 years.
I live in tillamook
@@jacobremington3239 Thanks for that info Jacob. Much appreciated
Suffering wind, rain, and cold to bring us more interesting history! Thanks Steve! Great job! Bart
Welcome to Oregon from a nearly 7 decade native. I thoroughly enjoyed your exploration of the history of Bayocean and the "remains" of the city. Hopefully one day you can explore the WW1, WW2, and Cold War sights of the Oregon coast.
Thanks. I'd love to get back and explore more. I've been to the Astoria area quite a few times, as I had family there, but I need to explore the coast more.
He wasn't far from a ww2 bunker while filming this video! I'm a tillamook native
My father's side of the family lived on the north Oregon coast since about 1912 and I knew all about Bayocean. Cool to see the story brought to light again though, what a crazy idea to build a town on a sand spit against the Pacific. They have towns like this all over the east coast but we have MUCH bigger weather and waves here. Not to mention the 'good deeds' of the Army Corps Of Engineers. With friends like that, who needs enemies?
I love going in these adventures with you. Thank you for posting!! I get to travel so many places with your videos
Glad you like them!
Your music choices are so good and I really appreciate how you lower the volume to speak!
We were in that area last summer on vacation and had no idea the city of Bayocean ever existed. Unless I missed it, even the local museum didn't mention it. Thanks for another great adventure.
Always so fascinating to stand where towns once did with all those amenities and look around to see nothing left. Nature works fast in the whole scheme of things. Really cool story though! You never cease to introduce us to stories we hadn't heard of. 👍
Thanks. It's wild to think about all the streets and everything under the peninsula that so much money was spent on, and it will likely never be seen again.
My wife and I were in Portland in 2007(?) when she played in ,and won, the Nike Open Senior DivisionTennis tournament.During an off day, we drove over the Costal Ranges to see the ocean and passed right by the turnoff to Tillamook. If we had known the story of Bayocean , we surely would have stopped . Thanks for the story Steve, and maybe someday we will go back and this time look at the area!
You must have went over 26 through seaside?
I've had many trips to the Oregon coast. I did not know about Bayocean. Thank you for this.
With it being wiped out so long ago, I think it's largely forgotten.
Back before it became illegal we used to pack in and camp there overnight. Probably did so ten times over a period of about fifteen years. The trip was limited to one night because we had to pack in water. Always camped in the same spot and found someone had hidden a nice porcelain grill behind some large driftwood. We probably used that grill at least a half dozen times, placing it back in it's hiding place once done. Last time we went the campsite was a huge mess and the grill was gone. We cleaned up the area and packed out the garbage. A year or so later we read that overnight stays had become prohibited. Lots of great memories and a beautiful area. Sad because it was the only place along our coast for no trace backpacking.
i used to camp out there back in 2007-2009 or so. i remember it being quite the hike to get out there through soft sand but such a great place to camp.
Thanks for the video. I've seen videos on the history of this place featuring old photos and talking heads. Your video shows how utterly and completely nature reclaimed the peninsula.
You know they’re from SoCal when someone is at the Oregon coast and it drizzles under a high overcast sky with a light wind and they think the weather is “getting pretty bad”.
Very interesting video and I didn’t know about this and I’m a “native” Oregonian.
Fascinating, as usual. Thank you.
Thank you.
Thanks for the history lesson. Born in Oregon, lived in Central Oregon since 1955 and was never aware of Bayocean. I've been through the Tillamook area many times and I can't remember hearing anything about it.
You really do dig deep into history before posting videos. Absolutely love seeing the real parts of America from here in New Zealand. Thank you the interesting tour of America.
Another great find for a great history lesson. A history lesson that has been repeated too many times. Living proof that mankind is doomed to repeat history over & over again.
This is a fascinating story. It reminds me of Pixie-Land, an amusement park on the Oregon Coast, which struggled financially and the land it sat on was restored to it's natural habitat. Thanks for all your stories and insights.
Hi Steve, I have taken a few walks here during my 18 years in Portland and like another Oregon resident mentioned, I never knew about the rich history of the lost town that I was treading upon! I really enjoyed watching this video and learning about the fascinating story of Bay Ocean!
Thanks for watching!
8:35 the complete take over of nature when seeing the hotel gives me hope. People really are the most dangerous creatures, especially to themselves
Glad to see you got sidetracked up here in Oregon, Steve! Hope you enjoyed the rest of your stay. That's a really pretty part of the coast, and The Three Capes Scenic Byway that goes between Cape Meares and Pacific City is a beautiful drive.
Fascinating subject. Thanks Steve for braving the inclement weather to bring us another great video.
To be honest, the weather there was a lot warmer than it was in Portland where we drove from.
@@SidetrackAdventuresHope the big recent San Diego rain and flooding wasn't a problem for you! Crazy winter so many places! 😎✌️
I moved East from Oregon in 2020 .. I am in process of moving back home! There is no place like home 😊
Steve,you tell a good story,very interesting,thanks for the post🤗😎🤗😎
I’m an Oregonian and I love the state. I grew up in Ashland area and now live in Eugene. The perfect place, about 45 minutes away from Florence and about 1-1/2 hours from the snow. It’s beautiful.
I spent a lot of time there during my 20s. It’s a remarkable place that holds a lot of fond memories
Crazy. I spent every summer in the late 80's through the 90's going to Cape Lookout state park for a week of camping, and I never even knew this existed. Thanks for sharing!
Wow! So amazing that nothing is left. The ocean claims mankind's efforts more quickly than the desert. Great job with all of the old photos. Getting rain here in San Diego tomorrow!
Thank you, we enjoyed the tour.
Excellent video about Bay Ocean, Steve. Thank you for sharing your adventures!
When my mother in law passed away, we were boxing up her book collection. I came across a copy of a book about Bayocean. I quickly looked through it then put it in the donation box, but I really wish I would have kept it!
As an Australian, I found this so interesting and educational. Thank you for all the effort you put in.👏👏👏👍👍
Thanks Steve for another historical location. Keep up the good work.
Thanks for making this video. This is one of my favorite places on earth, and I love how you've told its story
its always great to hear about the history here along the Oregon coast. Thanks for sharing
One of my fav places on the Oregon Coast - Thank you for sharing!
Damn, Mr. Mitchell was touched. Will dig for his story, thank you.
I had a home once,
a manor overlooking the sea.
Upon the world, this was a vestige.
Calling forward unto strangled ears.
But when the skies turned dark,
the house was taken by the sea.
A pillar truncated.
Cast down to the sea floor
with all the other forgotten things.
But I remember.
Fleeting shells sinking ever slowly.
Folding down, into themselves.
Forever tearing along the seams of the sky
until nothing remains except the eternal ghost.
And you ask yourself…
Could there be anything ever greater than this?
You have always been here.
I love your videos ! Thank you for ability too escape the depressing times we live in today even if it’s only for a few minutes .
You provide so much detail on topics about our country. Thanks so much for your time spent researching and putting together videos for us to enjoy. Best to you and your family.
Wow! Love these stories of old forgotten bygone towns. Really cool to virtually walk with you through the path and learn history.
What a fascinating story, answering questions I never knew I had. And you do as always a fantastic job of telling it, while showing us the scenery. And of course the drone-shots always add a lot!
Love your videos. Learning lots of things about people and places up and down the W. Coast. Good work, Steve!
You give so much history about places never or seldom seen. And great pictures. Great job Steve! You do an awesome job on your channel! Thank you
Love knowing nature will take it all back, erase our mistakes.
Steve, I don't know how you do it but thank you so much for taking us along on these adventures
Wow, you found the greenest town in the country! Another great find! Thanks for all the hard work to bring us another adventure.
Agree with Palm lanes. My family also waits for your vids. Thank you for this video. Oregon is my favorite place. Please go more often. ❤️
Never get tired of the description of places you take us along with you. The Underdog of describing them and great information on details. Often long forgotten~~just not by you.
Fascinating history and the power of nature.
Absolutely adore the Oregon Coast, so, of course, this video was a must watch. I love your calm demeanor in all of your videos. And always interesting narration. 😊
Great video, Thanks!! I'll never go there and never knew this about the City Bayocean. I love history and your videos have shown me ALL kinds of history. Your narratives are also excellent. Thanks again!!!
Wow!!! This was really great. Thanks for sharing all your knowledge.
Love the history. Keep it up!!!
Fascinating and sad at the same time. I need to go see that sometime.
I really enjoyed the video. I never knew about the town which I appreciate the detail information. Thank you for sharing
Fantastic loved this story...❤
Literally just discovered you a few days ago, and I really enjoy your presentations and style. Although not a mega-fan of California I've seen, through you, parts that intrigue me. Now here you are in Oregon, doing a piece on a place I've driven by countless times and never knew about! Thanks.
Amazing story! Thanks once again, Steve! Safe travels!
Thanks for another great video STEVE! Your research and presentation are the best. We enjoy all your efforts.
Thank you.
Another great adventure and a history lesson. Your one of the best content creators on UA-cam. Thanks for all the amazing videos.
Your fantastic in depth research and casual narration make these videos so much fun to watch.
12:02 omg these incredible kids. What a story. Big dreams. Washed away. All from such humble beginnings! Thanks Steve. ✨
Glad you enjoyed it
That was an awesome adventure! Thank you so much for sharing! 🤗
Awesome!! I’m in crescent city Ca and I love this, thanks for sharing ❤
Awesome story and video. Thanks for braving the elements to share!
Thanks for the exquisite adventure!
Great presentation. I visited the Bay Ocean myself a couple years ago and learned about its amazing history. Still, I found this video very comprehensive. Thank you.
Great video. Was there just last summer, wife and I exploring the coast. We are up by the Cascade Locks which is magnificent, anyone willing to drive along the river. The Oregon coast is almost indescribable. We learned some of the history of Bayocean but not this much. They had a heated, saltwater pool with a wave generator. Wow, amazing. Thanks for the video.
I currently live in almost-always sunny southern Baja but maintain ties to the Pacific Northwest and really appreciate this video. 101 is one of my favorite drives, but I had no idea of this story even though I've driven past it numerous times the past four decades. Thanks for the info, Steve.
Fascinating video! They just keep getting better and better
Nice video, looking forward to more😊.Thankyou.
outstanding , Steve ! ❤
an excellent history video on the BayOcean town of the Oregon Coast ...
keep up yer good werk !
safe travels
Welcome back to Oregon - enjoy your stories with all the research you do for them.
Fascinating story.
THANK YOU STEVE,WOW,THAT'S CRAZY STORY..SAFE TRAVELS..
Growing up in Oregon I remember learning about bayocean thank you for a trip down memory lane 👍
For a diversion…. One of the more interesting episodes. Thank you!
This was a very interesting and sad video. It was quite a little town once, judging by the photos. Thanks for braving the damp cold to take us on this adventure.
You had me at "one jetty is not better than zero jetties" 😂😂😂
Thank you for enlightening me.
Fascinating story
Wow that was really interesting. Thank you!
That was a fun and sad video. Great job!
Great video. There are so many things on this earth that we don't know about. Thanks for uncovering them for us.
Your historical trips are quite interesting Steve. You go to all these obscure places that are very relevant in the annuls of the history books.
Thanks for documenting these fascinating little tidbits of history.
I'm an expat Canadian living in the Philippines and I work remotely for a San Diego company that services a lot of the areas you cover.
You make my job much easier with these wonderful little historical jaunts!
Beautiful! Nature reclaims its works very quickly.
Incredible and sad. Thank you
A very beautiful video on the history of this disappeared seaside resort and the sinking of the ambitions of its founders all washed away by the strength of the ocean