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Rockaway Beach, Oregon

History
Weekly Tide Tables
Upcoming Events

View of beach access looking at Twin Rocks - Click here to go to Rockaway Beach Chamber of Commerce

Click here or on photograph to go to Rockaway Beach Chamber of Commerce


History

Before the jetties were built in the early 1900's there was a wide sandy beach all the way from Garibaldi to Nehalem Bay. This beach served as the only access to this area which was then known as "Garibaldi Beaches". The area remained nearly isolated to all but a few hardy souls who would drive up the beach by horse and wagon, or walk during the low tide. After several unsuccessful plans for a railroad line from Portland to Tillamook, the Pacific Railway and Navigation Company promoted by Elmer E Lytle opened to Hillsboro in 1906, and the first steam engine was delivered to the Tillamook end about 1907. The coastal land homestead claims, once considered near worthless, took on a new value and a flurry of subdividing into townsites took place from 1909 on. About 1910 the Pacific Railway and Navigation line ran flatcars as far as Salmonberry, and the first train from Portland arrived in Tillamook in October, 1911. The railroad was the vital factor in the development of the Rockaway area.

The train from Portland back in the teens and 20's was the main mode of transportation to the coastal communities. It was an all day dusty,long trip by car over gravel and plank roads, so the old steam trains played an important role in those early days. The train left Portland around 9 a.m. and arrived in the Rockaway area about 2:30 p.m. An extra engine was used to help it over the summit. The first passenger train came to Rockaway in 1912. At all the beach resorts in those days it was quite an occasion when the Friday afternoon train arrived, bringing the daddies who were joining their families for the week-end, thus earning the name of "Daddy-Train." Today you will find "The Little Red Caboose" that serves as The Rockaway Beach Chamber of Commerce set up at the Wayside as a symbol and tribute to these beginnings.

Today the City limits of Rockaway encompass the sundivisions or townsites from north to south named Manhattan, Highland Park Addition to Manhattan, Moroney Town, Lake Lytle, Beal's Addition to Lake Lytle: Seaview Park, Rockaway Beach, Elmore Park, Tillamook Beach (known as Saltair), Midway Beach, Twin Rocks, and a small portion of Ocean Lake Park. Information about these developments were gleaned from old abstracts, plat filings and records. as well as the stories by the early settlers and "summer people".

© Rockaway Beach Chamber of Commerce 2003


Weekly Tide Tables - Week of June 1
Date
High Tide
Time
Low Tide
Time
Sunday, June 01, 2003
+8.5
1:53am
-0.2
8:39am
Monday, June 02, 2003
+8.6
1:48am
-0.2
8:50am
Tuesday, June 03, 2003
+8.6
2:00am
-0.3
9:00am
Wednesday, June 04, 2003
+8.5
3:13am
-0.4
10:10am
Thursday, June 05, 2003
+8.3
3:00am
-0.5
10:00am
Friday, June 06, 2003
+8.2
3:15am
-0.7
11:50am

 


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