Photo from Lorraine Eckhardt's Bayocean album. The first and middle names of Albert
George and Orilla Sarah Jones are reversed in many official and unofficial records. |
Photo of Buck Sherwood from Mike Watkins, taken six years before his death in 2005. Buck took many photos of Bayocean used in newspaper articles, books and on websites, like mine. |
Buck Sherwood told Mike Watkins, his boyhood neighbor and lifelong friend, that Jones built the house for less than $1000. This figure would have included what Jones paid Williams and the Tillamook-Bayocean Company who then owned the Natatorium. Why didn't Jones mention Williams to Buck (his family didn't move to Bayocean until 1938, so all of what he wrote must have come from Jones)? Perhaps it just wasn't as good a story. If Jones had realized it, he could have bragged that some of his home's lumber came from the most northerly home ever built on a Bayocean lot. The Williams cottage was near the end of the paved section of High Street, a half-mile north of the first house lost five years earlier, and 1000' north of the Mueller cabin (see the map in that post to locate these properties) moved over to the bayside five years later.
Jones had purchased the lot (12:15) in the Oceanview Subdivision from George Higgins back in 1915. While still serving as the Cape Meares Lighthouse Keeper, Higgins took advantage of Bayocean publicity by developing and advertising his lots in Tillamook newspapers (the Potters advertised in big city papers) as a lower priced alternative. Jones and his wife bought eight adjacent lots (7-12 and 16 -17) during the 1930s. Buck said his family moved into the house in 1940. The deed for Howard (Sr.) and Maude Sherwood's purchase of all nine lots was not recorded until 1948 (DB 116:269) so they likely bought them on contract. Members of the family continued living there until 1990, which is why neighbors still refer to it as the "Sherwood House."
See the Index page to find more stories like this.
* From USACE records at the Seattle branch of the National Archives: POR-81; Civil Works Project Files, 1902-1968; Box 175; File 7250 Bayocean Preliminary Exams & Surveys.
See the Index page to find more stories like this.
* From USACE records at the Seattle branch of the National Archives: POR-81; Civil Works Project Files, 1902-1968; Box 175; File 7250 Bayocean Preliminary Exams & Surveys.
Fascinating website here, I just discovered through Forgotten Oregon on facebook. Maybe this is an ignorant question, but do people still own land on the Bayocean Spit, passed down in the family perhaps? So would they be able to camp there?
ReplyDeleteThanks for your interest. See https://www.bayocean.net/2015/02/bayocean-lots-in-pacific-ocean.html for information about private ownership and https://www.bayocean.net/2015/02/bayocean-by-foot-bicycle-and-horseback.html about camping. In short, only those who own land on Bayocean are allowed to camp there.
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