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Oregon Coast Ghosts and Other
Paranormal Legends
By Andre’ Hagestedt
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Fun with fake ghosts and
the town of Oceanside |
(Oregon Coast) – It’s a place full of
atmosphere and hidden legends, the kind
of conditions right to intrigue and
spark the imagination into flights of
fancy, in a way that’s similar to how
Lovecraft was inspired by the east coast
to write his weird, creepy tales. It’s
one of those incredible visual riches of
the United States that is a major
tourism destination, but there are
various layers for the visitor to
discover.
This time of year, as fall begins to
descend on the coast and Halloween
approaches, thoughts (and the store
shelves) turn to the more spooky side of
things. The winds begin to cut a bit
deeper at night, days shorten, fog
creeps in at night a little more often
and with greater spectacle, and the
world on this shoreline just seems to
prime its residents for ghost stories
and tales of the paranormal.
It's no wonder Oregon's northern coast
has a load of ghostly tales swirling
about. It's no wonder the remake of "The
Fog" currently in release is set in a
fictional North Oregon Coast town. From
flying pots and specters who've moved
from one building to another in Seaside,
the ghostly legends of a hotel in the
Nehalem Bay, to the myriad of hauntings
in ancient Astoria - there's plenty for
the ghost-hunting tourist in this
pristine and stunning area.
Astoria or Ghostoria?
At
the very northern tip of Oregon, Astoria
is full of major ghost stories of one
sort or another. That's no surprise,
considering it's the oldest settlement
west of the Mississippi, and its history
is rich with cutthroat maritime
intrigue, a smattering of battles
between the U.S., the English and the
natives, and dozens of barely literate
tribes of Europeans settled here early
on.
Here, the stately old Liberty Theater is
widely regarded as haunted. It was once
a haven for the likes of Duke Ellington,
Jack Benny, Guy Lombardo and supposedly
even gangster Al Capone. Purportedly,
it's also occupied by someone named
Paul. One employee was quoted as saying
that Paul is "quite handsome," giving
him the nickname Handsome Paul. He
apparently wears a "white tuxedo and a
panama hat," according to the Clatsop
County Historical Society.
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Part of the Lovecraft film was
shot in Del Ray Beach, just
south of Astoria |
Cast and crews over the years have
talked about spotting him. While mostly
just an apparition, he's been known to
slam doors and make other unruly noises.
Other tales from the theater include
objects gliding through the air, knobs
unscrewing themselves from appliances
and utilities, as well as two or three
other inhabitants from beyond.
Also famous for being haunted is the
firehouse there, plus the town has a
brutal history of men being "shanghaied"
in the early part of the century.
Two horror flicks latched onto it
recently and filmed there: “The Ring
II,” and the Lovecraft tale “Cthulhu”
was made there this year. In fact, some
history and literature buffs drew some
parallels between the NE seaboard town
that Lovecraft set the story in and
Astoria, purporting that the writer was
actually writing about Astoria. They
found some extraordinary, even eerie,
similarities,
which can be read here.
Sleepless in Seaside
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Some visitors come
farther than other to see
Seaside |
There are many creepy tales about
Seaside, but you have to dig deep. You
almost get a sense this town isn’t
willing to talk about these tales,
adding to the bone-chilling elements.
For almost 100 years, the old Hotel
Seaside (later named The Seasider) was a
grandiose, beautiful building that was a
sort of centerpiece to Seaside, at the
Turnaround. So it's no surprise that
place acquired tales of apparitions and
otherworldly guests over the years.
There were numerous spirits that
purportedly haunted it.
These days, the Shilo Inn sits in that
spot. But when the old hotel was torn
down, the spooks moved to Girtle's
Restaurant, just down the street on
Broadway, according to owner Bob Girtle.
Bob said he inherited some employees of
the old Seasider back in the 80's, and
at least one said they saw some of the
same ghosts. He recounted numerous
stories of otherworldly happenings in
the restaurant, having seen them himself
or coming from various employees who
tell their own tales. They talk of
seeing the mysterious shadows of feet
walking behind the door of a closed-off
area of the kitchen, visible from the
small space between the floor and the
door. This happens when it's not
possible anyone else is in there, say
Bob and his crew. They don't even check
that room anymore when they see the
shadows – they’re used to finding
nothing.
Then there is the notorious flying
coffee pot in the galley area between
the kitchen and the main dining room.
Bob and others on his staff have
experienced this more than once.
Sometimes it moves a bit, others it
literally flies across the hallway.
John Sowa, owner of the New
Orleans-style eatery Lil' Bayou, also
related tales of moving objects in the
kitchen and a strange sense of someone
being near him while alone in his
office. Kitchen utensils are found in
different places than employees have
left them, or an object suddenly falls
off a hook or a shelf.
Lil' Bayou lies in the historic Gilbert
District of Seaside, which is filled
with old buildings, almost all with
upstairs areas that are often unused.
The charming, atmospheric area has gone
through a rebirth in recent years, and
often there are whispers of ghosts
coinciding with many of the renewed
buildings.
The Seaside Aquarium may have a closet
containing something - or rather, an
upstairs that could be haunted. When the
building was a natatorium back about 80
years ago, there were apartments at the
top floor. The public can’t access this
area, but it is decidedly creepy and
full of mystery. With creaky, even
sometimes tilting floors, old fixtures
and a general sense of being abandoned
and discarded, this place is ripe with
weirdness.
It isn't used much at all now, but
employee Tiffany Boothe says she's heard
whispers over the years the top floor is
haunted. Various stories have been
handed down through the generations
about noises coming from there. Tiffany
says you’ll hear voices at night at
times, and the wind makes an exceptional
racket up there as well. Some who work
there think there could be something
otherworldly going on, but she believes
the voices simply come people playing on
the beach nearby, and that noise from
outside can be surprisingly audible.
See the aquarium ghost article.....
The Good, the Bad and the Creepy
on Nehalem Bay
Manzanita,
which caps the north end of the Nehalem
Bay, is shrouded in mists and mystery,
with Neahkahnie Mountain looming
overhead and legends of a galleon and
its buried treasures. Some versions of
that tale contain atrocities, like
purportedly burying their African slaves
alive with the treasure to keep the
natives away.
On its beaches, there are mysterious
piles of rocks that have appeared over
the years, apparently overnight.
Sometimes they appear as single piles or
stacks. No one has ever figured out who
is responsible, creating speculation of
an otherworldly artist.
In nearby Wheeler, facing the Nehalem
Bay, Old Wheeler Hotel owner Winston
Laszlo says he's encountered several
things in that old building he couldn't
really explain. Sometimes, he said, he
believes he sees someone in the corner
of his eye, only to discover there's no
one there.
Once, Winston was looking in a mirror in
the hotel's public area and saw the
reflection of a man sitting in a chair
behind him. Winston says he turned
around to look at the man, whom he
didn't recognize as a guest, and there
was no one there.
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Old Wheeler Hotel |
A pair of ghost hunters even came to the
visit the place and took photos of what
they believed could be "spirit orbs"
just outside the basement area. Winston
still has copies of these.
Winston and wife Maranne Doyle-Laszlo
say the entire building seemed to be
against them during the process of
remodeling the ragged old construct into
the first-rate hotel it is now. They had
a nagging feeling a presence seemed to
arrange one disaster and setback after
another, such as when a window blew out
in a storm. Then, one day, they say the
building seemed to accept them, and
reconstruction proceeded smoothly
thereafter. (www.oldwheelerhotel.com.
877-653-4683.)
In an email just before her visit, ghost
hunter Martina DeLude told Winston that
made sense. "Ghosts that haunt
residential and business locations
become very threatened when someone
starts changing things that they are
accustomed to. Some spirits actually
become incensed when furniture is moved
around. Just like the living, most
spirits do not like change. Possibly, as
soon as they realized that it was once
again going to become a hotel - perhaps
something they may remember - they
decided to help you along instead of
stifling your efforts." There's more on
their investigation of the Old Wheeler
Hotel at
http://www.nwpprs.com/Investigations/Places02/OldWheeler.html.
In other tales, Wheeler Antiques owner
Garry Gitzen says a Wheeler woman,
descended from local tribes, actually
burned down her own house in recent
years because disturbing spirits haunted
it. She did this in lieu of tearing the
thing down, never rebuilding it, with
rumors floating about that Native
American children had died in a fire in
that spot in ancient times.
Not all is creepy here. According to
Winston and Garry, there is a host of
well-meaning spirits there known as the
"Good Spirits of Wheeler," and Ekahni
Books owner Peg Miller says the place is
a sort of "spiritual vortex lite." They
all point to something they call a
"Wheeler Moment," where serendipity
seems to suddenly appear. Locals talk of
numerous circumstances where pleasant,
happy coincidences popped up, assisting
folks in some way. They all note various
incidents where someone is discussing
wanting to do something, and someone or
some opportunity arises that helps
things along - like the time the Garry
and Winston were talking about creating
a film festival, and they discovered a
documentary filmmaker was staying in
town.
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Wheeler, home of the
"Wheeler Moment" |
Nye Beach in Newport has a similar
legend, although it’s not as well known
or as strong an effect as in Nehalem
Bay, according to locals.
More on the Wheeler Moment is here.
Neskowin, just south of Pacific City,
has an intriguing legend of being a kind
of unusually powerful “spiritual spot.”
There are plenty that say there’s a
beautiful sense of peace in that place –
a beach with a distinctive feeling
that’s very positive and pleasant.
There's more on that here.
The Spooks of Lincoln City
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15th St. ramp in Lincoln
City |
Several spooky stories inhabit this
Central Coast town. The North Lincoln
Fire Station is said to have an
apparition lounging in the recreation
area. Former Visitors Bureau official
Jennifer Sears vouches for that one,
saying she's encountered something there
she couldn't explain.
At the beautiful Wildflower Grill, on
the north end of town, some have talked
about encountering a helpful geist named
Matilda, who liked to putter around the
restaurant. At one point, the place was
supposedly "cleaned" of any spirits by a
group of ghostbuster-types. But for a
while, she would pull a prank or two,
knock objects around the kitchen, and
had been known to conduct herself in a
politically incorrect manner by
occasionally patting someone on the
behind.
On
Siletz Bay, numerous locals have talked
about seeing a ghost ship appear and
then disappear over the years. This one
has some added potency because there
have been several shipwrecks there
before the 20th century. The skeleton of
one such wreckage was visible there
until the 80's (a scientific crew went
in search of that one earlier this
year).
There's actually a videotape sold by the
Lincoln City Visitors Center that
features a group of paranormal
investigators looking into the angry
ghost that wanders upstairs at Depoe
Bay's The Spouting Horn restaurant. This
one gets rather chilling in some spots.
At one point, the group finds out there
was once a doorway in the spot where,
according to employees, the spook keeps
walking through the wall. The video gets
really freaky when the two female
hunters tell their male colleague to be
absolutely still, as the ghost is
standing next to him and extremely
aggravated.
Oregon Paranormal: The Truth is
Out There
It's not all spooks and goblins on the
beach. There are a few tales of UFO's
being spotted in Astoria and in the
coast range around Corvallis and Albany,
close to Marys Peak.
Oregon may just have its own Area 51 in
the Van Duzer Corridor, just outside
Lincoln City. Strange murmurings
surround talk of lights in the sky or
people appearing in the roadway and then
disappearing.
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One bar in Lincoln City
has more than one kind of
spirits |
One rumor has a pair driving through the
winding, twisting roadway and feeling
like their car was controlled by some
unseen force. Another tale, according to
Portlander Jason Frank, has two Seattle
friends telling him they spotted what
looked like a secret military base while
hiking in those woods.
There have also been some whispers by
locals that a forest road was cut off by
the government in the 70's, fueling some
of the secret base talk. There actually
is a government testing facility near
Cascade Head that's locked off to the
public.
There’s actually a hidden ghost town in
the Van Duzer Corridor as well,
purportedly somewhere just east of Rose
Lodge. Articles on the subject will not
reveal its location, but talk about it
being a collection of two or three
buildings that once comprised a tiny
village, now buried beneath a lot of
foliage, just a ways up a small trail
from the highway.
The coast is full of some sundry,
oddball tales about ghosts.
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Cannon Beach - home of "bandage
man?" |
There’s the one about “bandage man,” –
some goofy tale about a bandaged specter
who terrorized folks on dark roads
around Cannon Beach. Supposedly, he’s
even carjacked trucks by hopping on the
back somehow. Other versions have him
poking around cabins in the woods on
dark, stormy nights. It’s been described
as a “low budget bonfire tale” by some
locals, however.
Some have talked about glowing balls of
lightning floating around Coos Bay. One
website once supposedly discovered “crop
circles” in the sands of Hug Point near
Cannon Beach, which they attributed to
beings who lived under the Earth
(whatever that meant). And then there’s
a supposed sea monster at Cape Kiwanda
(probably just the result of people
going missing in the raging, monstrous
surf of the area).
Lighthouses and Their
Ectoplasmic Inhabitants
The Heceta Head Lighthouse, north of
Florence, is the subject of some truly
chilling tales. This yarn has shades of
the old "Ghost and Mrs. Muir" TV series,
with families who've run the B&B at the
keeper's quarters saying the lady
phantom is like a member of the family.
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Heceta Head lighthouse |
Tales abound of wispy figures being seen
or things being inexplicably moved. And
there are some decidedly non-crackpot
witnesses. Famed Oregon photographer
Steve Terrill, whose photos grace dozens
of books and calendars, gladly speaks
about his encounter.
Terrill says he and photographer friend
Steve Gaddis caught a glimpse of
something in the shape of a woman in the
attic of the keeper's quarters while on
a shoot.
"We both saw it," Terrill says. "You
could just barely make out the outline.
And then it just disappeared. Steve got
spooked and said, 'No, I don't want to
think about it.' And later on, when we
found out it was the attic we were
looking at, I realized it was right
above the room he was staying in."
Terrill said that Gaddis recoiled at
that news. Later, Gaddis found it
thoroughly dreadful when the pair
discovered there was no one home during
their sighting.
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Yaquina Head Lighthouse |
Newport's Yaquina Head Lighthouse was,
for many years, the center of a tale
about a lighthouse keeper named Higgins
who died on the spiral stairway, then
haunted the place. Purportedly, his
colleague was scared to enter the tower
at night because of his ectoplasmic
former coworker.
That one was recently ghostbusted when a
letter was sent to those who oversee the
lighthouse by a descendant of Mr.
Higgins, saying he actually died in
Portland in the 30's.
The other, somewhat hilarious part of
this lighthouse’s history has the TV
crew of the Hardy Boys show filming
there in the 70’s, smothering the inside
of the lighthouse with cobwebs and other
props, but leaving the place in such a
mess that the organization in charge of
the lighthouse at the time had to sue
the Hollywood team to get them to come
and clean it up.
The tale of the teen ghostess at Yaquina
Bay Lighthouse is so very Scooby Doo,
where the figure of the young woman is
supposedly seen on the beach
occasionally. The legend came from a
fictional story published in the local
newspaper in the early part of the 20th
century, and has somehow lingered,
sometimes getting confused as an actual
legend and not a work of short fiction.
Note: BeachConnection.net editor
Andre’ Hagestedt will appear at the
Oregon Coast Aquarium in Newport on
October 28 to tell his collection of
ghost stories as part of a Halloween
celebration there called Creatures of
the Night - and in Seaside (Beach Books)
on October 30. |