Cape Meares Lighthouse  The lighthouse was commissioned on January 1, 1890.  The tower stands 38 feet high and is the shortest lighthouse in the state.  It is constructed of bricks (made right on site at a cost of $2,900) with iron plates (made in Portland and shipped by wagon) covering it.   The original addition that now houses the interpretive shop was built in 1895  - the current interpretive shop replaced the original work room in 1978.
Flower 3 Arch Rocks, Oceanside, Oregon
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LEGEND OF THE OCTOPUS TREE AT CAPE MEARES STATE SCENIC VIEWPOINT

SITKA SPRUCE - (PICEA SITCHENSIS)

Tradition handed down by the Indians is that the eerie giant is a burial tree shaped when it was young to hold canoes of a chief's family.  Such deeply-rooted lore passed from generation to generation is likely to be founded on truth, and Indian history of the area will corroborate it. 

Archaeologists have found evidence that Indians lived along these shores for 30,000 years.  The tribes in this area for generations back through the dim past placed their dead in the trees in canoes.  But the trees had to be prepared to hold them.  Branches of a forest tree normally reach straight upward, toward the light, but those on a burial tree were forced, when pliable, into a horizontal position beyond which they grew upward.  Once the pattern was set, the tree might grow to a great size but always kept the shape, as did the Octopus Tree. 

Burial trees (the oldest trees) for many years could be spotted here and there in the virgin forest.  The Octopus Tree (which the Indians revered and called The Council Tree) is more than 60 feet at its base.  No one can tell its age without counting the rings.  Some theorize it could have been a young tree at about the time of Christ.  No matter what the actual age of the tree may be, a visit to the prehistoric tree of mystery is truly an enjoyable visit. 

The Octopus Tree is located just several hundred feet south of the parking lot.  The improved trail is wheelchair accessible. 

 

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Friends of Cape Meares Lighthouse
PO Box 282
Oceanside, OR 97134
  E-mail to 
avalon@harborside.com

Member - U.S. Lighthouse Society and
Oregon Chapter U.S. Lighthouse Society   
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Associated with Oregon State Parks Department

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