thumb|250px|Pacific City and [[Nestucca Bay from the top of the Cape Kiwanda sand dune]]
thumb|upright|The view from the trail on [[Cape Kiwanda]]
thumb|Sunset in Pacific City, Oregon
Pacific City is a census-designated place (CDP) and unincorporated community in Tillamook County, Oregon, United States. Settlers did not live west of the Coast Range, but the small tribes of Native Americans in the area, already depleted by 80% due to malaria and other epidemics from 1830 to 1841, were driven from their lands.
The Nestuggas were one such tribe, that had previously been encamped just north of Pacific City near the town of Woods. They had noticed the smoke for several weeks, but were surprised one morning as the bright flames flickered atop the crests of the surrounding hills and rushed down on them. The Nestuggas fled by canoe down the Big Nestucca River to the ocean, and took refuge on the half-mile wide bare sandspit between Nestucca Bay and the ocean. After several weeks the fires were ended by a heavy rain, but the devastation had been complete: the forests were gone, and the game found to be charred crisp or cooked in the water they had sought refuge in.
Nestucca Bay was a rich fishing area, allowing the Nestuggas to survive despite the destruction of game. However, in 1854, settlers began arriving in the Tillamook Valley, and by 1876 Chief Nestugga Bill and the 200 remaining people of the small tribe were relocated to a reservation on the Salmon and Siletz River.
Many early pioneers arrived via seagoing steamers, others arrived from across the mountains. The town of Woods established itself as a depot for the new arrivals and a source of supplies and trade for the settlers. In 1886 the Linewebber and Brown cannery was started to take advantage of the plentiful fish in Nestucca Bay, shipping 12,000 cans of salmon a year and providing an economic basis for the region until 1926, along with logging and dairy farming. The area also became a "vacation" destination for Oregon Trail pioneers from the Midwest, who had never seen the ocean.
thumb|left|Surfers in Pacific City with [[Cape Kiwanda in the background, November 2004]]
In 1893, Thomas Malaney platted the town of Ocean Park (now Pacific City) directly across the river from Woods. When a flood in 1894 wiped out the first lots, Malaney moved the town south to higher ground. The Sea View hotel (later renamed Edmundes Hotel) was built around 1895 to serve vacationers from the Willamette Valley. Other buildings and campgrounds were established for visitors, and Ferry Street was "paved" with wooden planks for automobiles.
The town gained its modern name of Pacific City in 1909 to avoid confusion with the Washington town of Ocean Park. By 1926, overfishing from gillnetting had left the bay depleted of salmon, so commercial harvesting was stopped and fishermen switched to surf-launched dories; over time, due to commercial fishing vessels, the Dory Fleet dwindled and today only a few recreational fishermen keep the tradition alive. In the 1920s, tourism became the mainstay of the economy, lasting until the Great Depression of the 1930s. An airport was built to attract barnstormers and aviators, and other roads and bridges were opened.
Geography and climate
Pacific City is located along the Pacific Ocean adjacent to Bob Straub State Park and spans the Nestucca River with about half the city's area being behind Nestucca Bay. It is part of the Oregon Coast.
According to the United States Census Bureau, the CDP has a total area of , of which of it is land and of it (2.86%) is water. The area is located above sea-level.
| source 2 = Temperature averages — BestPlaces.net
Demographics
As of the census
- Hawaiki Cable, which connects Pacific City and Los Angeles with Polynesian ashore sites in Kapolei, Tafuna, Mangawhai Heads, and Sydney.
- New Cross Pacific (NCP) Cable System, which connects Pacific City with East Asia ashore sites in Toucheng, Pusan, Nanhui, Maruyama, Lingang, and Chongming.
Transportation
Pacific City is located from U.S. Route 101 and is served by the Pacific City State Airport, owned and maintained by Oregon Department of Aviation.
Tillamook County Transportation District, with two bus stops in Pacific City, offers bus service to Tillamook.
Education
It is in the Nestucca Valley School District 101J<!--UNI 08700-->
The county is in the Tillamook Bay Community College district.
References
External links
- Pacific City Dory Builder Video produced by Oregon Field Guide
