[or-roots] coos count history story / coal mining

Robyn Greenlund rgreenlund61 at yahoo.com
Sun Feb 7 08:21:15 PST 2010


The Pancake Mill (North Bend) is the place where you saw the photos, and they do have a nice collection. If you get time though, you really ought to drop by Denny's Pizza in Coquille. They have a significant number of Jack Slatery photos of the area, mostly logging, railroads and river shots - all are enlarged to about 18x24 and mounted on hard backings and identified. They are for sale, but looks are still free!

I have read Stars in the Dark - it's a great story. Hadn't heard about the County Annex - what a riot!

I've found 3 or 4 other very old accounts of early Coos county (Coose County) and will be sharing those soon.

 Robyn
rgreenlund61 at yahoo.com

Interested in Oregon History? Check out my webpages at
coquillevalley.org or genealogytrails.com (Coos & Curry Counties)




________________________________
From: Leslie Chapman <reedsportchapmans at verizon.net>
To: or-roots mail list <or-roots at listsmart.osl.state.or.us>
Sent: Sun, February 7, 2010 8:02:55 AM
Subject: [or-roots] coos count history story / coal mining

Robyn;

It is interesting to listen to narratives from a time when these communities were so small they were seperated by significant distance. We ate somewhere in Coos Bay a while back (Pancake Mill?) that had a bunch of historical photos and unlike so many other places some of these were captioned so you knew what you were seeing. I believe it was Broadway as a puncheon road that really caught my eye, all it was was a row of squared timbers laid side by side in a through cut with nary a structure in sight.

Also you have seen this I assume;

Stars in the Dark: Coal Mines of Southwestern Oregon by Dow Beckham (1995)

I remember when we went through the area in 1957, mom mentioning that the piling and so forth across the slough from where 42 crosses Davis slough had been a coal mine. A few years later the subject came up again when there was an attempt to discover oil in the area. But I had no idea how much mining and exploration for coal had gone on until reading Dow's book.

It is sort of like old sawmill sites in so much of Oregon. I have been places that look like man had never set foot there before me in so many parts of Oregon, only to discover here was an old mill site, and over yonder up that draw was another one and so on. Coal mines in the Coos Bay area are the same way. Pretty much from Hauser to Coquille and part way to Bandon on 101 you never get very far from one. 

The county annex in North Bend has an old mine directly underneath it that burned for a long time. I think about that every once and a while as I drive by, it would be extremely awkward if it caved in some day.

Les


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