|
Legends Home
Site
Map
What's New!!

American History
Ghost Towns
Ghostly Legends
Historic People
Native Americans
The Old West
Photo
Galleries
Roadside
Attractions
Rocky Mtn Store
Route 66
Travel
Destinations
Treasure Tales
Legends Blog
Free E-Newsletter

12343 W. 79th Terrace
Lenexa,
KS 66215
913-708-5119
Please report
broken links, missing pictures, or other problems online by clicking
HERE or send us an
email. Thanks!
| |
|
|
|
OREGON
LEGENDS
Shaniko - Wool
Capitol of the World
|
|

|
|

Shaniko
Ghost Town,
Wasco County, photo
courtesy
Oregon Tourism Commission
|
|
An almost
ghost town,
the Shaniko
area was first settled by a pioneer named August Scherneckau. Arriving
after the
Civil War, Scherneckau bought a farm near the present site
of the town and when Indians pronounced his name as Shaniko,
the locality became known as such.
On the stage route from The Dalles to
central
Oregon ,
the Scherneckau ranch soon became the site of a stage station. The first post office was established on May 23, 1879, with August Scherneckau as its first post master.
Officially called Cross Hollows for the local topography, the post
office lasted only eight years, closing on May 27, 1887.
In 1900, an official community was planned
and built by businessmen in The Dalles for the terminus of the
Columbia Southern Railroad. The station was to be utilized to
collect the enormous quantities of wool being produced in central
Oregon
– a role, it continued to play into the 1940’s.

Shaniko
City Hall
|
|
|
|
The Shaniko
post office was established on March 31, 1900, and in the same year
the, Shaniko
Hotel was built. First known as the Columbia Southern Hotel, the
structure was built with 18-inch thick walls and handmade brick. Continuing to serve weary travelers yet today, the hotel is on the
National Register of Historic Places.
Also built in 1900 was the 10,000 gallon
wooden water tower. The water, pumped from nearby Cross Hollow
Canyon, was piped through a wooden pipe system and stored in two large
wooden tanks.
Within a year, two financiers from The Dalles,
B.F. Laughlin and W. Lord, constructed a huge wool warehouse in Shaniko, the
largest in
Oregon
at the time. Shaniko quickly became a major trade center for the wool produced in
central and eastern
Oregon.
|
|

Shaniko School,
photo by Lynn Ewing, courtesy
History of Waco County
|
The three-room Shaniko
School, built in 1901, housed kindergarten through high school students
until 1946. Over the years, it fell into disrepair but was restored
during the 1990’s and now serves as a community hall. It is one of
the most photographed old school buildings in the state of
Oregon .
It was also in 1901 that Shaniko was
officially incorporated. By that time the town had a bank, two
blacksmith shops, a two-story, city hall that included the fire station
and the jail, three hotels, two newspapers, a post office, five saloons,
two stores and many other structures. Church services were held in the
school building.
|
|
In 1903 Shaniko was
referred to as the “Wool Capital of the World” after three wool sales
brought in the largest total sale of wool on record to date. The next
year, sheep men sold an estimated five million dollars worth of wool to
buyers in Shaniko.
In the 1910 census, Shaniko
claimed a population of 600 and its future seemed assured. However,
in 1911 the
Oregon
Trunk Railroad, linking Bend (70 miles to the south) to the Columbia
Gorge, began to draw business away from the more isolated Shaniko. Soon thereafter, a fire destroyed much of the downtown business district
and there were no funds to reconstruct the damaged buildings. Although
homesteaders, ranchers, and sheep men continued to reside in the area, Shaniko
began to fade.
Today, this almost
ghost town supports a population of just 20-25 people, but there is much to see
in Shaniko
and many claim it is the best
ghost town in
Oregon. The
enormous sheep sheds of that era still stand on the edge of town. Several
of its buildings are maintained in an Old West theme, complete with
authentic boardwalks and false fronts.
Still standing are the
old water tower, the City Hall complete with old jail, the school, and
post office. The Shaniko
Hotel is the town’s biggest attraction. Restored to its former
grandeur, the hotel features an antique shop, history of many of the
families who once lived in Shaniko, and
a café with home cooking that is said to the best in the area. The
old Shaniko
Livery Barn now stands as a museum featuring a number of antique cars in
their original state. Next door is the Shaniko Sage
Museum, also available to visitors. A number of antique and gift stores
have been established in the other historic buildings in the tiny downtown
district.
The community of Shaniko is
located on Highway 97 in southern Wasco County, about 20 miles southeast
of Maupin and 70 miles north of Bend.
Contact Information:
City of
Shaniko
PO Box 17
Shaniko,
Oregon
97057
541-489-3226
Join our
Ghost Town Forum
for information, questions, and Ghost Town experiences!
|
|
|

Shaniko Hotel, photo by Lynn Ewing, courtesy
History of Waco County
|
|
From the
Rocky Mountain General Store
Old
West Books -
Legends of America and
the
Rocky Mountain General Store has collected a number of
Old West
books for our frontier enthusiasts. For many of these, we have
only one available. To see this varied collection, click
HERE!
 |
| |
|