Oregon Route 2

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OR 2 1948.png
Oregon Route 2
Wolf Creek Highway #47 (1932-1946)
Timber Road (1939-1941)
Gales Creek Road (1939-1941)
Tualatin Valley Highway #29 (1940-1948)
Nehalem Highway #102 (1941-1948)
Sunset Highway #47 (1948-1951)
OR 2-map.jpg
Route Information
Maintained by Oregon State Highway Department
Length ≈3.77 mi.
Existed June 22, 1932 to October 21, 1951
Junctions
West End US 101 1948.png US-101 in Cannon Beach Junction
  OR 53 1948.png OR-53 in Necanicum Junction
OR 47 1948.png OR-47 in Staleys Junction
OR 47 1948.png OR-47 in Davies Junction
OR 6 1948.png OR-6/OR 8 1948.png OR-8 in Sylvan
East End US 99W 1948.png US-99W in Portland
Navigation
US 730.png OR-730 OR-3 OR 3.png

Oregon Route 2 was one of the original primary state routes when the system debuted on June 22, 1932. Originally assigned along a nebulous corridor of a "short route to the sea" from Portland, it was routed along the Wolf Creek (now Sunset) Highway #47. Because most of the chosen routing required new construction between Necanicum Junction and Sylvan, OR-2 likely wasn't first signed until 1939 when it was opened to traffic between Necanicum Junction and Sunset Camp, with a temporary routing to Forest Grove along county roads. After a westward extension to Cannon Beach Junction and delays in construction due to World War II, the full route of the Sunset Highway wasn't opened to Sylvan until 1948. US-26 was extended along the entirety of OR-2 in October 1951, eliminating the designation.

History

Prior to OR-2 Designation

While most of OR-2 was constructed along a new alignment, parts were designated along roads that existed prior to 1932.

Portland to Sylvan

In 1848, Portland tannery owner Daniel H. Lownsdale received permission to survey a road from Portland westward through the Tualatin Mountains (now known as the West Hills) along the Tanner Creek Canyon through what is now Sylvan, Beaverton and Hillsboro to Lafayette[1]. This road would open in 1849, providing a much-needed connection between the fertile Tualatin Valley farmlands and the growing city of Portland[2]. Unfortunately, the route soon became impassable due to mud. In response, Lownsdale petitioned the Oregon territorial government to construct a tolled wooden plank road, called the Great Plank Road, to replace it; his charter for the Portland & Valley Plank Road Company was approved in August 1851[1]. The first planks were laid at Portland's western plat line, close to the present day Portland South Park Blocks along SW Jefferson Street, on September 27 that same year[1].

The road's construction was mired in financial mismanagement in subsequent years[3] and the territorial government chartered a new company, Portland and Tualatin Plains Plank Road Company, in February 1856 to take over and complete the road[1]. Nevertheless, the road -- renamed Canyon Road by this point -- was completed to Beaverton by 1860, costing between $1 and $5 to use depending on the weight of the cargo[4]. However, wooden plank roads deteriorated rapidly in Oregon's cold wet climate, and by 1867 there were already calls to macadamize the increasingly impassable road[1]. Despite calls by The Oregonian in 1872 to supplant plank roads like Canyon Road with railroads[5], a new road appears to have been surveyed by late March of that year and constructed soon after[6]. In 1885, the Oregon House of the Legislative Assembly passed a bill providing $1,000 in funding to maintain Canyon Road over a two-year period[7][8].

In 1897, Canyon Road was mentioned as a bicycling route in the Oregon Division of the Legion of American Wheelmen's Road Book of Oregon[9]. It was paved by 1921.

A bus heads east towards Portland on the newly paved Canyon Road, 1930.

At the March 21, 1921 meeting of the Oregon State Highway Commission, Canyon Road between Beaverton and Portland was designated as part of the Tualatin Valley Highway #29[10]. The request was made by Lewis A. McArthur, the Secretary of the Oregon State Geographic Board at the time.[10]. While the state took over the entirety of Canyon Road between Beaverton and the county line, Multnomah County retained jurisdiction over their portion; this was due to a provision in the 1917 highway program wherein Multnomah County would fund the construction and maintenance of any state highway that passed through it[11]. The state wouldn't take over the Portland-Sylvan part of Canyon Road until January 16, 1931[12], readopting it on May 18, 1937[13].

Between 1926 and 1930, Multnomah County reconstructed much of its section Canyon Road from Sylvan to Portland[14].

Elsie to near Sunset Rest Area

This segment closely follows the path of the partially-built Salem-Astoria Military Road. Attempts by Oregon's provisional and territorial governments to build such a road between Salem and Astoria via the Tualatin Valley failed in 1843 and 1848 respectively[15]. Settlers eventually persuaded the US Congress to send the US Army Corps of Topographical Engineers to survey and construct the road[15]. In July 1855, the survey team, conducted by Lt. George Derby and his team of 10 men and 6 pack animals, began their general survey from Astoria towards Salem; a more detailed survey was performed on the return trip to Astoria the next month[15].

Behind schedule by 8 months, construction of the Salem-Astoria Military Road began in 1856[15]. Funding also became an issue, with costs exceeding the initial $30,000 allocated to the project and intermittent funding causing stoppages[15]. Furthermore, Lt. Derby was unable to find laborers who would build the road for $60 per month (or just over $2,000 in 2021 dollars) due to a gold discovery along the Colville River in present-day Washington state[16]. Nonetheless, almost 53 miles of the road opened by 1858; the Astoria side made it to the Nehalem River near Elsie, and the Salem side made it to Timber[16][15].

The outbreak of the Civil War eliminated funding for the military road, which was now the responsibility of the individual counties to complete[15]. These counties never did end up completing the road to its 16-foot width standard, though a pack trail connected the two ends[17]. While the road became an important mail route in later years, wagons weren't able to traverse the route until 1895, and it certainly couldn't handle the horseless carriages and cars that followed in subsequent decades[17].

Cannon Beach Junction to Necanicum Junction

By 1895, a road existed between what is now Cannon Beach Junction and the Necanicum River about 4 miles to the east, as part of a longer coastal road from Astoria to the Clatsop/Tillamook county line and beyond. This original road appears to diverge south of modern-day US-26 near the Black Bridge over the Necanicum River, and is now known as the Necanicum Mainline.

Sometime in the 1910s, the unimproved 1895 road was extended eastward across the Necanicum River to what is now Necanicum Junction, where it also turned south towards the county line. The entire coastal road from Astoria to the county line, including this segment, was designated as part of Coast Highway #3 on November 27, 1917 by the Oregon State Highway Commission[18]. The name of the highway was changed to the Roosevelt Coast Military Highway by 1919[19]; it later was referred to as the Roosevelt Coast Highway, Roosevelt Highway and Coast Highway until it was officially changed by law to the Oregon Coast Highway on February 27, 1931[20]. Also, at some point between 1918 and 1920, its highway number changed from #3 to #9, the current number of the Oregon Coast Highway.

On November 11, 1926, this section of road, along with the rest of the Coast Highway in Oregon, was designated US-101 by the American Association of State Highway Officials[21].

Planning and Constructing the Wolf Creek Highway

  • Seaside, 1870s-1880s

Plans for a short road between Portland and the coastal communities of Seaside and Cannon Beach were proposed by highway enthusiast Sam Reed to the Portland Chamber of Commerce as far back as the mid-1900s.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 Wayne, Tyler. "Great Plank Road," Oregon Encyclopedia, last updated 29 August 2019, last accessed 27 February 2021
  2. The Sunday Oregonian. "The Immigration of 1844," 13 July 1884, p. 1
  3. City of Beaverton. "History," last accessed 27 February 2021
  4. Tims, Dana. "Beaverton Road Project Unearths Oregon History," OregonLive, 21 August 2015, last accessed 27 February 2021
  5. The Morning Oregonian. "Plank Roads," 27 February 1872, p. 1
  6. The Morning Oregonian. "Washington Co. Plank Road," 1 April 1872, p. 3
  7. Journal of the House of the Legislative Assembly of the State of Oregon, 1885, p. 144
  8. The Morning Oregonian. "The Legislature," 29 January 1885, pp. 2 & 4
  9. The Morning Oregonian. "Roadbook of Oregon," 11 February 1897, p. 8
  10. 10.0 10.1 Oregon State Highway Commission minutes, 21 March 1921, pp. 908-909
  11. The Morning Oregonian. "Roads Lead From As Well As To," 14 October 1931, p. 8
  12. Oregon State Highway Commission minutes, 16 January 1931, p. 2886
  13. Oregon State Highway Commission minutes, 18 May 1937, pp. 7354-7355
  14. Multnomah County. "Canyon Road (SW) construction, 1926-1930," last accessed 28 February 2021
  15. 15.0 15.1 15.2 15.3 15.4 15.5 15.6 Wayne, Tyler. "Great Plank Road," Oregon Encyclopedia, last updated 29 August 2019, last accessed 27 February 2021
  16. 16.0 16.1 Prosch, Thomas W. "Notes from a Government Document on Oregon Conditions in the Fifties," Oregon Historical Quarterly, Vol. VIII, Willis S. Duniway (Salem, OR), 1907, p. 195
  17. 17.0 17.1 Langille, W. A. "Saddle Mountain State Park", Oregon State Parks Department, 28 Aug 1947, pp. 3-4
  18. Oregon State Highway Commission minutes, 27 November 1917, p. 337
  19. General Laws of Oregon, 1919, Chapter 345
  20. General Laws of Oregon, 1931, Chapter 90
  21. Weingroff, Richard F. "From Names to Numbers: The Origins of the US Numbered Highway System," Highway History, Federal Highway Administration, last updated 27 June 2017, last accessed 28 February 2021