Sailor’s Diggings and the Disappeared Town of Waldo

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Up that road is the old cemetery for the town of Waldo.  It was once the Josephine County seat.  No longer is this the case.  There isn’t even a single house here anymore.

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The small roadside memorial reads:

Sailors Diggings

In 1852, English sailors jumped ship in Crescent City to go east in search of rumored gold strikes, and found “color” here at what became known as Sailors Diggin’s.  By January 22, 1856, this had become the town of Waldo, the first Territorial seat of Josephine County, with the Post Office established the same year.  THe town was named for William Waldo, brother of California Judge Daniel Waldo.  With its stores, saloons, billiard halls, boarding houses and hotels, a skating rink, and a bowling alley, Waldo reached a population of 3000, only 1500 of whom were citizens, and 600 were “Celestials,” Chinese who could not become citizens or own gold claims or other property.  Oregon’s first water rights were established here***, making Waldo the hub of Oregon’s first hydraulic mining industry.

As the gold played out, many of Waldo’s residents drifted away.  In 1919, a land development company sold speculation housing lots and began building a home, which was never completed.  In 1927, Waldo was leveled by the giant hydraulic mining water cannons of the placer mines.

The dreams of its residents now gone, only the occupants of the hilltop cemetery remain to watch over the once thriving community of Waldo, Oregon.

This plaque was placed October 8, 2011 by the Umpqua Joe Chapter 1859 of the Ancient and Honorable Order of E Clampus Vitus in cooperation with the Josephine County Historical Society.

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This area is remarkably healed for having been hydraulically mined a little less than 100 years ago.  No evidence of a town exists.  Such is life in old gold towns.

A Backwoods Drive Through Jedediah Smith Redwood State Park


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While driving up US 199, Heather and I took a turn-off to look at an interesting bridge.  Before long, we ended up on a dirt and mud single lane road through a stately forest of redwoods.  We spent a couple hours driving through this grand stand of giants with hardly another person to be found.  For all the traffic that Redwood National Park gets, I can’t believe that this place doesn’t get more visitors!

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This redwood has a spiral trunk.  Most have straight bark but this one spirals.  Neat!

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Monsters above.

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Heather on a walking path we found.

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Some people walk this trail but not nearly enough.  If everyone understood what these forests are like, there wouldn’t still be redwood logging.

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These things are just so giant!

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If there are such things as Ents, this has to be one of them.




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A small river running through the forest.

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The Audi making its way along the path through the forest.  This is yet another place that the German engineers that designed this car never anticipated.

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A bridge over a small creek in the forest.

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A small stream running through the redwoods.

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Yup, we drove a luxury German car through here.

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The Smith River.


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Heather took a picture of me at work.

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A small river in the forest.  The water was incredibly clear and clean.

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Primeval moss hanging from the trees.

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Giants everywhere!

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A tree once fell across the road.  Someone kindly cut it out of the way.

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Clear mountain water running through the redwoods.  This is what streams, creeks, and rivers should look like.

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Heather on a hiking path among the trees.

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