Radd Icenoggle
June 7, 2021
The Oregon Coast Trail crosses Neahkahnie Mountain, so you can access the summit ridge viewpoint from the north or the south. We chose to start from the south, but we accidentally selected a trailhead that added an additional 2-miles (both coming and going) through a timber sale. Guess we needed to extra exercise.
The “lost treasure” of Neahkahnie Mountain has been searched for by hundreds of people over the years, some treasure hunters became so overcome with the gold fever that in the 1930s, two would-be booty billionaires died when their poorly thought-out excavation caved in on them.
The legend dates back to the mid-1800s when the first trappers arrived with claims that the mountain conceals a treasure, hidden by 16th-century Spanish sailors. The story goes that the sailors carried a chest up Neahkahnie Mountain, dug a hole, and lowered the treasure inside (like every lost booty story ever). But wait, there’s a twist. One of the sailors skewered an African slave with his sword and threw the body on top of the treasure as a deterrence to those that might disturb the man’s grave or the treasure (bad mojo).
Now before you go off to seek your fortune, digging for treasure is prohibited by the Oregon Parks and Recreation Department.
Like all good legends, this tale starts with a nugget of fact. In all likelihood, Spanish ships probably visited this area by the 16th century, including the 1543 voyage of Juan Rodríguez Cabrillo reached California and, under Bartolomé Ferrelo, might have reached the Oregon coast. The 1774 voyage of Juan Pérez was the first European voyage to have unquestionably reached the Oregon coast. And there is ample evidence that as many as five ships may have wrecked ashore near Neahkahnie Mountain during this era of European exploration.