Dating Bay Area In Port Townsend Wa

View of Discovery Bay near sunset, looking north with the San Juan Islands in the background
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Discovery Bay is a small bay connected to the Strait of Juan de Fuca on the Olympic Peninsula in Washington state; it was also historically called Port Discovery. An unincorporated community also named Discovery Bay lies in Jefferson County at the southern end of the bay.[1]

The bay was named by George Vancouver after the Discovery, a ship used in his 1792 expedition of the area. The community at the foot of the bay eventually assumed the same name.

Geography[edit]

Jefferson County (highlighted)

Discovery Bay is located at the northeastern edge of the Olympic Peninsula of Washington state. The bay enters the Strait of Juan de Fuca between the Miller and Quimper peninsulas. The bay's mouth is just south of Protection Island, a small federally protected nature preserve. Discovery Bay is 9 miles (14 km) in length, and 1.5 miles (2.4 km) wide at its mouth. Its primary inlet is Snow Creek at the south end of the bay, and other small watercourses feed the bay on its east and west sides.

Communities[edit]

The community of Discovery Bay is an area near the intersection of U.S. Route 101 and State Route 20, at the foot of Discovery Bay – roughly midway between the larger communities of Port Townsend to the northeast and Sequim to the northwest. It is a mix of residential areas and commercial enterprises, including crabbing, oystering, clamming, timbering, security training and gravel extraction. A few restaurants and stores on US 101 near SR 20 primarily serve drivers and truckers along US 101.

Discovery Bay is the current name generally associated with the area. Its use for the community, as opposed to the bay itself, is relatively recent. The original communities in the area, primarily mill towns that waxed and waned along with the local timber industry, had different names:

  • Fairmont is a group of residences at the southeast corner of the bay, off SR 20 just northeast of US 101.
  • Discovery Junction is an abandoned railroad junction near Fairmont.
  • Uncas is an old mill community to the southwest of Fairmont, on the south side of US 101.
  • Fort Discovery is the original location of Capt. Vancouver's camp and the present headquarters of Security Services NW.
  • Maynard is an old mill community to the north of Uncas, along US 101 at the southwest corner of the bay. An abandoned sawmill just to the east of US 101 is a well-known remnant of this community. The mill has often been incorrectly identified as the 1858 Port Discovery Mill (see Port Discovery, below). It was, in fact, the Maynard Mill.
Discovery Bay as seen from Gardiner, Washington, with Diamond Point visible on the left

These names often appear on maps[2] and persist in local road names. The mill communities no longer have the population or visibility they enjoyed when the mills were operating, making these hamlets primarily matters of local historical interest. However, changing demographics and rising property values are leading to redevelopment of this area, and breathing new life into older names.

South Discovery now constitutes the entirety of the area around Discovery Bay, especially the area between Port Discovery and Port Townsend. The South Discovery voting precinct includes areas away from Discovery Bay, as well.

Dating Bay Area In Port Townsend Way

Several nearby place names are also prominent in Discovery Bay history:

  • Eaglemount is an area on the hills to the south of Discovery Bay, on the east of US 101 above high bluffs over Discovery Bay. (Eaglemount is sometimes depicted as a location on SR 20, but in fact it is reached by turning south on Eaglemount Road from SR20.)
  • Port Discovery is the location of George Vancouver's 1792 visit to Discovery Bay. Many sources incorrectly identify the current Discovery Bay community as the location of Port Discovery; however, Port Discovery was several miles to the north, at Mill Point on the west side of the bay. The site is along US 101, near today's Broders Road.[3]

There are several other communities located on or near the shores of Discovery Bay. Proceeding clockwise from the northeast corner:

Dating
  • Port Townsend occupies the northern end of the Quimper Peninsula, 5 miles (8 km) east of the northeast corner of the bay. The downtown area of Port Townsend, a famous seaport (once the major port of the region, before the rise of Seattle), is on the opposite side of the peninsula.
  • Cape George is located on high bluffs at the northeast entrance of the bay.
  • Beckett Point is a shoreline community a mile south of Cape George.
  • Adelma Beach is a shoreline community halfway down the bay.
  • Gardiner is an unincorporated community several miles to the west along US 101, established by Herbert Gardner in the late 19th century. (The town name spelling originally matched that of its founder, but was later changed due to a conflict with another Gardner, Washington.)
  • Diamond Point is located at the northwest mouth of the bay, opposite Protection Island. It once hosted a government quarantine station.

History[edit]

Native people – the Klallam (locally: S'Klallam) – have occupied the lands around the Strait of Juan de Fuca for millennia, including locations on Discovery Bay. Most native populations on the Olympic Peninsula were relocated to reservations during the 19th and early 20th centuries, leaving only scattered individuals of native descent still residing on the bay.

The Spanish explorers Manuel Quimper and Gonzalo López de Haro in Princess Royal are the first known Europeans to find and map the bay of Port Discovery. They were sent to explore the Strait of Juan de Fuca by Francisco de Eliza in 1790. The Spanish named the bay Puerto Quadra, after Juan Francisco de la Bodega y Quadra.[4]

Dating Bay Area In Port Townsend Water

In 1792, George Vancouver's exploration of the area provided names for Discovery Bay and Port Discovery. A landing party put ashore along the west shore of the bay near what is now Contractor's Point to fill water barrels from the creek there. Today, a sign alongside Highway 101 above the site of the landing commemorates the event.

In 1858, the S. L. Mastick Company of San Francisco established the Port Discovery Mill on the western shore of the bay, at what is now Mill Point. The old growth timber on the steep hillsides above the mill were felled, slid down to the sawmill, milled into lumber and loaded from the wharf to ships for other ports. A village grew around the mill to house its employees. The peak population of the community, in the late 19th century, was in the hundreds. Port Discovery remained an important coastal port well into the 20th century, and was visited by many Pacific Ocean vessels.

The U.S. Federal Census of 1860 designated Port Discovery as one of three enumeration districts in Jefferson County. The indigenous people were not counted for this census. The total population was 70, and all but one were males between the ages of 20 and 52 years old. The one female was married to a cook, and the only non-white person counted was an African-American male cook. Two-thirds of the population were American-born, all of which had migrated west from other states. Of the third that were foreign-born, all but one were from England, Ireland, Wales, or Canada. The exception was born in Sweden.

Another major mill community was established at the foot of the bay, where the town of Maynard grew. The Maynard mill continued in operation until the 1970s, and was responsible for the several nearby small communities mentioned above. The abandoned sawmill was a popular sight for tourists and appears in many nostalgic area photographs and paintings. It deteriorated rapidly during storms in 2005–2006, and as of 2007 had been slated for removal, as part of a habitat restoration effort.

References[edit]

  1. ^'Discovery Bay'. Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey.
  2. ^e.g. maps.google.com – map of Port Discovery area
  3. ^Jefferson County Historical Society archives and publications, Port Townsend Washington
  4. ^Hayes, Derek (1999). Historical Atlas of the Pacific Northwest: Maps of exploration and Discovery. Sasquatch Books. p. 70. ISBN1-57061-215-3.
  • Jefferson County Historical Society, With Pride in Heritage: History of Jefferson County, Portland, Oregon, Professional Publishing Printing, Inc., 1966.
  • United States Federal Census of Washington Territory 1860, ProQuest Image Databases, HeritageQuest Online, Series M653, Roll 1398, pp 46–47.

External links[edit]

  • Survey of Historic Sites and Buildings - Discovery Bay, Washington, National Park Service

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Coordinates: 47°59′24″N122°53′31″W / 47.99000°N 122.89194°W

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Discovery_Bay,_Washington&oldid=938844604'

Washington Lost Treasure

Washington lost treasure sites are listed on this page. However, I cannot promise that this information is completely accurate. As treasure tales go, because they have been passed down through many years, certain elements of the lost treasure story may have been altered, either intentionally or otherwise.

This information should be researched through other means as well. Never rely on one piece of information about a treasure story you are researching. Use multiple research tools.

For more information on where and how to research for lost treasures,please visit my research page.

Good luck! And have fun in your search for Washington lost treasure.

The Captain Scarborough Treasure

Somewhere along the banks of the Columbia River, near route 101, on the now, Fort Columbia Military Reservation, is a buried treasure of gold coins worth approximately $130,000. It was in 1852 when Captain James Scarborough, a wealthy businessman, buried the gold coins in a barrel.

Discovery Bay

Located near Port Townsend, off route 20. A British payroll, stolen durring the Revolutionary War, worth $80,000 is supposedly buried on the banks of Discovery Bay.

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The Harry Sutton Treasure

Somewhere in the Hammond Orchard, in Port Townsend, saloon owner Harry Sutton, in 1870, buried $11,000 in gold coins.

The S.S. Buckley Treasure

Also in the Hammond Orchard there is rumored to be another treasure. Apparently, S.S. Buckley, a jeweler, buried a large amount of jewelry and money there.

Area

Protection Island

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Located a short distance north of port Townsend. In 1874, a prospector buried approximately $70,000 in gold bullion. However, after leaving the area for supplies, he was unable to locate the exact area of the treasure.

The Chevy Chase Inn Treasure

Located on Port Discovery Bay, in the Straits of Juan de Fuca. In 1864, the Canadian Pacific Railroad was robbed of $60,000 in British gold soverigns. The hoard was then buried on the property of the old Chevy Chase Inn.

Washington lost treasure may be located in ghost towns.

Townsend

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Port

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