- Graveyard of the Pacific
The Graveyard of the Pacific is a nickname for a stretch of the coastal region in the
Pacific Northwest , fromTillamook Bay on theOregon Coast northward to the tip ofVancouver Island . cite web
url = http://www.historylink.org/essays/output.cfm?file_id=7936
title = Graveyard of the Pacific: Shipwrecks on the Washington Coast
author = David Wilma
date =September 12 2006
accessdate = 2007-06-28 ] The region's seas are frequently subject to heavy and unpredictable weather year round combined with the rugged, largely undeveloped coastline, especially alongVancouver Island and its northwestern tip at Cape Scott, causing sea conditions which endanger many marine vessels. More than 2000 vessels and 700 lives have been lost near theColumbia Bar alone. [ cite web
url = http://www.blueoregon.com/2006/01/graveyard_of_th.html
title = Graveyard of the Pacific; Gateway to the Northwest
author = Russell Saddler
publisher = Blue Oregon
date =January 29 2006
accessdate = 2007-06-28 ] One book about regional wrecks lists 484 wrecks at the south and west sides of Vancouver Island. [ cite book
url = http://www.heritagehouse.ca/douglasmacintyre/moreshipwrecks.htm
author = Fred Rogers
title = More Shipwrecks of British Columbia
publisher = Heritage House—Douglas & McIntyre
date = 1992
id = ISBN 1-55054-020-3 ]Combinations of
fog ,wind ,storm , current andwave have crashed hundreds of ships in the region by the middle of the twentieth century, including famous wrecks in regional history. Charts of the region show its famous, and dangerous, landmarks:
*Columbia Bar : a giant sandbar at the mouth of the Columbia River
* Cape Flattery
* Reefs and rocks lining the west coast ofVancouver Island
*Strait of Juan de Fuca Shipwreck charts are studded with sites. [ cite web
url = http://www.pacificshipwrecks.ca/english/wrecks.html
title = Interactive Map of the Wrecks of the Graveyard of the Pacific
publisher = BC Maritime Museum
accessdate = 2007-06-28 ] Actual physical wreckage is minimal due to the violence of the wrecks and their age, despite the difficulty of access for salvagers. [ cite web
url = http://www.funbeach.com/attractions/shipwrecks.html
title = Graveyard of the Pacific
publisher = Long Beach Peninsula Visitors Bureau
accessdate = 2007-06-28 ]The term is believed to have originated in the earliest days of the marine fur trade, not only as increasing numbers of traders' ships began to be wrecked, but also because of the ongoing state of incipient warfare that all ships had to be provided for in the region, which was considered one of the most dangerous and deadly regions to trade in the Pacific.
The rate of major wrecks has decreased considerably since the 1920s, but several lives are still lost each year.
ee also
*
Graveyard of the Atlantic
* Lightship "Columbia"
* "New Carissa "
* "Peter Iredale "
*Puget Sound Mosquito Fleet
*Steamboats of the Oregon Coast
*Inside Passage
*Ripple Rock
* "SS Pacific "
* "SS Valencia "
* "Sechelt"
* "Clallam"ources
*"First Approaches to the Northwest Coast", Derek Pethick
*"A Historical Atlas of British Columbia and the Pacific Northwest", Derek HayesReferences
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