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Elk City, Oregon

Elk City, Oregon
Unincorporated community
Elk City scene in 2008
Elk City scene in 2008
Elk City, Oregon is located in Oregon
Elk City, Oregon
Elk City, Oregon
Elk City, Oregon is located in the US
Elk City, Oregon
Elk City, Oregon
Location within the state of Oregon
Coordinates: 44°37′10″N 123°52′46″W / 44.61944°N 123.87944°W / 44.61944; -123.87944Coordinates: 44°37′10″N 123°52′46″W / 44.61944°N 123.87944°W / 44.61944; -123.87944
Country United States
State Oregon
County Lincoln
Named for Big Elk Creek
Elevation 371 ft (113 m)
Time zone PST (UTC-8)
 • Summer (DST) PDT (UTC-7)
ZIP codes 97391
Area code(s) 541
Coordinates and elevation from United States Geological Survey

Elk City is an unincorporated community in Lincoln County, in the U.S. state of Oregon. Lying along the Yaquina River east of Newport, it is on Elk City Road off U.S. Route 20 at Toledo. Elk City lies at the confluence of Big Elk Creek with the river, about 23 miles (37 km) upstream from the Yaquina river mouth. Ocean tides affect the water levels this far upriver.

Named for the creek, Elk City was "said to have been the first settlement in what is now 'Lincoln County'." A post office was established at this location, then called Newton, in 1868. In 1888, the name was changed from Newton to Elk City. The Elk City post office closed in 1958.

The Corvallis and Yaquina Wagon Road Company established Elk City in 1866 by building a warehouse with a store and by laying out a town. A year later, Elk City had a second store, a hotel, and a structure doubling as a church and schoolhouse. Boats regularly ascended the river to Elk City, the last stop on the overland mail route of the time, and delivered mail downriver by water.

In the late 19th century, Elk City was one of the stops on the Oregon Pacific Railroad, linking the former port city of Yaquina to Corvallis and Albany. After the Oregon Pacific failed financially, fell into receivership, and went through 17 years of financial and legal complications, it became a branch line of the Southern Pacific in 1907.

Efforts to restore a covered bridge over the Yaquina River at Elk City fell short in 1981. Fund-raising for repairs had produced $20,000, and restoration had begun when high winds caused another $90,000 damage to the structure. The county did not have enough money to pay for restoration or to pursue an insurance settlement through the courts. The original bridge, built by the county in 1922, was a 100-foot (30 m) Howe truss span supported by wooden pilings that suffered from rot. And then in August 2016 a new property owner arrived. His name is Jim Salisbury, Jim purchased the old Elk City Grange. The grange was a neighborhood gathering spot for many years. However, the Grange has fallen into dis-repair. Jim was born in Newport in 1956 and starting fish very close to the Grange one favorite fishing hole is Bevens Hole named after Harold Bevens. Jim plans to restore the Grange and use it as residence.


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