What was once known as
Devil’s Elbow State Park, is now called Heceta Head Lighthouse Scenic Viewpoint
State Park.
This lighthouse is located
just north of Florence, Oregon. It sits 205 feet above sea level, on the west
side of 1,000-foot-high Heceta Head. It is situated in a cove at the mouth of
Cape Creek.
This lighthouse is one of the
most photographed spots in Oregon, and is considered one of the most beautiful
in the world.
Heceta was first
illuminated in 1894 and has a 56-foot tower. It was named after a Spanish
sailor Don Bruno Heceta, who discovered the area in 1755.
Heceta Head Lighthouse was
automated in 1963, and is the strongest light along the Oregon Coast--it can be
seen 21 miles from shore. It was renovated in 2013.
The Assistant Lighthouse
Keeper’s house--built in 1893-- still sits near the tower. Today this building
is known as Heceta House. It is run by the U.S. Forest Service, and today is a bed and breakfast.
Visitors staying at this house can see the grey whale migration as they travel to and from Alaska to Baja
California. This 549-acre park offers day campers, seven miles of trails, of varying
degrees of difficulty, spectacular viewpoints, tide pools, natural caves, a
variety of wildlife, and a pristine sandy beach.
Needless to say, this bed and
breakfast is a popular spot, and there is a 3-month waiting list for
reservations. More information can be found about it here.
Both the Lighthouse and
Heceta house, are on the National Register of Historic Places. “Heceta” is pronounced by
most as “ Ha--SEE--Ta,” others pronounce it “HECK--ah--Ta.”
The Grey Lady
Heceta House |
Unlike most hauntings near a
lighthouse, this ghost is not seen in the Heceta Head tower. Instead, The Grey
Lady or “Rue” resides in the Assistant Lighthouse Keepers home--Heceta House.
It is believed that Rue’s
spirit stays because the grave of an infant girl was discovered on the
Lighthouse grounds. It is said Rue still watches over her baby girl.
Rue was dubbed the Grey Ghost
because she is seen as a grey mist, with a human form. Her ghost is considered
friendly, and sometimes mischievous.
She often moves items and
opens and closes cabinet doors. She is heard walking upstairs in the house.
Many encounters with her have
been reported since the 1950s.
At one time a volunteer crew
was sent out to paint Heceta House. This crew spent the night but did not get
much sleep.
Throughout the night, the fire
alarm kept going off--no fire was discovered. Tired of being woken up, a member
of this crew removed the batteries from this alarm. It did not work, the alarm
sounded again.
It seems Rue didn’t like the
color of the new paint.
Her ghost is most active when
construction or renovations are taking place in the building.
Another encounter with Rue was
when a workman came face to face with her in the home’s attic. He was so
startled, he fled the house and refused to return to the attic.
A few days later, he
accidentally broke the attic window, while working on the exterior of the building.
Refusing to go into the attic, he instead repaired this window from the outside. As he did this, he pushed the
broken glass into the room and it scattered.
That night other workers
heard scraping sounds across the attic floor. When they inspected the room the
next morning, they found the glass neatly swept into a pile beneath the repaired
window.
Rue is most often seen peering down
at people from the upstairs.
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