North Lincoln County Historical Museum | Lincoln City
Take a trip through the past at the North Lincoln County Historical Museum in Lincoln City! Museum admission is free, and tours are available. Pixie Kitchen and PixieLand displays up all year. Lincoln City - a great place to try new things!
North Lincoln County Historical Museum | Lincoln City
Take a trip through the past at the North Lincoln County Historical Museum in Lincoln City! Museum admission is free, and tours are available. Pixie Kitchen and PixieLand displays up all year. Lincoln City - a great place to try new things!
Lincoln County Historical Museum 2016
Videos from my visit to the North Lincoln County Historical Museum.
4/14/16
Pixieland in Oregon Rebuilding
Original of Pixieland and Pixie Kitchen located w/in North Lincoln County Historical Museum Lincoln City Oregon
1.22 ACRES in LINCOLN County, Oregon for ONLY $11,900
Web site: FREE SIGN UP TO VIEW CALL (541) 228-9393
Lot is PERFECT for CAMPERS, RV'S and TENTS for YOUR OWN PRIVATE GETAWAY!
Market Value: $40,490
CASH or LOAN Price: $11,900
LEASE OPTION Price: $29,900 with only $5,000 down.
To get directions put 45.021736 -123.852341 in Google Maps - created at
Family Promise of Lincoln CountyThrift Store Grand Opening
Grand opening of the Family Promise of Lincoln County Thrift Store at 5030 SE Hwy 101 in Lincoln City. Proceeds benefit the Family Promise mission of alleviating homelessness.
Siletz Bay Lodge - Lincoln City Hotels, Oregon
Siletz Bay Lodge 2 Stars Hotel in Lincoln City, Oregon Within US Travel Directory This property is 3 minutes walk from the beach. Situated on Siletz Bay, this lodge features an indoor jacuzzi and spacious rooms with cable TV. It offers beach access and is a 5-minutes’ walk from North Lincoln County Historical Museum.Guest rooms at Siletz Bay Lodge are furnished with a microwave and a refrigerator. Each includes dark wood furniture and a view of Siletz Bay. Free internet access is available.The lodge includes a gift shop and free parking. A daily continental breakfast is also offered.Kite flying, tide-pooling and whale watching are nearby the lodge. Lodge Siletz Bay is 19.3 km from Cascade Head Scenic Research Area Park.
Siletz Bay Lodge - Lincoln City Hotels, Oregon
Location in : 1012 Southwest 51st Street, OR 97367, Lincoln City, Oregon
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Archaeological Findings of Lincoln Era Courthouse with Archaeologist Floyd Mansberger
Archaeological excavations were performed in July of 2014 in order to mitigate the adverse affects that construction for Bloomington-Normal’s new visitors center, Cruisin’ with Lincoln on 66, would have on the historic landscape on the south side of the Museum. The Visitors Center will be located in the ground floor of the Museum with entry through a broad plaza, located on Washington Street.
Archaeological excavations not only uncovered portions of the foundation of the Second Courthouse, (which Abraham Lincoln practiced law in during his time as a lawyer on the Eighth Judicial Circuit from 1837-1861) but also exposed several artifacts from the same time period.The team’s findings will allow the Museum plot out the exact location of the Lincoln era courthouse and to provide more complete interpretation of the site during that time period.
Floyd Mansberger received his bachelor’s degree in Archaeology from the University of Illinois and his master’s degree in History from Illinois State University. He started Fever River Research in 1984 as a part-time business conducting archaeological and architectural surveys. Today, the full-time firm (based out of Springfield) specializes in cultural resource management projects concerning historical properties. For over the past 20 years, Mansberger has participated in a variety of cultural resource management projects such as archaeological and architectural surveys, archaeological excavations, and archival research, as well as preparing historic structure reports for historic buildings. Mansberger has published articles on his research in such journals as Illinois Archaeology, Transactions of the Pioneer America Society, Historic Illinois, Wisconsin Archaeologist, Agricultural History, Journal of the Illinois Geographical Society, and Western Illinois Regional Studies.
Historic Apple Orchard - Lincoln County
Historic Apple Orchard.
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Fire damages Otis Café near Lincoln City on Oregon coast
Investigators are shifting through debris to find out what caused an iconic Oregon restaurant to catch on fire on Independence Day.
Lincoln County Rope Rescue Team
Lincoln County Rope Rescue Team and Eyes Over Oregon Aerial Imagery work together to deploy rescue lines for climbers.
Camp Hancock State Historic Site
A glimpse of what you can see on a visit to Camp Hancock State Historic Site.
Lincoln County Oregon Corruption against Christopher-Robert: Walker
November 7, 2014 Case Files Not Available???
7 Facts about Nebraska
In this video you can find seven little known facts about Nebraska. Keep watching and subscribe, as more states will follow!
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US States & Territories
206 Countries in One Series
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1. Nebraska, which was admitted to the union as the 37th state on March 1, 1867, two years after the end of the American Civil War, contains some of the nation’s best ranchland and farmland. Prior to its statehood, the Nebraska Territory had been sparsely settled but saw growth during the California Gold Rush in 1848, with a larger wave of settlers arriving as homesteaders in the 1860s.
2. The city that would become Nebraska’s capital was originally named Lancaster, after the town in Pennsylvania. It was renamed to honor Abraham Lincoln after his assassination, but there was also an ulterior motive. There was talk of moving the state capital from Omaha to Lancaster in 1867, and because much of the state had supported the Confederacy during the Civil War, a Nebraska legislator who wanted to keep the capital in Omaha decided to “honor” Lincoln by renaming Lancaster. He was also counting on Confederate sympathizers to vote against moving the state capital to a town named after the man who ended slavery. His plan failed.
3. While it doesn’t have an official state food, Nebraska does have an official state soft drink: Kool-Aid. Originally called “Fruit Smack,” Kool-Aid was invented by a man named Edwin Perkins who ran a small mail-order business out of Hastings, Nebraska. Though the Fruit Smack concentrate syrup was one of his most popular products, the glass bottles often broke in transit. Perkins invented a powder concentrate in 1927 to solve the problem, and Kool-Aid was born.
4. Bailey Yard in North Platte is the world’s largest train yard, situated on 2,850 acres of land spanning eight miles. It manages as many as 10,000 rail cars each day and can repair up to 20 cars per hour in its immense locomotive repair shop.
5. Speaking of Oregon Trail landmarks, one of them seems to be dwindling due to erosion. Chimney Rock, a prominent rock formation near Bayard, Nebraska, was another important marker for the covered wagon set. It’s a good thing that the geologic wonder has been preserved on the state quarter, because it’s not quite as impressive as it once was, having lost more than 30 feet in the past 150 years.
6. The Ogallala Aquifer, which lies beneath 174,000 square miles of eight states extending from South Dakota down to western Texas, provides almost all of the water for residential, industrial and agricultural use in the High Plains region. Two-thirds of the Ogallala’s total supply comes from Nebraska.
7. The state is home to Archie, the biggest mammoth on display anywhere. This 14-foot fossil was found in 1922 by a rancher in Lincoln County. He turned Archie over to the University of Nebraska State Museum where he still lives today. The creature's name, by the way, comes from his scientific classification, Archidiskodon imperator maibeni.
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Pushed to Insanity
At Plane Crash Site In Lincoln County
HARRINGTON, Wash -- It's been a tough few days for the entire military community, after a Navy EA-6B Prowler crashed into a wheat field outside of Harrington Monday morning, killing all three people aboard.
The fella driving tractor pointed up and said, 'What's that?' recalled Mike Johnson, who was feeding cows in Davenport, some 23 miles away, when the plane went down. There was a big ol' mushroom cloud coming up.
In the day since the crash, a mini city of sorts has been set up at the site. Almost 100 people, mostly from Fairchild Air Force Base in Airway Heights, have made the trip to Lincoln County to help secure the site and aid in the ground search. Rows of trucks and tents are now visible on the horizon, as some military personnel are staying on site 24 hours a day.
Essentially what we do is walk a grid pattern around the area, walking shoulder by shoulder, explained Patrick Obruba, the Civil Engineering Squadron Commander at Fairchild.
The first priority is to recover the remains of those aboard, then searchers will retrace their steps to map the debris field with GPS -- an area that spreads out for half a mile.
We understand there was an explosion upon impact, and that's based on reports, Lincoln County Sheriff Wade Majers said Monday.
In the hours after the crash, Navy investigators from Whidbey Island, where the training flight originated from, flew in on two helicopters to help.
Military personnel will be on site for most of the week clearing the wreckage left behind. A representative from Dover Air Force Base in Dover, Delaware was expected Tuesday afternoon to help facilitate the dignified transfer of those lost.
What we're doing is making sure we're honoring fallen service members for their service to the country and we're doing that in a very dignified and methodical fashion, Obruba added.
There's still no word on what may have caused the crash. Part of the investigation will involve speaking with the crew members aboard the second 'wingman' plane that could only circle when they saw their own friends go down
Oregon Wild and Lincoln County Community Rights in the Siletz Gorge
In Search of The Great Black Hawk | Birds of North America | Topic
Jason and his brother Jeffrey wrap up their trip to Maine with a glimpse of a bird that's almost never been spotted in the United States: the Great Black Hawk, a native of Central and South America.
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Jason Ward has been an avid birdwatcher since he was a kid growing up in the Bronx, where he spotted a peregrine falcon eating a pigeon on a ledge outside his bedroom window. In the first season of Topic's new series, the avian advocate and father of two travels around the Northeast, from Cape May, New Jersey, to Maine, delighting audiences with his contagious curiosity about the natural world—and the creatures within it. Those creatures include those of the human variety, too, with guests such as comedian Wyatt Cenac, Dr. Drew Lanham of Clemson University, “The Birdist” Nicholas Lund, the American Museum of Natural History’s Paul Sweet, and the Feminist Bird Club. (Plus Jason’s younger brother Jeffrey, a fellow birder and formidable opponent in the brothers' annual bird count competition.) Get your binoculars ready.
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Topic is an ambitious new entertainment & storytelling studio from First Look Media, dedicated to working with creators at the forefront of culture. From Academy Award®-winning films (Spotlight) to television, audio and digital, we explore a wide range of subject matter, both fiction and nonfiction, with an emphasis on stories of consequence. On Topic.com we focus our efforts on visual and audio stories programmed around monthly themes. Our approach – challenging, compelling and unconventional – reflects our commitment to discovering and amplifying independent new voices, and supporting established ones.
In Search of The Great Black Hawk | Birds of North America | Topic
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Cape Perpetua Overlook, Lincoln County, Oregon
Left to right: Coastal Range, Pacific Ocean.
Ebb and Flow - a preview of what is coming soon.
Ebb and Flow a is very small sampling of the videos currently in production by the Lincoln County Historical Society. These videos featuring local people who lived and witnessed history in the making on the Central Oregon Coast will run in the Pacific Maritime Heritage Center's Doerfler Family Theater. Over twenty locals have been interviewed as they tell their stories.
This project is a result of the hard work and dedication of retired Newport City Manger Don Davis and Kevin Raichl of Visual Thinking Northwest
Fundraising continues for the theater and production of additional videos.
Liberate the Community, Episode 5
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Debra Fant, Rio Davidson, Barbara Davis, and Wren Davidson have a round table discussion about their trials and tribulations of organizing to ban aerial pesticide spraying, the need to keep forging ahead for the sake of the community, and how CELDF has helped them build the skills, confidence, and capacity to help better their community.
Background:
In 2017 Lincoln residents adopted the first-in-the nation countywide Freedom from Aerial Sprayed Pesticides law. Lincoln County residents were the first in Oregon to secure people’s environmental and democratic rights, the right of nature not to be poisoned by toxic chemicals, and challenging the claimed “rights” of corporations.
“The state government and the federal government have laws that say ‘you can’t challenge our laws’” - Debra Fant
“If we don’t make a change right now, right away, how are we gonna look back at our kids and tell them, ‘oh well we gave it a shot, you know, we got one ordinance passed but the second one, that was too much,’ I mean, we gotta keep going” - Rio Davidson
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