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All Aboard Lost When Barge Sinks Off Cape Blanco in 1892

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on

In December 1892, Capt. Nicholas Lorentzen, his daughter, Lena, and father-in-law were among the passengers aboard the barge Majestic, on a return trip from Vancouver, British Columbia.
It was the week before Christmas. Travelers and crew had completed their shopping and were anxious to return home for the holidays. The vessel made a stop in Puget Sound, taking on a load of coal and lumber, perhaps overloading.  When the Majestic reached Cape Blanco, Ore., it ran into an exceptionally bad storm and sank.  All aboard were lost.
Lorentzen’s widow, Anna, and her remaining children moved to be near friends in Langlois [langless], where she purchased a lot and built the Laurel Inn on the east side of U.S. Route 101.
Many years later, a plank bearing the name “Majestic” washed ashore and was given to Mrs. Lorentzen.  It was not a happy reminder for her, so she put it in the woodshed, and no one knows what became of it after that.
In 1910, Mrs. Lorentzen sold the hotel to a family who operated it as Mary Sorenson’s Rooming House, which still stands today.
 
Source: Boice-Strain, Patti. “Floras Creek Precinct and the Boice Family of Curry County.” Gold Beach, Oregon, Curry County Historical Society Press /Hal & Patti Strain, 2003, pp. 83-8; Dodge, Orvil. Pioneer History of Coos and Curry Counties. Second ed., Bandon, Ore., Coos-Curry Pioneer and Historical Association, 1969, p. 263.

Episode
3356
Date
Author
Laurel Gerkman