The SOHS Library is OPEN to the public at 106 N. Central Avenue in Medford, with FREE access to the SOHS Archives, from 12:00 - 4:00 pm, Tuesday through Saturday. Appointments are not necessary. Please contact library@sohs.org, or call 541-622-2025 ex 200 to ask questions or request research.

 

Single Redwood Tree Yields Lumber for 36-room Motel

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on

Tom Wyllie’s idea was to build an entire motel from a single tree. Wyllie fell a curly-grained redwood in 1952 near the Klamath River. Eighteen feet in diameter at the base, the tree yielded 57,000 board feet of lumber. The huge tree was cut into five logs so big they had to be quartered to haul them to mills, yielding enough lumber, with plenty left over for future additions, to build the 36-room Curly Redwood Lodge in Crescent City, Calif. One l ucky fisherman, Roy Magnusun, found refuge at the solidly built motel in 1964 when a tsunami destroyed a large portion of Crescent City. Magnusun drove full speed toward the south harbor to save his commercial fishing boat. When he saw a huge wave roaring toward him, he turned his car around and raced across the highway to the Curly Redwood Lodge, jumped out and ran up the outside stairway to the second floor. The water swirled around and slammed debris into the motel before receding as quickly as it had come, but no one was injured. The motel, built from a single tree, is still in business in Crescent City. Sources: Blackburn, Chuck. "Squawk then Silence." Del Norte Triplicate, 20 Apr. 2011. Web. 3 Oct. 2014. ; Hawk, Diane. Touring the Old Redwood Highway: Del Norte County. Piercy, Calif.: Hawk Mountaintop Publishing, 2006. 60. Print.

Episode
2539
Date
Author
Alice Mullaly