Battle Rock, Oregon coast
This is an unused color postcard featuring a photograph of Battle Rock also called Battle Rock Arch found on the Oregon coast inside the city limits of Port Orford. It is “Another André Original” printed or published by Anderson’s Scenic Postcards of Portland, Oregon. At the bottom of the center line on the reverse is “DBN-1 A, Mike Roberts.” In the designated area for a stamp is also written B35. The edges of the card are scalloped or deckled which help date it to around 1960 or earlier. The blurb at the bottom left side on the reverse: “This unusual rock formation is at Port Orford, Oregon, the most westerly town in the continental United States.” The blurb is not entirely correct and should have said “one of the most westerly.” Battle Rock is in the Otter Point Foundation which is in the boundaries of the Cape Blanco State Park. It is the cape that extends farther west than any point of land in the contiguous United States, except some places on the Olympic Peninsula in Washington.
The rock is mainly basalt. At low tides it is connected to the mainland but at high tide it is not. It is about 300 ft or 91 m long and approximately 60 ft or 18 m high. It has some trees and other vegetation growing on it. Geologists have estimated most of the land in the Otter Point Formation can be dated back to the Jurassic period.
How did Battle Rock get its name? In 1851, nine men were left at Port Orford by captain William Tichenor as part of the western expansion to the Pacific Coast. That same year a skirmish broke out between the white settlers and the indigenous Quatomah Tutunis, Athapaskan people, who lived in the area. The settlers eventually fled but later returned in greater numbers. The leader of the nine men left by Tichenor, J.M. Kirkpatrick, published an account of the skirmish which inspired the name of the rock. His account has become a local legend and part of Port Orford’s community celebrations and folklore. Several native chiefs and a member of the nine-men expedition, who later died, are buried on Battle Rock.
Thanks to Bob for sharing the card.
For additional information, see:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_Rock








