Hotels and Lodges
- Arch Cape Hotel, Oregon Coast - c. 1907As low as $5.00Arch Cape was already a tourist destination in 1907. This view shows one of its finer hotels, with the owners ready to serve you. Learn More
- Azalea Hotel, on the Pacific Highway - circa 1928As low as $5.00The Azalea Hotel was built in 1912, and was first known as the Canyon Pass Hotel. The building still exists, and now houses the Azalea Mountain Store. Learn More
- Cabins at Cloud Cap Inn, Mt. Hood - c. 1900As low as $5.00Cloud Cap Inn was opened on the north side of Mt. Hood in 1889, a project of William S. Ladd and C.E.S. Wood. These cabins were built at the front of the main Inn. Learn More
- Car Camping at the Newly Completed Crater Lake Lodge - c. 1916As low as $5.00Car camping was popular by 1916, and setups often involved pitching a tent over the car itself, as can be seen by two sets of campers in the foreground. Learn More
- Chanticleer Inn, Columbia River Highway - c. 1916As low as $5.00The Chanticleer Inn, at the west end of the Columbia River Highway, was built in 1912 and predated the highway. Like many early wooden inns, it burned down, in 1930. Learn More
- Clay Moore Saloon, in Blanco Hotel, Marshfield - c. 1900As low as $5.00Patrons gather outside the Clay Moore Saloon, in the Norman Building, at Front and Commercial in Marshfield (now known as Coos Bay). Moore operated several Marshfield saloons - this one is in the old Blanco Hotel. Learn More
- Cloud Cap Inn and Mt. Hood - c. 1895As low as $5.00Opened in 1889, Cloud Cap Inn was built on the north side of Mt. Hood at the 6,000 foot level - about the same level as today's Timberline Lodge. Learn More
- Cloud Cap Inn and Mt. Hood - c. 1935As low as $5.00Mount Hood is definitely the focus of this image by Ralph Eddy, though some details of Cloud Cap Inn can be clearly seen in the lower left. Learn More
- Cloud Cap Inn, Mt. Hood - c. 1900As low as $5.00A group of visitors demonstrate appropriate mountain attire while visiting Cloud Cap Inn on the northeast flank of Mount Hood. Learn More
- Crater Lake Lodge, After Expansion - 1926As low as $5.00Originally opened in 1915, Crater Lake Lodge was significantly expanded from 1922 through 1924, doubling the number of guest rooms and adding private bathrooms to the lodge's new wing. Learn More
- Crater Lake Lodge, Before Expansion - 1921As low as $5.00This unusually early photo of Crater Lake Lodge was taken in 1921. We can date it from the dealer plates on the car. Learn More
- Deep Snow Cuts at Paradise Inn, Rainier National Park - c. 1920As low as $5.00The original for this image comes from a hand-tinted glass slide, called a magic lantern slide, distributed by the Pacific Stereopticon Company. Learn More
- E. M. Miller Hotel Coach at Hotel Seattle - circa 1905As low as $5.00Built in 1890 (after the devastating 1889 fire), the Seattle Hotel was located at the edge of Pioneer Place at Jackson and Railroad (now Alaskan Way). Learn More
- Earliest Known Photo of Sandy, Oregon - c. 1879As low as $5.00We're looking east towards Mt. Hood on what is now Pioneer Boulevard in Sandy, Oregon. The Barlow road trails off to the right in the background. Learn More
- FDR Rides Past Mount Hood on Way to Timberline Lodge Dedication - 1937As low as $5.00The caption of this news photo reads, "Bundled up against the chill autumn air, President Roosevelt, accompanied by Mrs. Roosevelt and Gov. Charles Martin of Oregon drives past the fir clad slopes of Mt. Hood, towering behind them." Learn More
- First Truck of the Season Arrives at Government Camp - 1919As low as $5.00This one-ton Chevrolet truck with a full load made it to Government Camp on April 1, 1919, enabled by an 11-man crew, who spent 10 days digging through snow to travel the last nine miles. Learn More
- Golden Rule Grocery, Auto Camp and Garage, Cottage Grove - c. 1925As low as $5.00We have a number of photos taken by Frank Patterson, but only a few are recreated from their original glass negatives. While cellulose negatives were widely used in 1925, some traditionalist professional photographers preferred the qualities only available by using glass. Learn More
- Government Camp Hotel, Mt. Hood - c. 1925As low as $5.00Built in 1910 as an expansion to the original 1899 Mountain View House seen to its right, the Government Camp Hotel was for years the main source of lodging for visitors to Mount Hood. Learn More
- Guests Arriving at Paradise Inn, Mt. Rainier - 1923As low as $5.00Almost all these guests are arriving in "automobile stages", the name usually given to these early tourist-carrying vehicles. They came from Seattle, Tacoma and Yakima, and from the nearby railroad station in Ashford. Learn More
- Harriman Lodge at Pelican Bay, Upper Klamath Lake - c. 1908As low as $5.00Initially named the Pelican Bay Lodge, built in 1889, it was purchased in 1906 by Edward Harriman and renamed. It burned in 1942 and was rebuilt in 1953. Learn More
- Hotel Bill, Cannon Beach - c. 1907As low as $5.00Yes, the Hotel Bill was named after someone named Bill, but it was his last name - not his first name. Learn More
- Hotel Chewaucan, Paisley, Oregon - circa 1915As low as $5.00Built in 1910, the Hotel Chewaucan was called by locals "the finest hotel within 45 miles". They were right - it was the only hotel within 45 miles. Learn More
- Lithia Springs Hotel, in Ashland - c. 1926As low as $5.00When the luxurious nine-story Lithia Springs Hotel opened on July 1, 1925, it was the tallest building between Portland and San Francisco. Learn More
- Lobby of Paradise Inn, Mount Rainier - circa 1925As low as $5.00This is the 50 by 100 foot great hall at Paradise Inn, which opened in 1917. With large stone fireplaces at each end, it is certainly an impressive space. Learn More
- Longmire Springs & the First Hotel at Mt. Rainier - c. 1895As low as $5.00In 1883 James Longmire built a trail from Succotash Valley 13 miles to the hot springs in the area that now bears his name. John Muir described staying here on his way to Mount Rainier in 1888. Learn More
- Looking East Down Main Street, Medford - 1888As low as $5.00We're looking down 7th Street (now called Main Street) across the decorative railing for the railroad depot, built in 1884, in the middle of the street. (It made sense at the time.) The depot was used until it was replaced in 1900. Learn More
- Looking Over Timberline Lodge Towards Mt. Jefferson - c. 1940As low as $5.00From behind Timberline Lodge, completed a couple years before this photo, we can see clearly to Mt. Jefferson, about fifty miles to the south. Learn More
- Mount Baker Lodge - c 1928As low as $5.00One of the great lodges of the Pacific Northwest, Mount Baker Lodge lasted for only about four years. Learn More
- Multnomah Hotel, Portland - c. 1918As low as $5.00When the Multnomah Hotel first opened in 1912, it was the Northwest's largest and most modern hotel. It remained Portland's largest hotel until 1961. Learn More
- Oregon Caves Resort, Old Chalet - c. 1925As low as $5.00This view shows the "Old Chalet" at the Oregon Caves, built in the mid 1920s by a group of Grants Pass businessmen, under a permit issued by the U. S. Forest Service. Learn More
- Packing in to Timberline Lodge, Closed for WWII - c. 1942As low as $5.00This photo was taken in the winter of 1942-43 when Timberline Lodge was closed due to wartime conditions. Learn More
- Paradise Inn at Mt. Rainier, with Paradise River Below - c. 1928As low as $5.00This vertical format photo of the valley, inn and mountain starts with the Paradise River in the valley below. Learn More
- Prospect Hotel, on Crater Lake Highway - c. 1920As low as $5.00Located half-way on a two-day carriage trip from Medford to Crater Lake, the Prospect Hotel was built in the late 1800s as the Boothby House. Learn More
- Revenue Hotel, Sandy, Oregon - Circa 1879As low as $5.00John H. Revenue and his father Francis built this hotel in 1874. It was the first hotel in Sandy, Oregon, which had received its first post office, and its name, the previous year. Learn More
- Splashing Surf on Nye Beach Natatorium - circa 1915As low as $5.00Natatoriums were indoor heated sea-water swimming pools, built in a number of locations along the Oregon Coast in the early 1900s. Learn More
- Telephone Party at Government Camp Hotel - c. 1925As low as $5.00This 1920s view shows a "Telephone Party", mostly young telephone company employees either before or after an ascent of Mt. Hood. The exact dates of their excursion are given - July 19th and 20th, but the last digit of the year is now illegible. Learn More
- The Lodge at Crater Lake - circa 1923As low as $5.00The original for this panoramic view is a hand-tinted print included in "Crater Lake National Park, Oregon", published by Swem's Studio in Medford. Learn More
- Timberline Lodge When it First Opened - 1938As low as $5.00While Timberline Lodge was dedicated by FDR in the fall of 1937, it was not officially open to the public till February 4th, 1938. This classic view was created by Ralph Eddy on February 16th. Learn More
- Timberline Lodge, Nearing Completion - 1937As low as $5.00This photo taken by Ralph Eddy on August 29, 1937 shows Timberline Lodge almost completed. Learn More
- Timberline Road, Mt. Hood - 1938As low as $5.00Traveling through deep snow up the road to Timberline Lodge, in the year it opened to the public - 1938. Learn More
- View of Crater Lake from the Lodge - c. 1922As low as $5.00This image is from a hand-tinted albertype of a Fred Kiser photo included in the 1922 booklet, "Crater Lake National Park, Hand-colored". Learn More
- Winter Garments of Mt. Hood at Government Camp - 1932As low as $5.00This is the Battle Axe Inn, built in 1925, and for years the center of winter activity on the south side of Mt. Hood. Learn More