Said to be guarded by the ghosts of some unfortunate victims murdered, it is said that a treasure of gold is buried on Neahkahnie Mountain by a Spanish Galleon coming perhaps from the Philippines to the Manzanita Beach.
Between the chill winds of the Pacific Ocean and the misty pines of the Oregon coast lies Manzanita Beach, a quiet stretch of sand near Nehalem Bay that draws travelers with its breathtaking beauty and repels the brave of heart with something far darker.
Read More: check out all ghost stories from USA
At the heart of this haunting with Neahkahnie Mountain looming overhead, is a tale soaked in saltwater, blood, and betrayal, tracing back to the 17th century, when a Spanish galleon, rumored to be heavy with gold and secrets, met its end off the rugged Oregon coast.
The Cursed Galleon and the Mountain of the Dead
Manzanita Beach in Nehalem Bay is near Neahkahnie Mountain, the supposed site of a wrecked 17th century Spanish galleon. At least two of Oregon’s historical shipwrecks occurred off the Manzanita coast: the Glenesslin in 1913, and the Santo Cristo de Burgos (disappeared 1693) which has generated rumors of treasure buried on Neahkahnie Mountain.
In those days, conquistadors were carrying boatloads of Aztec and Incan gold to Spain. Legend says the ship, possibly a Manila galleon returning from the East Indies, was pushed off course by a violent storm and wrecked near Neahkahnie Mountain, a looming and sacred landmark that towers just inland from Manzanita Beach. Spanish sailors, desperate to protect their cargo, are said to have dragged it ashore, hiding their treasure deep within the shadowed slopes of the mountain—or beneath the shifting sands of the beach itself.
But the most chilling part of the tale? To guard their hidden trove from local tribes, the sailors allegedly buried enslaved men alive with the gold—living sentinels forced into an eternal watch. The indigenous Tillamook people lived along the Oregon coast, including the Manzanita area for about 12,000 years. They suffered from smallpox and other illnesses brought by white settlers, and the few remaining Tillamook people were relocated to the Siletz and Grand Ronde reservations in the 1850s. They were extremely careful with graves.
According to the legend, these men were either African or Southeast Asian slaves brought aboard the ship, voiceless and forgotten by history, but not, it seems, by the land.
Today, odd formations dot the beach with stone outcrops that seem too intentional, too sculpted by unseen hands.These mysterious piles of rocks that appear overnight have been happening for years, and no one knows what it is and who did it. Some believe they mark where the treasure lies. Others believe they’re graves.
Reflections of the Forgotten
Manzanita means ‘little apple’ in Spanish. Modern Manzanita may look serene, but beneath the surface, things aren’t always what they seem.
Winston Laszlo, owner of a the Old Wheeler Hotel near the beach, has shared disturbing experiences: reflections in mirrors showing people who aren’t there, voices whispering in languages long lost to time, and apparitions that flit through the dark corners of the basement—one of which he swears wears rusted chains.
“It’s like the whole place hums,” Laszlo once said. “Not loud. Not even in your ears. But in your bones.”
Some guests have reported unshakable dreams of being buried alive, of choking on sand, or of watching as shadowy figures carry chests ashore under moonlight. Even more chilling are the reports of footprints in the morning—bare, human footprints that begin at the sea and vanish into the dunes, where no one walks.
The Restless Night Watchers
On foggy nights, residents say the beach seems to breathe, as if exhaling secrets from the sea. Figures are spotted moving slowly up and down the shoreline, heads bowed, chains trailing in the sand. Dogs refuse to approach certain parts of the beach, and children sometimes say they hear men crying beneath the waves.
Folklorists and paranormal investigators who’ve visited Manzanita Beach speak of a “psychic weight” that clings to the place. Mediums have claimed to sense trapped souls, spirits that never received burial rites, still reaching out in agony, bound not just to the treasure but to their unjust end.
While no definitive archaeological discovery has ever confirmed the shipwreck or the buried gold, the legend persists. It seems to date back to the mid-1800s by the first Hudson’s Bay Company. The mountain, the beach, and the odd, chilling experiences shared by locals seem to speak to something unresolved.
Newest Posts
- A Vrykolakas Vampire in Sunny MykonosA vampiric Vrykolakas from Greek folklore was said to terrorize the inhabitants on Mykonos island. To stop the haunting, they exhumed, burned and buried the remains of the body on an inhabited island. But did it work?
- Manananggal: The Night Splitter of Filipino FolkloreAs part of the shapeshifting Aswang demons of the Phillipines, the Manananggal was soaring the sky in her bat-like appearance on her hunt for human blood.
- The Atoning Vrykolakas Vampire in SantoriniAfter a man died before atoning for his crimes, he came back from the dead as a vampiric Vrykolakas when his wife failed to follow his final wishes. What followed was a month full of terror and haunting.
- The Vrykolakas Vampire in PatmosAfter terrorizing his village, the Vrykolakas Vampire from Patmos in Santorini were taken to an inhabited island and set on fire. The question is, did it really work?
- The Churel: The Vengeful Vampire Woman of South Asian FolkloreFueled by anger and vengeance, the vampiric Churel of South Asian folklore, is said to haunt down men to drain their blood as a vengeful spirit brought back from the dead.
- The Shoemaking Vrykolakas Vampire from Pyrgos CastleAfter a humble life as a shoemaker on Santorini in Greece, a man was said to have come back as a Vrykolakas, the vampire of Greek folklore. But for this Vrykolaka, it wasn’t to devour human life that kept him going.
- The Sea Draug: The Ghostly Fisherman of the Norwegian CoastThought to be haunting the dark seas of the north, the Sea Draug is a ghost of the drowned fishermen’s and other unfortunate souls who perished on the waters.
- The Haunted Jane Street Hotel: Echoes of the Lost SailorsAfter tragedy struck and the Titanic sank to the bottom of the Atlantic ocean, the surviving crew members were sent to The Jane Street Hotel in New York. According to stories, they are still haunting the rooms, where the trauma of their tragedy lingers.
- The Silent Music Haunting Hald PensjonatWho can be haunting the old Hald Pensjonat in Mandal? Playing soft piano music in the afterlife, and rumours about the footsteps of a Norwegian pirate seems to linger.
- The Mandurugo Vampire Bride of Philippine FolkloreHidden among human society, the vampiric Mandurugo creature is slowly draining her unassuming husbands of their blood and life to sustain her eternal youth and beauty.
- The Ghostly Guardian of MS NordstjernenThe MS Nordstjernen spent decades bringing passengers north across the arctic sea, and although the waters can be brought this far north, it always seemed to reach port unharmed. Some think that it could be Ernst, the ship’s ghosts.
- The Cabin in the Woods where the Forest Watches BackThe DNT Cabin Flisberget deep in the mystical forest of Finnskogen, bordering Norway and Sweden has a lot of strange tales coming from it. So much so, that it was voted the scariest cabin in the country.
References:
Truth Behind the Story — Pirate’s Treasure « Mindy Meyers-Halleck
Ghost Hunting on Oregon’s Coast – Legends of America
Neahkahnie Mountain – Atlas Obscura
The Spanish Gold of Neahkahnie Mountain
