Gorge Heritage Museum - Dock Grade/Bluff Stairs/Steamboat Dock




Dock Grade - Bluff Stairway - Steamboat Dock

These projects were a result of the feud between Theodore Suksdorf and A. H. Jewett in the 1890s.
Scroll down & slide your cursor over the thumbnails to view large photos and read the history below.


Dock Grade Road
Dock Grade Road under construction.
Dock Grade Road under construction.
Bluff Stairway
Bluff Stairway
1st White Salmon Steamboat Dock

1st White Salmon Steamboat Dock

1st White Salmon Steamboat Dock
In the early 1890's, White Salmon transported it's annual berry crops to the ferry landing on the Columbia River by via an access right of way through Bingen. During his feud with A. H. Jewett of White Salmon, Theodore Suksdorf closed the right of way cutting White Salmon off from the landing. White Salmon responded with a massive volunteer effort and built their own steamboat dock, the Dock Grade road in 1892, and the Bluff Stairway in 1897.

The stairway ran from the old Zeigler place at the foot of the bluff to a landing at the top of the bluff between the Pollard and Teunis Wyers homes. Most accounts have the total number of steps at 652. The steps were used about 15 years for both business and pleasure, as well as for Teresa Zeigler to walk to school.

The last of the stairway burned up in a bluff fire in the early 1950's. The Ziegler place burned in 1961.