Photo Ben Maxwell, Salem Public Libr. Hist. Photo Collec., 5873
Detroit, 1912.
Photo Ben Maxwell, Salem Public Libr. Hist. Photo Collec., 5861
Detroit, 1912.
Photo Ben Maxwell, Salem Public Libr. Hist. Photo Collec., 5860
Detroit, 1912.
Photo Ben Maxwell, Salem Public Libr. Hist. Photo Collec., 5859
Detroit, May 1946.
Photo Ben Maxwell, Salem Public Libr. Hist. Photo Collec., 5863
Salmon hatchery near Detroit Dam, 1955
Oreg. State Archives, Oreg. Water Resources Dept., OWR0076
Remains of original Detroit townsite, about Sept. 1953.
Photo Ben Maxwell, Salem Public Libr. Hist. Photo Collec.
Commencement of Detroit Dam construction, Aug. 1950.
Salem Public Libr. Hist. Photo Collec., 7279
Cedars Restaurant, Detroit, 1960.
Photo Ben Maxwell, Salem Public Libr. Hist. Photo Collec., 5874
Detroit Supermarket, Dec. 1956.
Photo Ben Maxwell, Salem Public Libr. Hist. Photo Collec., 5864
Cook's Market and Detroit Motel, Aug. 1962.
Photo Ben Maxwell, Salem Public Libr. Hist. Photo Collec., 5872
Detroit Dam, July 1990.
Photo Bob Heims, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
Detroit, city hall, Aug 26 1962 City Hall at Detroit, Aug. 1962. Photo Ben Maxwell, Salem Public Libr. Hist. Photo Collec., 5873
Detroit, 1912 Detroit, 1912. Photo Ben Maxwell, Salem Public Libr. Hist. Photo Collec., 5861
Detroit, rail scene, 1912, 1 Detroit, 1912. Photo Ben Maxwell, Salem Public Libr. Hist. Photo Collec., 5860
Detroit, rail scene, 1912, 2 Detroit, 1912. Photo Ben Maxwell, Salem Public Libr. Hist. Photo Collec., 5859
Detroit, street scene in, May 3 1946 Detroit, May 1946. Photo Ben Maxwell, Salem Public Libr. Hist. Photo Collec., 5863
Detroit, salmon hatchery near, aerial of, 1951 Salmon hatchery near Detroit Dam, 1955 Oreg. State Archives, Oreg. Water Resources Dept., OWR0076
Detroit, town remains, Sep 1953 Remains of original Detroit townsite, about Sept. 1953. Photo Ben Maxwell, Salem Public Libr. Hist. Photo Collec.
Detroit Dam, construction of, concrete bucket, Aug 5 1950 Commencement of Detroit Dam construction, Aug. 1950. Salem Public Libr. Hist. Photo Collec., 7279
Detroit, Cedars Restaurant in, Feb 1 1960 Cedars Restaurant, Detroit, 1960. Photo Ben Maxwell, Salem Public Libr. Hist. Photo Collec., 5874
Detroit, supermarket in, Dec 14 1956 Detroit Supermarket, Dec. 1956. Photo Ben Maxwell, Salem Public Libr. Hist. Photo Collec., 5864
Detroit, street scene, Aug 26 1962 Cook\'s Market and Detroit Motel, Aug. 1962. Photo Ben Maxwell, Salem Public Libr. Hist. Photo Collec., 5872
Detroit Dam, USACE, 1990 Detroit Dam, July 1990. Photo Bob Heims, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
Fifty-one miles east of Salem on Oregon State Highway 22, Detroit sits alongside Detroit Lake, one mile north of the town’s original location on the North Santiam River. Detroit had its beginnings in 1889 as a work camp for the Oregon Pacific Railroad, but the 1890 bankruptcy of the company halted construction of the line four miles east of the town. Still, Detroit survived, and a post office was established in 1891.
In 1895, Montana timber baron A.B. Hammond bought the Oregon Pacific Railroad, changed its name to the Oregon Central and Eastern Railroad, and established lumber camps in the area, shipping logs to nearby Mill City. The railroad also brought sportsmen to the area, seeking fish and game in the Cascade Mountains. Other visitors passed through on their way to Breitenbush Hot Springs Resort, which Merle Bruckman opened ten miles east of town in 1927.
Hammond’s death in 1934 and the Great Depression brought stagnation to Detroit until 1946, when the Army Corps of Engineers began buying land for Detroit Dam, six miles downstream. The reservoir would inundate Detroit, and residents established a new town, incorporated in 1952, on a former Hammond lumber camp next to the reservoir and Highway 22.
The dam and the resulting reservoir, Detroit Lake, transformed the local economy. Restaurants and stores served boaters, campers, and other tourists staying in town or at nearby Mongold and Detroit Lake state parks. The decline of the area’s timber industry in the 1990s led to increasing dependency on tourism.
A drought in 2001 left the reservoir dry and kept tourists away, demonstrating the vulnerability of the town’s economy, as well as the resilience of its residents. In 2008, Detroit had a population of 271 people.