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LANDMARK RESTAURANTS – Columbia River History
Salty’s on the Columbia River has been a landmark restaurant
and a locals’ favorite waterfront seafood restaurant and café-bar
from the time of its opening in October of 1987. It opened as the second
Salty’s seafood-focused restaurant in Portland. The first Salty’s
restaurant, Salty Pickerel’s and Angus McHereford’s, was
located on the Willamette River near the east end of the Sellwood Bridge.
It opened in February of 1978 and closed in November of 1991.
The building housing the landmark Salty’s Restaurant on the Columbia
River originally opened as Bart’s Wharf in 1961. It, too, was known
as a Portland landmark restaurant. Salty’s owners purchased the
building and land from the family of its founder, Bart Woodyard. Bart’s
Wharf had been operating for nearly three decades by Bart’s son,
Perry, when it closed in 1986. Salty’s did extensive remodeling
before reopening in 1987. A bar was added upstairs and wraparound outdoor
decks with fabulous riverfront views were added upstairs and downstairs.
The area is a boaters’ paradise with several marinas adjacent to
Salty’s providing easy access to the Mighty Columbia River.