The Winter Springs Ranch is offered for sale for $11,895,000

  • 775+ acres

  • 5 tax lots total

  • 4 homes

  • 3 more potential home sites

  • 2 forest lots

  • Working Tree Farm

  • Year-round water with springs, creeks and streams.

A historic ranch near Gold Beach on the Southern Oregon Coast is offered for sale for only the second time in 155 years. 

The property spans over 775 acres including 5 contiguous tax lots and 4 distinctive dwellings with two year-round flowing creeks and numerous springs originating on the property.

Winter Springs Ranch, perched on the edge of Oregon’s Wild and Scenic Rogue River, is in a truly remarkable location. Just 10 miles from Gold Beach and the Pacific Ocean, it is in the optimal location for easy access to the Southern Oregon Coast and all the treasures that it offers.

Close to five designated wilderness areas, this sparsely populated region offers a lifestyle that is vanishing elsewhere in the Pacific Northwest.  Experience nearby uncrowded beaches, quiet country roads, pristine wide-open spaces, plentiful wildlife, vast forests, and rugged mountains.

Claim this legacy property as a private lasting compound for your family’s retreat. Plant a vineyard on the property’s southern facing slopes. Build a destination resort, retreat center or eco-friendly lodge. Infuse new energy in the working tree farm. Harness the springs to market your spring water. Continue as the next steward of this unique property.

Come experience Winter Springs Ranch. A place unlike any other - where water is abundant, the air is clear, and the opportunities are endless.

A brief history of the Ranch…

Picture of the historic ranch house and old barn. Early 1900s.

Winter Springs Ranch was purchased by the current owner in 1989 from the Miller Family who homesteaded the Ranch. This property was managed by the Miller Family for subsistence farming: livestock and timber production.

Abe Reed Miller was born in Dayton, Ohio in 1825. At just 25 years old, he took the challenging and adventurous journey west to Oregon in 1850. He married Mary Jane Coy in 1852.

Abe, Mary Jane, and their family homesteaded the Ranch in Curry County in 1869, only a decade after Oregon became a state.

This is only the second time in 155 years this property has been for sale.