CHAPTER ELEVEN: Ranger Activities In Crater Lake National Park: 1916-Present

According to the manual the Crater Lake ranger force consisted of twenty persons. These included:

 1 Chief Park Ranger
2 Permanent Park Rangers
13 Seasonal Rangers
3 Fire Guards
1 Fire Lookout

The living arrangements of the rangers, as outlined in the manual, provide an interesting commentary on what it was like to reside in the park. Unmarried rangers assigned to headquarters duty or who worked from headquarters were housed in the Ranger Dormitory. Married rangers assigned to duty at headquarters were furnished “insofar as possible, tent accommodations.” Married rangers assigned to outlying stations occupied the furnished quarters, while single rangers assigned to such stations were provided with tent quarters. The park furnished a bed, mattress, chest of drawers, and bath facilities for $5.00 per month. Meals were to be obtained at the government dining room “at approved rates, usually at a cost of about $1.20 a day.”

The majority of the manual was devoted to a detailed explanation of the duties and responsibilities of rangers. These duties were outlined under the following categories:

Checking Station
Forest Protection
Public Contacts
Public Campgrounds
Headquarters Assignment
Traffic and Highway
Police Protection
Winter Activities
Wildlife Activities
General and Special Patrols [16]

Increasing visitation, more extensive diversified use, and year-round operation of the park created added demands on the ranger force at Crater Lake. In January 1940 Chief Ranger Crouch prepared a report on “Ranger Protection Requirements” for the park and made recommendations for increasing the efficiency of the ranger force.

The first issue to be addressed in the report was that of “protection facilities.” At the time the only ranger station in the park was located at park headquarters. In addition there were three “entrance” or “checking” stations–Annie Spring (11 miles from south boundary and 7 miles from west boundary); North (8 miles from north boundary); and Lost Creek (3-1/2 miles from east boundary). Operations at these stations included fee collection, visitor registration, gun sealing, checking in and out of deer killed outside of the park, regulations with respect to dogs and cats, truck weights and sizes and their control, and information services.