Oregon's Greatest Wonder: Lake, Which Fills the Bowl of Extinct Volcano.
The Lincoln Evening News
June 14, 1904
Congress last year created Crater Lake National Park, in this state writes a
Grant Pass correspondent of the New York Herald. Within the 249 square miles
embraced by this park there are as many natural wonders of mountains, snow-clad
peaks, forests plains and streams as are to be found in any similar area of the
west. Though comparatively unknown, the new park possesses many natural
distinctions that may make it a rival of the Yellowstone.
The lake and its surrounding wonders, comprising the new park, are located on
the range of the Cascade mountains, northwest Klamath county, and eighty miles
from the railroad. A spur line is being built from the Southern Pacific into
that part of Oregon, and will ultimately reach the park.
The present method of reaching Crater Lake is by team. Traveling up the Rogue
from the railroad, one finds the valley narrowing and the farm houses lessening,
while the river grows swifter, the forests grow denser and the mountains more
rugged. At a distance of fifty miles from the valley the Rogue narrows to a
width of seventy-five feet and flows with a great rapidity through a deep gorge.
Here the river has an average fall of 200 feet to the mile.
Great columns or pyramids of cement rise from the bottom of the gorge. These
columns are forty to fifty feet through at the base and attain a height of 100
and more feet. These strange formations were composed of a harder substance than
that which surrounded them, and did not yield so readily to the action of the
water as it cuts its wav deeper and deeper into the gorge.
When within twelve miles of the lake evidences of volcanic action are seen
along the Rogue. These are a silent reminder of the time when Mt Mazama, then
the greatest mountain of the Cascades, threw forth volumes of fire, smoke and
lava. Then the day came when the great volcano had spent its energy and its
fires died out. The crater cooled and filled with water, forming a lake of
matchless beauty.
This body of water is elliptical, having a length of six miles and a width of
four. In the early days the Indians viewed Crater lake and its surroundings as
holy ground and approached it with reverence. To them it is one of the spots
made sacred by the presence of the Great Spirit. None but medicine men visited
it and when one of a tribe felt called upon to become a teacher and healer he
spent several weeks on the shore of the lake lasting with the dead and in prayer
to the Shahullah Tree.
The shores of Crater lake are precipitous and rugged towering at many points
to a height of 2,000 feet above the water. The water's edge can only be reached
by a few narrow, winding trails.
The expanse of the lake, is unbroken save by Wizard Island, a cone-shaped
mountain that rises 900 feet above the surface near the wester shore. Wizard
island was the last smoking chimney of the volcano.
The water of the lake is cold, clear and pure as the melted snowdrops of the
surrounding peaks can make it. There are no fish save some placed there in
recent years, and the scarcity of vegetation will make it hard for these to
survive. Over the deep blue expanse and its surrounding solitude reigns a
silence that borders on the sublime. It is but little wonder that the savage red
man believed the Great Spirit slept in the bosom of Crater lake.