Crater Lake National Park News
Crater Lake Institute - www.craterlakeinstitute.com
The jewel turns 100: a century
after it was dedicated, Crater Lake National Park inspires
wonder for millions
Mail Tribune
Medford, Oregon
May 19, 2002
By PAUL FATTIG

Russ Namitz and Jan Feola take in the awe-inspiring view of Crater Lake while enjoying a tailgate lunch at Discovery Point recently. The establishment of Crater Lake National Park on May 22, 1902, has allowed visitors to enjoy this view for a century.
CRATER LAKE - For a moment, college student Jan Feola couldn't
find the words to describe the view of the deepest lake in the
United States.
"It's just so very calming, so relaxing, so beautiful," said the
graduate student at Humboldt State University in Arcata, Calif.
Fellow HSU student Russ Namitz was equally impressed with his
first visit to the lake as the two science majors shared lunch
last week at Discovery Point overlooking the sparkling blue
water 1,000 feet below.
"This is something that makes you come to a stop, and just eye
the spectacle," he said, adding, "and you think about the people
who came here before ...''
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The people who came before created Crater Lake National Park a century ago on May 22, 1902, the day President Teddy Roosevelt signed the proclamation creating the nation's sixth national park. Yellowstone was the first.
A group of Southern Oregon prospectors are credited with
"discovering" the lake on June 12, 1853, from the overlook
appropriately dubbed Discovery Point.
"I knew when I gazed upon Crater Lake that even though the West
was filled with undiscovered wonders, Crater Lake would hold its
own," said John Wesley Hillman, the gold miner who financed the
trip when he was 21, in an interview late in his life.
It has held its own. The two college students represent half a
million people who now visit the park each year. Most wait until
after much of the snow melts from the rim, which rises to some
7,100 feet above sea level.
The first automobile stage service to the lake was created in
1910 when one could ride the "Locomobile" from the Nash Hotel in
Medford to the lake for the hefty fee of $25, according to an
article in the May issue of Southern Oregon Heritage Today
magazine.
The site traditionally has been a sacred one for American
Indians whose oral traditions tell of the eruption of Mount
Mazama, a mountain that scientists estimate stood 12,000 feet
high.
The cataclysm 7,700 years ago was nearly 50 times that of Mount
St. Helens when it erupted on May 18, 1980, according to Charlie
Bacon, a volcanologist at the U.S. Geological Survey office in
Menlo Park, Calif. Ash deposits from the explosion have been
found as far away as Greenland, Bacon said.
"The highest initial eruption was on the order of 50 kilometers
high," Bacon said. "It probably made some pretty cool sunsets."
It also created one of the most spectacular volcanic lakes on
the planet, observed Mac Brock, a biologist who serves as the
park's natural resources officer.
"This is truly a special place," he said. "There is very little
organic material in the lake, so the water is very clear. One of
the (science) reports we got last year was that the water here
is the purest in the world. They are redefining properties of
clear water using Crater Lake as the base."
Five scientists were gathering water quality samples in the lake
this past week as part of a long-term program to monitor lake
chemistry and nutrient levels. Scientists consider it a closed
ecological system since no water runs in or out.
Incidentally, that incredible color of the water comes from the
fact that blue is the last color to be absorbed by deep water,
scientists explain. The lake is 1,943 feet deep.
It was originally known by several names, including Deep Blue
Lake, a reflection of the purity of the water.
The blue water, sheer rock walls of the caldera and majestic
views are what prompted early-day Europeans to push for the
creation of the park, noted park historian Steve Mark, whose
grandfather first visited the park nearly 90 years ago.
"But people were already treating it like a park before one was
created," Mark said.
By 1893, the lake and its environs had received partial
protection when it became part of what was called the Cascade
Range Forest Reserve created under the watch of President Grover
Cleveland.
But that wasn't enough for William Gladstone Steel. As a
youngster in Kansas, he learned of the lake while reading a
newspaper used to wrap his school lunch. After moving to
Portland as a young man, he joined the Army expedition to the
lake in 1885 and became convinced that only national park status
would protect it for future generations.
For 17 years he lobbied for the creation of the park, gathering
support from powerful individuals like Gifford Pinchot, the
"father" of the Forest Service.
Steel constantly had warned that land speculators would move in
if the site was not made into a national park, Mark said.
"There was always that threat when you had something like this
sitting out here in the public domain," he acknowledged.
The man who signed the proclamation creating the park probably
never visited the site, although an old black-and-white
photograph of a fellow looking remarkably like Teddy Roosevelt
sitting on the rim of the lake does exist, Mark said.
"There is no evidence that he was ever here," he said. "But we
do know that he was in Ashland on a campaign swing in 1903. He
went up to Salem from there."
But the park has drawn plenty of celebrities, including "Call of
the Wild" author Jack London. "Incomparable in beauty" is how he
described the lake following his 1911 visit. Pioneering aviator
Charles Lindbergh flew over the lake in 1927.
Many old photographs taken of the lake by early-day photographer
Peter Britt of Jacksonville and others will be on display at the
park this summer.
The Sinnott Memorial overlook, built 70 years ago, is reopening
this year after $500,000 worth of restoration and new exhibits
on geology and history.
One of the historic items to be displayed will be the device
used to first measure the depth of the lake in 1886.
It includes a big spool of piano wire, a hand crank and a lead
pipe weight.
"It looks like they took pieces from other things to make this,"
said park curator Mary Benterou. "You can see this leather strap
here. It was obviously made specifically for here."
Jury-rigged or not, the machine was able to determine it was the
deepest lake in the nation at nearly 2,000 feet. It is the
seventh deepest lake on the planet.
"There is no question this is one of the more interesting
caldera lakes in the world," Mark said.
The park will celebrate its centennial with a small ceremony
Wednesday and a proclamation by Gov. John Kitzhaber. More
elaborate events are planned in August, when better weather can
be expected.
Reach reporter Paul Fattig at 776-4496 or e-mail him at
pfattig@mailtribune.com
On the Web: Crater Lake National Park official site: http://www.nps.gov/crla/