
Larry Smith (left) and his brother Lloyd (right) as rangers at
Crater Lake National Park
Submitted for inclusion in the Crater Lake Symposium Proceedings
July, 1993
By: Larry B. Smith
As with most people who visit Crater Lake
National Park, my twin brother, Lloyd, and I became fascinated with a large
number of unusual places names that have been sprinkled around a Park. Who would
not be curious about such geographical names as: Goodbye, Annie, Wizard,
Phantom, Vidae, Watchman, Cleetwood, Skell, Llao, Danger Bay, and of course the
most enduring of all Park names "The Old Man of the Lake".
It was during our early Ranger years at
Crater Lake ( Lloyd, 1959 - 1981), Larry, (1961 - 1980), that we wondered what
event or events created the circumstances for such unusual names and who were
these people who had the honor of being the first ones, in the right place of
the right time, to find such odd names to stick onto the slippery rock slopes of
Crater Lake?
During my third season at Crater Lake
(1964), while working the Ranger Dispatch Desk at Headquarters, I happened upon
the story behind the naming of "Goodbye". I was soon engrossed in the story of
the interior departments firing of Superintendent Arant and his refusal to
vacate his Annie Springs office. Since the superintendent would not leave on his
own, U.S. Marshals were called in to forcibly remove him from his government
office and the Arant family from their nearby living quarters. During this
difficult time, Arant and his brother had been building a bridge over an unnamed
Creek, about a mile north of his headquarters camp. As U.S. Marshals Leslie
Scott bid "goodbye" to Arant family, he named a bridge and a creek beneath a
bridge "Goodbye" because it was the last piece of work completed at Crater Lake
by "retiring" Superintendent.
I was fascinated by this trivial fact of
history and felt the story should be shared. So I typed up a short summary on an
index card and tacked it to the employee bulletin board at the head of the
stairs in the Ad Building. Several more stores followed. Thus started my
lifelong hobby of collecting Crater Lake stories.
It was a policy in the ranger division,
during these years, to keep a daily and weekly log of important Park events and
happenings. Red Cone District Ranger, Larry Hakel took this responsibility very
seriously. One day Hakel mentioned to my brother that these logs should become a
part of the Park's permanent record and that perhaps the monthly summary logs
could be expanded to include interesting events from the past years. Acting on
this suggestion, Lloyd, and the District Ranger busied themselves collecting
these past Park stories as they happened upon them in the course of their
duties.
I remember walking into the Ranger Office
during the summer of 1968 several weeks after Lloyd had told me about Hakel's
desire to start in important event log of Crater Lake. I noticed that Hakel had
assembled two typewritten pages of important park events. The second page was
still in the typewriter. I took the two pages upstairs and made Xeroxed copies.
Since I was working the Park's evening
Dispatch Desk that summer, I had access to a typewriter and Park records. I
began filling in interesting events between the dates that Larry Hakel had
started. Lloyd was working those summers as Patrol Ranger and since his patrol
duties took him over the whole Park, he had many opportunities to meet "Old
Timers" who loved to share old Park stories.
For the rest of the summer Lloyd fed me a
constant stream of scrawled, handwritten notes that I typed into quickly
expanding log. Our first, primitive edition came off the Headquarters Xerox
machine and late August.
The book quickly became a favorite
reference source for the Park staff. Lloyd and I were hooked! During the next 15
years that we worked seasonally at Crater Lake, we put out nine, updated an
expanded editions. We witnessed many of the events that appear in our
chronology. A constant stream of people flowed through the Park eager to share a
good story about their favorite happenings at Crater Lake with a couple of
interested Rangers.
We have received a bit of criticism from
some historians who feel the collection loses research value because few of the
items are annotated. About a third of the entire collection, up to 1932, was
gleaned from newspaper accounts found in the Steel Scrapbooks. About third the
collection comes from various Park records, memos and reports. The remaining
third of the entries are either oral stories relayed to the authors or incidents
personally experienced by the Smith Brothers during their four decade
association with Crater Lake National Park. Also, as a practical matter, had all
2,000 entries been annotated, the reference list would have nearly equal the
chronology entries.
In 1977, reporter Lee Juillerat wrote a
story about our collection of Crater Lake Stories for the Klamath Falls, The
Herald and News. In this article, apparently for lack of better name, Lee
called our booklet "The Smith Brothers' Chronological History of Crater Lake
National Park". We have since adopted that name.
We have now completed the collection's
fourteenth revision. The chronological history is approaching 150 pages, with
nearly 2000 entries. Computers allow us to get away from the old method of "cut
and paste" whenever we add new story. We have strived to double check our
entries for accuracy, but we have found that oral remembrances do cause what
seem to be contradictions and inconsistencies. People remember past events in
different ways, but because we have accepted oral history and traditions into
our collection, some perceived inaccuracies are acceptable if you accept this
premise.
Records of particular events may or may not
have been superseded subsequent years. Old and out-of-date records have been
left in because they were a significant happening of that particular year. A
limited attempt has been made to cross reference older records with newer
records. ( such as: please refer to...)
If you know any good Crater Lake stories,
please contact us because this history will never be complete. That seems to be
the nature this type of collection. Let a month or to go by and more stories
pop-up and we will again feel the urged to start working on revision number
fifteen.

Lloyd Smith (left) and his brother Larry (right),
Jacksonville, OR, 2005