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May
William Gladstone Steel, as a school boy in Kansas, reads a
newspaper article telling of the discovery of Crater Lake and
determines to visit the Lake. The newspaper had been wrapped
around his lunch. Will’s father, William, was from Scotland and
was a first cousin of the late Prime Minister Gladstone. After
moving to Ohio, William Steel, Sr. became active as a prominent
abolitionist by moving slaves through the Underground Railroad.(see 1911)
“I was a farmer’s boy in southern Kansas and attended school 5
miles distant. My lunch was carried in a newspaper, the
advantage of which was that I had no basket or bucket to carry
home. One warm day in May or June, I sat in the schoolroom
eating the contents of that paper. When through I scanned the
columns, reading the short articles, among which was one
descriptive of a sunken lake that had been discovered in
Oregon. It was said to be 5,000 feet below the surface of the
surrounding country, with vertical walls so that no human body
could reach the water. In the center of it was an island 1,5000
feet high, with an extinct crater in the top. In all of my life
I never read an article that took the intense hold on me that
that one did and I then and there determined to go to Oregon and
to visit that lake and to go down to the water.” Will G. Steel,
from a speech given in 1917 at the National Parks Conference in
Washington, D.C.