VIII. Roads of Crater Lake
National Park
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B. Entrance Road and Bridges
1. Early Conditions Call for Improvements
The road stretching from the park entrance
up the canyon above Annie Spring to the rim was originally only a crude
path cut by wagon wheels. Even after the park's establishment, when
Congress appropriated money to improve the road to the "crater," little
was done besides cutting trees and clearing away fallen timber. The
final ascent to the rim had a maximum grade of 33%, forcing most
visitors to leave their conveyances at the foot of the hill about a mile
from their goal and proceed the rest of the way on foot.
Although during W.F. Arant's
superintendency from 1902 to 1913 visitors would be few and far between,
as soon as he entered on the job Arant wrote the secretary of the
interior suggesting improvement of the only road to the rim, which was
up a "very steep rocky and rough mountain."
[6] This entrance road began
three miles from the summit and made a steep climb of 1,000 feet or more
up the slope.
By May 1903 Superintendent Arant hoped to
have a new road leading to the lake constructed by August l. It was to
be a vast improvement over the old by virtue of its being shorter with
lower bumps and fewer steep grades.
[7] By July 31 needed improvements
in the old road had been made and two miles of new construction had been
accomplished. Work had also begun on a bridge over Annie Creek.
Unfortunately, skimpy appropriations--a problem continually hampering
new park areas--had precluded further improvements and completion of the
new road.
[8] In August, however, the bridge over Annie Creek was
finished, measuring 103 feet long and 30 feet high. Still under
construction was a 90-foot-long bridge over "Bridge Creek."
[9] (In
order to preserve the bridges he built in the park, Arant removed their
flooring every winter to prevent the framework from being broken by
heavy snowfalls).

Illustration 14. Crater Lake highway, ca. 1900.
Courtesy Southern Oregon Historical Society.
In December 1903, in his annual report to
the secretary of the interior, Superintendent Arant made several
recommendations for improvements that should be made in the park during
fiscal year 1904. Those affecting roads and bridges included:
1) improving the condition of the eight
miles of road from the south end of the park to Annie Creek;
2) constructing a bridge over Whitehorse
Creek and improving the road there;
3) rerouting the entrance road from a
point about 3-1/2 miles west of the summit to Annie Creek bridge,
thereby eliminating a high hill; and,
4) completing the road from Annie Creek
bridge to the rim of the "crater," of which only two miles had been
constructed.
[10]