Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 19, 1953
Crater Lake Discovery Centennial
By H. John Runkel, Ranger Naturalist
Gold! Gold! That cry rang across the
United States in the late 1840's, and Mr. Wesley Hillman heard the call
and responded. He set out for California from New Orleans in 1840 - -
taking his young son, John, along (see inside Front cover). The party
followed the Old Immigrant Trail and crossed the Rockies via the South
Pass. Young John later recalled seeing thousands of buffalo and
remembered the stampedes. Three months passed before the group reached
the area where the waters flow west. Soon they arrived at the Columbia
River and used it as their avenue to the West. Mecca of the West at this
time was San Francisco, as for thousands of prospectors, the destination
of the Hillmans. An exciting trip along the coast on various craft
carried John and his father to San Francisco.
John Wesley Hillman soon departed from
his father to search for a strike that could bring wealth in a day.
Having only moderate success as a prospector, John Hillman shifted from
job to job for the next three years. While driving mules for an
ungrateful, penny-pinching, pioneer business man, John Hillman received
word of a California party secretly purchasing supplies near his home in
Jacksonville, Oregon.
A prospecting party quickly organized
and decided to follow the California group on their search for a rumored
fabulous Lost Cabin Mine. The Californians soon realized they were being
followed and began scattering through the brush, camping in inaccessible
areas and using a series of other pioneer tricks in the attempt to shake
off the pursuing Oregonians, but to no avail.
One June day in 1853, when both parties
had scattered and were searching for landmarks which would lead them to
the mine, John Hillman approached close enough to bid one of the
Californians a good day. Soon after this incident the groups settled
their differences and united. Supplies of both groups were low so it was
decided to allow three men from each party to gather as many provisions
as possible and make one final search for landmarks.
On June 12, 1853, this group, including
John Wesley Hillman, climbed the west slope of the mountain now called
Mazama and became the first white men to gaze upon this circular sea of
indigo later to be named Crater Lake. John Hillman stated that if he had
not borrowed an exceptionally fine mule from a friend, he would not have
been the first man to see the lake. Hillman was so surprised to find a
lake he had noticed in the distance that he failed to look down; his
mule suddenly stopped and he was about to spur the animal when he
glanced over the rim an noticed the 1,000 foot drop. Had his mule been
blind someone else would have discovered Crater Lake!

Hillman Plaque
|
Recovering from the initial impact of
finding this unusual lake, the group assembled and two names were
suggested. Mysterious Lake and Deep Blue Lake were voted on and the
latter was chosen as the first name of the Lake. Hillman suggested
descending to the water's edge, but his exhausted and hungry companions
vetoed this idea and the group started home to Jacksonville. The
excitement of Indian wars and the discovery of gold, plus the fact that
there was no newspaper published in the area allowed their discovery to
be quickly forgotten.
The United States was well launched
into the Civil War by the year 1862. Prospectors, settlers and
westerners were hardly affected by the war and it was in that year that
Chauncey Nye and his party were heading south from the John Day Basin
area in search of water. They came upon the rim of the Lake and thought
of using it as their source of water. However, they decided to use
melted snow for their water supply, as they soon realized the tremendous
distance to the water.
The Nye party drew a crude map of the
area as they moved around the rim and they called the Lake simply Blue
Lake. Enroute to Jacksonville, Chauncey Nye and three others noticed a
very rugged peak which they climbed and named Union Peak. A majority of
the group favored the Union cause in the Civil War and they hoped the
name of this volcanic plug would never change. Following the usual slow
route of travel to Jacksonville, Oregon, the Nye party reported their
discovery and on November 8, 1862, in the Oregon Sentinel, the
first printed article about the Lake appeared.
The Civil War had spread to the West to
a considerable degree by 1865, both the Confederacy and the Union Army
having sent men to the West in search of horses. Captain B. F. Sprague,
Company I of the 1st Oregon Infantry, had been detailed to build a road
from Fort Klamath to Jacksonville. He sent F. M. Smith and John Corbell
to hunt game in the area because the fresh meat supply of the Company
was getting low. While on this hunting trip, these two men came upon the
Lake. They returned and told of their discovery. This news was passed on
and so excited several members of the Company that they decided to visit
the Lake at their earliest convenience.
Meanwhile, the Snake Indians in the
Steens Mountain area had one of their frequent uprisings. Captain
Sprague and five volunteers headed for the troubled territory and
decided to visit the mysterious lake on their return. Captain Sprague
suggested that the group descend to the water's edge and a friendly race
soon developed, Orson Stearns being the victor. Since Stearns was the
first to reach the water, he was given the honor of naming the lake.
With appropriate ceremonies it was called "Lake Majesty".
In the course of the next four years,
reports reached many scattered towns and settlements concerning this
large sunken lake and the lonely island cinder cone on which the foot of
man had never trod. Our early western settlers had a spirit of adventure
found only in an energetic and colonizing group. These reports excited
John Sutton, and in 1869 he organized a party with the specific purpose
of visiting the Lake, Carrying a knocked down boat which they assembled
at the shore of the Lake, they rowed over to, named and explored Wizard
Island. The Sutton party wrote an account of their trip, placed it in a
tin can and left it in the rocks of the island's crater. After exploring
the island they decided to sound the Lake. They made several soundings,
but soon decided their craft was too frail for such a job. From those
taken, however, they estimated the lake to be 2,000 feet deep and later
official soundings indicated they were very nearly correct.
John Sutton's patty christened the blue
waters "Crater Lake" and also took the first photograph of the lake. In
1872, Crater Lake was visited by the Applegate party, which included
Leslie M. Scott, Lord Maxwell of Scotland and Dr. Munson. Applegate Peak
and Munson Point were named by this party.
Hillman, Nye, Sprague and Sutton are
names important in the discovery of Crater Lake, but the development of
this area was to rely on a man of steel convictions, William Gladstone
Steel, later to become known as the "Father of Crater Lake National
Park". His association with Crater Lake began as a boy in his teens.
Will carried his lunch in a newspaper rather than a dinner pail because
he did not like carrying a cumbersome pail five miles home from school
each day. One noon, forced inside by inclement weather, Will Steel was
reading various articles in a newspaper wrapped about his lunch when his
attention focused on an article of a mysterious lake in a crater
somewhere in Oregon. Will Steel read the article over several times and
while walking home to the ranch in Kansas the curiosity and desire to
visit this mysterious lake increased with each step. Once home, he
talked about that lake continuously and eventually resolved to see it.
He never forgot this boyhood vow and
when, at the age of eighteen, his family moved to Portland, young Will
Steel immediately started a search for information about the lake. It
was not until four years later that the information necessary for a
visit to the lake was found. William Steel was employed at a local
publishing firm when C. E. Watson stopped in the office to visit a
friend and told of his visit to the lake. Of course, Will Steel obtained
all information possible. He learned of two ministers planning a visit
to the lake and asked to join the group.
In 1885 Will Steel finally saw the
watery gem of the Cascades, the rim and the Lake, a place he was to know
so well that it was to become a major part of his life. Humbled and
inspired by the heavenly blue color of the lake, he soon conceived the
idea of preserving this area for all the people, for all time. A
national park there was the dream of William Gladstone Steel.
"What was necessary to develop this
area into a national park?" he asked himself. Most important at this
early date was the publication of its beauty, to announce its grandeur
and then to establish its location. Closely connected with these steps
were the publication and improvement of the routes of accessibility. To
those few who had visited the area, the beauty and the glory of nature's
handiwork were as impressed on their thinking as the effects of the
master architect, erosion, or the results of glacier and volcanic action
evident everywhere in the vicinity of the lake. William contacted these
people and asked them to contribute articles to various organizations
concerning these wondrous sights and, more important, information
establishing the definite location of available routes to the lake.

William Gladstone Steel
|
The enthusiastic spirit of the people
contacted by Mr. Steel soon made Crater Lake the most visited scenic
wonder in Oregon. One needs little imagination to realize that William
Steel's next problem was to bridge the gap between Washington, D. C. and
Crater Lake. National parks are established by a Congress in Washington,
and Will Steel attacked the problem with great vigor, writing a petition
to President Cleveland explaining the natural wonders of the region. On
August 21, 1886, ten townships including Crater Lake were withdrawn from
public sale. This same year, Captain C. E. Dutton and party, coupled
with the work of Professor J. S. Diller in 1883, did a great deal to
familiarize Washington Congressmen with the geologic wonder of Crater
Lake. Officially establishing Crater Lake's depth at 1,996 feet, the
deepest lake then known in North America, was news of national
importance.
Writing thousands of letters,
organizing petitions, seeking prominent citizens' support and carrying
on the battle of the Cascade Forest Range and its closely aligned fight
with ranchers and lumbermen who could only look at the forest with
"board feet" eyes were some of the unpaid tasks carried on by Will
Steel.
Since the first discovery of the lake,
men had wondered if there were fish in Crater Lake. In 1888, Will Steel
was enroute to the lake on one of his many visits to explain some of the
numerous outstanding features to guests, when trouble caused the group
to stop at the Gordon Ranch The Gordon boys collected 600 fingerling
trout, which Steel purchased. Steel began the forty-nine mile trip to
the lake, stopping at each fresh stream to change water. As he neared
the rim, several fish began to die and at the time of the planting only
thirty-seven remained alive - - but the first fish had been stocked in
Crater Lake.
On May 22, 1902, Crater Lake was
established as our fifth national park and Steel's efforts were
rewarded. On October 13, 1902, W. F. Arant became the first
Superintendent of Crater Lake National Park, appointed by Secretary of
the Interior Ethan A. Hitchcock. Arant's first and most important
contribution was the improvement of roads. This was the beginning of an
ever-improving highway system in the park. This was not the end of work
for William Steel, for he threw his weight behind the effort of
developing roads and lodging for visitors. In 1913, he became the second
Superintendent of Crater Lake National Park. Much personal time and
money were sacrificed by him in the improvement of the park.
The advent of the horseless carriage
was of critical importance at Crater Lake and a suggestion was made to
build two roads to the rim, one for horses and the other for the noisy
automobile. In 1907 the first cabinet member visited the park, James R.
Garfield, Secretary of the Interior. Several years later, in honor of
his visit, Garfield Peak was named. 1907 was a year of firsts, the first
public boat, the Wocus, having been launched on Crater Lake at that time
also.
In 1912, the lodge was erected and one
unit of it is the oldest structure now existing in the rim area. 5,235
visitors were recorded in that year. Seven years later, the rim road
around Crater Lake was completed and visitors had increased to 16,645.
The plaque in honor of John Wesley Hillman was dedicated in 1925, and
three years later the Crater Wall Trail was completed. By 1931, the new
standard grade road was in operation, Sinnott Memorial was dedicated and
visitors totaled 170,284 during that year. In 1953, 332,835 persons came
to the park.
In Crater Lake National Park we have
commemorated within one year of each other, a centennial and a
semi-centennial - - last year the fiftieth birthday of the National Park
and this year the one hundredth anniversary of its discovery. The
history of the park does not end with these, but rather will continue to
reflect the broad-minded concept of administration initiated with Will
Steel's dream - - to conserve the scenery, the natural and historic
objects and the wildlife therein and provide for the enjoyment of the
same in such manner and by such means as to leave them unimpaired for
the enjoyment of future generations.
Selected References
Arant, W. F. 1904. Report of the
Superintendent of Crater Lake National Park to the Secretary of the
Interior.
Carey, Charles Henry. 1922. History of
Oregon.
Fremont, John Charles. 1887. Memoirs of
my life.
Gorman, M. W. 1897. Discovery and early
history of Crater Lake. In
Mazama.
Gray, W. H. 1870. History of Oregon.
Steel, William Gladstone. 1914. Report
of the Superintendent of Crater Lake National Park to the Secretary of
the Interior.
______, 1885 - 1934. Eleven volumes of
scrapbooks containing numerous clippings, telegrams, and correspondence
concerning Crater Lake. Also his correspondence file concerning Crater
Lake National Park. In the files of the Park Naturalist, Crater Lake
National Park.