Winter can last for more than seven
months at Park Headquarters. A sign of the coming of spring appears when
enough snow has melted to reveal a figure known as the Lady of the
Woods. When the snow finally disappears, which is usually in June or
July, visitors can take a short trail located behind the Steel
Information Center to view the three foot high sculpture. Chiseled from
a boulder, this unfinished work of art blends almost perfectly into a
subalpine forest of mountain hemlock. It will be 80 years old this
October and shows a few signs of age. The most noticeable is pitting in
the once smooth volcanic rock, but there are also some details that have
begun to fade with time. In spite of its inevitable decay, the sculpture
is still striking and should remain recognizable well into the next
century.
Oddly enough, the Lady of the Woods was
its creator's first attempt at sculpture. At the time of its carving,
Earl Russell Bush was a 31 year old medical doctor who attended to the
road crews that built the first rim drive around Crater Lake. The
season's work had largely ceased by the end of September 1917, and he
found himself with almost two weeks at his disposal. Bush left the park
on October 20th, having chisled and hammered a recognizable form on the
hard rock. He worked from memory and, several years later, tried to
explain what possessed him:

Earl Russell Bush and the Lady of the Woods,
1954.
NPS photo by C. Warren Fairbanks.
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"This statue represents my
offering to the forest, my interpretation of its awful stillness and
repose, its beauty, fascination, and unseen life. A deep love of
this virgin wilderness has fastened itself upon me and remains
today. It seemed that I must leave something behind...if it arouses
thought in those who see it, I shall be amply repaid. I shall be
satisfied to leave my feeble attempt at sculptural expression alone
and unmarked, for those who happen to see it and who may find food
for thought along the lines [of what] it arouses in them
individually. It would be sacrilege to assign a title and decorate
it with a brass plate. "
By the 1930s the statue acquired both a
title (suggested by Fred Kiser, the photographer, who seemed to always
be looking for different ways to promote the park) and a sign made of
wood with raised lettering. The idea of leading visitors there with a
trail came under attack for the first time in 1930, and is an objection
which has been voiced several times since then. Not by visitors, nor
through conservation groups, but by park employees who thought the
sculpture did not belong in a "natural" area. To them, such artifice had
no place even at Park Headquarters, where rustic architecture and
naturalistic landscape design blend aesthetics with function. Just as
with stone masonry (which is used on buildings and evident in walls,
steps, curbs and even drainage features), the carving constitutes an
attempt to design with nature. The only difference is that the
sculpture's functional aspects may not be immediately apparent to all
who view it.
Whereas the function of most built
features at Park Headquarters has been put in terms of visitor services
(information, restrooms) or support facilities (employee housing,
offices, equipment storage), the Lady of the Woods serves to instruct
and inspire. The sculpture can speak to change, because 80 years ago
Park Headquarters looked considerably different than it does today. When
Bush made his carving in 1917, there were only three log buildings and a
barn with no attempt at year round occupancy of the site. Less than a
decade later the National Park Service began building a headquarters
where the road camp had been, something which expanded over time to
impinge on the sanctity of the forest that Bush once knew.
The Lady of the Woods is not, however,
a merely antiquarian artifact (where the past is separated from the
present) because NPS landscape architects incorporated it within an
exceptionally coherent site design, listed on the National Register of
Historic Places in 1988 as the Munson Valley Historic District. Despite
the recognition, designed landscapes cannot be frozen in time and
compromises remain apparent -- most notably in the NPS having to utilize
Park Headquarters for winter operations. This can be seen even along the
400 foot trail to the Lady of the Woods. Not only have the Messhall and
Meathouse been adaptively reused (for ranger operations and a trail
cache, respectively), but looming in the distance between them is the
recently constructed maintenance shop -- an especially unartistic and
slavish example of form following function when contending with
snowfall.

Park headquarters at the time when Bush carved the
Lady of the Woods, ca. 1925.
NPS photo.
While change is important,
character-defining features of the historic district and (in particular
the Lady of the Woods) are more significant as representations of
continuity. This type of continuity pertains to how parks evolved as a
cultural expression of interaction with a certain setting or
environment. Parks began as simple enclosures, intended as places where
the nobility exercised exclusive rights to hunt game animals. During the
17th and 18th centuries parks fused with ornamental gardens, the latter
having originated in the Ancient World from an urge to manipulate nature
and create pleasing effects. Features of the garden (such as plantings
which imitated growth in the wild, walks, and statuary or other
structures built to evoke introspection in those allowed access)
followed Classical models at first and then became more "natural" as the
desire to emulate landscape paintings spread throughout western Europe.
The English were especially adept at creating "landscape gardens" and
developed a vocabulary for enjoying the "picturesque" surroundings which
were contrived to appear more natural than Nature itself. When parks
became public as a response to 19th century urbanization resulting from
the Industrial Revolution, the private landscape gardens of the gentry
and a newly rich class of merchants thus became models for how to
socialize a broad spectrum of citizens by bringing them into contact
with the perceived benefits of nature.
Those familiar with the landscaped
parks brought their vocabulary with them when they went looking for
"sublime" scenery. These people followed their guidebooks and found
monumental scenery which matched the lighting effects employed by
landscape painters to animate mountains, forests, lakes, waterfalls,
caves, or coastlines. Americans embraced these aesthetic tastes at
roughly the same time as the public park movement came across the
Atlantic. It is therefore no surprise that public parks could encompass
not only the countryside within or adjacent to cities, but also the most
sublime scenery, particularly where the land remained in the Public
Domain. National parks are really part of a vast national estate, where
a few of the most unusual features such as Crater Lake can be protected
for future generations to contemplate. By seeing sublime landscapes as
art, the prevailing taste allowed for access but sought to minimize
visitor impact.
Consequently, developments in the
national parks have usually had both functional and ornamental
qualities, with the best being subordinate and inspired by its
surroundings.
Employees and visitors are now
prevented by NPS regulations from making artistic statements similar to
Bush's, but the Lady of the Woods is a rare window into the cultural
patterns behind the origin and use of national parks. Through this
sculpture and rustic architecture elsewhere in the park, it is possible
to relate the story of how a collective perception of nature developed
through time and found expression in gardens, parks, and finally sublime
landscapes. I thought of this inheritance and Bush's intent when these
lines from J.M. Synge's
Prelude came to mind:
I knew the stars, the
flowers, and the birds,
The grey and wintry sides of many glens,
And did but half remember human words,
In converse with the mountains, moors, and fens.
Reference: Richard M. Brown, The
Lady of the Woods Revisited,
Nature Notes from Crater Lake 21 (1995), pp. 5-12.

Karl J. Belser, in Ernest G. Moll, Blue Interval
(Portland: Metropolitan Press, 1935)
Rock Patterns
(The Grottos)
Out of the ancient rage of
fire and frost
And prisoned forces struggling to be free
Came beauty such as poets, vision-lost,
Dreamed long ago in dales of Arcady.

The crater on Wizard Island and Crater Lake.