Emmett Blanchfield

Foot notes:

  1. The Crater Wall Trail, in use from 1929 to 1959.
  2. Chief landscape architect for the National Park Service.
  3. Joe Mancini
  4. The Cleetwood Cove Trail opened in 1960.
  5. A hoist built by Park Mechanic Martin Palmer.
  6. The new road, which was a realignment of the Rim Drive built from 1913 to 1918, began with construction west of Rim Village.
  7. This section, now highway 230, was originally part of a wagon road connecting the Rogue Valley with the John Day country.
  8. A.P. Gianini
  9. Building 116.
  10. This was A.L. Peck, professor of landscape architecture at Oregon State College.
  11. George W. Peavy, dean of the school of forestry and former president of Oregon State University.
  12. Now known as the Pacific Northwest Region (Region 6) covering national forest lands in Oregon, Washington and Alaska.
  13. The position would be akin to the combination of a project supervisor and buildings and utilities foreman today.
  14. Davidson, by this time, had completed his six-month sentence which stemmed from his involvement in the scandal which forced Superintendent E.C. Solinsky from office.
  15. The term is sometimes misapplied to structures at Crater Lake.
  16. Tidal wave. This occurred in 1964 after the Alaska earthquake.
  17. One of the National Geographic’s aims was to find the tallest tree.
  18. Director of the National Park Service from 1940 to 1951; chief, California Division of Beaches and Parks from 1952 to 1959.
  19. Mott served as NPS director from 1985 to 1989.
  20. The Lake Trail, in use from 1906 to 1928.
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