DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR ALBERT B. FALL. SECRETARY NATIONAL PARK SERVICE STEPHEN T. MATHER, DIRECTOR RULES AND REGULATIONS CRATER LAKE NATIONAL PARK OREGON Photograph by Senic America Co. APPLEGATE PEAK FROM DUTTON CLIFF SEASON FROM JULY 1 TO SEPTEMBER 20 THE NATIONAL PARKS AT A GLANCE. [Number, 19; total area, 11,304 square miles.] National parks in , .. Area in order of creation Location. square Distinctive characteristics. miles. Hot Springs Middle Arkansas 1], 46 hot springs possessing curative properties— 1332 Many hotels and boarding houses—17 bath­ houses under public control. Yellowstone Northwestern Wye- 3,348 More geysers than in all rest of world together— 1872 ming. Boiling springs—Mud volcanoes—Petrified for­ ests—Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone, remark­ able for gorgeous coloring—Large lakes—Many large streams and waterfalls—Vast wilderness, reatest wild bird and animal preserve in world— fexceptional trout fishing. Sequoia Middle eastern Cali- 252 The Big Tree National Park—several hundred 1890 forma. sequoia trees over 10 feet in diameter, some 25 to 36 feet in diameter—Towering mountain ranges— Startling precipices—Mile long cave of delicate beauty. Yosemite Middle eastern Cali- 1,125 Valley of world-famed beauty—Lofty cliffs—Ro- 1890 fornia. man (ic vistas—Many waterfalls of extraordinary height—3 groves of big trees—High Sierra— Waterwheel falls—Good trout fishing. General Grant Middle eastern Cali- 4 Created to preserve the celebrated General Grant 1890 fornia. Tree, 35 feet in diameter—6 miles from Sequoia THE 1'IIANTOM SHIP. National Park. Mount Rainier ... West central Wash- 324 Largest accessible single peak glacier system—28 1899 ington. glaciers, some of large size—48 square miles of glacier, 50 to 500 feet thick—Wonderful subalpine wild-flower fields. Crater Lake.. Southwestern Oregon. 249 Lake of extraordinary blue in crater of extinct 1902 volcano—Sides 1,000 feet high—Interesting lava formations—Fine fishing. Wind Cave South Dakota 17 Cavern having many miles of galleries and numer- 1903 ous chambers containing peculiar formations. Piatt Southern Oklahoma... 1J Many sulphur and other springs possessing mediei- 1904 na[ value. Sullys Hill North Dakota lj Small park with woods, streams, and a lake—Is an 1904 important wild-animal preserve. Mesa Verde Southwestern Colo- 77 Most notable and best preserved preliistoric clifi* 1906 rado. dwellings in United States, if not in the world. Glacier Northwestern Mon- 1,534 Rugged mountain region of unsurpassed Alpine 1910 tana. character—250 glacier-fed lakes of romantic beauty—60 small glaciers—Precipices thousands of feet deep—Almost sensational scenery of marked individuality—Fine trout fishing. Rocky Mountain. North rrnddTe Colo- 397J Heart of the Rockies—Snowy range, peaks 11,000 1915 rado. to 14,255 feet altitude—Remarkable records of glacial period. Hawaii. Hawaii 118 Three separate areas—Kilauea and Mauna Loa on 1916 Hawaii: Ilaleakala on Maui. Lassen Volcanic. Northern California... 124 Only active volcano in United States proper— 1916 Lassen Peak, 10,465 feet—Cinder Cone 0,870 feet—Hot Springs—Mud geysers. Mount McKinlcy. South central Alaska.. 2,645 Highest mountain in North America—Rises higher 191' above surrounding country than any other moun­ tain in the world. Grand Canyon.... North central Arizona. 958 The greatest example of erosion and the most sub- 1919 lime spectacle in the world. Lafayette Mainecoast 8 The group of granite mountains upon Mount Desert 1919 Island. PISHING IS EXCELLENT IN CRATER LAKE. Zion Southwestern Utah... 120 Magnificent gorge (Zion Canyon), depth from 800 1919 . to 2,000 feet, with precipitous walls—Of great beauty and scenic interest. 91377°—22 2 HI CONTENTS. General description a j An unforgetable spectacle "' " 2 How it was discovered 3 Seeing Crater Take 4 Camping out on the Rim 4 Trails to the lakeside and elsewhere 4 The Unusual fishing 4 Notes on the wild flowers _~ 5 Administration _* " g National Parks Portfolio How to reach the park 7 Railroad information 7 (THIRD EDITION) Scenic approaches to Crater Lake '_'_ 7 Medford and the Rogue River Valley I 0 Willamette Valley and Portland ' 9 Approaches by automobile „__ ~ 70 Principal points of interest 12 Rules and regulations ' 12 presentation of the national General regulations 72 A parks and national monu­ Automobile and motorcycle regulations _____ 76 ments in picture. The selection is Map "_ ""_" lg Bound securely from the best work of many photog­ Panoramic view 43 Literature ' jg in cloth raphers, professional and amateur. Government publications __ \% One dollar It contains nine chapters descriptive Distributed free by the National Park Service 19 each of a national park, and one larger Sold by Hie Superintendent of Documents 79 Bibliography jg chapter devoted to other parks and Other national parks 20 monuments. 248 pages, including Authorized rates for public utilities 20 Autostage service from railroad points to Crater Lake____ 20 306 illustrations Hotels and camps 21 General stores 94 Transportation within the park 22 €5 Sent post paid, upon receipt of price in cash or money order, by the Superintendent of Documents, Government Printing Office, ILLUSTRATIONS. Washington, D. C. COVER. rv Applegate Peak from Dutton Cliff Front The Phantom Ship ______lTs.de front 1 1 slung is excellent in Crater Lake Inside front Motors on Rim Road over Skell Head Inside back Crater Lake Lodge Inside back! Cliff east of Eagle Cove __Back TKXT. Page. Mount Mazama restored 7 Railroad routes to Crater Lake National Park " 3 Guide map of Crater Lake National Park . 70 Ma{) showing automobile roads between Crater Lake, Lassen Volcanic, and Mt. Rainier National Parks ' 77 v CRATER LAKE NATIONAL PARK. GENERAL DESCRIPTION. RATER LAKE NATIONAL PARK is in the very heart of CRATER LAKE, C the Cascade Range in southern Oregon. It has an area of 249 square miles, or 159,360 acres, and was set apart from the public AULDRON-LIKE and circular, 7,000 feet domain and dedicated as a park on May 22, 1902. C high, is perched amid the peaks. Perpen­ Crater Lake itself is a body of water 6 miles in diameter of un­ believable blue, occupying the crater of an extinct volcano. In this dicular sides of slaggy lava rise over a thousand neighboi'hood the Cascades merge into a broad, irregular platform feet from waters of indigo blue 6 miles across surmounted by volcanic cones. The cones vary greatly in size and and 2,000 feet deep. are distributed without regularity. Each has been an active volcano. " To the scientist, a mighty volcano collapsed The fragments, blown out by violent eruption, have fallen upon the volcanic orifice from which they issued and built up cinder cones. within itself, Mount Mazama, 15,000 feet high, telescoped. " To the poet, ' the sea of sapphire,' ' the sea of silence,' ' a lake of mystery.' " To me, a shell hole of a war of worlds—who knows ? " Could the great blind poet have seen this marvel ere his pen had Lucifer and his host of rebel angels— MOUNT MAZAMA RESTORED. Hurled headlong flaming from the ethereal sky, From their bases have spread streams of lava (coulees), raising With hideous ruin and combustion down— the general level of the country between the cones. From some vents in Miltonic imagery here he'd have found the by many eruptions, both explosive and effusive, large cones, like impact." McLoughlin, Shasta, and Hood, have been built up. Were we to examine their internal structure, exposed in the walls of the canyons —Congressman Sinnott, in House of Representatives, carved in their slopes, we should find them composed of overlapping August 20,1918, layers of lava and volcanic conglomerate. But to this general form of volcanic architecture there was an exception. One of the very largest of these ancient volcanoes was Mount Mazama, which lifted VI its majestic cone nearly to the height of Mount Rainier, 300 miles to the north. But this was ages ago. No human eyes ever saw Mount Mazama. Long before man came the entire upper part of it in some titanic cataclysm fell in upon itself as if swallowed by a subterranean cav­ ern, leaving its craterlike lava sides cut sharply downward into the central abyss. What a spectacle that must have been! The first awful depth of this vast hole no man can guess. But the volcano was not quenched. It burst up through the collapsed lavas 1 2 CRATER LAKE NATIONAL PARK. CRATER LAKE NATIONAL PARK. 3 in three places, making lesser cones within the crater, but none quite at one's feet, and, in the lake between, the myriad gradations from so high as the surrounding rim. faintest turquoise to deepest Prussian blue, dwells long in the Then the fires ceased and gradually, as the 3'ears passed, springs memory. percolated into the vast basin and precipitation, in the form of snow, Unforgetable also are the twisted and contorted lava formations filled it with water within a thousand feet of its rim. of the inner rim. A boat ride along the edge of the lake reveals This is Crater Lake. these in a thousand changes. At one point near shore a mass of curi­ To-day one small cone emerges a few hundred feet from the sur­ ously carved lava is called the Phantom Ship because, seen at a face. The lake is 2,000 feet deep in places. It has no inlet of any' distance, it suggests a ship under full sail. The illusion at dusk or sort, nor is there any stream running out of it; but the water is sup­ by moonlight is striking. In certain slants of light the Phantom posed to escape by underground channels and to reappear as springs Ship suddenly disappears—a phantom indeed.
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