CRATER LAKE
Administrative History
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VOLUME I
PART I: HISTORY OF CRATER LAKE UNTIL ITS DESIGNATION AS A NATIONAL PARK
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CHAPTER FOUR:
ESTABLISHMENT OF CRATER LAKE NATIONAL PARK: 1902
A. LEGISLATIVE BILLS: 1898-1900
The legislative struggle to establish Crater Lake National Park was
renewed by Thomas H. Tongue in 1898 when he entered the House of
Representatives as Oregon's sole Congressman. On January 25 of that year
he introduced a bill (H.R. 7200) that provided for
Reserving from the public lands in the State of Oregon, as a public
park for the benefit of the people of the United States, and for the
protection and preservation of the game, fish, timber, and all other
natural objects therein, a tract of land. . . . That the tract of land
bounded north by the parallel forty-three degrees four minutes north
latitude, south by forty-two degrees forty-eight minutes north latitude,
east by the meridian one hundred and twenty-two degrees west longitude,
and west by the meridian one hundred and twenty-two degrees sixteen
minutes west longitude, having an area of two hundred and forty-nine
square miles, in the State of Oregon, and including Crater Lake, is
hereby reserved and withdrawn from settlement, occupancy, or sale, under
the laws of the United States, and dedicated and set apart forever as a
public park or pleasure ground for the benefit of the people of the
United States, to be known as Crater Lake National Park.
The reservation would be under the control of the Secretary of the
Interior whose duty it would be to establish regulations and take
appropriate measures
for the preservation of the natural objects within
said park, and also for the protection of the timber from wanton
depredation, the preservation of all kinds of game and fish, the
punishment of trespassers, the removal of unlawful occupants and
intruders, and the prevention and extinguishment of forest fires.
It would be unlawful for any person to
establish any settlement or residence within said reserve, or to engage
in any lumbering or other enterprise or business occupation therein, or
to enter therein for any speculative purpose whatever, and any person
violating the provisions of this Act, or the rules and regulations
established thereunder, shall be punished by a fine of not less than
fifty dollars and not more than five hundred dollars, or by imprisonment
for not more than one year, and shall further be liable for all
destruction of timber or other property of the United States in
consequence of any such unlawful act. . . .
The reservation, however, would be open "to all scientists,
excursionists, and pleasure seekers." Furthermore, 'restaurant and hotel
keepers, upon application to the Secretary of the Interior" would be
permitted "to establish places of entertainment within the Crater Lake
National Park for the accommodation of visitors, at places and under
regulations fixed by the Secretary of the Interior."
The bill provided for judicial and police protection of the proposed
park. The United States marshal for the Oregon district would be
empowered to appoint one or more deputy marshals for the park. The
deputies could live in the park, and the district and circuit courts of
the United States Judicial District of Oregon would have jurisdiction
over all offenses committed in the park. Upon the request of the
Secretary of the Interior, the Secretary of War was authorized
to make the necessary details of troops to prevent trespassers or
intruders from entering the park for the purpose of destroying the game
or other natural objects therein, or for any other purpose prohibited by
law, and to remove such person from the park, if found therein.
[1]
After examining the bill the House Committee on Public Lands
recommended passage of the legislation with one amendment on March 3.
The amendment proposed by the committee was to strike the prohibition
against mining in the proposed park. With that exception the committee
gave its enthusiastic endorsement to the park bill stating:
The area included within the proposed park is situated in the Cascade
Mountain Range in southern Oregon, and does not embrace in its limits
any agricultural lands; the altitude is from 6,000 to 8,000 feet above
sea level. While a large part of the tract is covered with timber, it is
not of a character suitable for lumber, most of it being what is known
as lodge-pole pine, and of very little commercial value.
Near the center of the proposed park is situated Crater Lake, which
is conceded by all who have visited it to be one of the greatest scenic
wonders in the United States, if not in the known world. Increasing
numbers of scientists visit it from year to year for the purpose of
making additional investigations, and all of them regard it as one of
the greatest natural wonders of our country. The people of the West, as
well as tourists, with one accord join the scientist in the wish that
this grand work of nature may be preserved in its original beauty for
the instruction and pleasure of all who may desire to visit it.
There are no settlers within the limits of the proposed park; hence
its establishment would in no way interfere with any vested or
squatters' rights, and for this reason it is desirable that the proposed
park be authorized at an early day.
Another argument in favor of such action is the fact that the park
would be easily accessible by means of roads already constructed.
We are fully satisfied that the land designed to be set aside for the
purpose contemplated by this bill is of such a character that it can not
be utilized for agricultural purposes, nor with profit for any purpose
of trade whatever, but is chiefly valuable for the purpose for which the
proposed act seeks to appropriate it. . . .
The report included supporting letters of endorsement from Binger
Hermann, Commissioner of the General Land Office, Acting Secretary of
the Interior Thomas Ryan, and the aforementioned scientists J.S.
Diller, C. Hart Merriam, Barton W. Everman, and Frederick V.
Colville. [2]
The bill died on the House floor, the result of lobbying efforts by
timber and other speculative interests. Tongue introduced an identical
bill (H.R. 2976) on December 8, 1899, and it was again reported
favorably by the Committee on Public Lands on March 6, 1900, this time
without recommending the removal of the ban on mining. The bill,
however, met a fate similar to its predecessor on the House
floor. [3]
Action on the Crater Lake National Park bill focused on the Senate
where Oregon's two senators introduced bills virtually identical to
those submitted by Tongue.The bills, however, encountered opposition
from various political interest groups and died in the Committee on
Public Lands.
B. LEGISLATIVE HISTORY OF PARK ESTABLISHING ACT:
1901-1902
Finally, on December 10, 1901 , Representative Tongue introduced a
bill (H.R. 4393) that would ultimately be enacted into law, thus
establishing Crater Lake National Park. [4]
As introduced the bill read:
Be it enacted, etc., That the tract of land bounded north by the
parallel 43° 4' north latitude, south by 42° 48' north latitude,
east by the meridian 1220 west longitude, and west by the meridian
122° 16' west longitude, having an area of 240 square miles, in the
State of Oregon, and including Crater Lake, is hereby reserved and
withdrawn from settlement, occupancy, or sale under the laws of the
United States, and dedicated and set apart forever as a public or
pleasure ground for the benefit of the people of the United States, to
be known as Crater Lake National Park.
SEC. 2. That the reservation established by this act shall be under
the control and custody of the Secretary of the Interior, whose duty it
shall be to establish rules and regulations and cause adequate measures
to be taken for the preservation of the natural objects within said
park, and also for the protection of the timber from wanton depredation,
the preservation of all kinds of game and fish, the punishment of
trespasses, the removal of unlawful occupants and intruders, and the
prevention and extinguishment of forest fires.
SEC. 3. That it shall be unlawful for any person to establish any
settlement or residence within said reserve, or to engage in any mining,
lumbering, or other enterprise or business occupation therein, or to
enter therein for any speculative purpose whatever, and any person
violating the provisions of this act, or the rules and regulations
established thereunder, shall be punished by a fine of not less than $50
and not more than $500, or by imprisonment for not more than one year,
and shall further be liable for all destruction of timber or other
property of the United States in consequence of
any such unlawful act: Provided, That said reservation shall be open,
under such regulations as the Secretary of the Interior may prescribe,
to all scientists, excursionists, and pleasure seekers: And provided
further, That restaurant and hotel keepers, upon application to the
Secretary of the Interior, may be permitted by him to establish places
of entertainment within the Crater Lake National Park for the
accommodation of visitors, at places and under regulations fixed by the
Secretary of the Interior, and not otherwise.
SEC. 4. That the marshal of the United States for the district of
Oregon may appoint one or more deputy marshals for said park, who may
reside in said park. That said park, for all the purposes of this act,
shall constitute a part of the United States judicial district of
Oregon, and the district and circuit courts of the United States in and
for said district shall have jurisdiction of all offenses committed
within said park.
SEC. 5. That all costs and expenses arising in cases under this act,
and properly chargeable to the United States, shall be certified,
approved, and paid as like costs and expenses in the courts of the
United States are certified, approved, and paid under the laws of the
United States.
SEC. 6. That the Secretary of War, upon the request of the Secretary
of the Interior, is hereby authorized and directed to make the necessary
details of troops to prevent trespassers or intruders from entering the
park for the purpose of destroying the game or other natural objects
therein, or for any other purpose prohibited by law and to remove
such persons from the park, if found therein. [5]
With the introduction of H.R. 4393, which was virtually identical to
Tongue's earlier bills, Steel began circulating a petition via
Oregon's newspapers. Addressed to "the Senate and House of Representatives
assembled" the petition requested "favorable consideration" of the
bill. It read:
Crater Lake is located on the summit of the Cascade range of mountains,
in Klamath County, Oregon, and is one of the greatest natural wonders of
the world. It is a portion of the unappropriated vacant domain of the
Government, and in the opinion of your petitioners should be set apart
and maintained as a National Park. To this end Hon. Thomas H. tongue has
introduced in your honorable body H.R. 4393, for which we respectfully
request your support.
The surface of the lake is 6,239 feet above sea level, it is nearly six
miles in diameter and is completely surrounded by nearly perpendicular
walls from 1,000 to 2,000 feet high. It contains a circular island, or
cinder cone, 845 feet high, in the top of which is an extinct crater 90
feet deep. The water is clear as crystal, 2,000 feet deep and of the
richest possible blue. Adjoining the lake and guarding its approaches
the mountains are rugged, of great altitude and of no value for
agriculture or mining. In spite of laws to the contrary, wild game in
the Pacific Northwest is rapidly disappearing, and unless steps are
taken in the near future to provide a refuge for it, many varieties will
become extinct. [6]
By March 1902 the petition had been signed by more than 4,000
persons, many of them being political, business, and religious leaders
in the state. [7] National periodicals
contributed to the campaign effort by printing illustrated articles
describing the beauties of the lake. [8]
Responding to publicity engendered by the Steel petition and the
national periodical articles, the House Committee on Public Lands
unanimously recommended passage of the bill without amendment on March
11. The report contained supporting letters of recommendation from
Binger Hermann, Commissioner of the General Land Office; Thomas Ryan,
former Acting Secretary of the Interior; Diller, Merriam, Everman, and
Colville. [9]
Despite the favorable report by the committee, the bill encountered
opposition from House Speaker David B. Henderson of Iowa. Because there
were a number of national parks and battlefield bills before the House
at the time Henderson refused to recognize any of them. Thus , when
Representative John F. Lacey of Iowa attempted to call up the bill for
consideration by the Committee of the Whole on March 14, Henderson
refused to permit the bill to be debated. [10]
Tongue, as well as Steel, took the matter to President Theodore Roosevelt,
who supported the bill, and, at the request of the president the Speaker
agreed to let the bill be considered by the full House.
As a result of these negotiations Tongue was permitted to bring up
the bill for consideration by the House on April 19. After the bill was
read it was subjected to considerable debate. Representative Charles
L. Bartlett of Georgia requested that Tongue describe the character of
the land that was "proposed to be appropriated as a park." Tongue
responded:
I think, possibly, I can best answer the gentleman's question by reading
from the report of Prof. Hart Merriam, chief of the Biological Survey,
who has visited the park, and who makes this statement, which will be
found on page 4 of the committee's report:
The proposed park is a very small affair--only 18 by 22 miles, if I
am correctly informed--and contains no agricultural land of any kind,
but consists wholly of a mountain, a little more than 9,000 feet in
altitude, whose summit has been destroyed by volcanic action, and is now
occupied by a gigantic caldron nearly 6 miles in diameter and 4,000 feet
in depth.
That is the character of the land included in the park. I requested
Professor Diller, of the Geological Survey, who has visited this lake at
different times, to draw the boundaries of this park so as to include no
valuable land. Now, the object of the bill is simply this: Crater Lake
is one of the most interesting natural objects on the continent, if not
in the world. It is an extinct volcano. The top of the mountain has
apparently been cut smoothly off. There is a cavity about 4,000 feet in
depth, 2,000 feet of which is water. Along the sides of the mountains
there seem to be an unusual variety of fauna and flora, a great variety
of timber, of mammal, birds, etc. , rendering this place of great
scientific value. The object of this bill is simply to withdraw this
land from public settlement. The most of it has been withdrawn already
by reason of being in a forest reserve, and also, which is the most
important object, to punish mutilation and destruction of the natural
objects of interest within the park and to preserve it in its present
condition, in its natural beauty and native wildness, both for its great
beauty and great scientific value.
This bill has been reported three times in three separate Congresses
unanimously by the Committee on Public Lands. It has been recommended by
the Secretary of the Interior, by the Commissioner of the Land Office,
by the officers of the Geological Survey, by the Biological Department,
and two or three others of the bureaus of the Agricultural Department,
and is favored by all the scientific offices of the Federal Government.
[11]
Thereafter, an extended debate ensued over the matter of mining in the
proposed park. Participants in the debate were Representatives John H.
Stephens of Texas, Eugene F. Loud of California, John F. Shafroth of
Colorado, Joseph G. Cannon of Illinois, Thomas C. MacRose of Arkansas,
and Franklin W. Mondell of Wyoming. The course of the debate, which
ultimately led to amendments providing for development and location of
mining claims in the park bill, proceeded as follows:
Mr. STEPHENS of Texas.
Does this [park] contain any mineral lands?
Mr. TONGUE. No mineral
lands. Nothing of any value. It will simply preserve the curiosity of
the scenery and of the growth of animals and vegetation, trees, flowers,
and so forth, for scientific purposes.
Mr. STEPHENS of Texas. Is there
any provision for the lease of mineral lands?
Mr. LOUD. It prohibits
that.
Mr. TONGUE. There is none.
Mr. SHAFROTH. Does the clause remain in
this bill that permits prospecting? We had that matter up when the bill
was considered once, I know, and I offered an amendment allowing
prospecting.
Mr. LOUD. If I understand the bill correctly, it prohibits
that and imposes a penalty, both minimum and maximum, for entering the
reserve for this purpose.
Mr. SHAFROTH. I think you will find that it
allows prospecting and the locating of mineral claims. At least that was
an amendment that was put in the bill at my suggestion one year.
Mr.
LOUD. If you think it is there, you had better find it.
Mr. CANNON. I do
not think this bill ought to pass, I will say to the gentleman.
Mr.
SHAFROTH. I think that amendment must be in the bill.
Mr. CANNON. Does
the bill stand on a request for unanimous consent?
Mr. TONGUE. Yes.
Mr. STEPHENS of Texas.
Do you not think this reservation ought to be thrown open for the
location of mining claims under the mineral laws of the United
States?
Mr. TONGUE. There is no mining in that vicinity or in that range of
mountains or near that locality
Mr. STEPHENS of Texas. Suppose there should be. We do not want to
lock it up perpetually.
Mr. TONGUE. If there should be, I have no doubt there would be means
and methods found to get it mined. At the same time, if it is thrown
open indiscriminately for prospectors, then it will be of little use to
undertake to preserve the natural conditions.
Mr. STEPHENS of Texas. It would be impossible to ascertain whether
there are any minerals there or not unless prospecting is allowed.
Mr. TONGUE. This is close to one of the oldest settled sections of
Oregon. It is in one of the counties where the first mines in that State
were discovered and where the most prospecting has been done; but the
mining is in the other range of mountains opposite from this. None has
ever been discovered here, so far as I ever heard of.
Mr. LOUD. Why do you prohibit mining if there is no mining there?
Mr. TONGUE. The object is to prohibit people from coming in under the
name of prospecting and destroying the natural conditions of the park
and the natural objects of beauty and interest.
Mr. LOUD. Then you provide for a deputy United States marshal. Is not
that something unusual?Mr. TONGUE. The deputy United States marshal is
simply proposed as the cheapest way of arresting people who violate the
law. This is simply a provision to give him authority to make
arrests.Mr. LOUD. Is not such a provision new in the establishment of
reservations of this kind?
Mr. TONGUE. I could not say as to that. That provision was placed in
the bill by the Department of the Interior.
Mr. LOUD. The gentleman will admit that the prohibition in regard to
mining should not be in that bill. The gentleman from Colorado [Mr.
SHAFROTH] seemed to think that there was an amendment in the bill
allowing prospecting. He has evidently had to do with the bill before.
There is not a park in this country set aside in this way that you can
not go into for mining purposes. Now, it will not do to say that there
is no mining land there, because if this provision is put in the bill
they never will be able to enter this park to find out whether there is
or not.
Mr. TONGUE. So far as mining is concerned, I am just informed by a
gentleman at my right that mining is prohibited in all the national
parks, including the Yellowstone.Mr. LOUD. The gentleman is mistaken;
that is all. I had occasion to read this law yesterday, in response to
an inquiry of one of my constituents. If I did not know, I would not say
anything about it.Mr. SHAFROTH. Would the gentleman from Oregon object
to inserting after the word "seekers," in line 3, page 3, the words "and
for the development and location of mining claims?"
Mr. TONGUE. I have no objection.
Mr. SHAFROTH. And also strike out the words in line 16, page 2, "or
to engage in any mining."
Mr. TONGUE. I have no objection to the amendment the gentleman
proposes.
Mr. SHAFROTH. I have no objection to the bill if that is done.
I have no doubt this is a meritorious bill if these amendments are
included. I think we ought to have considerable to say as to what
shall be done with these lands.
Mr. TONGUE. I have no objection to the amendments proposed by the
gentleman.
Mr. BARTLETT. The gentleman from Colorado stated a while ago that the
amendment in reference to mining was in the bill.
Mr. SHAFROTH. It was in the bill one year, I know, but I did not
remember whether it was in the bill introduced in this Congress or
not.
Mr. MCRAE. I suggest to the gentleman that he permit this bill to go
over until Monday. It is unusual and unprecendented, in my opinion, to
open national parks to free mining. That carries with it the right to
utilize any and all of the public timber in the park in the operation of
mines, and you may defeat the very purpose of the park if you allow that
to be done. I do not want to object to consideration of the bill, but I
hope the matter will go over until that feature of it can be considered.
I am opposed to this amendment, and will also ask some other amendments.
Mr. TONGUE. I will say to the gentleman from Arkansas that I am so
well satisfied that there is no mining there that I regard any provision
on that subject as of no importance one way or the other, and in order
to avoid objection to the bill, I am perfectly willing to submit to the
amendment.
Mr. MCRAE. The creation of a national park is a very different thing
from the making of a public reserve, and we should see to it that the
parks are established for public and not private purposes. To set these
public lands aside as a national park, and then to allow miners to go
into and work it freely and at pleasure may result in dedicating it to
mining, if there is mineral there. If there is mineral in the land, it
ought not be a park. The two are inconsistent.
Mr. SHAFROTH. Suppose it were discovered that there were some
valuable mines on this land, that it was infinitely more valuable for
mining than for any other purpose?
Mr. MCRAE. If there is a probability of that, then I say there ought
not to be any park created. The idea of a national park and a mining
camp are inconsistent with each other.
Mr. SHAFROTH. You can not determine that at this time, nor possibly
for ten or twenty years, whether there is to be any mining done
there.
Mr. MCRAE. Then if you can not determine that, you ought not to
undertake at this time to make a park of the lands in question. Declare
it a reservation and wait.
Mr. SHAFROTH. Then you exclude them from the privilege of having a
public park there. I think they ought to have a public park there.
Mr. MCRAE. I am not certain but we are overdoing the business of
establishing national parks; but I do not arise for the purpose of
objecting to this one if the facts stated in the report are true and
some other amendments are made as to the administration of the park.
Mr. MONDELL. I hope the gentleman will not insist on his amendment.
There is not a national park in the country that is open to exploration
under the mining laws. There is no reason why this national park should
be so open.
The debate then moved to other topics, such as its prohibition
against settlement, cost and expense to the federal government, and
provisions for military policing. The course of this portion of the
debate went as follows:
The SPEAKER. No amendment can be offered, as the [Crater Lake National
Park] bill is not yet before the House. It is pending on a request for
unanimous consent for its consideration. Is there objection?
Mr. CANNON. Mr. Speaker, I have hastily glanced at this bill, and I
am not prepared to say that I would object to it if I had a little more
time to examine it; but I will say to the gentleman that I notice that
it prohibits settlement. I notice that it binds the United States to pay
all cost and expense. I am not sure but what it binds the United States
to extinguish title to any lands that may be owned. It puts a troop of
soldiers in there--a superintendent, full fledged. I think that the bill
ought to be considered in committee; and I suggest to the gentleman that
he modify his request; that it be considered in the House as in
Committee of the Whole. And it seems to me that if it could go over
until Monday it would be better. I do not want to object.
Mr. BARTLETT. Let the gentleman withdraw his request.
Mr. LACEY. The suggestion that the gentleman from Illinois makes
ought to be acceded to, and then these matters of detail could be
speedily arranged. I do not think the bill would take very long in
Committee of the Whole. It is not at all a complicated bill; and I would
suggest to my friend from Illinois that this land is all from six to ten
thousand feet above the sea. It is a very high altitude park.
Mr. CANNON. The Government owns all the land inside of it?
Mr. LACEY. The Government owns all the land.
Mr. CANNON. Every foot?
Mr. LACEY. I understand every foot of it. It is not a very difficult
proposition. In Committee of the Whole these matters could be considered
as separate propositions, and could be readily adjusted.
Mr. TONGUE. I make that request.
The SPEAKER. The gentleman modifies his request and asks unanimous
consent that the bill be considered in Committee of the Whole.
Mr. CANNON. Just a word.
The SPEAKER. Is there objection?
Mr. CANNON. One word, Mr. Speaker. I suggest to the gentleman from
Iowa that all after section 1 be stricken out. That reserves it as a
national park and leaves to the future for Congress to say how it shall
be made and policed. There it is; it is not suffering. I do not think
this bill ought to pass in its present shape if it is desirable to make
it a national park.
The SPEAKER. Objection is made.
Mr. LACEY. Does the gentleman object?
Mr. CANNON. Will the gentleman consent to strike out all after the
first section?
Mr. TONGUE. I will not do that.
Mr. CANNON. I will have to object for the present. I do not want to
be discourteous to the gentleman.
The SPEAKER. Objection is made.
The debate on the bill rested until April 21 when Tongue requested
unanimous consent for reconsideration of the bill with amendments.
Tongue agreed to a number of amendments: (1) the minimum penalty as
stated in Section 3 was to be removed; (2) Sections 4, 5, and 6 were to
be stricken from the bill; and (3) the restriction against mining in
Section 3 was to be eliminated and a clause was to be inserted that the
reservation would be open, under regulations to be prescribed by the
Secretary of the Interior, to "the location of mining claims and the
working of the same." After adopting these amendments the House passed
the bill. [12]
Considerable behind-the-scenes politicking had been undertaken by
Representative Tongue to secure House passage of the bill. In a
letter to Steel on April 21 he described the maneuvering that he had
conducted to secure passage:
I presume you will be gratified at the action of the House on last
Saturday in passing the Crater Lake bill. I had secured the endorsement
of about every scientific officer in any of the Departments, the
Secretary of Agriculture and the President. Before the bill came on the
floor I had consulted with Mr. Richardson the leader of the opposition,
and had supposed everything was all smooth. But I had reckoned without
my host. The idea of a National Park was alarming. Quite a number of
gentlemen were on their feet at once, as soon as the bill was read.
Nearly half the members have bills pending for the establishment of
National Parks. This is the first one that has been permitted to come up
this session. When I went to Mr. Richardson, the leader of the
opposition, and endeavored to disarm his opposition, his first statement
was "why I have a bill for a National Park, why does not the Speaker
allow me to bring mine up"? For a while the opposition became too
strong, and Mr. Cannon at last objected. I at once went around to
interview the different gentlemen, explaining the bill, smoothed down
their objections, and at last agreed to several small amendments which
did not in any way militate against the bill. In fact, the last three
sections were a little inconsistent with the general provisions of the
bill. These leave it under the Secretary of the Interior who prescribes
the rules. Under the last sections of the bill, the enforcement of these
rules were left to the United States Marshal, striking out these
sections and also the provision of the Secretary of War can send
soldiers, leaves the matter wholly under the direction of the Secretary
of the Interior, as is done with other National Parks. I cannot see why
this is not just as good, if not the best policy. The whole forestry
reserve is under his charge. The bill provided a penalty of not over
$500 nor less than $50 for violation of the laws. The less than $50 was
stricken out, leaving it discretionary with the Court from $1 to $500.
There was no objection to this.
The mining people seemed anxious to retain a provision so that if
mines were discovered they could be worked, so the provision making it
criminal to engage in mining was stricken out, and the provision leaving
it under the Secretary of the Interior to arrange rules for the location
and working of mining claims is left in. As I apprehend no mines will
ever be discovered I regard this matter as entirely immaterial. If you
find the congressional record you will find the matter on pages 4669 to
4673. While all those objecting were Cannon, Loud,
Bartlert [sic], Shafroth, Stevens [sic]. So you may imagine I felt
very much like being in the sweat box and was considerably relieved when
the matter went through. I think there is no doubt whatever about its
passing the Senate at an early day. Senator [Henry Clay] Hansbrough [of
North Dakota] is chairman of the Committee on Public lands, and I think
will report it at once. If that is done and the bill signed, I shall now
feel like I could join the Mazamas next summer and take some enjoyment
out of the visit to Crater Lake. [13]
On April 21, 1902, the legislation was sent to the Senate, where it
was assigned to the Committee on Public Lands. [14]
The committee chairman, H.C. Hansbrough, was concerned about the issue of
whether there were railroad grants within the proposed park. If such grants
existed the question of lieu lands for the grants would have to be
addressed. On April 29 General Land Office Commissioner Hermann assured
Hansbrough that there were no railroad grants in the proposed park and
the nearest land grant was the Oregon military road which was ten miles
distant and some seven miles from the indemnity limits of that grant.
With the question of land grants settled, the Senate committee
recommended that the bill pass without amendment on April 29.
[15]
The Senate passed the bill without debate or amendment on May 9,
1902. [16] Upon hearing of that event, Steel
wrote a letter to President Roosevelt expressing his thanks for the chief
executive's aid:
Please accept my sincere thanks and grateful acknowledgement for the
great assistance rendered in this matter by you. When I tell you I have
labored for seventeen years to bring this to pass, paying every expense,
except one single item, and all as a matter of love for the grand region
in question, you may comprehend the depth of my gratitude.
He concluded the letter by inviting Roosevelt to join him as he led "a
party of eminent men--and women, too"--to Crater Lake for a two week
outing that summer. [17] On May 22, the
President signed the bill, creating Crater Lake as the nation's sixth
national park. [18] The establishing
act for Crater Lake National Park (32 Stat. 202) contained three
sections: Section 1 described the boundaries and the purpose of the
park:
That the tract of land bounded north by the parallel forty-three degrees
four minutes north latitude, south by forty-two degrees forty-eight
minutes north latitude, east by the meridian one hundred and twenty-two
degrees west longitude, and west by the meridian one hundred and
twenty-two degrees sixteen minutes west longitude, having an area of two
hundred and forty-nine square miles, in the State of Oregon, and
including Crater Lake, is hereby reserved and withdrawn from settlement,
occupancy, or sale under the laws of the United States, and dedicated
and set apart forever as a public park or pleasure ground for the
benefit of the people of the United States, to be known as "Crater Lake
National Park."
Section 2 provided that the reservation would be under the custody
of the Secretary of the Interior.He was authorized to establish
"regulations and cause adequate measures to be taken" for the
preservation of the natural objects within said park, and also for
the protection of the timber from wanton depredation, the preservation
of all kinds of game and fish, the punishment of trespassers, the
removal of unlawful occupants and intruders, and the prevention and
extinguishment of forest fires.
Section 3 contained prohibitions and
penalties for infractions in the park as well as provisions for the
admission of visitors, location and working of mining claims, and
establishment of visitor accommodations. The section stated:
That it
shall be unlawful for any person to establish any settlement or
residence within said reserve, or to engage in any lumbering, or other
enterprise or business occupation therein, or to enter therein for any
speculative purpose whatever, and any person violating the provisions of
this act, or the rules and regulations established thereunder, shall be
punished by a fine of not more than five hundred dollars, or by
imprisonment for not more than one year, and shall further be liable for
all destruction of timber or other property of the United States in
consequence of any such unlawful act: Provided, That said reservation
shall be open, under such regulations as the Secretary of the Interior
may prescribe, to all scientists, excursionists, and pleasure seekers
and to the location of mining claims and the working of the same: And
provided further, That restaurant and hotel keepers, upon application to
the Secretary of the Interior, may be permitted by him to establish
places of entertainment within the Crater Lake National Park for the
accommodation of visitors, at places and under regulations fixed by the
Secretary of the Interior, and not otherwise. [19]
The issue of mining in the park bothered officials in the Department
of the Interior, although it was considered to be of negligible impact
on the operation of the reservation. In his annual report in 1902
Secretary of the Interior Ethan A. Hitchcock noted that Crater Lake's
establishing act differed from that of other national parks in that it
provided that the reservation should be open "to the location of mining
claims and the working of the same." It was not believed, however, to be
the purpose of that provision to extend the mining laws to the
reservation without limitation. Rather the provision was intended "only
to authorize the location and working of mining claims thereon in such
manner as not to interfere with, or prejudicially affect, the general
purpose for which the reservation was established."
[20]
APPENDIX A:
Act Establishing Crater Lake National Park
May 22, 1902
An Act Reserving from the public lands in the State of Oregon, as a
public park for the benefit of the people of the United States, and for
the protection and preservation of the game, fish, timber, and all other
natural objects therein, a tract of land herein described, and so forth,
approved May 22, 1902 (32 Stat. 202)
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United
States of America in Congress assembled, That the tract of land bounded
north by the parallel forty-two degrees forty-eight minutes north
latitude, east by the meridian one hundred and twenty-two degrees west
longitude, and west by the meridian one hundred and twenty-two degrees
sixteen minutes west longitude, having an area of two hundred and
forty-nine square miles, in the State of Oregon, and including Crater
Lake, is hereby reserved and withdrawn from settlement, occupancy, or
sale under the laws of the United States, and dedicated and set apart
forever as a public park or pleasure ground for the benefit of the
people of the United States, to be known as "Crater Lake National Park."
(U.S.C., title 16, sec. 121.)
SEC. 2 That the reservation established by this act shall be under the
control and custody of the Secretary of the Interior, whose duty it
shall be to establish rules and regulations and cause adequate measures
to be taken for the preservation of the natural objects within said
park, and also for the protection of the timber from wanton depredation,
the preservation of all kinds of game and fish, the punishment of
trespassers, the removal of unlawful occupants and intruders, and the
prevention and extinguishment of forest fires. (U.S.C., title 16, sec.
122.)
SEC. 3. That it shall be unlawful for any person to establish any
settlement or residence within said reserve, or to engage in any
lumbering, or other enterprise or business occupation therein, or to
enter therein for any speculative purpose whatever, and any person
violating the provisions of this act, or the rules and regulations
established thereunder, shall be punished by a fine of not more than
five hundred dollars, or by imprisonment for not more than one year, and
shall further be liable for all destruction of timber or other property
of the United States in consequence of any such unlawful act: Provided,
That said reservation shall be open, under such regulations as the
Secretary of the Interior may prescribe, to all scientists,
excursionists, and pleasure seekers and to the location of mining claims
and the working of the same:
And provided further, That restaurant and hotel keepers, upon
application to the Secretary of the Interior, may be permitted by him to
establish places of entertainment within the Crater Lake National Park
for the accommodation of visitors, at places and under regulations fixed
by the Secretary of the Interior, and not otherwise. (U.S.C., title 16,
sec. 123.)
32 Stat. 202.
crla/adhi/chap4.htm
Last Updated: 13-Aug-2010
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