51. U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Harpers Ferry Center,Crater Lake National Park Collection Management Plan, 1977, Files, Technical Information Center, Denver Service Center.
52. U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Historical Studies Plan, Crater Lake National Park, by Vernon C. Tancil, May 11, 1979, Files, Technical Information Center, Denver Service Center.
53. U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Harpers Ferry Center,Interpretive Prospectus, Crater Lake National Park, Oregon, May, 1980, Files, Technical Information Center, Denver Service Center.
CHAPTER 17
1. W.G. Steel, “Crater Lake,” in The Mountains of Oregon, (Portland: David Steel, 1890), pp. 20-22.
2. Gerald W. Williams, (comp.), Judge John Breckenridge Waldo: Diaries and Letters from the High Cascades of Oregon 1880-1907, manuscript, USDA Forest Service, Umpqua National Forest, Roseburg, April 20, 1989, p. 221.
3. Earl Morse Wilbur, “Description of Crater Lake,” Mazama 1:2 (October 1897), pp. 144-145.
4. Annual Report of the Superintendent of Crater Lake National Park Oregon, to the Secretary of the Interior, 1903 (Washington, 1903), p. 6.
5. Annual Report of the Superintendent of Crater Lake National Park, Oregon, to the Secretary of the Interior, 1904 (Washington, 1904), p. 8.
6. Report of the Superintendent of Crater Lake National Park Oregon to the Secretary of the Interior for the Year Ended June 30, 1905 (Washington, 1905), pp. 5-6.
7. Portland Morning Oregonian, November 7,1906.
8. Greene, Linda, “Historical Data Section,” p. 21, in U.S. Department of Interior, National Park Service. Historic Structure Report: Crater Lake Lodge, Crater Lake National Park Crater Lake Oregon, by David Arbogast, et al., (Denver: NPS Branch of Cultural Resources, 1982 [1984]).
9. “Crater Lake Lodge: Additional Notes on its Architectural Significance and about the Architect,” prepared for the Historic Preservation League of Oregon, Portland, January 8,1988, p. 5.
10. Remarks of Mark Daniels, in Proceedings of the National Park Conference Held at Berkeley, California March 11, 12, and 13, 1915 (Washington, 1915), p. 19.
11. Ibid., p. 20.
12. Ibid., p. 18.
13. Mark Daniels, “Crater Lake National Park,” American Forests, XXII (October, 1916), pp. 586-592. U.S. Congress, House of Representatives, Committee on Appropriations,Improvement and Management of National Parks, 64th Cong., 1st Sess., 1916, H2 Doc. 515, p. 12.
14. George Goodwin, Civil Engineer, to Horace Albright, Assistant Director, May 22, 1918, History Files, Crater Lake Lodge Pre-1930 folder, Crater Lake National Park.
15. “Interior of Great Hall, Crater Lake Lodge, Crater Lake National Park, Oregon,” n.d., Gifford Collection, Oregon Historical Society, Portland. Parkhurst was so greatly undercapitalized that Steel suggested an experiment be tried at Crater Lake where the Government would pay the company for the value of its improvements, assume title, and then lease them back to the concession for a fixed term. “Report of the Superintendent of Crater Lake National Park,” [by William G. Steel], Medford, Oregon, October 1, 1914, p. 815, in Annual Report of the Department of Interior, 1914, (Washington, 1915).