Foot notes:
- The Crater Wall Trail, in use from 1929 to 1959.
- Chief landscape architect for the National Park Service.
- Joe Mancini
- The Cleetwood Cove Trail opened in 1960.
- A hoist built by Park Mechanic Martin Palmer.
- The new road, which was a realignment of the Rim Drive built from 1913 to 1918, began with construction west of Rim Village.
- This section, now highway 230, was originally part of a wagon road connecting the Rogue Valley with the John Day country.
- A.P. Gianini
- Building 116.
- This was A.L. Peck, professor of landscape architecture at Oregon State College.
- George W. Peavy, dean of the school of forestry and former president of Oregon State University.
- Now known as the Pacific Northwest Region (Region 6) covering national forest lands in Oregon, Washington and Alaska.
- The position would be akin to the combination of a project supervisor and buildings and utilities foreman today.
- 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.
- The term is sometimes misapplied to structures at Crater Lake.
- Tidal wave. This occurred in 1964 after the Alaska earthquake.
- One of the National Geographic’s aims was to find the tallest tree.
- Director of the National Park Service from 1940 to 1951; chief, California Division of Beaches and Parks from 1952 to 1959.
- Mott served as NPS director from 1985 to 1989.
- The Lake Trail, in use from 1906 to 1928.