Crater Lake Special Events Log
The Smith Brothers' Chronological History
of Crater Lake National Park
1850's
- December 1851
- James Cluggage and James Poole, two mule packers, discover gold
on Rich Gulch, 85 miles west of Crater Lake. Within six months, nearly 3,000
expectant miners have poured into newly formed town of Jacksonville.
Eventually $40,000,000 worth of gold is mined from the foothills of
the Siskiyou's before the mines play out in 1880's. Jacksonville soon
establishes itself as a commercial and cultural center for the entire
Southern Oregon region.
- July 19, 1852
- John Diamond and one companion climb what is now known as
Diamond Peak and discover Diamond Lake while searching for an emigrant
trail from Southern Oregon to Eastern Oregon. Most likely the two explorers
viewed the Rim of Crater Lake.
- May 2, 1853
- Isaac Skeeters, Jacksonville, Oregon merchant, proposes to John
Wesley Hillman, that he finance an expedition of 11 men to go search for
the Lost Cabin Gold Mine. Hillman has some money with him left over from
gold mining in Northern California. Skeeters becomes the guide for the
party. The idea of getting up and expedition to look for the famous Lost
Cabin Mine came to Skeeters, (born 1825), while he was waiting on several
California customers in his merchantile store in Jacksonville. He overheard
one member of the group of California miners discussing the Lost Mine, and
that this gentleman knew of certain landmarks, and if he could locate them,
the group would become rich men. The group had been drinking and were
rather lose of tounge. Isaac hastily contacted J. W. Hillman who provided
the money for the "Oregonian" expedition. Skeeters, Hillman and the nine
others set out secretly following the eleven Californians. Eventually the two
groups joined forces after playing hide and seek for several days, and after
becoming hopelessly lost in the process.
- Story from Lu Wells, 209 Hillside, Klamath Falls, Oregon, great grand daughter
of I. skeeters. (Collected 1984), Isaac Skeeters, while serving customers from
California in his mercantile store in Jacksonville, one day overheard that
they were leaving the next morning in search of the Lost Cabin Gold Mine.
The group had been drinking and talking quite loose. Isaac decided to get a
party up to follow. He approached Hillman since he had money from the mining
in N. California. Isaac asked Hillman to finance the trip. Leaving
Jacksonville, they followed from a distance until they joined the group.
After a while and lacking proper supplies, the party split up, one Californian
stayed with the small group of Oregonians, including Hillman,
Kippel and Skeeters. Skeeters' family claims that the reason Hillman received
more credit than is due him is because Hillman donated money to Steel and
the Park. Steel approached the family seeking information about Isaac.
"Since the family didn't have any money to donate to Steel, the information
was passed over. Issac's parents: Abraham and Margaret Skeeters. Born in
Hardin Co., Kansas. Was married in Indiana. Left for Oregon with his
wife and child. The family was scared out by Indians and the Plague and
returned East. Isaac remained out west and remarried without first
divorcing his first wife.
- June 1853
- Isaac Skeeters, packer and guide for the discovery party, often told
this story about his Crater Lake trip: "At camp one evening we made plans for
the following day. Early in the morning, each of us agreed to take a
different direction for hunting, as we were low on food. I started out for
the higher ridges, and it was agreed that should any of us become lost, we
would signal the others with rifle shots. In ascending the higher ground,
I encountered snow to a depth of 12 inches which made walking slow and
difficult. When suddenly a snow white deer stepped right in front of me,
near enough that I could see that it had pink eyes. Instinctively I
raised by rifle to shoot but was held spelledbound by the beauty and unusual
color of the animal and decided just to observe and admired it. The deer
gave one might leap and was gone. Then realizing that it was getting dark,
I found a white-fir tree, with low hanging branches where the ground was
barren and made a fireplace with twigs and bark. I used to the flint and the
powder from my powder horn when suddenly the flame ran down into the powder
horn and caused it to explode. The flash burned my eyebrows and eyelashes
and all the front of my hair. There I was with no fire, no gun powder but
I did have one shot in my rifle. I began to realize that I was lost. I
spent the night applying snow to my burned face and forehead. Then at
daybreak I started out again. I was surprised when I discovered that I had
circled the white fir, for when I came back to my tracks from the night before I
found moccasin tracks right behind my own. I always thought that if I had
killed the white deer that the Indian who followed me would have killed me,
for I had been told that the Indians held a superstition for the white deer. I
shot my rifle and my friends answered some miles down the canyon where I
joined them."
- June 12, 1853
- John Wesley Hillman and a party of prospectors from
Jacksonville discover Crater Lake. The Hillman-Skeeters party of 11
Oregonians had followed a group of 11 Californians from a discreet distance.
The miners soon discovered the Oregonians on their trail. As rations on
both sides began to dwindle, Hillman approached the other camp, proposing
that since they were lost and looking for the same thing, they should join
forces. A truce was declared and both groups began to search together.
- When their provisions were finally exhausted, the prospectors found
themselves at the head waters of the Rogue River. Seven of them road ahead
seeking game for food. John Wesley Hillman, Henry Kippel and Isaac Skeeters
soon found themselves riding up a long, sloping mountain when the
group suddenly saw a large body of water spread out below them. Hillman
exclaimed that the blue was the bluest he had ever seen, so Skeeters
suggested that they name it "Deep Blue Lake". They wrote the name on a
piece of notebook paper, along with their names and place the note on a
stick.
- June 13, 1853
- The prospectors encounter a party of Indians who deny any
knowledge of the Lake's existence. The group later learns from a medicine
man that the Lake is sacred and the death would come to any Indian who gazed
upon it. Starvation soon drives the miners down from the mountain and back
to Jacksonville. They report their discovery, but since gold and Indians were
uppermost in the minds of the settlers, their discovery is soon forgotten.
- September 7,1854
- Williams Steel is born in Stafford Ohio. His father was a
Scottish Immigrant who cam to Virginia in 1817 at age 8. His mother
was a Virginia native, the former Elizabeth Lowery.
- February 14, 1859
- Oregon is admitted to the Union as the 33rd state.
(Next stop 1860's)
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