Army Corps of Engineers Road System Added to the National RegisterCrater Lake National Park, OregonT
Army Corps of Engineers Road System Added to the National RegisterCrater Lake National Park, OregonThe Army Corps of Engineers Road System at Crater Lake National Park is among Oregon’s latest entries in the National Register of Historic Places.The National Park Service accepted the nomination on August 12. NPS staff historian Stephen Mark took the lead in writing the nomination, which centered on a previously little-known effort by the Army Corps in highway engineering and construction that happened from 1910 to 1919 in the park.The Army Corps of Engineers Road System, a precursor to the historic Rim Drive, is significant for its association with the earliest period of highway engineering in Oregon.As Stephen Mark describes, “Unlike today’s roads, this system came into being with hand tools, horse power, and a couple of wood-burning steam shovels.”The road system was the first federally funded and supervised highway project in Oregon and is the only road project in Oregon attributed to the Army Corps of Engineers.The road system is the fourth historic district listed at Crater Lake National Park, with others at Rim Village, at Park Headquarters and along Rim Drive.Discover more about the nomination and the history of the road system: News Release: “National Register Listing for Army Corps of Engineers Road System”Visit the park website to plan your visit: Crater Lake National ParkFind more from the National Register of Historic Places A car on a road in front of impressive snow banks, almost completely obscuring a house, shows the winter conditions at Crater Lake, 1949.(NPS/Harpers Ferry Center Archives) -- source link
#historic preservation#cultural landscape#historic roads#oregon#national register#rim drive#tourism#findyourpark#travel#road trip#history