DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
_ REPORT.
OF THE
_ GENERAL SUPERINTENDENT AND
~ LANDSCAPE ENGINEER OF
NATIONAL PARKS |
TO THE
SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR
1915
WASHINGTON : GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE : 1915
.s. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
REPORT
OF THE
GENERAL SUPERINTENDENT AND
LANDSCAPE ENGINEER OF
NATIONAL PARKS
TO THE
SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR
1915
WASHINGTON : GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE : 1915
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CONTENTS.
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Installation of cost-keeping system in Yosemite National Park..........
unehaserol cup plies). cc core a oe oe oe eee ee Seale Soe ec eeinaieeee eciee
Improvement in transportation, Yosemite National Park. ........-....-
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Recommendations:
As to the office of the general superintendent and landscape engineer of
Bae LOTI en RTC eee ers, Sec et) ata rareteret cata eat ante ah a) Pepe te aya) aie acaba: lates
Recommendations for the various parks—
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Mesa Verde National Park ........-. Si pe era meer cor etna at a
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ILLUSTRATIONS.
Suggested organization for supervision of national parks.......-.......-..--
Appropriations, revenues, and visitors, Sequoia National Park...........---
Appropriations under Interior Department, revenues, and visitors, Yellow-
Srariye | AMEN ntoyorod lil thd ee Lei AB SS Se a ee mee tcc aCe Ier
Appropriations, revenues, and visitors, Wind Cave National Park........---
Map showing national parks and national monuments..-...-..---.----------
Appropriations, revenues, and visitors, Yosemite National Park..........-.--
Appropriations, revenues, and visitors, Glacier National Park....-..-..--.--
Appropriations, revenues, and visitors, Mesa Verde National Park..........-
Vos fst aps iid bast S UU Sad eee Peon ee Selo eee he oe CeO ae a eA Seemenrs
Revenues and visitors, Hot Springs Reservation................-----..--.--
Appropriations, revenues, and visitors, General Grant National Park.....--. ue
Appropriations under Interior Department, revenues, and visitors, Mount
SV Creals yOu Wee < eee ee eR RAR AO Den SOE eee at os nee ee ete
Appropriations under Interior Department, revenues, and visitors, Crater
(Gales INR ends 2 oon Sop pGancsnen 4ceoc betondoreeeroon dono reoseoued
Appropriations, revenues, and visitors, Platt National Park......-..--...---
Appropriations under Interior Department, revenues, and visitors, all national
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REPORT OF THE GENERAL SUPERINTENDENT AND
LANDSCAPE ENGINEER.
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR,
OFFICE OF GENERAL SUPERINTENDENT AND
Lanpscare ENGINEER OF NATIONAL Parks,
San Francisco, Cal., Monadnock Building.
Sir: The work in this office during the first year of its life has
brought into strong relief the need of further study of the problems
involved in the administration of our national parks. There is a
growing feeling that our scenic areas, and particularly those which
have been set aside as national parks, have not received the attention
which their importance as a factor in both the economic and aesthetic
development of our country would seem to justify. This is evidenced
by the marked increase in the attention paid by the press to the
affairs of our parks and by the apparent desire on the part of the
public to know more of them and the particular part they play in
the life of the Nation.
That the expenditure of money for the maintenance and develop-
ment of our scenic reservations has an economic as well as aesthetic
justification there can be no doubt, for each year large sums of
money have left this country to be spent by tourists in foreign lands
in search of scenic beauty. The fact that no material proportion of
this sum returns is only less provoking than the knowledge that the
money thus taken abroad by Americans is spent to view natural
attractions that are inferior to those which may be found at home.
In your report of 1913 you stated that land is not always land, but
is sometimes coal, sometimes timber. One might add that it is some-
times scenery and, as such, merits the careful study and development
that would be extended to other national resources.
The condition of travel in foreign lands has stimulated the in-
terest of our people in the merits of similar pleasures in this coun-
try. Never in history has there been so great a volume of travel in
the United States. Surely it is the part of wisdom to retain this
great advantage and to crystalize upon a general policy for the ad-
ministration of our national parks.
FUNCTIONS OF OUR NATIONAL PARKS.
The first step in the consideration of a general policy for the ad-
ministration of the national parks is the determination of just what
functions they perform. Clearly they are not designated solely for
the purpose of supplying recreation grounds. The fostering of re-
creation purely as such is more properly the function of the city,
county, and State parks, and there should be a clear distinction be-
tween the character of such parks and national parks. The latter
5
6 REPORT LANDSCAPE ENGINEER OF NATIONAL PARKS.
should constitute a class that is of national interest. In the category
of national parks should be no reservation that is of local interest
only. What, then, are the functions of our national parks as dis-
tinguished from State and local parks? As I view this question our
national parks should serve three distinct functions:
1. The stimulating of national patriotism.
2. The furthering of knowledge and health.
3. The diverting of tourist travel to the scenic areas of the United
States.
NATIONAL PATRIOTISM.
We, as a people, have been accused of lacking in that love of coun-
try with which our neighbors in Europe are so plentifully blessed.
Whether such a criticism is merited or not, it is certain that local
patriotism has rapidly grown in this country more or less at the
expense of patriotism for the country as a whole. This condition
would not exist if our people knew their country.
To love a thing one must know it. The Belgian knows each hill
and dale of his small country and loves it with an intensity that has
become proverbial. And so it is with the Swiss, the French, the
English. These peoples know their lands and love them. But ours
is a great country, stretching from sea to sea, and a knowledge of
all its glories is given to but few. What more noble purpose could
our national parks serve than to become the instrument by which
the people shall be lured into the far corners of their land that they
may learn to love it? For one who will encompass the circuit of
our parks, passing over the great mesas of Colorado, crossing the
painted desert, threading the sparkling Sierra Nevada, and viewing
the glaciers and snow-capped peaks of the great Northwest will
surely return with a burning determination to love and work for,
and if necessary to fight for and die for the glorious land which
is his.
KNOWLEDGE AND HEALTH.
I have said that it is my opinion the Federal Government is not
justified in maintaining a national park for recreation purposes alone,
yet it is readily seen from the character of our reservations that each
has its recreational feature. I do believe, however, that objects and
districts ef great educational value should be reserved and placed
in the category of national parks. Natural phenomena, great can-
yons, ruins of antiquity, waterfalls—all are objects of great interest
and possess an educational value that can not be estimated.
In Yellowstone are the geysers, in Yosemite the highest of water-.
falls, in Sequoia the largest and oldest trees on earth, trees that were
8,000 years old when Christ was born. In Wind Cave National Park
is a cave that comprises over 90 miles of sparkling passages. At
Arkansas Hot Springs and Platt National Park are medicinal waters
that have dispelled the pain of legions of sufferers. In Mesa Verde
National Park are the crumbling dwellings of a forgotten race.
Pregnant with mystery and romance, these ancient ruins beckon
the traveler across the great green mesa and cast about him the spell
of endless conjecture. If for no other reason, the value of these
treasures as a medium for the furthering of knowledge and health
REPORT LANDSCAPE ENGINEER OF NATIONAL PARKS, 7
fully justifies the plea for further aid, both moral and financial, from
our Federal Government.
If this aid is granted and a systematic effort is put forth to send
our people out into the hinterland of this country, we shall be con-
fronted by the problem of caring for a flood of tourists whose needs
must be anticipated.
THE TOURIST.
The first logical step to be taken in an analysis of the conditions of
tourist travel is a study of the tourist himself. Primarily, the tourist
takes the line of least resistance. This means that he seeks the path
that presents the best accommodations for the least cost. From a
record of travel in our parks it may be shown that the finest scenery
without accommodations will not receive so large a travel as an
eg character of scenery which has a better type of accommo-
ation.
The tourist who upon the strength of literature issued by the
department travels to our parks is more or less justified in holding
the Federal Government responsible for his comforts or discomforts
while there. Nor is he backward with criticism. He demands that
he be instructed as to the merits of this trail or that, this camp or
that. He not infrequently is disappointed in not finding luxuries
that he would not expect in similar places under other than Federal
control. He invariably overlooks the fact that he, in a way, is part
of the Government, and therefore indirectly responsible for the con-
ditions he finds. Nevertheless, his demands must be respected if it is
hoped to direct his footsteps to travel in our country.
The three potent factors in influencing tourist travel are publicity,
accommodations, and transportation. Obviously, the tourist must be
informed of the merits of the district to which it is desired to bring
him. He must then be shown that the accommodations at that place
are satisfactory; and, last, he must know that the transportation
facilities to, through, and from the location are good and may be
had at reasonable cost. These three factors should constantly be
borne in mind in any planning for the development of tourist travel.
The three general classes of tourists who visit our parks are: Those
to whom the expense is of little moment; those who, in moderate
financial circumstances, travel in comfort but dispense with luxuries;
and, third, those who, fired with the love of God’s out-of-doors, save
their pennies in anticipation of the day when they may feast their
eyes upon the eternal expanse of snow-clad peaks and azure skies. It
is of this latter class that I would speak.
Many of our parks are truly vast in area, encompassing within their
boundaries innumerable wonders. To reach these the tourist, upon
arriving at the park, must hire saddle animals, pack animals, a guide,
cook, and other help. The expense of such an outfit is prohibitive
to all but the wealthy. Those who have waited and saved their money
are denied the fuller enjoyment of our parks, for they can not bear
the expense of transporting their supplies over the trails. There is
but one solution of the problem of caring for this class of tourists,
and that is the establishment of small inns at convenient intervals,
so that tourists may travel the trails afoot, purchasing their provi-
sions and other necessities as they go. As you are aware, the first
8 REPORT LANDSCAPE ENGINEER OF NATIONAL PARKS,
. steps in an effort to bring about such a condition have been taken in
Yosemite National Park. If this work is carried through, a blessing
will have been conferred upon those whose lack of money has shut them
from the greater part of our national parks. It will also be, in my
opinion, the most potent factor in retaining, through the medium of
our parks, a material percentage of tourist travel and will necessitate
a careful consideration of the problem of a general policy.
Any plan, however, which may be devised for the management of
our national parks should not be predicated upon the assumption
that their function is solely to accommodate and retain our tourists
in this country.
A GENERAL POLICY.
A policy to be efficient must be functional. One for the parks,
therefore, must take into consideration the distinctive characteristics
of national parks which, as before stated, are relative to the further-
ing of a national patriotism, public knowledge and health, and tour-
ist travel in the home land. Upon consideration it will be seen that
the first two follow as a natural consequence of the last. In the con-
sideration of a general policy we are concerned primarily, therefore,
with tourist travel.
To foster tourist travel it will be necessary to develop the roads,
trails, and other accommodations in the parks to a point where the
traveler will not be subjected to serious discomfort. This means the
expenditure of money upon a larger scale than has been the practice
heretofore, and the first question that should be settled is, What shall
be the source of supply ?
There are but two practical sources from which funds may be
secured, namely, by Federal appropriation and by revenues from the
parks themselves. Both resources are now resorted to, each of which
is inadequate. If the Federal Government is to support the parks,
then they should be operated so as to make the cost to the tourist
as low as possible. If not, then the various sources in the parks them-
selves should be developed sufficiently to supply the needed money.
The sources of revenue from the parks fall into four classes:
1. Automobile permits.
2. Concessions of various kinds.
3. Receipts from public utilities operated by the Government, such
as light, telephone, ete.
4, Natural resources, such as timber, stone, fuel, etc.
Of these four sources it will be seen that they may all be classified
as taxes in proportion to the benefit received rather than the ability
to pay. An analysis of this character may help in the decision of the
policy to be pursued, but it can do no more. The decision must be
made in the light of public needs, and the park supervisors should
know whether they are to develop the park revenues to their maxi-
mum, or whether the park is to be administered at the lowest possible
cost to the tourist.
Tf the question of finances were settled, in so far as the source is
concerned, and a well-crystalized policy, looking toward the develop-
ment of the parks along lines that will foster the increase of tourist
travel in this country, is established, much of the delay and confusion
in the field will be eliminated.
REPORT LANDSCAPE ENGINEER OF NATIONAL PARKS, 9
WHAT HAS BEEN ACCOMPLISHED.
The. work in this office has been distributed among the parks, giv-
ing attention where it seemed to be most needed.
One of the first steps taken after the creation of this office was the
laying out of organization charts for the office of the general super-
intendent and a typical organization chart for the Yosemite National
Park. Three charts were drawn—one for the office of the general
superintendent, one organization chart for the Yosemite National
Park, and a functional organization chart making a complete and
detailed analysis of the functions of the various officers in Yosemite
National Park.
INSTALLATION OF COST-KEEPING SYSTEM IN YOSEMITE
NATIONAL PARK.
With these organization charts well in mind, a system was devised
which will enable the department to keep a close and accurate record
of the operations in the parks where the system was adopted. This
system was installed in the Yosemite National Park, and the records
and information shown in the monthly reports therefrom enable this
office to make many material reductions in the cost of operation. For
example, the report of May, 1915, showed a cost of $1.66 per mile for
sprinkling roads. The analysis given in the report enabled us to
find the leaks and losses, and the monthly report for August, 1915,
after repairs had been made to the sprinkling system, showed a cost
of 72 cents per mile for sprinkling roads. Similar reductions were
made possible in other departments.
This system of cost keeping comprises two general divisions,
namely, statistical reports and financial reports. Copies of the
monthly reports are forwarded to the department, showing clearly
the operations of the month.
Before this system could be installed it was necessary to take an
inventory of the physical assets, such as buildings, bridges, power
plant, materials on hand, etc. This inventory was made, and dis-
closed the astounding fact that there were in the Yosemite National
Park on April 380, 1915, $23,625.34 represented by materials and
supplies on hand. The inventory further showed that the assets in
the park in the form of construction work done, utilities, etc.,
amounted to. $613,635.03, apportioned in the following manner:
Construction work, such as trails, bridges, culverts, ete___________ $453, 923. 15
Public utilities operated by the department, such as electric system,
telephone system, etc____-_-_ is LE ee BES ea ee 96, 601. 75
Equipment, comprising live stock, wagons, machinery, etc_________ 36, 484. 29
Inventories, comprising materials and supplies, forage, ete________ 23, 625. 34
Accounts receivable cash onthand! etea a2 Ute sree ei ee 3, 050. 50
618, 635. 03
The items that go to make up this inventory are segregated,
showing fully what has been expended on each piece of work, and it
is proposed hereafter to keep a record so that the department will
have on file the amount of money spent on each road, trail, bridge, and
every other feature in the park that demands an expenditure of money.
Tt is considered that only in this way will it be possible to carefully
11096—15 2
KO’ REPORT LANDSCAPE ENGINEER OF NATIONAL PARKS.
check the expenditures. Further than this, it is only by resorting
to a unit cost-keeping system that the department will be able to
segregate accurately the moneys for maintenance from those ex-
pended for improvements and betterments.
PURCHASE OF SUPPLIES.
This office, since the Ist of April, 1915, has been purchasing all
supplies for Yosemite and Sequoia National Parks and for the other
parks where it was practicable to do so. It was found that a better
quality of goods could be obtained and a better price could be had by
making a personal inspection of the supplies purposed to be fur-
nished.
It has been the custom in the past for the local supervisor or
superintendent to purchase the supplies direct. The parks are so
situated that they are usually quite a distance from a market, and
this custom resulted in loss of time in sending proposals back and
forth. When the goods arrived, they were often found to be of
inferior quality and not exactly what the supervisor or superin-
tendent desired. San Francisco has a factory representative of
practically every line of manufacture in this country, and the pur-
cliase of supplies for the national parks can be done here on the
same basis as though the purchasing agent visited each factory and
made a personal investigation of samples of the supplies to be fur-
mished. Shipping these supplies over bond-aided railroads to the
various parks places the local dealers in the vicinity of the parks
(who have heretofore had this business) in direct competition with
the manufacturers and wholesale dealers of supplies required in the
operation: of the parks. This new system of purchasing from this
office from factory representatives and wholesale dealers has resulted
in a great saving to the department.
The superintendent or supervisor of each park makes a requisition
on this:office for material and supplies that he desires purchased.
This: office then submits proposals to the various dealers, makes
persona! inspection of the goods to be supplied, and makes the award,
whereupon the supplies are shipped to the park, thereby saving a
great deal of time as well as money.
IMPROVEMENT IN TRANSPORTATION, YOSEMITE NATIONAL
PARK.
Starting on June 1, 1915, the Yosemite Stage & Turnpike Co.
placed in operation between the Mariposa Grove of Big Trees and
the village of the Yosemite Valley an automobile service for the
transportation of tourists between these points. This service re-
placed the old horse-drawn stages, which were uncomfortable and
slow, requiring at least four hours and a half between Yosemite Vil-
Jage and the Wawona Hotel and an additional hour and a half be-
tween the Wawona Hotel and the Mariposa Grove of Big Trees, and
with this service it was not possible for tourists to go from the village
in the valley to the Mariposa Grove without stopping at least one
night at the Wawona Hotel. The new service provided a schedule
that enabled the tourists to leave the valley in the morning and spend
one hour and a half at the Mariposa Grove and return to the valley
in the evening in time for 6 o’clock dinner.
REPORT LANDSCAPE ENGINEER OF NATIONAL PARKS, ala!
This service has proven very satisfactory to the traveling public,
especially the summer just past, as it would have been a physical
impossibility to handle the volume of travel that went over this
road with the old horse-drawn stages.
ACQUISITION OF ROADS.
The department has acquired title to that portion of the Tioga
Road lying within Yosemite National Park. This road has been
rehabilitated this summer and was formally opened on the 28th of
July to the public. The opening of this road makes accessible that
portion of the park known as the High Sierras and has opened up
a section that is extremely beautiful and traverses the park in an
easterly and westerly direction. The department’s acquiring the Tioga
Road has met with great public favor, and when same has been put
in good condition it will be the most popular pass for transconti-
nental tourists through the Sierra Nevada Mountains, as well as
being a favorite trip for local automobiles.
The department has also acquired title to that portion of the Big
Oak Flat Road lying within Yosemite National Park, and improve-
ment of same is now in progress. In the past this road has been
operated by private owners as a toll road. Its acquisition by the
Government makes this a free road and is one of the shortest and
most practical, as well as being one of the easiest grades, of any
road entering Yosemite Valley.
ROAD AND TRAIL MAPS.
During the year 1914 a topography map was started by the sur-
veyors from the Office of Public Roads of the Agricultural Depart-
ment, under the charge of Mr. T. Warren Allen, showing the topo-
raphical conditions on a section of the floor of Yosemite Valley.
his survey was made so as to show buildings, trails, roads, and
bridges on a scale that could be used for working drawings in
planning further improvements. This map was compiled in this
office.
Tt became evident during the first days of the life of this office that
a comprehensive plan for the road and trail development of all of
the national parks was an essential, to the end that the habit of
building disconnected bits of roads and trails might be stopped.
Plans for the complete road and trail svstems for each of the five
national parks were then drawn in preliminary form. The parks
thus covered were Yosemite, Crater Lake, Rainier, Glacier, and
Sequoia.
THE VILLAGE PLAN FOR YOSEMITE.
Using the topographic map above referred to, an exhaustive study
was made of conditions on the floor of Yosemite Valley with the
intention of relieving the congested condition around the present
villnge. As a result, three plans were drawn in the course of the
studies made.
In addition to the village plan, studies were made for the new
hotel to be constructed on the floor of the valley. Plans were also
drawn for the new hotel to be constructed at Glacier Point, together
with tentative studies for 12 village buildings.
12 REPORT LANDSCAPE ENGINEER OF NATIONAL PARKS.
In conjunction with the work done on the replanning of the vil-
lage, an entire new plan of operation for the concessions in Yosemite
National Park was considered. This plan contemplated the granting
of a concession to a large operator who would build a hotel of sufficient
size to accommodate the demands on the floor of the valley, a smaller
hotel at Glacier Point, and 15 mountain inns in the High Sierra in
the park, to be built at the rate of three inns each year. Several
attempts have been made in the past to secure a concessionaire who
would perform this service, but all had been unsuccessful, due to the
fact that certain terms could not be agreed upon. The terms consid-
ered in this plan were on a profit-sharing basis, the concessionaire
under the terms of this arrangement to receive a permit of 20 years’
duration and to share the net prefits of his concession with the
Federal Government. This plan of sharing profits will overcome
the difficulty of establishing a graduated scale of charges, thereby
making it possible to grant a long-term permit.
With a large hotel on the floor of the valley, a new one on Glacier
Point, and a chain of mountain inns throughout the park so spaced
that they will be within easy walking distance of one another, it will
be possible for those of small financial means to see the entire park to
an extent that is now denied them.
In addition to this, the adoption of the village plan will do away
with the unsightly buildings that now mar the scenery and will es-
tablish a village properly planned, comprising buildings of carefully
studied architecture.
The above paragraphs have dealt with work originating in this
office. The remainder of the work done in this office will be segre-
gated under the headings of the parks for which the work was done.
YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK.
In addition to the work above outlined, plans and specifications
for the new El Capitan Bridge over the Merced River were prepared
in this office, and the bridge constructed under contract for the sum
of $2,965.
Plans were also drawn for a new bridge over the Merced River in
the vicinity of the present village, which plans are now being con-
sidered by bidders.
Plans and specifications were drawn for ranger cabins in the
Yosemite National Park, three of which were built at a total cost of
$2,990. ?
In December, 1914, new regulations for the park ranger force were
drawn and promulgated by the Secretary. In conformance with
these regulations a uniform was designed and insignia of the officers
selected. The park rangers in Yosemite National Park are now
uniformed according to regulation, and the organization of the park
ranger force under the new regulations has been perfected and has
demonstrated the merits of the steps taken.
CRATER LAKE NATIONAL PARK.
Plans were begun on the new village for Crater Lake National
Park in the year 1915. The work done under this plan comprised
studies in architectural character, together with an investigation of
REPORT LANDSCAPE ENGINEER OF NATIONAL PARKS, ¥3
pee feasible method of laying out roads for the circulation of
tratiic.
Mn addition to this work, a tour of inspection was made, together
with a study of the road and trail system in this park.
MESA VERDE NATIONAL PARK.
A tour of inspection was made of this park in the late summer of
1914, and the needs of roads, trails, and other developments carefully
considered. Plans and specifications were drawn for a ranger cabin
to be built of stone in the vicinity of the ruins of Spruce Tree House.
GLACIER NATIONAL PARK.
The work in this office on this park has been confined to the pur-
chasing of materials and planning of the road and trail system which
followed as a result of a more or less prolonged inspection of the
park.
SEQUOIA NATIONAL PARK.
Trips of investigation have been made to Sequoia National Park,
and a system of roads and trails planned. A survey has also been
made (finished in June, 1915) of the Mineral King Road, which
traverses the park, together with a survey and location of the pro-
posed changes necessary to make this road practical and passable to
motor-propelled and other vehicles.
RECOMMENDATIONS
AS TO THE OFFICE OF THE GENERAL SUPERINTENDENT AND
LANDSCAPE ENGINEER OF NATIONAL PARKS.
The following recommendations are based upon the assumption
that it is the Secretary’s desire to hold the general superintendent
and landscape engineer responsible for the work in the national
parks and that the general superintendent should in turn hold the
officers in the parks responsible to him.
The general superintendent should have the authority to employ
or dismiss any men in the service, and that suspension should remain
effective until revoked by the Secretary.
Alletments from the annual appropriations should be made in the
general supperintendent’s office after a general plan for the expendi-
ture of money has been submitted to the Secretary and approved.
IT recommend that the general superintendent be given authority
to enter into contracts for construction work as well as for the pur-
chase of materials by contract in accordance with the general scheme
of expenditures approved by the Secretary.
This office has purchased all supplies for Yosemite, Sequoia, and
General Grant National Parks sinee April 1, 1915. Considerable
saving has been accomplished by purchasing in San Francisco rather
than through local dealers in the neighborhood of the parks. Some
purchasing has’ also been dene for other parks west of the Recky
Mountains, and in some instances from 15 to 25 per cent has been
saved. I recommend that this system of purchasing and the forms
14 REPORT LANDSCAPE ENGINEER OF NATIONAL PARKS.
used be adopted and the practice extended throughout the various
parks wherever practicable.
In order that the general superintendent may be thoroughly
familiar with the phases of the work for which he is held responsible,
it is my opinion that correspondence from the parks should be
addressed to the general superintendent, or through him to the Secre-
tary, and, likewise, all communications that have to do with oper-
ations in the parks should be forwarded from the department through
the general superintendent to the parks.
I recommend that all regulations and instructions to be enforced
in the parks be promulgated from the general superintendent’s office.
It is impossible to accomplish economical management of the parks
without the aid of a practical working unit cost-keeping system.
Such a system has been installed in the Yosemite National Park and
is producing most satisfactory results. I recommend that this sys-
tem be extended to each and every other national park. This will
involve the taking of an inventory on the physical assets in each
park such as was taken in Yosemite. This work should also be car-
ried on in other parks.
The title of general superintendent and landscape engineer of
national parks carries with it two distinct and separate classes of
duties. There is sufficient work under each of these two titles to keep
one man very busy throughout the year. It is not humanly possible
for one man to act in the capacity of general superintendent and
landscape engineer and perform the duties that each of these two
titles require. I recommend, therefore, that the title be split and
two officers appointed for this work—a general superintendent and
a landscape engineer.
Perhaps the most important work that can be carried on in this
office is the planning of improvements in the various parks, and I
strongly urge that the work that has begun in the way of planning
new villages for the Yosemite and Crater Lake National Parks be
continued in the remaining parks where such work is needed.
Several attempts have been made to establish by an act of Congress
a national park service, and there can be no doubt in the minds of
those who are familiar with the problems of administering our
national parks that such a service is seriously needed. I would urge
that every effort be made to secure the enactment of a law that will
establish the national park service on a firm footing.
The title of superintendent in any national park should be dis-
pensed with and a title of supervisor should indicate the officer in
immediate charge of the park, as the title of superintendent is con-
fusing with the title of general superintendent.
RECOMMENDATIONS FOR THE VARIOUS PARKS.
YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK.
The steps that have been taken for the erection of the new hotel
on the floor of the valley and another at Glacier Point, and a chain
of mountain inns throughout the park, will undoubtedly bring a
materially increased travel. To prepare for this, more road and trail
construction work in the park is necessary. The road from El Portal
REPORT LANDSCAPE ENGINEER OF NATIONAL PARKS, 15
to the valley should be widened and properly surfaced. The road
on the north side of the valley from Pchona Bridge to the new hotel
site should be surfaced. That portion of the road on the south side
of the valley which is now a dirt road should be surfaced. A new
bridge should be erected in place of the present Sentinel Bridge,
which has several times been condemned and which is now not strong
enough to carry passenger trucks.
When the village on the north side of the river is completed it
will be necessary to erect new barns and headquarters for the Gov-
ernment employees and stock. There is also a crying need for a
new administrative building. The old building occupied at present
by the superintendent is insanitary and rapidly falling to pieces.
It is recommended that three motor-driven power sprinkling trucks
be purchased for use in sprinkling the roads in Yosemite National
Park, as the cost of sprinkling the roads in this park by horse-drawn
sprinklers is entirely too high. For the months of May, June, July,
and August, 1915, 6,162 miles of roads were sprinkled in this park,
at an average cost of 93 cents per mile. The reason for this apparent
high cost is that horse hire and forage for the subsistence of stock is
very high. The average cost per horse-day for the months of May,
June, July, and August was $1.07. By installing motor-driven
sprinkling trucks and making some slight improvements in the water
system this expense could be reduced 50 per cent.
The purchase of the Tioga Road has widened the activities of the
park ranger force, and this force should be augmented to control the
travel.
The park rangers in the Yosemite Park have no headquarters of
their own in the valley. A ranger barrack should be erected, in
which will be lockers for each ranger. A stable should be con-
structed in conjunction with the barrack where the park rangers
called to the valley for special duty may stable and feed their horses.
An information bureau has been in operation for a few months
during the season of 1915 and has met with enthusiastic approval on
the part cf the public. This bureau gives information direct to the
tourists regarding the condition of the roads, trails, and all other
information desired in a way that is not biased by local prejudice.
I strongly urge that a system of local information bureaus operated
by the department be adcpted in all of the parks and continued in
Yosemite National Park.
A ccllection of stuffed birds and animals indigenous to the area
covered by Yosemite National Park has been started, and the same
is being placed on exhibition in the bureau of information. The ex-
hibits are supplied through Dr. Joseph Grinnell, director of the
museum of vertebrate zoology of the University of California. Some
of the park rangers have been instructed by Dr. Grinnell and his
assistants in the securing and stuffing of the birds and animals. The
work done to date has aroused considerable public interest and has
met with enthusiastic appreciation.
A collection of wild flowers is also being completed and placed om
exhibition. With each flower is a water-color drawing showing the
true color of the flower. This work is being carried on through the
park ranger force and the bureau of information.
SULLYS HILL Fa)
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@ Hor SPRINGS
RESERVATION
arks and national monuments.
18 REPORT LANDSCAPE ENGINEER OF NATIONAL PARKS,
SEQUOIA NATIONAL PARK.
The Mineral King Road, which traverses the Sequoia National
Park from the western boundary to the eastern boundary, connects
the San Joaquin Valley with a small summer resort named Mineral
King. There is urgent demand on the part of the public to use this
road, which use has been denied them. I recommend that the de-
partment put this road in shape for travel at the earliest possible
date.
The Mount Whitney Power Co. has built a road up the canyon
of the Middle Fork of the Kaweah. Surveys for the extension of
this road should be made so that it may connect with the Giant For-
est Road, thus forming a loop in the park. Another survey of a road
connecting Sequoia Park with General Grant Park has been made
by the Office of Public Roads. This survey should be considered and,
if accepted, adopted and plans for its construction undertaken.
To the east of Sequoia National Park is some of the finest moun-
tain scenery in the world. The area in which the scenery lies is of
little or no value for purposes other than the pleasure of scenery
lovers. It contains the great Kern Canyon, Kings River Canyons,
and Mount Whitney, the highest peak in the United States, together
with almost innumerable other features. I can not recommend too
strongly that the Sequoia National Park be enlarged to take in the
areas to the southeast and east which contain these examples of
wonderful mountain scenery.
CRATER LAKE NATIONAL PARK,
The present headquarters of the superintendent are at a point a
thousand feet below the rim of the crater. The location is not satis-
factory. Plans should be made for a secondary summer headquarters
on the rim of the crater, either at the location of the present hotel
or at some other point on the rim.
The ranger force in this park is not of sufficient size to adequately
protect the park in the winter. The force should, therefore, be
augmented to prevent poaching.
A trail should be built as near to the water’s edge as possible and
as far around the lake as practicability will allow.
Ranger cabins in the form of automobile-checking stations should
be erected at each roadway entrance to the park.
The patrolling of this park is rather difficult, as it is in all parks,
and in order that the superintendent may perform his duties effec-
tively he should be furnished with an inexpensive automobile.
MOUNT RAINIER NATIONAL PARK.
The entire stretch of road in this park from the park entrance to
Paradise Valley should be surfaced with crushed rock.
A survey of the entire road and trail system as outlined on the
roads and trails map executed in this office should be made and the
feasibility of following out the plans indicated should be investigated.
Steps should be taken at once for the development of an encircling
road around Mount Rainier and all construction work should be
confined to portions of the general plan.
REPORT LANDSCAPE ENGINEER OF NATIONAL PARKS, 19
The village at Longmire Springs is particularly unsightly, and
steps should be taken to either clean this place and bring about a more
harmonious architectural scheme or the site should be abandoned
and another one established. The plans for extensions of the trail
system as recommended by the supervisor in his report should be
adopted.
_ Tourists climbing the mountain are frequently overcome with fa-
tigue before they reach the summit and are forced to stop over en
route. A small comfort station should be erected along the trail to
accommodate such people.
Satisfactory headquarters for department officials should be erected
in the village and the park rangers in this park should be uniformed
according to regulations.
GLACIER NATIONAL PARE.
The development of travel in Glacier National Park has been in an
easterly and westerly direction. As a result most of the trails in the
park traverse the Great Divide. It is impossible to take a trip paral-
leling the Great Divide, which would be by far the most beautiful
trip that could be devised in this park. In addition to this, there are
practically no roads within the boundaries of the park, and automo-
bile touring, therefore, is excluded. I strongly urge, therefore, that,
the plans shown on the map executed in this office for the roads and
trails development of this park be adopted in general and surveys
made to determine how much of the roads and trails indicated thereon
are feasible and practicable.
The headquarters of the supervisor.are established at the foot of
McDonald Lake. This is not in my estimation the proper location.
A thorough investigation of the available sites at Belton and some
point on the eastern side of the park, either near St. Marys Lake
or in the vicinity of Glacier Park Hotel, should be studied and steps
taken to establish the headquarters at the location chosen.
The park ranger force in this park is not adequate to properly
patrol the area.
‘The telephone system should be improved and all metallic circuits
installed. It is not in any way satisfactory that the Government
should use private telephone lines erected by concessionaires. It is
my opinion that the department should own its own telephone sys-
tem, so that immediate service may be had in case of forest fires or
serious accidents.
YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK.
This park is administered by the Secretary of the Interior, using
the soldiers and officers detailed by the Secretary of War for the pur-
pose of patroling and maintaining order. This constitutes more or
less of a dual administration, which can never be satisfactorily car-
ried out. In my opinion this park should be administered solely by
the Secretary of the Interior or solely by the Secretary of War.
I recommend that the improvements requested by the acting super-
intendent for the buffalo farm be carried out and that the additional
fire lanes requested by him be constructed.
20 REPORT LANDSCAPE ENGINEER OF NATIONAL PARKS.
At Mammoth Hot Springs are several buildings formerly occupied
by soldiers of this military post which might be put to better pur-
poses than those for which they are now used. There is a real de-
mand for a museum, and I recommend that the feasibility of rear-
ranging the interior of one of these buildings be investigated, and if
it is found the same can be accomplished for reasonable cost, plans be
drawn and contract let for the construction work necessary to estab-
lish this museum.
MESA VERDE NATIONAL PARK.
The present road, leading from the park entrance to the top of
the great mesa, is poorly located and unnecessarily long. The recom-
mendations regarding this road submitted by the superintendent
should, in my opinion, be carried out.
Many of the ruins are in such shape that it is practically impossi-
ble to get about among them. I would urge that a sufficient appro-
priation be secured to permit the Smithsonian Institution to carry on
the work of restoration recommended by the superintendent.
The many relics of a forgotten race that were once in this park
have been scattered to the four corners of the world. Those which
were retained by the residents of the district are slowly disappearing.
If a museum, even of the smallest kind, were erected in the park,
most of these relics could be secured either by loan or gift and some
of the implements, textiles, and other objects of interest could be
permanently preserved.
ROCKY MOUNTAIN NATIONAL PARK,
This park is the newest in the system. The first steps that should
be taken, in my opinion, are the preliminary investigations looking
forward toa complete road and trail system. This park will doubtless
receive the greatest tourist travel of all of the mountain parks, and I
recommend that plans for its development be at once undertaken on a
broad and comprehensive scheme.
I would suggest also that no steps be taken in the granting of
cencessions in this park until a policy is established for their opera-
tion similar to that which is now being developed in Yosemite and
Mount Rainier National Parks. The crying need of this park for the
next two years will be roads and trails.
PLATT NATIONAL PARK.
Platt National Park, like the Hot Springs Reservation, lays claim
to its place in the category of national parks by virtue of the health-
giving waters to be found there. The accommodations and facilities
for the proper use of these waters, however, have not been developed
in any way commensurate with the real value of the water. There
are two ways in which this water could be used and placed at the
disposal of the great number of people who might be benefited by
them:
1. By erecting a large hotel or sanitarium in the park.
2. By bottling the waters for distribution.
REPORT LANDSCAPE ENGINEER OF NATIONAL PARKS, ot
I believe these two possibilities should be thoroughly investigated
and the choice determined. It is possible that both might be ad-
visable. ‘The principal question, however, is the quantity of the
various waters that can be secured.
The French Republic operates a bottling plant at Vichy Springs
and sends water from these springs to all parts of the world. If
the flow of water in the various springs in Platt National Park is
of sufficient volume or can be developed, I believe that it will be the
part of wisdom to see that these waters are more generally distrib-
uted. Last year over 50,000 gallons of water were shipped by private
individuals from Platt National Park to all parts of the country.
It will be entirely feasible, in my opinion, to secure the coopera-
tion of a concessionaire to build a hotel or the bottling plant on a
long-term and profit-sharing lease, providing a sufficient quantity of
water is available. I would recommend, therefore, that the flows of
these springs be thoroughly tested and the possibility of increasing
them investigated. If the results justify, I would further recom-
mend that steps be taken to secure a concessionaire who will carry
on the operations in accordance with the above outline.
HOT SPRINGS RESERVATION.
There are two important problems in this reservation that should
receive immediate attention. First is the public bath operated by
the Government where medical services and treatments are free to
those who are unable to pay for them. The present bathhouse is
crumbling with decay, unsightly, insanitary, and reflects anything
but credit upon the Federal Government.
Hundreds of thousands of people have been relieved of suffering
and as many have had their lives saved to them by virtue of the
medicinal qualities of the waters of Arkansas. It is a great insti-
tution and one that fully warrants the hearty support of our Fed-
eral Government. The bathhouses that are privately owned are
many of them luxuriously appointed, and the growing contrast be-
tween the people who have money and can afford these bathhouses
and the conditions with which the poor are confronted in the free
bathhouse is one that arouses righteous anger. I can not conceive
a more noble act or more justifiable expenditure of public money
than the erection of a new and beautiful bathhouse as a gift from the
Federal Government to the suffering poor of this country.
The second feature that needs attention is the general develop-
ment of the reservation from the standpoint of a landscape architect.
Several plans have been submitted for the reservation, but none has
been adopted.
WIND CAVE NATIONAL PARK,
As a curious wonder, I doubt if there is anything in this country
which equals the Wind Cave in this park, which contains over 90
miles of explored passages which are hung with stalactites and
sparkling crystals.
The cave, however, is in utter darkness and the tourists visiting
it are only able to secure a glimpse now and then while a bit of
22 REPORT LANDSCAPE ENGINEER OF NATIONAL PARKS,
magnesium tape is being burned by the guide. I recommend that
a system of lighting the cave be worked out. A test is now being
made with storage batteries loaned by the Edison Electric Co. The
object of using storage batteries is to avoid the necessity of running
wires through the cave. If these prove succesful it will be possible
to carry the batteries from the various chambers for re-storing.
The results to date indicate that this method of lighting the cave
will probably be feasible, and if upon further test our present opinion
is corroborated, I would recommend that some of the main cham-
bers be equipped with these storage-battery lights.
Respectfully submitted.
Mark Danitets,
General Superintendent and
Landscape Engineer of National Parks.
The SEcrETARY OF THE INTERIOR,
Washington, D. C.
23
REPORT LANDSCAPE ENGINEER OF NATIONAL PARKS,
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REPORT LANDSCAPE ENGINEER OF NATIONAL PARKS,
24
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National Park. Appropriations for road work under War Department not
Appropriations under Interior Department, revenues,
cluded in this diagram.
3,000)
10,000
709000
52000
43000
39,000
22000
13,000
ced t i i
1904 /905 /906 907 908 /909 /9/0 191
REPORT LANDSCAPE ENGINEER OF NATIONAL PARKS,
S905 1906 /907 7/908
7909 /9/0 S94 19/2 SWZ f WHA (US
Appropriations, revenues, and visitors, Wind Cave National Park.
/
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Appropriations, revenues, and visitors, Yosemite National Park.
26 REPORT LANDSCAPE ENGINEER OF NATIONAL PARKS.
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1
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REPORT LANDSCAPE ENGINEER OF NATIONAL PARKS,
27
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Appropriations, revenues, and visitors, Mesa Verde National Park.
28 REPORT LANDSCAPE ENGINEER OF NATIONAL PARKS,
Se
Beessesessceesessecsccranssses seseesencs
190% /905 1905 /907 £908 1909 19/0 /91 (912 (93 19/4 15
Visitors, Sullys Hill Park.
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Revenues and visitors, Hot Springs Reservation.
é roe Cae at Hot Springs in March, 1911, yielded $82,818; other revenues amounted
° ,060.
REPORT LANDSCAPE ENGINEER OF NATIONAL PARKS, 29
7000
490% (905 (906 /907 /908 /909 1/910.
49 (We JH3 1918 (YS
Appropriations, revenues, and visitors, General Grant National Park.
“$0000
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SU 1H2 SH3 SH4 SUS -
Appropriations under Interior Department, revenues, and visitors, Mount Rainier National
Park. Appropriations for road work under
diagram.
War Department not included in this
30 REPORT LANDSCAPE ENGINEER OF NATIONAL PARKS.
Ou
17904 /905 /906 /907 /908 £909 /WHO /9// 192 19/3 VR SHG
Appropriations under Interior Department, revenues, and visitors, Crater Lake Na-
tional Park, Appropriations for road work under War Department not included in
this diagram,
31
REPORT LANDSCAPE ENGINEER OF NATIONAL PARKS,
1915
1907
£206
(204
_/90B -
Appropriations, revenues, and visitors, Platt National Park.
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