On a cool rainy day Tuesday,
September 25, veteran forester Dick Spray led his hiking class up Crescent
Mountain. The Sisters Central Oregon Community College group ambled past
lichen-shrouded Douglas fir trees in old growth stands over 200 years old.
Crossing Maude Creek, the
group stopped to inspect old signs posted on trees. The signs identifying
the creek were barely readable. Lovely green moss covered many of the
rocks.
Later the group passed hemlock,
spruce and silver fir trees before stopping for lunch. A few huckleberries
were found and shared along the trail.
It is a four-mile hike to
the top and a 2,000-foot elevation gain. There was a former fire lookout
station on Crescent Mountain. Parts of the old wooden floor survive today.
It was first used as a lookout in 1908 according to Spray.
"A crude shake cabin was built
in 1914, a Cupola constructed in 1922, a lookout in 1938 that was destroyed
in 1948," Spray said.
Spray recounted the tale of
the death of 16-year old lookout Douglas Lindsay who was working there
during World War II. He had been pressed into service because many men
had left for the war effort. He lived alone at the lookout tower.
The tale is recounted in the
piece Mystery Fatality at Crescent Mountain, by Ray Kresek in "Fire Lookouts
of the Northwest" 1984):
Three weeks after Doug had
moved up on the peak, he failed to report in. The Fish Lake packer was
dispatched. Four hours later, the phone rang. It was Crescent Mountain
on the other end of the line. But instead of the watchman, it was the
packer's voice, with grim news that he'd just found Doug lying dead on
the porch of his cabin, the victim of a point blank gunshot wound in the
head.
Several unusual circumstances
surrounding the youngster's death lacked necessary answers. Neither of
his guns had been fired recently; yet empty .22 cartridges were found
in and around the station, recently fired by an unidentified weapon.
After weeks of interrogation
and examination, investigators were unable to find sufficient evidence
as to how the incident might have occurred. Was it an accident or homicide?
The answer remains unknown (over 50 years later) and will no doubt never
be solved."
Spray commented, "In 1945
I was on Jump Off Joe Lookout with my father. We heard of the shooting
via the grapevine on our circuit.
"The explanation that we heard
was that it was an accidental shooting -- nothing more. Accidents were
fairly common among lookouts, and often required medical attention or
even evacuation. Axes were usually the culprit."
To visit Crescent Mountain
drive west on Highway 20 towards Sweet Home. Turn right at the Lava Lake
sno park signage and travel about 1.5 miles to the trailhead.