Dee Wright Observatory

{{Infobox park

| name = Dee Wright Observatory

| photo = Dee Wright Observatory (Deschutes County, Oregon scenic images) (desDB1726).jpg

| photo_width = 250

| photo_caption = Observatory at the summit of McKenzie Pass

| type =

| location = McKenzie Pass, Lane County, Oregon, United States

| coords = {{coord|44.260556|-121.801222|display=inline,title}}

| area =

| created = 1935

| operator = U.S. Forest Service

| visitation_num =

| status =

| open =

}}

Dee Wright Observatory is an observation structure at the summit of McKenzie Pass in the Cascade Mountains of Oregon. The structure is an open shelter constructed with lava stone. It is located in the midst of a large lava flow, and offers an exceptional view of numerous Cascade peaks.

Location

Dee Wright Observatory is located in the Willamette National Forest 15 miles (24 km) west of Sisters, Oregon on Route 242.[https://www.fs.usda.gov/recarea/willamette/recreation/recarea/?recid=4403"Dee Wright Observatory"], Willamette National Forest, United States Forest Service, Eugene, Oregon 26 June 2002. The highway is part of the McKenzie-Santiam Pass Scenic Byway. McKenzie Pass is {{convert|5325|ft|m}} above sea level, and winter snow and the narrow road surface requires McKenzie Pass to be closed to motor vehicles from November to July each year.[http://www.fs.fed.us/r6/willamette/recreation/accessible/index.html "McKenzie Travel Corridor, Dee Wright Observatory"], Willamette National Forest, United States Forest Service, Eugene, Oregon, 7 May 2007.[http://www.tripcheck.com/Pages/SBmckenzie.asp "McKenzie Pass"], Oregon Department of Transportation, Salem, Oregon, 2008. It is at times accessible to cyclists when the road is closed to vehicles.{{cite news |last1=Hogan |first1=Jackson |title=Cyclists, hikers to have limited access to McKenzie Pass Highway this spring |url=https://www.bendbulletin.com/localstate/7040860-151/cyclists-hikers-to-have-limited-access-to-mckenzie |accessdate=31 March 2019 |work=The Bulletin |date=28 March 2019 |language=en}}

Structure

The observatory is an open shelter built with basaltic andesite lava found at the construction site.{{cite journal |last1=Cashman |first1=Katharine V. |last2=Deligne |first2=Natalia I. |last3=Gannett |first3=Marshall W. |last4=Grant |first4=Gordon E. |last5=Jefferson |first5=Anne |title=Fire and water: Volcanology, geomorphology, and hydrogeology of the Cascade Range, central Oregon |journal=GSA Field Guide |date=January 2009 |volume=15 |page=549 |doi=10.1130/2009.fld015(26)|isbn=978-0-8137-0015-1 }} The viewing windows are cut to specifically highlight the neighboring mountains. These "lava tube" viewing holes allow visitors to easily identify the different Cascade peaks. There is also a 36 inch (90 cm) diameter, bronze azimuth-like "peak finder" on the observatory’s roof to help visitors locate nearby geologic features as well as the surrounding mountain peaks. From the top of the observatory, visitors have a panoramic view of the Cascade Mountain Range including Mount Hood in the far north.

Image:Dee Wright Observatory 02.jpg

Many peaks can easily be seen from Dee Wright Observatory: Mount Jefferson, Cache Mountain, Dugout Butte, Black Butte, Bluegrass Butte, Black Crater, North Sister, Middle Sister, Little Brother (and ridge west), Condon Butte, Scott Mountain, South Belknap Cone, Belknap Crater, Little Belknap, and Mount Washington. Mount Hood, Bald Peter, Green Ridge, and Horsepasture Mountain can also be seen from the observatory during good weather.[http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Volcanoes/Oregon/HighCascades/dee_wright_observatory.html "Dee Wright Observatory"], United States Geological Survey, Cascades Volcano Observatory, Vancouver, Washington, December 2005.

The half-mile long Lava River Interpretive Trail begins at the observatory, and takes visitors on a 30-minute walk through lava beds. The trail is paved and easy to follow. Interpretive panels, located along the trail highlight the geology of the area. The trail also offers open vistas of the surrounding landscape.

History

McKenzie Pass follows the path of an 1860 wagon route. The route emerges from the forest and crosses a {{convert|65|mi2|km2|sing=on}} lava flow. At the summit, the wagon road had to be cut through the lava beds. As a result, alternate routes over the Cascades were used by most early travelers. Today’s highway follows the wagon route over the lava beds past the observatory site.

The observatory was built during the Great Depression by a Civilian Conservation Corps crew at Camp Belknap near Clear Lake.{{cite news|url=http://www.oregonlive.com/travel/index.ssf/2008/10/autumn_touring_on_the_mckenzie.html|title=Autumn touring on the McKenzie-Santiam loop|last=Hill|first=Sean Patrick|date=October 11, 2008|work=The Oregonian|accessdate=2008-10-12}}{{cite magazine |last=Benson|first=G.T.|date=February 1965|title=The Age of Clear Lake|url=https://ir.library.oregonstate.edu/downloads/5999n7893|format=PDF|magazine=The Ore Bin|volume=27|issue=2|page=40|publisher=Department of Geology and Mineral Industries, State of Oregon|issn=0148-1827|access-date=31 March 2019}} It was completed in 1935, and named for the construction crew’s foreman who had died the previous year after serving 24 years as a Forest Service packer and crew foreman at Camp Belknap.

In addition to Dee Wright Observatory, the rough-hewn timber shelter built by the Civilian Conservation Corps at Camp Belknap still stands near Clear Lake. Both sites are maintained by the United States Forest Service. Today, Dee Wright Observatory is visited by thousands of travelers crossing McKenzie Pass each summer.

File:DeeWrightObservatory (1 of 1).jpg

References

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