Chandler State Wayside (also known as Chandler State Park) is a state park in south-central Oregon in the United States. It is named in honor of Solomon and Hattie Chandler, who donated the land for the park. The park covers 85 acres (34ha) of pine forest along a creek. The park provides restrooms and other basic facilities to accommodate the traveling public. Chandler State Wayside is administered by the Oregon Parks and Recreation Department.
Park
Chandler State Wayside is a day-use park that runs along both sides of U.S. Route 395, approximately 16 miles (26km) north of Lakeview, Oregon. The wayside provides a stopping place along Oregon's Outback Scenic Byway. The public park area is located on the west side of the highway in a grove of large ponderosa pine. Crooked Creek flows through the park, just east of the developed wayside area.[2][3][4]
The park has picnic tables, potable drinking water, and flush toilets. The wayside provides access to fishing spots along Crooked Creek, where rainbow trout can be found. Chandler State Wayside is also a good area for wildlife viewing. There is no fee to use the park area.[2][4] The wayside has approximately 41,700 day-use visitors each year.[5]
History
The park property was donated to the state by Solomon and Hattie Chandler. The Chandlers were early settlers in Lake County, Oregon. They established their ranch in the latter part of the 19thcentury. By the 1920s, they were among the largest land owners in the area. At that time, their ranch extended from the north end of Abert Lake through the Valley Falls area into the Crooked Creek valley. They also owned some dispersed parcels of land in the Goose Lake Valley north of Lakeview. The Chandlers grazed large sheep herds and some cattle on their ranch.[6][7]
The Chandler ranch included property on Crooked Creek. In one area along the creek, there was a stand of large ponderosa pine. These were the first large pine trees that travelers encountered when approaching the area from high desert county to the north and east. In the mid-1920s, the state highway department offered to buy the pine-covered property along the creek for use as a roadside park. Instead of selling the land, the Chandlers decided to donate the property to the State of Oregon in July 1929. The state named the park in honor of the Chandlers.[2][6][7]
In the mid-1960s, the section of Route 395 adjacent to Chandler State Wayside was relocated. As part of this project, the State of Oregon purchased additional land to expand the park and ensure convenient access from the highway. Today, the park covers 85 acres (34ha) and is administered by the Oregon Parks and Recreation Department.[5]
12345Bannan, Jan, "Chandler State Wayside", Oregon State Parks: A Complete Recreation Guide, The Mountaineers Books, Seattle, Washington, 1993, pp. 164–165.
↑"Driving Directions", Google Maps link from Oregon Department of Transportation, Salem, Oregon, 15 July 2014.
123"Park Information", Chandler State Wayside, Oregon Department of Transportation, Salem, Oregon, 15 July 2014.
12"Park History", Chandler State Wayside, Oregon Department of Transportation, Salem, Oregon, 15 July 2014.
12"Chandler State Park", historical information kiosk, Oregon Department of Transportation, Chandler State Park near Lakeview, Oregon, 14 July 2007.
↑"Chandler State Wayside", Basin Range and Birding Trail, Central Modoc River Center, Alturas, California, 15 July 2014.
↑"About the Forest", Fremont–Winema National Forest, United States Forest Service, United states Department of Agriculture, Lakeview, Oregon, 15 July 2014.
↑"Oregon Wildlife Explorer", National Resources Digital Library, Oregon State University Libraries, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon, 15 July 2014.