Tule Lake Explained

Tule Lake
Location:Siskiyou / Modoc Counties, California, United States
Coords:41.9093°N -121.5331°W
Type:Ancient lake, intermittent lake
Inflow:Lost River
Pushpin Map:California#USA
Pushpin Map Alt:Location of Tule Lake in California, USA

Tule Lake [1] is an intermittent lake covering an area of, long and across, in northeastern Siskiyou County and northwestern Modoc County in California, along the border with Oregon.

Geography

Tule Lake is fed by the Lost River. The elevation of the lake is 4035feet.

It is one of twenty ancient lakes in the world that have existed continuously for more than 1 million years.[2] However, this has recently come under significant threat due to multiple years of drought conditions.[3]

Tule Lake is located 2.4km (01.5miles), southwest of the town of Tulelake in Northern California.

Wildlife and water

The lake is part of the Tule Lake National Wildlife Refuge and the Klamath Project. Deliveries of water from the Klamath Project have been necessary to provide sufficient water for wildlife. On July 24, 2020, a delivery of water from the Klamath Project saved 50,000 ducklings from death.[4]

History

Canby's Cross is located about 3miles south of the lake; it is the site where General Edward Canby was killed by the Modoc chief Kintpuash, also known to American settlers as Captain Jack.

The Tule Lake War Relocation Center, a Japanese American internment camp, is located east of the lake, in Modoc County. During World War II, the United States federal government under Executive Order 9066, forced the evacuation of Japanese nationals and Japanese Americans, including citizens born in the United States, to numerous camps built in the interior of California and inland states. This camp later housed mainly those who rebelled against WRA control in other Japanese Internment Camps, as well as those who refused to cooperate under what was known as the "loyalty questionnaire".[5] They were forced to sell their businesses and homes, and suffered enormous economic and psychological losses by being treated as potential enemies. Following World War II, the federal government awarded 86 farm sites on land reclaimed by the drainage of Tule Lake to returning white veterans using a land lottery.[6] A lottery was used because the number of applicants was greater than the number of homesteads available.[7]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Tule Lake . Lexico UK English Dictionary . Oxford University Press.
  2. Web site: Ancient lakes of the world | Christopher M. Free . marine.rutgers.edu . 12 January 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200209063201/https://marine.rutgers.edu/~cfree/ancient-lakes-of-the-world/ . 9 February 2020 . dead.
  3. News: Alexander . Kurtis . A vast California lake is set to run dry. Scientists . 18 April 2022 . San Francisco Chronicle . 15 April 2022.
  4. Web site: 2020-07-24. Klamath water arrives, saving 50,000 ducklings from certain death. 2020-07-25. SFChronicle.com. en-US.
  5. Web site: Wallace . Nina . 2020-07-14 . Understanding Tule Lake: A Brief History . 2023-10-15 . Densho: Japanese American Incarceration and Japanese Internment . en-US.
  6. "Veterans Win Farms at Tule Lake Lottery," Life, 22:73-74, January 20, 1947, referenced in H W Martin and C A McMahan, 'Land Distribution in Georgia, The Southwestern Social Science Quarterly, Vol. 33, No. 1 (June 1952), pp. 44-51
  7. Klamath Project, "The Klamath Project at 100:Conserving our Resources, Preserving our Heritage" http://nebula.wsimg.com/32eef7685dfbe3422fba25c7b1a7b461?AccessKeyId=F79F3BB35D44F5CEBBA5&disposition=0&alloworigin=1 accessed 3 July 2015