Bear Mountain State Park

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File:Bear Mountain as seen from Croton-Harmon.jpg
Bear Mountain State Park as seen from across the Hudson River at Croton-Harmon, New York

Bear Mountain State Park is a Template:Convert state park located on the west bank of the Hudson River in Rockland and Orange counties, New York.<ref name=RIoG_PS/><ref name=GNIS_BMSP>Template:Cite GNIS</ref> The park offers biking, hiking, boating, picnicking, swimming, cross-country skiing, cross-country running, sledding and ice skating. It also includes several facilities such as the Perkins Memorial Tower, the Trailside Museum and Zoo, the Bear Mountain Inn, a merry-go-round, a pool, and a skating rink. It also hosts the Bear Mountain Circle, where the historic Palisades Interstate Parkway and Bear Mountain Bridge meet. It is managed by the Palisades Interstate Park Commission, which is overseen by the State of New York.<ref name=Binnewies_2001_AppA/>

Geography

The park includes Bear Mountain as well as Dunderberg Mountain and West Mountain. Fort Montgomery is adjacent to the north edge of the park, while Iona Island Bird Sanctuary is on the eastern edge in the Hudson River. The park is a separate entity from the adjacent Harriman State Park, which runs along the western edge of the park. It lies within the Northeastern coastal forests ecoregion.<ref name="terrestrial">Template:Cite journal</ref>

History

File:Bear Mtn Bridge.jpg
View of Bear Mountain Bridge from the Perkins Memorial Drive mountain summit. The bridge enters the northern edge of the park, the only portion that is in Orange County.

During the American Revolution, when the British viewed control of the Hudson River as essential to dominating the American territories, the area that was to become the park saw several significant military engagements. In 1777, British troops routed Patriots at Fort Montgomery. Anthony Wayne's attack of the British fort at Stony Point moved colonial troops to the west of Bear Mountain.Template:Citation needed

In 1908 the State of New York announced plans to relocate Sing Sing Prison to Bear Mountain. Work was begun in the area near Highland Lake (renamed Hessian Lake) and in January 1909, the state purchased the Template:Convert Bear Mountain tract. Conservationists inspired by the work of the Palisades Interstate Park Commission lobbied successfully for the creation of the Highlands of the Hudson Forest Preserve, stopping the prison from being built.

Mary Averell Harriman, whose husband, Union Pacific Railroad president E. H. Harriman died in September of that year, offered the state another Template:Convert and one million dollars toward the creation of a state park. George W. Perkins, with whom she had been working, raised another $1.5 million from a dozen wealthy contributors including John D. Rockefeller and J. Pierpont Morgan. New York State appropriated a matching $2.5 million and the state of New Jersey appropriated $500,000 to build the Henry Hudson Drive, (which would be succeeded by the Palisades Interstate Parkway in 1947).Template:Citation needed

Bear Mountain-Harriman State Park became a reality the following year when the prison was demolished and a dock built for steamboat excursion traffic; the following year a new West Shore Railroad station was built near the dock. In 1912, a replica of Henry Hudson's ship, the Half Moon was built and moored at the dock. Major William A. Welch was hired as Chief Engineer, whose work for the park would win him recognition as the father of the state park movement<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> (and later, the national park movement).Template:Citation needed

File:Hessian Lake NY.JPG
Hessian Lake at Bear Mountain State Park

The park opened in June 1913. Steamboats alone brought more than 22,000 passengers to the park that year. Camping at Hessian Lake (and later at Lake Stahahe) was immensely popular; the average stay was eight days and was a favorite for Boy Scouts. By 1914 it was estimated that more than a million people a year were coming to the park.

In the 1930s the federal government under Franklin D. Roosevelt was developing plans to preserve the environment as part of the Depression-era public works programs; the Civil Works Administration and the Works Progress Administration spent five years on projects at the park. Pump houses, reservoirs, sewer systems, vacation lodges, bathrooms, homes for park staff, storage buildings and an administration building were all created through these programs. Template:Citation needed

The park continued to grow after its creation. The Palisades Interstate Park Commission began purchasing nearby Doodletown in the 1920s and completed the acquisition with eminent domain in the 1960s.

The park temporarily closed between July and August of 2023 after a storm struck the area on the 9th of July which damaged multiple pieces of infrastructure and washed out many trails in the park.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Many of the park's trails remained closed for the following couple of months, however a majority of the trails have since reopened.

Facilities

Bear Mountain Inn

File:Bear Mountain Inn after reconstruction.jpg
Bear Mountain Inn after renovation

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Originally completed in 1915, the Bear Mountain Inn is an early example of the rustic lodge style influenced by the Adirondack Great Camps and later used extensively in the National Park System. It closed in 2005 for extended renovations, reopening in 2011.

Perkins Memorial Drive

File:Bear Mountain Peak.JPG
Peak of Bear Mountain

The Perkins Memorial Drive is a scenic road to the summit of Bear Mountain. At the summit, the Template:Convert Perkins Memorial Tower provides a view of four states and the skyline of Manhattan, Template:Convert to the south. The road and tower were built by the Civilian Conservation Corps between 1932 and 1934. It is named after George Wallbridge Perkins, the first president of the Palisades Interstate Park Commission.<ref name="ppc">Template:Cite web</ref>

Trailside Museums and Zoo

File:Bear Mtn Zoo.JPG
Bear Mountain Zoo

The Trailside Museums and Zoo are located at the former site of Fort Clinton. Its name is a reference to the Appalachian Trail that runs through the complex. The zoo began as a bear den in 1926 and is currently the home of a wide variety of local injured or rehabilitating animals, including bears, otters, deer, bald eagles, and owls. The zoo's popular otter died in June 2013, aged 19 years. The Reptile and Amphibian House has many species of fish, turtles, snakes and frogs. The Nature Study Museum was formed in 1921 for the Boy Scouts facility in the park from the original exhibits created by the American Museum of Natural History. The Geology Museum covers the Hudson Highlands and other local geology. The History Museum has exhibits about colonial and Native American culture.<ref name="trailside">Template:Cite web</ref> On February 11, 1962, 35,120 spectators turned out to watch the New York State Junior Ski Jumping Championship.<ref>The New York Times, February 12, 1962</ref> More jump competitions were held at Bear Mountain than at any other ski jump in the United States. The ski jumps have not been used since 1990.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Hiking

There are over 50 official trails covering Template:Convert, featuring a wide range of difficulties and elevation changes.

The first section of the Appalachian Trail, taking hikers from Bear Mountain south to the Delaware Water Gap, opened on October 7, 1923 and served as a pattern for the other sections of the trail developed independently by local and regional organizations and later by the federal government. The Bear Mountain Zoo, through which the Appalachian Trail passes, is the lowest elevation on the Template:Convert trail. There are Template:Convert of the AT located in the park. In 2010, sections of the AT within the park were rebuilt by the New York - New Jersey Trail Conference, with stone steps to handle the 500,000 annual hikers.<ref name="2010nytimes">Template:Cite news</ref> The Manhattan skyline can be seen from the top of Bear Mountain.

Cross country running

Bear Mountain also regularly hosts cross country running events during the fall season. High school cross country teams compete on the Template:Convert course, which mostly consists of paved walkways. Bear Mountain is the location for the County's Championship race as well as the Rockland County Alumni Race, run every year since 1983.<ref>http://alumnixc.blogspot.com/ Template:User-generated source</ref>

Cruises

Several cruise lines operate cruises with views and trips to the park. These ships ride the Hudson River fifty miles from Manhattan in order to visit the park.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

See also

References

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  • Myles, William J., Harriman Trails, A Guide and History, The New York-New Jersey Trail Conference, New York, N.Y., 1999.
  • 50 Hikes in the Lower Hudson Valley. Written by New York-New Jersey Trail Conference members Stella Green and H. Neil Zimmerman. The Countryman Press. 296 pages, 2008, 2nd ed.

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