High Point (New Jersey)
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High Point is a mountain peak within High Point State Park on the border of Wantage Township and Montague Township, Sussex County in the U.S. state of New Jersey. Located in the portion of the state known as the Skylands, it is the highest elevation in the state, with a peak elevation of Template:Convert. The closest city is Port Jervis, New York, which lies to the northwest. Besides being the highest peak in New Jersey, High Point is also the highest peak of the Kittatinny Mountains. Three states – New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania – can be seen from the summit.
At the peak is the High Point Monument, a Template:Convert obelisk, built in 1930 as a war memorial.
High Point State Park
The mountain is in the Template:Convert High Point State Park. Route 23 skirts the park and carries visitors from the New Jersey suburbs and from points in New York State. The park is administered by the New Jersey Division of Parks and Forestry.
As of the 2023 season, park entry was free.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
The land for High Point State Park, donated by Colonel Anthony R. and Susie Dryden Kuser of Bernardsville, New Jersey, was dedicated as a park in 1923. The pleasant landscaping was designed by the Olmsted Brothers of Boston, a prominent landscape architectural firm run by the sons of Central Park designer Frederick Law Olmsted.
To the south the Appalachian Trail follows a rocky ridge which offers many scenic views of the valleys and mountains surrounding the area. To the north, the trail drops off the ridge through hemlock gorges into former agricultural fields with a view of the surrounding countryside and the High Point Monument in the distance.
During the winter, portions of the parks trails are used for cross-country skiing.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
War veterans monument
The Monument on High Point was built by Kuser to honor war veterans. Master mason Michael Maddaluna began construction of the Template:Convert tower – which has a base which is 34 feet square – in 1928 and completed it in 1930. The outside is made of New Hampshire granite and also Shawangunk quartz. There are four small windows through which observers have a view of the ridges of the Pocono Mountains toward the west, the Catskill Mountains to the north and the Wallkill River Valley in the southeast. The Monument is an obelisk monument similar to other war monuments, such as the one on Bunker Hill in Massachusetts. The Monument has 291 steps from the base to the highest viewing platform.
Plans were made to close the park as of July 1, 2008, under Gov. Jon Corzine's budget plan for 2009. Veterans groups, who have held an annual memorial at the site, expressed their opposition to the proposal, which was ultimately removed from the final budget.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Summit panorama at ground level
See also
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- National Register of Historic Places listings in Sussex County, New Jersey
- Outline of New Jersey
- Index of New Jersey-related articles
- List of U.S. states by elevation
References
External links
- New Jersey Parks: High Point
- New Jersey Northwest Skylands guide to High Point State Park
- Outdoor Places visitor's guide
- NY-NJTC: High Point State Park Trail Details and Info
Template:U.S. State Highest Points Template:New Jersey Parks Template:NRHP in Sussex County, New Jersey Template:Mountains of New Jersey
- Mountains of New Jersey
- Kittatinny Mountains
- State parks of New Jersey
- Parks in Sussex County, New Jersey
- Monuments and memorials on the National Register of Historic Places in New Jersey
- Highest points of U.S. states
- National Register of Historic Places in Sussex County, New Jersey
- Mountains of Sussex County, New Jersey
- Montague Township, New Jersey
- 1930 establishments in New Jersey
- Papakating Creek watershed