Hudson Highlands State Park
Template:Short description Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox protected area Hudson Highlands State Park is a non-contiguous state park in the U.S. state of New York, located on the east side of the Hudson River. The park runs from Peekskill in Westchester County, through Putnam County, to Beacon in Dutchess County, in the eastern section of the Hudson Highlands.
The park's lands, heavily mined, logged and quarried in the past, were assembled over the mid-20th century from different purchases by the state, totaling Template:Convert as of 2025.<ref name=RIoG_ParkStats>Template:Cite book</ref> They range from riverside salt marshes to mountain summits, including the highest in the Highlands, the Template:Convert south summit of Beacon Mountain.<ref name="PCNR page">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> It is managed by the New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation (NYSOPRHP) from offices at Fahnestock State Park to the east. Its parcels adjoin others owned by other public agencies and private preserves, some of which are managed by NYSOPRHP as well and are open to the public.
Due to its panoramic views of the river and mountains, and easy access by both automobile and rail, it has become a very popular destination for day hikes. The park's best known trail makes a steep, rocky ascent up Breakneck Ridge. Other trails climb neighboring Bull Hill and follow the cliffs of Anthony's Nose. The Appalachian Trail (AT) also goes through the southeast corner of the park.
Geography
The park is composed of four separate tracts of land, two of which are contiguous, reflecting its piecemeal acquisition. The southernmost section begins just north of Peekskill, abutting the New York National Guard's Camp Smith, following the Bear Mountain Highway (US 6 and 202) around the lower slopes of Anthony's Nose. In Putnam County, it serves as the AT's corridor along the north of the mountain and on Canada Hill. In the land above Manitoga, the former estate of industrial designer Russel Wright, the AT interconnects with its trail system and follows the border with another parcel known as the Osborn Preserve, formerly part of Wing & Wing, the estate of 19th-century Illinois Central railroad president William Osborn.<ref name="NYNJTC map 101">Template:Cite map</ref>
The AT leaves the state park for a National Park Service-owned corridor here, and the other trails provide access to Sugarloaf Hill, whose Template:Convert summit looks across the river at the village of Highland Falls and the United States Military Academy at West Point. Here, near Garrison, the southern parcels end.<ref name="NYNJTC map 101" />
North of the villages of Cold Spring and Nelsonville is the central and largest section. Starting at the Little Stony Point area along the river, which is separated from the rest of the parcel by the easement for the New York City water supply system's Catskill Aqueduct, this section contains Bull Hill and Breakneck Ridge, with Breakneck Brook between them, then sprawls into Dutchess County, where it includes Pollepel Island, Sugarloaf Mountain, the south summit of Beacon Mountain and Beacon Reservoir, reaching its northern terminus at the Dry Brook trailhead at the end of Pocket Road in the city of Beacon. It is complemented by Storm King State Park across the river.
The Fishkill Ridge Conservation Area, owned by the environmental organization Scenic Hudson but managed by NYSOPRHP, bridges the gap between that central tract and the northern tract, a trail-less parcel on Sour Mountain at the Highlands' northern end, reaching almost to Interstate 84 at the bottom of the slope.<ref name="NYNJTC map 102">Template:Cite map</ref>
Also in Beacon is the Template:Convert Denning Point parcel. This small wooded promontory is located where Fishkill Creek drains into the Hudson.<ref name="New York Walk Book172-3">New York Walk Book, 172–73.</ref>
History
The Eastern Highlands before the 20th century
Swedish botanist Pehr Kalm sailed up the Hudson in 1749 and wrote one of the earliest accounts of the eastern Highlands:
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Kalm landed in the area and wrote the first scientific description of mountain laurel, a plant species still abundant in the area.<ref name="Kalm quoted in 50 Hikes" />
For most of American history, the Highlands were harvested for their natural resources, particularly mineral. Iron and copper were mined from them. Some of the former was used to make cannons by the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War, and the West Point Foundry in Cold Spring continued making them under the direction of Robert Parrott through the late 19th century. Quarries were also carved out of the slopes, most notably on Breakneck Ridge and Bull Hill.
By the beginning of the 20th century, the eastern Highlands had been mostly tapped out as an easy source of minerals and were reforesting. Early hikers began to explore them, following the abandoned paths and roads from the earlier extractions. One, William T. Howell, catalogued their history and lore. In 1910, he pleaded for the land to be left alone and preserved in near-wilderness condition as summer vacationers started to head north looking for green spaces:
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Creation of park
As New York began creating its first state parks in the Hudson Valley Region during the 1910s and 20s, it concentrated its efforts on larger tracts it had acquired such as Harriman and Bear Mountain to the southwest and Fahnestock to the east. Much of the present Hudson Highlands State Park was either part of large estates or owned by commercial interests seeking to exploit their mineral resources. An organization called the Hudson River Conservation Society (HRCS) worked to preserve the lands by persuading owners to donate them to the state or include clauses in deeds that forbade or greatly restricting quarrying and mining operations on the property.<ref name="New York Walk Book148">New York Walk Book, 148.</ref>
In 1938 the society made its first significant accomplishment when it persuaded Rosalie Loew Whitney to give the state Conservation Department Template:Convert on the northwest face of Breakneck Ridge from the estate of Thomas Nelson, the local landowner from whom Nelsonville took its name. The next year, an appeal to save Anthony's Nose raised enough money to purchase Template:Convert of its northern slope.<ref name="New York Walk Book148" />
No more major land acquisitions took place until the 1960s, when the State Council of Parks, forerunner of NYSOPRHP, formed the temporary Hudson River Valley Study Committee to develop a comprehensive plan in response to increasing industrial interest in the area, exemplified by Consolidated Edison's proposal to excavate a large chunk of Storm King Mountain, across from Breakneck, for a hydroelectric plant, which would have involved running power lines across the river and into the eastern Highlands. In 1967 the state acquired the Little Stony Point property to prevent its development.<ref name="New York Walk Book148" />
The park finally began to come together towards its present form in the next few years, as the Rockefeller family's Jackson Hole Preserve foundation gave New York a deed of trust for land purchases in the Hudson Highlands. Approximately Template:Convert were acquired this way, primarily in the large central parcel of the park along the Dutchess-Putnam county line. In 1974 William Henry Osborn II, a past HRCS president, donated the Template:Convert preserve that bears his family name to the state. Scenic Hudson acquired the Template:Convert Fishkill Ridge Conservation Area in 1992 with assistance from the Lila Acheson and DeWitt Wallace Fund for the Hudson Highlands.<ref name="New York Walk Book149">New York Walk Book, 149.</ref>
The north end of the park became the center of a local controversy in the late 1990s. It is home to a den of Eastern timber rattlesnakes, a New York State threatened species. The state's Department of Environmental Conservation brought suit to stop the snake-proof fences a local quarry operator had put up while it was applying for permission to mine stone from the operation. In 1999 then-Attorney General Eliot Spitzer persuaded a court to order the fence be torn down.<ref name="Spitzer court order">Template:Cite press release</ref> It survived appeal, and became a legal precedent establishing New York's right to enforce the state's Endangered Species Act on private property.<ref name="THR Sour Mountain story">Template:Cite news</ref>
Flora and fauna
The park's plants and animals are part of the Northeastern coastal forests ecoregion.<ref name="terrestrial">Template:Cite journal</ref> Its variety of biomes – ranging from brackish tidal marsh and mudflats along the river's edge to pitch pine-oak-heath rocky summit forest and rocky grasslands at higher elevations – contribute to its biodiversity. The mountain slopes are dominated by oak hickory and chestnut oak forests.<ref name="State parks biodiversity report">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }} Template:Small, 90–91. Retrieved February 8, 2009.</ref>
Besides rattlesnakes, the park also supports some other state-listed threatened species, such as the bald eagle and least bittern. Three of New York's five known eastern fence lizard communities are found in Hudson Highlands State Park, near the northern end of its range.<ref name="biodiversity press release">Template:Cite press release</ref>
Public use and access
The park is open during daylight hours year-round. It is used mainly for passive recreation, mostly hiking, but also birding. Limited hunting is allowed: bowhunters make take deer during that season in the late fall, and shotguns may be used during spring turkey season. Some areas near the riverside are accessible by kayak, and there is a state-owned launch for them off the Annsville Circle, where US 9 meets routes 6 and 202, north of Peekskill. Camping and open fires are prohibited, as are vehicles of any kind, and there are no designated campsites or shelters in the park.<ref name="State parks page">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Pollepel Island, while accessible by water a short distance from the east bank of the river, is the only area of the park to which access is restricted. It and the ruins of Bannerman's Castle, listed on the National Register of Historic Places, can only be visited by making advance arrangements through NYSOPRHP for a guided tour.<ref name="State parks page" />
Access
The park is most frequently entered from its western side. NY 9D runs near or along its boundaries, particularly between Cold Spring and Breakneck Ridge, and two of its major trailheads are along that section at Little Stony and Breakneck points. The Osborn Preserve and Anthony's Nose sections have trailheads along the Bear Mountain Highway and at the Appalachian Trail crossing at South Mountain Pass Road south of Canada Hill. The AT's junction with US 9 and NY 403 allows access from the east. In Garrison it is also possible to use the trails from Manitoga and the Castle Rock Unique Area to reach the park parcels on the ridgetops.<ref name="NYNJTC map 101" /><ref name="NYNJTC map 102" />
The Fishkill Ridge areas and Mount Beacon are commonly climbed from the east either by following the Fishkill Ridge trail from its northern terminus at Pocket Road in Beacon. From the west, they can be reached from the Wilkinson Memorial Trail on Old Albany Post Road North just south of the county line along US 9.<ref name="NYNJTC map 102" />
Hikers coming from the south also have the option of taking the train to the trails from as far away as Grand Central Terminal in midtown Manhattan. Metro-North Railroad's Hudson Line parallels NY 9D and the east bank of the river, where request stops have been built at Breakneck Ridge and Manitou, south of Garrison along the river. The former is a short distance from the trailhead and parking lot; the latter is at river's edge, requiring a short climb up to the Manitoga and Canada Hill areas. Service to those stations is weekends-only, with northbound trains making stops in the mornings and southbound ones taking returning hikers in the evening. At other times hikers can use the Cold Spring station, with regularly scheduled trains.<ref name="Hudson Line schedule">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }} Template:Small, Metro-North Railroad, October 5, 2008. Retrieved February 10, 2009.</ref>
Trails
The trails of the park are maintained by volunteers from the New York-New Jersey Trail Conference, which also publishes detailed maps. Some follow, in whole or part, old woods roads left over from the quarrying and mining operations; at other times they climb the steep and rocky peaks directly. They are blazed with NYSOPRHP plastic disks, except for the Appalachian Trail which uses white paint blazes.
Many take advantage of the ridgetop topography and thinly wooded summits to offer panoramic viewpoints over the river and region.
Some of the longer and more frequently-hiked trails in the park are:
- Appalachian Trail (AT): A Template:Convert section of the Georgia-to-Maine long-distance trail passes through the southern portion of the park near the Osborn Preserve. From NY 9D just north of the Bear Mountain Bridge, it ascends Canada Hill and follows that ridge for two miles before descending to the US 9/NY 403 junction at Graymoor.<ref name="New York Walk Book165–66">New York Walk Book, 165–66.</ref>
- Breakneck Ridge Trail: One of the most popular trails in the park,<ref name="50 Hikes53">McMartin, 53. "Judging by the cars that line NY 9D two miles north of Cold Spring, near the underpass and trailhead below Breakneck Ridge's cliffs and jagged skyline, it is easy to believe that this mountain is everybody's favorite in the Hudson Highlands."</ref> due to the challenge of the westernmost section, which climbs Template:Convert in its first Template:Convert through steep rocky chutes that require scrambling and offer views of Storm King and Newburgh Bay. The entire trail, Template:Convert in length, continues over the mountain along the ridgetop to South Beacon Mountain.<ref name="New York Walk Book151–53">New York Walk Book, 151–53.</ref>
- Camp Smith Trail: This Template:Convert trail follows a narrow corridor through of parkland between the National Guard base and the Bear Mountain Highway, traversing Anthony's Nose. It has many steep and rocky sections with views of Bear Mountain, the bridge and Haverstraw Bay to the south.<ref name="New York Walk Book171–72">New York Walk Book, 171–72.</ref>
- Fishkill Ridge Trail: Starting from the Pocket Road trailhead in Beacon, this Template:Convert trail makes a large loop over that mountain, offering some views over Fishkill and southern Dutchess County along the way.<ref name="New York Walk Book155–56">New York Walk Book, 155–56.</ref>
- Notch Trail: Formerly the Three Notch Trail, this Template:Convert trail follows wood roads from near the summit of Bull Hill, down into the col and up the north face of Breakneck Ridge. There it joins that trail for Template:Convert along the ridge, then descends the face of Sunset Point to Squirrel Hollow Brook and continues a long traverse across the lower slopes of South Beacon Mountain to reach Route 9D in Dutchess Junction south of Beacon, near Melzingah Brook.<ref name="New York Walk Book158–59">New York Walk Book, 158–59.</ref>
- Osborn Loop: This Template:Convert trail connects to the AT near Canada Hill at both ends. It can be reached from Manitoga, the AT, or the trails around Sugarloaf Mountain.<ref name="New York Walk Book167–68">New York Walk Book, 167–68.</ref>
- Undercliff Trail: A Template:Convert route from Nelsonville to Breakneck Ridge that crosses the shoulder of Bull Hill along the way. It takes its name from the many cliffs whose foot it passes.<ref name="New York Walk Book160-61">New York Walk Book, 160–61.</ref>
- Washburn Trail: The main route up Bull Hill from the Little Stony Point trailhead just north of Cold Spring climbs the mountain's Template:Convert in almost Template:Convert. This is the greatest vertical ascent of any trail within the park.<ref name="New York Walk Book161–62">New York Walk Book, 161–62.</ref>
- Wilkinson Memorial Trail: Longest trail in Hudson Highlands State Park at Template:Convert. It begins along NY 9D just north of Breakneck Ridge and gradually ascends to cross all the summits of Scofield Ridge, the highest peak in Putnam County, located outside the park. It descends from there to Old Albany Post Road North, just off US 9 near the county line.<ref name="New York Walk Book162–64">New York Walk Book, 162–64.</ref>
See also
References
External links
- New York State Parks: Hudson Highlands State Park
- New York-New Jersey Trail Conference: Hudson Highlands State Park