Adirondack Park | |
New York Forest Preserve | |
Long Pond, in the Saint Regis Canoe Area.
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Name origin: Mohawk for tree eaters. | |
Country | United States |
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State | New York |
Region | Upstate New York |
Highest point | Mount Marcy |
- location | Keene Valley, Essex County |
- elevation | 5,344 ft (1,629 m) |
- coordinates | 44°06′45″N 73°55′26″W / 44.11250°N 73.92389°W |
Lowest point | |
- location | Ausable River at Lake Champlain, Essex County |
- elevation | 120 ft (37 m) |
- coordinates | 44°34′52″N 73°26′20″W / 44.58111°N 73.43889°W |
Area | 9,375 sq mi (24,281 km2) |
Biomes | Temperate broadleaf and mixed forests, boreal forest, alpine tundra |
Founded | New York State Forest Preserve |
Date | 1885 |
Management | Adirondack Park Agency, New York State Department of Environmental Conservation |
- location | Ray Brook, Essex County |
IUCN category | V - Protected Landscape/Seascape |
NHL designation | 1966 |
NRHP Ref# | 66000891 |
Park area highlighted in green, bounded by the Blue Line, within New York state.
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New York within the United States.
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The Adirondack Park is a part of New York's Forest Preserve in Upstate New York, United States. The park's boundary corresponds to the Adirondack Mountains. Unlike most preserves, about 52 per cent of the land is privately owned inholdings heavily regulated by the Adirondack Park Agency. This area contains 102 towns and villages, as well as numerous farms, businesses, and an active timber harvesting industry. The year-round population is 132,000, with 200,000 seasonal residents. The inclusion of human communities makes the park one of the great experiments in conservation in the industrialized world.
The park's 6.1 million acres (2.5×10 6 ha) include more than 10,000 lakes, 30,000 miles of rivers and streams, and a wide variety of habitats including wetlands and old-growth forests.
For the history of the area before the formation of the park, see The History of the Adirondack Mountains.
Before the 19th century the wilderness was viewed as desolate and forbidding. As Romanticism developed in the United States, the view of wilderness became more positive, as seen in the writings of James Fenimore Cooper, Henry David Thoreau and Ralph Waldo Emerson.
The 1849 publication of Joel Tyler Headley's Adirondack; or, Life in the Woods triggered the development of hotels and stage coach lines. William Henry Harrison Murray's 1869 wilderness guidebook depicted the area as a place of relaxation and pleasure rather than a natural obstacle.
Financier and railroad promoter Thomas Clark Durant acquired a large tract of central Adirondack land and built a railroad from Saratoga Springs to North Creek. By 1875, there were more than two hundred hotels in the Adirondacks including Paul Smith's Hotel. About this time, the Great Camps were developed.