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Hunter Mountain (ski area)

Hunter Mountain
Hunter Mountain logo.png
Snowboarder at Hunter Mountain
Snowboarder at Hunter Mountain
Location

Hunter, New York, U.S.

Opened 1959 (1959)
Nearest city Kingston, New York, U.S.
Coordinates 42°12′01″N 74°13′49″W / 42.200278°N 74.230278°W / 42.200278; -74.230278
Vertical 1,600 feet (490 m)
Top elevation 3,200 ft (975 m)
Base elevation 1,600 ft (488 m)
Skiable area 240 acres (97 ha)
Runs 58
Longest run 2 mi (3.2 km)
Lift system 9 chairlifts; 1 J-Bar; 1 rope tow
Lift capacity 16,990 passengers/hr
Terrain parks 2
Snowfall 120 in (305 cm) annual average
Night skiing

Ski/Board No

Tubing Yes
Website http://www.huntermtn.com

Hunter, New York, U.S.

Ski/Board No

Hunter Mountain is a ski resort located about three hours north west of New York City in Hunter, New York. It features a 1,600-foot (488 m) vertical drop.

From its inception in the late 1950s, the management of Hunter Mountain has employed extensive snowmaking facilities. Hunter was the first ski destination in the state of New York to install snow-making, the first in the world with top-to-bottom snow-making, and the first in the world to have 100-percent snow-making coverage of the mountain.

The resort offers snow tubing and snowshoeing as well as skiing. Hunter Mountain also features two terrain parks and holds freestyle events throughout the ski season.

During the mid-50’s a group of local businessmen, including Orville, Karl Plattner Sr. and Israel Slutzky, developed plans to revive the area's economy after the Great Depression, World War II and the decline of Catskills tourism had caused long-term economic distress. The sport of skiing was becoming popular, and the group considered developing Hunter Mountain as a ski resort. After a failed lobbying attempt to get the state to develop a new ski area on Hunter Mountain, the group contacted Denise McCluggage, a sports editor at the New York Herald Tribune. They told her they had a mountain to give away to any developer who would build a ski area called Hunter Mountain on it. McCluggage wrote an article that attracted the interest of a group of Broadway show-business people.

This group created the Hunter Mountain Development Corp., which was the first operator of Hunter Mountain. Headed by James Hammerstein, the son of Oscar Hammerstein II, the group included many Hollywood and Broadway stars of the time. With Orville and Izzy Slutzky providing most of the land and their firm I. & O.A. Slutzky providing the construction, ground was broken to develop the ski area in the summer of 1959. The area was given to the group to operate with two stipulations: that it be called "Hunter Mountain Ski Bowl" and that it have snowmaking capabilities, which was a relatively new technology at the time.


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