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Jerimoth Hill

Jerimoth Hill
Jerimoth Hill Summit.JPG
Jerimoth Hill Summit
Highest point
Elevation 811 ft (247 m)  NGVD 29
Prominence 192 ft (59 m) 
Listing U.S. state high point 46th
Coordinates 41°50′58″N 71°46′43″W / 41.8495431°N 71.778681°W / 41.8495431; -71.778681Coordinates: 41°50′58″N 71°46′43″W / 41.8495431°N 71.778681°W / 41.8495431; -71.778681
Geography
Jerimoth Hill is located in Rhode Island
Jerimoth Hill
Jerimoth Hill
Rhode Island
Location Foster, Rhode Island, US
Topo map USGS East Killingly, CT
Climbing
Easiest route Highway (RI 101)

Jerimoth Hill (812 ft, 247 m) is the highest point in Rhode Island. The hill is located on Route 101 in Foster, a half mile over the Connecticut Line. To get to the summit, which there is no sign for, you must walk .3 miles for a 10 foot elevation gain. The mountain soars at 812 feet high, making it the 46th highest high point in the U.S. The mountain is located 15 miles west of Providence, and 35 miles east of Willimantic, Connecticut.

The high point was donated to Brown University by Walter Raymond Turner, a Brown alumnus of the class of 1911. In 1938 he purchased the saltbox house to the west and the surrounding 360 acres (150 ha). Turner provided a right of way, straight north from the high point to Route 101, though eventually it became overgrown.

Brown University has used Jerimoth Hill as an astronomy observatory location for decades, because the university has easy access to this land-locked parcel where they have a view of the skies without light pollution from Providence. The high ground has been cleared of pine trees over an area of about 200 square feet (19 m2). The high point is a rocky outcrop in the woods on the northwest edge of the clearing. A summit register is located in a mailbox for visitors to sign.

As the highest point in Rhode Island, Jerimoth Hill is a destination for high pointers—hikers who try to attain the highest peak in various areas. For many years, hikers could not access the hill, because the only path to the summit crossed the driveway of a private property owner, Henry Richardson, who prohibited entry. Richardson posted "no trespassing" signs and installed a security system that alerted him whenever people entered his property. Richardson's belligerence toward hikers made him something of a legend in the community. Eventually, Richardson's son worked out a plan to allow access to the path four times a year. After Richardson's death, his property was purchased in 2005 by the Mosby family, who permitted daily access and eventually ceded the land to the state. In 2011, the state began the process of acquiring the summit itself from Brown University; this was completed in 2014.


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Wikipedia

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