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Lyman Run State Park

Lyman Run State Park
Pennsylvania State Park
Fall Preview (1).jpg
Lyman Lake at Lyman Run State Park
Named for: Major Isaac Lyman
Country United States
State Pennsylvania
County Potter
Townships Ulysses, West Branch
Location
 - elevation 1,690 ft (515 m)
 - coordinates 41°43′20″N 77°46′37″W / 41.72222°N 77.77694°W / 41.72222; -77.77694Coordinates: 41°43′20″N 77°46′37″W / 41.72222°N 77.77694°W / 41.72222; -77.77694
Area 595 acres (241 ha)
Founded 1951
Management Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources
IUCN category III - Natural Monument
Lyman Run State Park is located in Pennsylvania
Lyman Run State Park
Location of Lyman Run State Park in Pennsylvania
Website: Lyman Run State Park

Lyman Run State Park is a 595-acre (241 ha) Pennsylvania state park in Ulysses and West Branch Townships in Potter County, Pennsylvania in the United States. Lyman Run Lake is a 45-acre (18 ha) man-made lake within the park surrounded by a northern hardwood forest of mainly maple and cherry trees. Lyman Run State Park is 7 miles (11 km) west of Galeton and 15 miles (24 km) east of Coudersport, and is nearly completely surrounded by the Susquehannock State Forest.

Lyman Run State Park is named for the creek that runs through it, which is dammed to form Lyman Run Lake. Major Isaac Lyman, an American Revolutionary War veteran was one of the first permanent settlers in Potter County. Major Lyman is recognized as the founder of Potter County. He was paid ten dollars for each settler that he convinced to move to Potter County. He built his home in 1809 in nearby Lymansville, now known as Ladonna. Major Lyman also built the first road to cross Potter County and the county's first sawmill and gristmill.

Lyman had a colorful personal history. Isaac was married three times and had 17 children. His first wife (Sally Edgecomb Lyman) died in 1791. He divorced his second wife (Laura Pierce Lyman) and started a third family in Potter County with his third wife (Patience Mann Spafford Lyman). The second Mrs. Lyman was determined not to suffer on her own. She sought out the Major, traveled to Potter County, with the help of her son, Burrell who was 18 at the time, and settled. Major Lyman lived with his two families in Potter County. Historical accounts of the living situation vary. Some say that Lyman kept both wives under one roof. Others state that there were two log homes for the families on the same piece of property. The descendants of Major Isaac Lyman still live and work in Potter County.


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