Bucktail State Park
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Bucktail State Park, Pennsylvania, USA | |
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IUCN Category III (Natural Monument) | |
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Location: | Pennsylvania Route 120 in Cameron and Clinton Counties, Pennsylvania, USA |
Nearest city: | Lock Haven, Pennsylvania |
Area: | 21,039 acres (85.14 km²) |
Established: | 1933 |
Governing body: | Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources |
Bucktail State Park is a Pennsylvania state park on 21,039 acres (85.14 km²) in Cameron and Clinton Counties in Pennsylvania in the United States. The park follows Pennsylvania Route 120 for 75 miles (120.7 km) between Emporium (in Cameron County, which contains 9,239 acres (37.39 km²) of the park) and Lock Haven (in Clinton County, which contains the other 11,800 acres (47.75 km²)). The park runs along Sinnemahoning Creek and the West Branch Susquehanna River and also passes through Renovo (in Clinton County). The park is named for the Civil War Pennsylvania Bucktail Regiment and is primarily dedicated to wildlife viewing, especially elk.
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[edit] History
Pennsylvania Route 120 follows an old Native American Trail, the Sinnemahoning Path. This trail was used by Native Americans to cross the eastern continental divide (specifically the Allegheny Front) between the Susquehanna River (which drains into the Chesapeake Bay) and the Allegheny River (which forms the Ohio River with the Monongahela River at Pittsburgh and eventually drains into the Gulf of Mexico via the Mississippi River). American Pioneers also used the trail to make their way west and it was also known as the Bucktail Trail. As the technology of road building advanced, what was once a Native American Trail became the two lane highway known today as Pennsylvania Route 120.
Pennsylvania Route 120 was officially designated as Bucktail State Park in 1933 by an act of the Pennsylvania Legislature. The Act says:[1]
“ | That the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania hereby dedicates to the public, for use as a park and pleasure ground for the benefit and enjoyment of the people, all that area of land extending in length from the western city line of Lock Haven, in Clinton County, to the eastern borough line of Emporium, in The County of Cameron, and along the course of the western branch of the Susquehanna River, and its tributary, Sinnemahoning Creek, in Clinton and Cameron counties, an estimated distance of 75 miles, and in width from mountain rim to mountain rim across the valley.
The said park shall be called and know as the "Bucktail State Park", in commemoration of the Bucktail Regiment which embarked from Driftwood, in Cameron County, in April, 1861, upon rafts of their own construction to hasten their arrival at the imperiled State Capitol. |
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Although the park covers 21,039 acres (85.14 km²), much of the land within the park boundaries is actually in private hands. The rest of the land in the valleys is owned by the Bureau of State Parks and the Bureau of Forestry as part of Elk State Forest and Sproul State Forest.
[edit] Wildlife watching
Bucktail State Park is in the West Branch and Sinnemahoning Valleys. River valleys are ideal gathering points for wildlife as the valleys tend to be warmer and wetter than the surrounding mountains. Animals are drawn to the warm and wet valley. The river valley is a natural passageway for plants and animals. The valley is home to river birch and sycamore trees. Osprey, a wide variety of duck, white-tailed deer, bald eagles, otter, merganser, mink and black bear can all be seen living in the boundaries of Bucktail State Park.
Elk can be seen in the early morning and late afternoon hours in the northern portions of the park. Special elk viewing playforms have been built in Sinnemahoning State Park and near the small village of Bennezette.
[edit] Nearby state parks
The following state parks are within 30 miles (48 km) of Bucktail State Park:
- Bald Eagle State Park (Centre County)
- Bendigo State Park (Elk County)
- Black Moshannon State Park (Centre County)
- Cherry Springs State Park (Potter County)
- Colton Point State Park (Tioga County)
- Denton Hill State Park (Potter County)
- Hyner Run State Park (Clinton County)
- Hyner View State Park (Clinton County)
- Kettle Creek State Park (Clinton County)
- Kinzua Bridge State Park (McKean County)
- Leonard Harrison State Park (Tioga County)
- Little Pine State Park (Lycoming County)
- Lyman Run State Park (Potter County)
- McCalls Dam State Park (Centre County)
- Ole Bull State Park (Potter County)
- Parker Dam State Park (Clearfield County)
- Patterson State Park (Potter County)
- Prouty Place State Park (Potter County)
- Poe Paddy State Park (Centre County)
- Poe Valley State Park (Centre County)
- R. B. Winter State Park (Union County)
- Sand Bridge State Park (Union County)
- S. B. Elliott State Park (Clearfield County)
- Sinnemahoning State Park (Cameron and Potter Counties)
- Sizerville State Park (Cameron and Potter Counties)
- Susquehanna State Park (Lycoming County)
- Upper Pine Bottom State Park (Lycoming County)
[edit] References
- ^ Bucktail State Park. Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources. Retrieved on November 6, 2006.
- Pennsylvania Department of Transportation, Bureau of Planning and Research, Geographic Information Division. "2006 General Highway Map of Clinton County". Retrieved on November 6, 2006.Note: shows Pennsylvania Route 120 and Bucktail State Park
- Pennsylvania Department of Transportation, Bureau of Planning and Research, Geographic Information Division. "2006 General Highway Map of Cameron County". Retrieved on November 6, 2006.Note: shows Pennsylvania Route 120