词条 | High Falls on the Oswegatchie River |
释义 |
| name = High Falls | photo = Oswegatchie River - High Falls.jpg | photo_caption = High Falls on the Oswegatchie | location = Adirondack Park, Fine, New York, United States | type = | height = {{convert|15|ft|m}} | height_longest = | number_drops = | average_flow = | world_rank = | elevation = {{convert|1,601|ft|m|abbr=on}} }}High Falls is a small but picturesque waterfall on the upper Oswegatchie River in the Five Ponds Wilderness. It is located in the town of Fine, in a remote part of Adirondack State Park in St. Lawrence County. The falls drops about {{convert|20|ft|m}}.[1] Access is by canoe or by maintained hiking trails. The closest public road, near Wanakena, is almost six miles (circa 9 km) to the north. Trail access is by a short spur from the High Falls Loop Trail. The most direct canoe access is by way of the Oswegatchie River from the Oswegatchie River Inlet on Inlet Road. The waterfall has been designated a scenic special interest area in the New York State Land Master Plan.[2] HistoryAt the falls the Oswegatchie flows northwest over glaciated granite gneiss bedrock.[3] They are surrounded by white pine forest, somewhat more open than one might expect in an area characterized as old growth forest. However windstorms in 1950[4] and in 1995[5] devastated this part of the Five Ponds Wilderness. The region has been logged and remnants from that era may be found nearby. A logging railroad once ran between Wanakena and High Falls.[6] The Rich Lumber Company built the standard gauge railroad along the Oswegatchie River about 1902 and operated it until 1912.[7][8][9] That part of the Five Ponds Wilderness to the south of High Falls still has the largest area of virgin forest in the US Northeast however. It is also the largest trailless area in New York state.[10][11] There is no longer a bridge at High Falls,[12] and a canoe is required to gain access to the region further south. The portage around the waterfall itself is short. The former bridge was the crossing for the long-abandoned middle section of the Red Horse Trail. The original trail ran from Wanakena to the Beaver River, now the Stillwater Reservoir, {{convert|10|mi|km|spell=in}} south of the falls. The Red Horse Trail was one of the oldest Adirondack Mountain Club (ADK) hiking trails in Adirondack Park, dating back to the 1920s.[13] The five-and-a-half mile (9 km) section running north from Big Burnt Lake / Trout Pond is all that remains of that trail. The Red Horse Trail intersected the old Albany Road, known as the Old Military Road, a half-mile south of High Falls.[14] The Old Military Road was built between 1812–1815, following a much older Indian trail.[15] GalleryReferences1. ^p. 140, McMartin, Barbara, et al., Discover the Northwestern Adirondacks, Backcountry Publications, Woodstock, Vermont, 1990, {{ISBN|0-942440-48-X}}. 2. ^p. 27, DEC, Five Ponds Wilderness Area Unit Management Plan, 1994 - accessed 29 April 2008 3. ^p. 156, O'Shea, Peter V., Northern Region: Guide to Adirondack Trails, vol. 2, The Adirondack Mountain Club, Inc., 1986, 1994, {{ISBN|0-935272-63-1}}. 4. ^p. 10, DEC, Five Ponds Wilderness Area Unit Management Plan, 1994 - accessed 29 April 2008 5. ^Lamb, Ruth, "One Year After the Big Blowdown," in: Adirondack Voices, Vol. 6, No. 1, Dec. 1996 6. ^DEC, Five Ponds Wilderness webpage - accessed 15 May 2008 7. ^p. 143, McMartin, Barbara, et al., op. cit. 8. ^New York Logging Railroad List - accessed 15 May 2008 9. ^pp 9, 10, DEC, Five Ponds Wilderness Area Unit Management Plan, 1994 - accessed 15 May 2008 10. ^p. 28, DEC, Five Ponds Wilderness Area Unit Management Plan, 1994 - accessed 29 April 2008 11. ^p. 137, O'Shea, Peter V., op. cit. 12. ^p. 156, O'Shea, Peter V., op. cit. 13. ^p. 9, Cooper, James W., ADK Trails Program History, Aug. 1995, monograph - accessed 29 April 2008 14. ^p. 142, McMartin, Barbara, et al., op. cit. 15. ^p. 7, DEC, Five Ponds Wilderness Area Unit Management Plan, 1994 - accessed 29 April 2008 MapsUSGS 7.5' Newton Falls 1:24,000 External links
See also
4 : Waterfalls of New York (state)|Adirondacks|Protected areas of St. Lawrence County, New York|Landforms of St. Lawrence County, New York |
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