词条 | Waterloo State Recreation Area |
释义 |
| name = Waterloo State Recreation Area | iucn_category = | photo = Waterloo State Recreation area Miching Markla Lake access path.JPG | photo_caption = Markla Lake access walking path | photo_width = 288 | map = USA Michigan | map_caption = Location within the state of Michigan | map_width = 250 | location = Jackson / Washtenaw counties, Michigan, USA | nearest_city = Chelsea, Michigan | coordinates = {{coord|42|21|41|N|84|11|27|W|region:US-MI|display=inline, title}} | area = {{convert|21000|acre|km2}} | established = | visitation_num = | visitation_year = | governing_body = Michigan Department of Natural Resources | url = http://www.michigandnr.com/parksandtrails/details.aspx?id=506&type=SPRK }} Waterloo State Recreation Area is the third-largest park in Michigan, encompassing over {{convert|21000|acre|km2}} of forest, lakes and wetlands. Located in northeast Jackson County and parts of Washtenaw County, the park is the largest in the Lower Peninsula of Michigan and features 4 campgrounds, 11 lakes, a nature center, and over {{convert|50|mi|km}} of trails - some for horses, bicycles, hiking and cross-country skiing. Waterloo SRA includes the Black Spruce Bog Natural Area, a National Natural Landmark and borders the {{convert|11000|acre|km2|adj=on}} Pinckney Recreation Area on the east and the {{convert|950|acre|km2|adj=on}} Phyllis Haehnle Memorial Audubon Sanctuary to the west. The land preserved by the park is not all contiguous and numerous private landholdings and roads run through the park area. The area is characterized by moraines, kettle lakes, swamps and bogs left by retreating glaciers after the last ice age. The park was created by the federal government during the Great Depression and is long-term leased to the state. HistoryThe Waterloo area was first settled in the 1830s but the ground was poorly suited for farming and during the Great Depression large numbers of farms were abandoned or in financial trouble. The Federal Emergency Administration of Public Works studied the creation of a variety of kinds of parks in several states. The lands were transferred to the Resettlement Administration of the Department of Agriculture in 1935. In 1935-1936, 45 recreational demonstration projects were established including {{convert|12000|acre|km2}} at Waterloo. These areas were sited in marginal areas near large population centers to provide outdoor recreation actitivies and temporary employment. Most of the sites had CCC camps, Works Progress Administration workers and other "relief workers". Permanent organized family, industrial and youth camps, roads, trails, park facilities buildings and bathing facilities were constructed. Waterloo had three permanent camps: the Cedar Lake, Mill Lake and Cassidy Lake camps. Mill Lake served inner-city youth and Cassidy Lake was a year-round trade school before being converted to its current use as a prison in 1942. Camp Waterloo began as a CCC camp, then served to train military police and as a German POW camp during World War II. It later became a low security prison. Sylvan Pond was created when the WPA put in a dam and levees at Cassidy Lake raised its water level permanently. The clubhouse of former Sylvan Estates Country Club is the current park headquarters.[1] The recreational demonstration projects were transferred from the Resettlement Administration to the National Park Service in November, 1936. The Park Service ended hunting on all park lands it managed nationwide which created a local controversy in Waterloo. In 1943, the state of Michigan leased the park from the National Park Service under the conditions that it must remain a public park for recreational and conservation purposes. In particular, the lease for Waterloo Park requires marshes be maintained for the sandhill cranes and that Michigan must provide funds to run the Yankee Springs Recreation Area near Grand Rapids, the other recreational demonstration project in the state.[2][3] Facilities and activitiesThe park offers over 434 campsites that are available in two modern campgrounds, one equestrian and one rustic campground. Also available to visitors are thirteen rustic cabins. The park boasts a swimming beach, several picnic sites, 11 fishing lakes, and eight boat launches. Hunting for small game and deer is allowed in most of the park, except for established safety zones around campgrounds and park facilities. The park offers extensive trails that wind through the vast landscape and around the eleven lakes that exist within the park's confines - {{convert|12|mi|km}} of interpretive nature trails, {{convert|47|mi|km}} of hiking trails and numerous equestrian trails. The {{convert|36|mi|km|sing=on}} Waterloo-Pinckney Trail runs across the park and into the adjoining {{convert|11000|acre|km2|sing=on}} Pinckney Recreation Area. The lakes host a variety of fish species which include Largemouth Bass, Smallmouth Bass, Bluegill, Sunfish, Catfish, Northern Pike and others. Crooked Lake, Clear Lake, Little Portage Lake, Mill Lake, Sugarloaf Lake, Doyle Lake, Merkle Lake, Mud Lake, and the Winnewana Impoundment are among the eleven bodies of water found in the park. Clear Lake, Doyle Lake, Little Portage Lake and Merkle Lake are accessible by foot only by crossing state land. Fishing piers are located on Big Portage and Crooked lakes. Sugarloaf Lake has state owned access limited to campers and a privately owned access site. Public boat launches are located on the following lakes: Big Portage, Cedar, Green, Crooked, Mill, Mud, and Walsh. The Winnewana Impoundment also provides a boat landing. The launch site at Big Portage Lake meets ADAAG standards for universal accessibility. Boats may be rented by visitors at Big Portage Lake from the park if needed. ==Gerald E. Eddy Discovery Center== The Gerald E. Eddy Discovery Center features exhibits on the geology and natural habitats of Waterloo State Recreation Area, both in pre-settler times and today. Another display shows fluted spear points used by the Paleo-Indian hunters and other cultural history artifacts. There is an auditorium, interactive exhibits and computer games. The center hosts special events and programs for school groups. See also
References1. ^Waterloo Recreation Area Supporting Analysis part 3, Michigan DNR 2. ^Expansion of the National Park Service in the 1930s: Administrative History; Chapter Four: New Initiatives in the Field of Recreation and Recreational Area Development; I. Recreational Demonstration Areas, National Park Service, Mar 14 2000 3. ^SUPPORTING ANALYSIS: Waterloo Recreation Area, Michigan Department of Natural Resources External links{{Commons category}}
7 : State parks of Michigan|Important Bird Areas of Michigan|National Natural Landmarks in Michigan|Protected areas of Jackson County, Michigan|Protected areas of Washtenaw County, Michigan|Protected areas established in 1943|1943 establishments in Michigan |
随便看 |
|
开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。