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The rock monument at the summit of Bear Mountain in CT

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The rock monument at the summit of Bear Mountain in CT

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‹‹Beaver lodge down the hill behind Pine Swamp Brook Lean-to in CT.   Caper Spring .2 mi south of 10 Mile River Lean-to in CT  The rock monument at the summit of Bear Mountain in CT  Puncheon bridge over a section of Brassie Brook

  Description for The rock monument at the summit of Bear Mountain in CT

Description by refreeman

refreeman

The rock monument at the summit of Bear Mountain in CT: Bear Mountain is the tallest mountain with its peak in Connecticut, USA, at 2,326 feet (709 m). The Appalachian Trail climbs to the summit of Bear Mountain; there is no road to mar the rocky outcroppings and blueberry bushes. From the summit the view includes Twin Lakes and cultivated fields to the east, the Catskills to the west, Massachusetts' Mount Everett to the north and Lion's Head with the landscape of the town of Salisbury, CT behind it.

Comments for The rock monument at the summit of Bear Mountain in CT (4)

  1. #1 Kerosene
    Re: The rock monument at the summit of Bear Mountain in CT
    Interesting. I don't remember this monument from my 1974 section hike. What is it a monument to, who built it, and when?
  2. #2 Red Rover
    Re: The rock monument at the summit of Bear Mountain in CT
    Quote Originally Posted by Kerosene
    Interesting. I don't remember this monument from my 1974 section hike. What is it a monument to, who built it, and when?
    The entire text: http://www.ct-amc.org/nwcamp/MtRigaStory.htm

    In 1972 a group of interested Salisbury people, not AMC, decided to cap the cairn on the summit of Bear Mountain to prevent its further destruction by vandals. This was done in an efficient manner using a helicopter to haul cement and pour the cap.

    The cairn was built by Robbins Battell of Norfolk, Connecticut in 1885 (stone mason Owen Travis of Salisbury) to mark [what] was thought to be the highest point in Connecticut, 2354 feet in elevation. Mr. Battell was State Senator and president of Connecticut Historical Society. (A point of Mt. Frisell's slope has since been determined to be the highest point, 2380 feet at the Connecticut - Massachusetts line, although Bear Mountain remains the highest summit).
  3. #3 Kerosene
    Re: The rock monument at the summit of Bear Mountain in CT
    Thanks, Red Rover!
  4. #4 refreeman
    Re: The rock monument at the summit of Bear Mountain in CT
    A pyramidal stone tower was built on the peak in 1885. The current plaque which was originally on the now-demolished pyramid erroneously calls the peak the highest ground in Connecticut — an honor that belongs to the south slope of Mount Frissell, whose peak is in Massachusetts; it also overestimates the height of the peak.
    The pyramid and plaque as well as the identification of Bear Mountain as Connecticut's highest peak and misidentification as Connecticut's highest point are the work of Robbins Battell of Norfolk, Connecticut, who became convinced that the Encyclopædia Britannica was wrong in stating that there was no point in Connecticut over 1,000 feet above sea level, and had the Litchfield Hills surveyed.
    Having identified Bear Mountain as the state's highest peak, Battell took out a long-term lease on the land and contracted with mason Owen Travis for a marker, to be visible from the surrounding district. Over the next three years, despite the lack of roads, Travis brought 350 tons of stone to the summit and constructed a pyramidal tower, 20 feet square at the base and 22.5 feet tall, tapering to 10 feet square at the top, building it in the fashion of old Connecticut stone fences, with no mortar. A lightning rod stood another 17 feet above the top of the tower.
    Over the years, the tower deteriorated and began to collapse. Restoration was hampered by the lack of access by road. In 1972 a private donor had it restored and topped with a cement cap; shortly afterwards, a group of Boy Scouts restored it once again; and finally in 1978, the eastern corner disintegrated and the tower completely collapsed, leaving the plaque in the ruins. In 1982 and 1983 a movement to have the state take over the site resulted in a decision not to rebuild the tower, and the ruins were stabilized and the plaque set into the rubble.
    rubble.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bear_Mountain_(Connecticut)