S. B. Elliott State Park

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S. B. Elliott State Park, Pennsylvania, USA
IUCN Category III (Natural Monument)
S. B. Elliott State Park, Pennsylvania, USA
Map of the U.S. state of Pennsylvania showing the location of S. B. Elliott State Park
Map of the U.S. state of Pennsylvania showing the location of S. B. Elliott State Park
Location: Clearfield County, Pennsylvania, USA
Nearest city: Clearfield, Pennsylvania
Coordinates: 41°06′30″N, 78°31′59″W
Area: 318 acres (1.29 km²)
Established: 1933
Governing body: Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources

S. B. Elliott State Park is a 318 acres (1.29 km²) Pennsylvania State Park located in Clearfield County, Pennsylvania in the United States. The park is surrounded by Moshannon State Forest. The park is entirely wooded with second growth forests of hardwood and oak. S.B. Elliott State park is nine miles (14.84 km) north of Clearfield on Pennsylvania Route 153 just off exit 111 of Interstate 80.

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[edit] History

By the mid 19th century the demand for lumber reached Clearfield County, where White pine and hemlock covered the mountainsides. Lumbermen came and harvested the trees. The Central Pennsylvania Lumber Company and Goodyear Lumber Company owned thousands of acres in Cleafield and surrounding counties. They built railroads and roads to harvest and distribute the timber. The lumber boom era was not to last, and soon all the trees were gone. Once the trees disappeared, the people were soon to follow. The lumbermen left behind a barren landscape that was devastated by erosion and wildfires. The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania bought the thousands of acres of deforested and burned land. The state began the massive project of reforesting the land. The forest has since recovered and is part of Moshannon State Forest.

The park is named for the Honorable Simon B. Elliott. He was a member of the Pennsylvania Legislature. He was a conservationist who promoted the idea of replanted the forests in order to limit erosion and fires.

The park was built in 1933 by the Civilian Conservation Corps. The young men of Camp S-116-PA built the park. They built many of the cabins, roads, pavilions, and trails that exist at the park today. They also cleared brush, cleaned streams, built roads and bridges, and planted trees as part of a reforestation effort. The CCC also placed a plaque honoring Simon B. Elliott in the woods on the northern edge of the park.

[edit] Recreation

Fishing at S. B. Elliott State is a popular recreational activity. There is a population of native and stocked trout in the small mountain streams of S. B. Elliott State Park. They can only be accessed by hiking through the woods pn one of the three miles of hiking trails.

The park is a trailhead for the Quehanna Trail system. This trail is a 75 mile trail that passes through Moshannon State Forest. It also connects with the Susquehannock Trail system near Sinnemahoning State Park.

The CCC built several cabins and pavilions that are available for camping and picnicking. There is a 25 site rustic campground at S. B. Elliott State Park. There is a modern restroom near the camping area, but there are no showers.

Hunting is permitted on about 234 acres of S. B. Elliott State Park. Hunters are expected to follow the rules and regulations of the Pennsylvania State Game Commission. The common game species are ruffed grouse, squirrels, turkey, white-tailed deer, and pheasant. Many more acres of forested woodlands are available for hunting on the grounds of the adjacent Moshannon State Forest.

[edit] Nearby state parks

[edit] References

Flag of Pennsylvania Protected Areas of Pennsylvania
Department of Conservation and Natural Resources
State Parks Allegheny Islands | Archbald Pothole | Bald Eagle | Beltzville | Bendigo | Benjamin Rush | Big Pocono | Big Spring | Black Moshannon | Blue Knob | Boyd Big | Buchanan's Birthplace | Bucktail | Caledonia | Canoe Creek | Chapman | Cherry Springs | Clear Creek | Codorus | Colonel Denning | Colton Point | Cook Forest | Cowans Gap | Delaware Canal | Denton Hill | Elk | Erie Bluffs | Evansburg | Fort Washington | Fowlers Hollow | Frances Slocum | French Creek | Gifford Pinchot | Gouldsboro | Greenwood Furnace | Hickory Run | Hillman | Hills Creek | Hyner Run | Hyner View | Jacobsburg | Jennings | Joseph E. Ibberson | Kettle Creek | Keystone | Kings Gap | Kinzua Bridge | Kooser | Lackawanna | Laurel Hill | Laurel Mountain | Laurel Ridge | Laurel Summit | Lehigh Gorge | Leonard Harrison | Linn Run | Little Buffalo | Little Pine | Locust Lake | Lyman Run | Maurice K. Goddard | Marsh Creek | McCalls Dam | McConnells Mill | Memorial Lake | Milton | Mont Alto | Moraine | Mt. Pisgah | Nescopeck | Neshaminy | Nockamixon | Norristown Farm | Nolde Forest | Ohiopyle | Oil Creek | Ole Bull | Parker Dam | Patterson | Penn-Roosevelt | Pine Grove Furnace | Poe Paddy | Poe Valley | Point | Presque Isle | Prince Gallitzin | Promised Land | Prompton | Prouty Place | Pymatuning | R. B. Winter | Raccoon Creek | Ralph Stover | Ravensburg | Reeds Gap | Ricketts Glen | Ridley Creek | Ryerson Station | S. B. Elliott | Salt Springs | Samuel S. Lewis | Sand Bridge | Shawnee | Shikellamy | Sinnemahoning | Sizerville | Susquehanna | Susquehannock | Swatara | Tobyhanna | Trough Creek | Tuscarora | Tyler | Upper Pine Bottom | Varden | Warriors Path | Whipple Dam | White Clay Creek | Worlds End | Yellow Creek
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