Snake Mountain | |
Grand View Mountain | |
monadnock | |
Snake Mountain ridgeline
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Country | United States |
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State | Vermont |
Region | Addison County, Vermont |
Municipality | Addison, Bridport, and Weybridge |
Elevation | 1,287 ft (392 m) |
Geology | thrust fault |
Orogeny | Taconic orogeny |
Period | 440 million years |
Website: Snake Mountain | |
Snake Mountain, 1,287 feet (392 m)[1], also called Grand View Mountain, is an isolated mountain located in Addison and Weybridge, Vermont; it belongs to a series of scattered hills extending from the greater Taconic Mountains geology. Snake Mountain contains the state of Vermont's 1,215-acre (492 ha) Snake Mountain Wildlife Management Area and The Nature Conservancy's Willmarth Woods Sanctuary.[2] Several hiking trails ascend the mountain.
The mountain was once the site of The Grand View Hotel, built in 1870 by Jonas N. Smith.[1] The hotel burned down but its foundations and the open vista of Lake Champlain remain.[1] Smith's stage coach road to the summit is now the primary hiking trail.[3] In memory of the hotel, the view from the summit is named "Grand View."