- Cuyahoga Valley National Park
-
Cuyahoga Valley National Park IUCN Category II (National Park)
Bedrock outcrops, such as this one, can be found throughout the park.Location Summit County & Cuyahoga County, Ohio, USA Nearest city Akron Coordinates 41°14′30″N 81°32′59″W / 41.24167°N 81.54972°WCoordinates: 41°14′30″N 81°32′59″W / 41.24167°N 81.54972°W Area 32,947.07 acres (133.33 km2)
19,459.82 acres (78.75 km2) federalEstablished October 11, 2000 Visitors 2,468,816 (in 2006) Governing body National Park Service Cuyahoga Valley National Park preserves and reclaims the rural landscape along the Cuyahoga River between Akron and Cleveland in Northeast Ohio. The 51-square-mile (130 km2) park is the only national park in Ohio.
Cuyahoga means "crooked river" in Mohawk.[1][2]
Contents
Administrative history
The valley began providing recreation for urban dwellers in the 1870s when people came from nearby cities for carriage rides or leisure boat trips along the canal. In 1880, the Valley Railroad became another way to escape urban industrial life. Actual park development began in the 1910s and 1920s with the establishment of Cleveland and Akron metropolitan park districts. In 1929 the estate of Cleveland businessman Hayward Kendall donated 430 acres (1.7 km2) around the Richie Ledges and a trust fund to the state of Ohio. Kendall's will stipulated that the "property should be perpetually used for park purposes". It became Virginia Kendall park, in honor of his mother. In the 1930s, the Civilian Conservation Corps built much of the park's infrastructure including what are now Happy Days Lodge and the shelters at Octagon, Ledges, and Kendall Lake.
Although regional parks safeguarded certain places, by the 1960s local citizens feared that urban sprawl would overwhelm the Cuyahoga Valley's natural beauty. Active citizens joined forces with state and national government staff to find a long term solution. Finally, on December 27, 1974, President Gerald Ford signed the bill establishing the Cuyahoga Valley National Recreation Area. The area was redesignated a national park by Congress on October 11, 2000,[3] with the passage of the Department of the Interior and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2001, House Bill 4578, 106th congress.[4] It is administered by the National Park Service. David Berger National Memorial in Beachwood, Ohio is also managed through Cuyahoga Valley National Park.
The Richfield Coliseum, a multipurpose arena in the Cuyahoga River area, was demolished in 1999 and the now-empty site became part of Cuyahoga Valley National Park upon its designation in 2000. It has since become a grassy meadow popular with birdwatchers.
Attractions
Many visitors spend their time hiking or bicycling the parks' many trails which visit its numerous attractions, including the crushed limestone along portions of the 20 miles (32.2 km) Towpath Trail, following a former stretch of the 308 miles (495.7 km) Ohio and Erie Canal.
Waterfalls, rolling hills, caves, winding river scenery attract many park visitors. Steep narrow ravines, a rolling floodplain, and lush farmland contrast one another throughout the park. Animal life is also plentiful. The Ledges provides a boulder-strewn cliff to relax and watch the sunset over the wooded scenery below. Sled-riding is popular during the winter at Happy Days Park.
The park offers an array of preserved and restored displays of 19th and early 20th century sustainable farming and pastoral or rural living, while catering to contemporary interests with art exhibits, outdoor concerts, and scenic excursion and special event railroad tours on the Cuyahoga Valley Scenic Railroad.[5]
It includes compatible-use sites not owned by the federal government, including several local regional parks in the Cleveland Metroparks and Metro Parks, Serving Summit County systems, Blossom Music Center, and the Hale Farm & Village. In the mid 1980s, the park hosted the National Folk Festival.
Ohio and Erie Canal Towpath Trail
The multi-purpose Ohio & Erie Canal Towpath trail was developed by the National Park Service and is the major trail through Cuyahoga Valley National Park. From it visitors can make connections to many of the natural and historic sites in the park and to other trails that intersect it along the way.[6] or through one of the Cuyahoga Valley National Park visitor centers.[7]
History
The Towpath Trail follows the historic route of the Ohio & Erie Canal. Before the canal was built, Ohio was a sparsely settled wilderness where travel was difficult and getting crops to market was nearly impossible. The canal, built between 1825 and 1832, provided a successful transportation route from Cleveland, on Lake Erie, to Portsmouth, on the Ohio River. The canal opened up Ohio to the rest of the settled eastern United States.[7]
There are numerous wayside exhibits that provide information about canal features and sites of historic interest.[8] There is also a virtual tour.[7][9]
Today visitors can walk or ride along the same path that the mules used to tow the canal boats loaded with goods and passengers. The scene is different than it was then; the canal was full of water carrying a steady flow of boats amongst the constant conversations of "canawlers." Evidence of beavers can be seen in many places along the trail.[7]
Stanford House (Formerly Stanford Hostel)
Located in the scenic Cuyahoga Valley near Peninsula, Ohio, Stanford House is a historic nineteenth-century farm home built in the 1830s by George Stanford, one of the first settlers in the Western Reserve. In 1978, the NPS purchased the property to act as a youth hostel in conjunction with the American Youth Hostels (AYH) organization. In March 2011, Stanford Hostel became Stanford House, Cuyahoga Valley National Park's first in-park lodging facility. The home was renovated by the Conservancy for Cuyahoga Valley National Park and the National Park Service.[10]
Towpath trailheads
Ohio and Erie Canal Tow Path Trailheads Coordinates Trailhead Map Address Description Lock 39 41°22′24″N 81°36′59″W / 41.373272°N 81.616382°W Canal Visitor Center Canal Road & Hillside Road, Valley View, Ohio 44125,
1½ miles south of Rockside RoadFrazee House Canal Road, Valley View, Ohio,
3½ miles south of Rockside Road41°19′10″N 081°35′15″W / 41.31944°N 81.5875°W[11] Station Road Bridge Red Lock Boston Store Boston Mills Road,
1/10 of a mile east of Riverview RoadLock 29 Hunt Farm Visitor Information Center Bolanz Road,
between Akron-Peninsula Road and Riverview RoadIra Indian Mound Visitor centers
Cuyahoga Valley National Park - Visitor Centers Coordinates Visitor Center Address Description
[12]41°22′24″N 81°36′59″W / 41.373272°N 81.616382°W Canal Canal Road & Hillside Road, Valley View, Ohio 44125,
1½ miles south of Rockside RoadCanal Visitor Center contains exhibits and a bookstore. Exhibits illustrate 12,000 years of history in the valley, including the history of the canal. The canal-era building once served canal boat passengers waiting to pass through Ohio & Erie Canal Lock 38. Canal lock demonstrations are conducted seasonally on weekends by National Park Service staff and by volunteers wearing period costumes. A 20-minute slide program about the park and three, 30-minute videos on canal history are shown on request. Happy Days State Route 303,
1 mile west of State Route 8,
2 miles east of the Village of Peninsula, OhioHappy Days was constructed by the Civilian Conservation Corps in 1938 and 1939 as a camp for urban children. The visitor center offers information and a variety of activities, including concerts, lectures, plays, and special events. A 20-minute slide program about the park is shown on request. Several hiking trails are located nearby. Boston Store Boston Mills Road,
1/10 of a mile east of Riverview RoadBoston Store was constructed in 1836 and has been used as a warehouse, store, post office, and gathering place. It is now a museum featuring exhibits relating to canal boat-building. Hunt Farm Bolanz Road,
between Akron-Peninsula Road and Riverview RoadThe Hunt Farm property is typical of the small family farms that dotted the Cuyahoga Valley in the late 19th century. Here you can get information about park activities and see exhibits about the area's agricultural history. Next to the Ohio & Erie Canal Towpath Trail, it is an ideal starting point for a hike or a bicycle ride. Frazee House Canal Road, Valley View, Ohio,
3½ miles south of Rockside RoadThe Frazee House was constructed in 1825 and 1826, during the same years the northern section of the Ohio & Erie Canal was dug. It is a fine example of a Western Reserve home and features exhibits relating to architectural styles, construction techniques, and the Frazee family. 41°14′32″N 81°32′57″W / 41.242287°N 81.549124°W Peninsula Depot 1630 West Mill Street, Village of Peninsula, Ohio 44264,
north of State Route 303The Peninsula Depot was originally located in the village of Boston, just north of Boston Mills Road. It was moved to Peninsula in the late 1960s. The building may be the only surviving combination station from the Valley Railway, which operated between Cleveland, Ohio and Tuscarawas County, Ohio in the late 19th century. Today the Peninsula Depot serves as an information and orientation center for people on foot, bike, and rail, and serves as a station for Cuyahoga Valley Scenic Railroad (CVSR) excursions. Exhibits highlight the history and recreational opportunities of the area. Points of historic interest
Coordinates Location Description 41°22′24″N 81°36′59″W / 41.37333°N 81.61639°W Canal Visitor Center - "Hell's Half Acre" Exhibits related to human history in the valley and Ohio & Erie Canal history are available at Canal Visitor Center. The exhibits are housed in a renovated canal-era tavern that, for some time, had such a colorful reputation that it came to be called "Hell's Half Acre." Lock 38 is located in the front; lock demonstrations are offered by volunteers and staff in period costume every Saturday, Sunday, and holiday during the summer months. A lock model is located inside the visitor center. The ranger at the information desk will perform lock model demonstrations on request. An auditorium in the basement is used to show three different canal-related videos and one park orientation slide program. These programs will be run on request.[13] Ohio & Erie Canal Related Structures The Ohio & Erie Canal was constructed between 1825 and 1832. It successfully provided Ohio with a transportation system that permitted residents to conduct trade with the world. While it stopped functioning after the great flood of 1913, remnants and ruins of canal-related structures can be seen alongside the Ohio & Erie Canal Towpath Trail. Wayside exhibits explain the function of many of the structures visible from the trail. Our Towpath Trail Sites to Visit list may be useful in directing you to the points of greatest interest.[14][15] Frazee House The Frazee House was under construction in 1825 when the canal was dug through its front yard. It's a great place to visit for information about Western Reserve architecture and construction techniques as well as some tidbits about the Frazee family.[16] Boston Store This early canal-era building was owned by the Boston Land & Manufacturing Company. The Boston Store now houses numerous exhibits relating to canal boat building.[17] Everett Road Covered Bridge The Everett Road Covered Bridge was constructed after a local resident was killed attempting to cross the swollen Furnace Run in 1877. It was destroyed by storm floodwaters in 1975 and reconstructed by the National Park Service in 1986. It is the only covered bridge in Summit County today. The bridge is located on Everett Road about 5/10 of a mile west of Riverview Road near Everett Village.[18] Brandywine Village Brandywine Village was conceived and founded by George Wallace, who built a sawmill next to Brandywine Falls in 1814. He encouraged others to move to the area, including his brother-in-law, who built a grist mill on the opposite side of the falls. With inexpensive land available and the presence of mills to provide lumber, flour, and corn meal, the Village of Brandywine began to grow. Today only a couple of buildings remain from the village but historic photos and remnants of building foundations allow us to remember the Brandywine Village that once was.[19] Civilian Conservation Corps Structures The Civilian Conservation Corps was responsible for the construction of some of the most attractive buildings in the valley. Happy Days Visitor Center as well as the Ledges, Octagon, and Lake Shelters were built of wormy American Chestnut wood in the late 1930s. These structures can be found in the Virginia Kendall Unit of the park.[20][21] The George Stanford House James Stanford moved to Boston Township immediately after surveying and naming it in 1806. He and with his wife Polly and son George were the first homesteaders in what is today Cuyahoga Valley National Park (CVNP). His son George built a stately Greek revival home in about 1830. That home, located at 6093 Stanford Road, now serves as the Cuyahoga Valley HI-Stanford Hostel.[22] National Register of Historic Places This page contains a complete list of National Register of Historic Places locations within CVNP. Some of these locations are privately owned.[23] Hale Farm & Village Hale Farm & Village is an outdoor living history museum that is just a few miles and 150 years away. Costumed "pioneer" interpreters describe life in the Western Reserve during the formative years of the United States of America. The village features 21 historic buildings to tour and many talented craftspeople. It is operated by the Western Reserve Historical Society. Craft demonstrations include glassblowing, candlemaking, broommaking, spinning & weaving, cheesemaking, blacksmithing, woodworking, sawmilling, hearth cooking, and pottery making. The farm also features oxen, sheep, cows, and gardens.[24]
National Register of Historic Places
Many of the listed homes are in private ownership.[26]
Cuyahoga Valley National Park - National Register of Historic Places # Coordinates Locale Historic Status Address Register Date Cuyahoga County and Summit County 1. Agricultural Resources of Cuyahoga Valley Multiple Property Document Form NO PUBLIC FACILITIES 3/12/93 2. Independence to Akron Valley Railway Historic District Cuyahoga Valley between Rockside Rd. at CVNP and Howard St. at Little Cuyahoga Valley. 5/17/85 3. Recreation/Conservation Resources of Cuyahoga Valley Multiple Property Document Form 1/10/97 Cuyahoga County 4. Bedford Cleveland and Pittsburgh Railroad Bridge OPEN TO THE PUBLIC Tinkers Creek 7/24/75 5. 41°19′17″N 081°35′14″W / 41.32139°N 81.58722°W[27] Brecksville Brecksville-Northfield High Level Bridge - STATE HIGHWAY BRIDGE OPEN TO THE PUBLIC Ohio State Route 82 and Cuyahoga River (also in Northfield, Summit County, Ohio) Best viewed from Station Road Bridge Trailhead on the Towpath Trail (Riverview Rd. just South of Ohio State Route 82) 1/6/86 6. Brecksville Burt,William House NO PUBLIC FACILITIES 9525 Brecksville Road 3/7/79 7. Brecksville Rich, Charles B., House NO PUBLIC FACILITIES 9367 Brecksville Rd. 2/22/79 8. Brecksville Brecksville Trailside Museum - (CLEVELAND METROPARKS NATURE CENTER) Chippewa Creek Drive off Ohio State Route 82 9?/92 9. Brecksville vicinity Coonrad, Jonas, House NO PUBLIC FACILITIES 10340 Riverview Road 7/24/79 10. Brecksville vicinity Vaughn Site (33CU65) Address Restricted NO PUBLIC FACILITIES 11/12/87 11. Brecksville vicinity Vaughn, Richard Farm NO PUBLIC FACILITIES 9570 Riverview Road 3/12/93 12. Independence Packard-Doubler House NO PUBLIC FACILITIES - PRIVATE PROPERTY 7634 Riverview Road 3/9/79 13. Independence vicinity South Park Site NO PUBLIC FACILITIES Address Restricted 6/22/76 14. Independence vicinity Terra Vista Archeological District NO PUBLIC FACILITIES Address Restricted 5/23/78 15. Independence to Akron Valley Railway Historic District Cuyahoga Valley Scenic Railroad OPEN TO THE PUBLIC FOR SCENIC TRAIN RIDES Cuyahoga Valley National Recreation Area Between Rockside Rd. and Howard St. at Little Cuyahoga Valley 5/17/85 16. Valley View Frazee, Stephen House CVNP VISITOR CENTER WITH LIMITED OPEN HOURS 7733 Canal Road 5/4/76 17. Valley View Gleason, Edmund House NO PUBLIC FACILITIES 7243 Canal Rd. 12/18/79 18. Valley View Gleason Farm - Boundary Increase NO PUBLIC FACILITIES 7243 Canal Rd., 3/12/93 19. Valley View Knapp, William, House NO PUBLIC FACILITIES 7101 Canal Road 3/19/79 20. Valley View Lock No. 37 and Spillway Ohio and Erie Canal Towpath Trail OPEN TO THE PUBLIC Fitzwater Road 12/11/79 21. Valley View Lock No. 38 and Spillway Ohio and Erie Canal Towpath Trail OPEN TO THE PUBLIC Hillside Road 12/11/79 22. Valley View Lock No. 39 and Spillway Ohio and Erie Canal Towpath Trail OPEN TO THE PUBLIC Canal Road 12/11/79 23. 41°22′24″N 81°36′59″W / 41.37333°N 81.61639°W Valley View Inn at Lock 38 a.k.a. Canal Visitor Center - CVNP VISITOR CENTER OPEN TO THE PUBLIC a.k.a. Hell's Half Acre Ohio and Erie Canal Towpath Trail, 7104 Canal Road 12/11/79 24. 41°21′53″N 081°36′32″W / 41.36472°N 81.60889°W[28] Valley View Tinkers Creek Aqueduct Ohio and Erie Canal Towpath Trail OPEN TO THE PUBLIC Tinkers Creek 12/11/79 25. Valley View Ulyatt, Abraham, House NO PUBLIC FACILITIES 6579 Canal Road 2/27/79 26. Valley View Wilson Feed Mill OPEN TO PUBLIC AS A FEED AND GRAIN STORE Ohio and Erie Canal Towpath Trail, 7604 Canal Road 12/17/79 27. Valley View Village Ohio and Erie Canal OPEN TO THE PUBLIC VIA THE TOWPATH TRAIL Ohio State Route 631 11/13/65 NHL 11/13/66 Summit County 28. Akron Vicinity Barker Village Site NO PUBLIC FACILITIES Address Restricted 04/19/78 29. Bath Hale, Jonathan Homestead - HALE FARM & VILLAGE OPEN TO THE PUBLIC 2686 Oak Hill Road 4/23/73 30. Boston Boston Land and Manufacturing Company Store a.k.a. Boston Store CVNP VISITOR CENTER WITH LIMITED OPEN HOURS Ohio and Erie Canal Towpath Trail, Boston Mills Rd 12/11/79 31. Boston Lock No. 32 Ohio and Erie Canal Towpath Trail OPEN TO THE PUBLIC 800 ft (240 m). N of Boston Mills Road 12/11/79 32. Boston Boston Mills Historic District MOST BUILDINGS ARE PRIVATE WITH NO PUBLIC FACILITIES Boston Mills Rd., Stanford Rd. & Main Street 11/9/92 33. Boston vicinity Lock No. 33 Ohio and Erie Canal Towpath Trail OPEN TO THE PUBLIC 1 mi (1.6 km). S. of Highland Road 12/11/79 34. Botzum Botzum Farm NO PUBLIC FACILITIES 11/01/96 - Determination of Eligibility 35. Cuyahoga Falls Hunt/Wilke Farm a.k.a. Hunt Farm Visitor Information Center CVNP VISITOR CENTER WITH LIMITED OPEN HOURS Agricultural Resources of Cuyahoga Valley MPD, 2049 Bolanz Road 3/12/93 36. Brecksville vicinity Jaite Mill Historic District - CVNP HEADQUARTERS NO VISITOR FACILITIES SE of Brecksville at Riverview and Vaughn roads 5/21/79 37. 41°19′10″N 081°35′15″W / 41.31944°N 81.5875°W[11] Brecksville vicinity Station Road Bridge OPEN TO THE PUBLIC East of Brecksville at Cuyahoga River 3/7/79 38. Everett Lock No. 27 Ohio and Erie Canal Towpath Trail OPEN TO THE PUBLIC Approx. 400 ft (120 m). E of intersection of Riverview and Everett roads 3/12/93 39. Everett vicinity Everett Knoll Complex Prehistoric District NO PUBLIC FACILITIES Address Restricted 5/25/77 40. Everett vicinity Furnace Run Aqueduct Ohio and Erie Canal Towpath Trail OPEN TO THE PUBLIC Furnace Run 12/11/79 41. Everett Everett Historic District VILLAGE IS OPEN TO THE PUBLIC - SOME BUILDINGS ARE PRIVATE RESIDENCES - NPS BUILDINGS HAVE NO VISITOR FACILITIES Everett and Riverview roads 1/14/94 42. Ira Lock No. 26 Ohio and Erie Canal Towpath Trail OPEN TO THE PUBLIC 3.3 mi (5.3 km). N of Ira Road 12/11/79 43. Northfield Center vicinity Wallace Farm OPEN TO PATRONS OF THE BED & BREAKFAST ONLY (Inn at Brandywine Falls) 8230 Brandywine Rd. 6/27/85 44. Peninsula Everett Road Covered Bridge OPEN TO THE PUBLIC SW of Peninsula on Everett Rd. over Furnace Creek 5/23/73 Demolished/Destroyed/Rebuilt 45. Peninsula Lock No. 28 Ohio and Erie Canal Towpath Trail OPEN TO THE PUBLIC Deep Lock Quarry Metro Park 12/11/79 46. Peninsula Lock No. 29 and Aqueduct Ohio and Erie Canal Towpath Trail OPEN TO THE PUBLIC off Ohio State Route 303 12/11/79 47. Peninsula Lock No. 30 and Feeder Dam Ohio and Erie Canal Towpath Trail OPEN TO THE PUBLIC Off Ohio State Route 303 12/11/79 48. Peninsula Lock No. 31 Ohio and Erie Canal Towpath Trail OPEN TO THE PUBLIC 200 ft (61 m). E. of Cuyahoga River and approx. 0.5 mi (0.80 km). S of Ohio Turnpike 12/11/79 49. 41°14′32″N 81°32′57″W / 41.24222°N 81.54917°W Peninsula Peninsula Village Historic District MOST BUILDINGS ARE PRIVATE - SOME ARE RETAIL STORES Both sides of Ohio State Route 303 8/23/74 50. Peninsula Fox House NO PUBLIC FACILITIES - PRIVATE PROPERTY 1664 West Main Street Part I Certification (contributes to the significance of the above-named district and is a certified historic structure for purposes of rehabilitation) 2/13/87, MARO 51. Peninsula Tilden, Daniel, House NO PUBLIC FACILITIES - PRIVATE PROPERTY 2325 Stine Rd. 6/20/85 52. Peninsula Welton, Allen, House NO PUBLIC FACILITIES - PRIVATE PROPERTY 2485 Major Rd. 5/07/79 53. Peninsula vicinity Brown, Jim, House NO PUBLIC FACILITIES S. of Peninsula at 3491 Akron Peninsula Rd. 3/2/79 54. Peninsula vicinity Brown/ Bender Farm, Boundary Increase NO PUBLIC FACILITIES 3491 Akron Peninsula Rd. 3/12/93 55. Peninsula vicinity Cranz, Edward Farm NO PUBLIC FACILITIES 2780 Oak Hill Drive 3/12/93 56. Peninsula vicinity Cranz, William and Eugene Farm NO PUBLIC FACILITIES 2401 Ira Road 3/12/93 57. Peninsula vicinity Stanford, George, Farm - (AYH Youth Hostel) 6093 Stanford Rd. 2/17/82 58. Peninsula vicinity Stumpy Basin Ohio and Erie Canal Towpath Trail OPEN TO THE PUBLIC 200 ft (61 m). E of Cuyahoga River and approx. 0.5 mi (0.80 km) S of Ohio Turnpike 12/11/79 59. Peninsula vicinity Duffy, Michael Farm NO PUBLIC FACILITIES - PRIVATE PROPERTY 4965 Quick Road 3/12/93 60. Peninsula vicinity Virginia Kendall Historic District OPEN TO THE PUBLIC - SHELTER, RESTROOMS, WINTER SPORTS CENTER Truxell Road 1/10/97 61. Peninsula vicinity Camp Manatoc Concord Lodge and Adirondacks Historic District NO PUBLIC FACILITIES - PRIVATE PROPERTY Truxell Road 1/10/97 62. Peninsula vicinity Butler, H. Karl Memorial NO PUBLIC FACILITIES - PRIVATE PROPERTY Truxell Road 1/10/97 63. Peninsula vicinity Camp Manatoc Dining Hall NO PUBLIC FACILITIES - PRIVATE PROPERTY Truxell Road 1/10/97 64. Peninsula vicinity Camp Manatoc Foresters Lodge and Kit Carson/Dan Boone Cabins NO PUBLIC FACILITIES - PRIVATE PROPERTY Historic District, Truxell Road 1/10/97 65. Peninsula vicinity Camp Manatoc Legion Lodge NO PUBLIC FACILITIES - PRIVATE PROPERTY Truxell Road 1/10/97 66. Peninsula vicinity Jyrovat Farmstead NO PUBLIC FACILITIES 696 W. Streetsboro Road 5/25/95 67. Sagamore Hills Lock No. 34 Ohio and Erie Canal Towpath Trail OPEN TO THE PUBLIC Highland Rd. 12/17/79 68. Sagamore Hills Lock No. 35 Ohio and Erie Canal Towpath Trail OPEN TO THE PUBLIC Off Ohio State Route 82 12/11/79 References
This article incorporates public domain material from the National Park Service document "http://www.nps.gov/archive/cuva/planavisit/todo/recreation/ohioerie.htm".
- ^ "Encyclopedia of Cleveland History - The Cuyahoga River". Case Western Reserve University. http://ech.case.edu/ech-cgi/article.pl?id=CR9.
- ^ "The Cuyahoga River". Cleveland Memory, Cleveland State University. http://www.clevelandmemory.org/ellis/chap03.html.
- ^ Cuyahoga Valley National Park - Frequently Asked Questions (U.S. National Park Service)
- ^ govtrack.us summary of HR 4578
- ^ "CVSR". Cuyahoga Valley Scenic Railroad. http://www.cvsr.com/.
- ^ "Towpath Trail map". National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior. http://www.nps.gov/archive/cuva/planavisit/maps/towpath.htm.
- ^ a b c d "Ohio and Erie Canal Towpath Trail". National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior. http://www.nps.gov/archive/cuva/planavisit/todo/recreation/ohioerie.htm.
- ^ "Ohio & Erie Canal Towpath Trail Tour - Sites to Visit". National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior. http://www.nps.gov/archive/cuva/visitonline/towpathtour/interact.htm.
- ^ "Ohio & Erie Canal - Towpath Trail Tour". National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior. http://www.nps.gov/archive/cuva/visitonline/towpathtour/index.htm.
- ^ "Cuyahoga Valley National Park - Stanford House". Day in the Valley. http://www.dayinthevalley.com/attractDetail.php?attrId=Stanford+House.
- ^ a b "Station Road Bridge". Geographic Names Information System, U.S. Geological Survey. http://geonames.usgs.gov/pls/gnispublic/f?p=gnispq:3:::NO::P3_FID:1073892. Retrieved 2009-05-03.
- ^ "Cuyahoga Valley National Park - Visitor Centers". National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior. http://www.nps.gov/archive/cuva/planavisit/visitorcenters.htm.
- ^ "Cuyahoga Valley National Park - Canal Visitor Center". National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior. http://www.nps.gov/archive/cuva/planavisit/visitorcenters.htm#CVC.
- ^ "Cuyahoga Valley National Park - Ohio and Erie Canal". National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior. http://www.nps.gov/archive/cuva/planavisit/todo/recreation/ohioerie.htm.
- ^ "Cuyahoga Valley National Park - Interactive Tow-Path Tour". National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior. http://www.nps.gov/archive/cuva/visitonline/towpathtour/interact.htm.
- ^ "Cuyahoga Valley National Park - Frazee House". National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior. http://www.nps.gov/archive/cuva/planavisit/visitorcenters.htm#FrazeeHouse.
- ^ "Cuyahoga Valley National Park - Boston Store". National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior. http://www.nps.gov/archive/cuva/planavisit/visitorcenters.htm#BostonStr.
- ^ "Cuyahoga Valley National Park - Everett Road Covered Bridge". National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior. http://www.nps.gov/archive/cuva/history/CvrdBrdg.htm.
- ^ "Cuyahoga Valley National Park - Brandywine Village". National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior. http://www.nps.gov/archive/cuva/visitonline/brandywine/index.htm.
- ^ "Happy Days Visitor Center". National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior. http://www.nps.gov/archive/cuva/planavisit/visitorcenters.htm#HDVC.
- ^ "Cuyahoga Valley National Park - Virginia Kendall Unit map". National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior. http://www.nps.gov/archive/cuva/planavisit/maps/Map_Ldgs.htm.
- ^ "The George Stanford House". National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior. http://www.nps.gov/archive/cuva/friends/stanford.htm.
- ^ "National Register of Historic Places - Cuyahoga Valley National Park". National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior. http://www.nps.gov/archive/cuva/history/NatRegst.htm.
- ^ "Hale Farm and Village". Western Reserve Historical Society. http://www.wrhs.org/sites/hale.htm.
- ^ "Points of Historic Interest". National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior. http://www.nps.gov/archive/cuva/history/PntsHist.htm.
- ^ "National Register of Historic Places - Cuyahoga Valley National Park". National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior. http://www.nps.gov/archive/cuva/history/NatRegst.htm.
- ^ "Brecksville-Northfield High Level Bridge". Geographic Names Information System, U.S. Geological Survey. http://geonames.usgs.gov/pls/gnispublic/f?p=gnispq:3:::NO::P3_FID:1073888. Retrieved 2009-05-03.
- ^ "Tinkers Creek Aqueduct". Geographic Names Information System, U.S. Geological Survey. http://geonames.usgs.gov/pls/gnispublic/f?p=gnispq:3:::NO::P3_FID:1073893. Retrieved 2009-05-03.
General references
- "A Green Shrouded Miracle: The Administrative History of Cuyahoga Valley National Recreation Area, Ohio". National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior. http://www.cr.nps.gov/history/online_books/cuyahoga/.
- "Ohio and Erie Canal National Heritage Corridor, a National Park Service Discover Our Shared Heritage Travel Itinerary". National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior. http://www.nps.gov/history/nr/travel/ohioeriecanal/.
- "The Ohio & Erie Canal: Catalyst of Economic Development for Ohio, a National Park Service Teaching with Historic Places (TwHP) lesson plan". National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior. http://www.nps.gov/history/NR/twhp/wwwlps/lessons/41ohio/41ohio.htm.
- "Cuyahoga Valley National Park - Official Site". National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior. http://www.nps.gov/cuva/.
- The National Parks: Index 2001–2003. Washington: U.S. Department of the Interior.
Further reading
Cuyahoga Valley Trails Council (2007). The Trail Guide to Cuyahoga Valley National Park, 3rd Edition, OH: Gray & Company, Publishers. ISBN 978-1-59851-040-9
External links
- Official site: Cuyahoga Valley National National Park
- Cuyahoga Valley National Park travel guide from Wikitravel
Protected areas of Ohio Federal National parksCuyahoga Valley National ParkCedar Point • Ottawa • West Sister IslandState Adams Lake • Alum Creek • A. W. Marion • Barkcamp • Beaver Creek • Blue Rock • Buck Creek • Buckeye Lake • Burr Oak • Caesar Creek • Catawba Island • Cleveland Lakefront • Cowan Lake • Deer Creek • Delaware • Dillon • East Fork • East Harbor • Findley • Forked Run • Geneva • Grand Lake St. Marys • Great Seal • Guilford Lake • Harrison Lake • Headlands Beach • Hocking Hills • Hueston Woods • Independence Dam • Indian Lake • Jackson Lake • Jefferson Lake • John Bryan • Kelleys Island • Kiser Lake • Lake Alma • Lake Hope • Lake Logan • Lake Loramie • Lake Milton • Lake White • Little Miami • Madison Lake • Malabar Farm • Marblehead Lighthouse • Mary Jane Thurston • Middle Bass Island • Maumee Bay • Mohican • Mosquito Lake • Mt. Gilead • Muskingum River • Nelson Kennedy Ledges • Paint Creek • Pike Lake • Portage Lakes • Punderson • Pymatuning • Quail Hollow • Rocky Fork • Salt Fork • Scioto Trail • Shawnee • South Bass Island • Stonelick • Strouds Run • Sycamore • Tar Hollow • Tinkers Creek • Van Buren • West Branch • Wingfoot Lake • Wolf Run
Beaver Creek • Blue Rock • Brush Creek • Dean • Fernwood • Gifford • Harrison • Hocking • Maumee • Mohican-Memorial • Perry • Pike • Richland Furnace • Scioto Trail • Shade River • Shawnee • Sunfish Creek • Tar Hollow • Yellow Creek • Zaleski
State nature
preservesAcadia Cliffs • Adams Lake Prairie • Audubon Islands • Augusta-Anne Olsen • Aurora Sanctuary • Baker Woods • Evans Beck Memorial • Betsch Fen • Bigelow Cemetery • Blackhand Gorge • Bonnet Pond • Boord • Brown's Lake Bog • Burton Wetlands • Caesar Creek Gorge • Lou Campbell • Carmean Woods • Cedar Bog • Chaparral Prairie • Christmas Rocks • Clear Creek • Clear Fork Gorge • Clifton Gorge • Howard Collier • Compass Plant Prairie • Conkle's Hollow • Copperrider-Kent Bog • Crabill Fen • Cranberry Bog • Crane Hollow • Crooked Run • Culberson Woods • Davey Woods • Davis Memorial • Marie J. Desonier • Drew Woods • Dupont Marsh • Eagle Creek • Emerald Hills • Erie Sand Barrens • Etawah Woods • Flatiron Lake Bog • Fowler Woods • Frame Lake Fen • Gahanna Woods • Gallagher/Springfield Fen • Goll Woods • Goode Prairie • Gott Fen • Greenbelt • Greenville Falls • Gross Memorial Woods • Hatch-Otis • Halls Creek • Headlands Dunes • Hueston Woods • Hutchins (Highland) • Irwin Prairie • Jackson Bog • Johnson Ridge • Johnson Woods • Karlo Fen • Kendrick Woods • Kessler Swamp • Kiser Lake Wetlands • Kitty Todd • Knox Woods • Kyle Woods • Ladd Natural Bridge • Lake Katharine • Lakeside Daisy • Lawrence Woods • Little Rocky Hollow • Mantua Bog • Marsh Wetlands • McCracken Fen • Mentor Marsh • Milford Center Railroad Prairie • Miller • Morris Woods • Mud Lake Bog • Myersville • Newberry • North Pond • North Shore Alvar • Novak Sanctuary • Old Woman Creek • Owens/Liberty Fen • Pallister • Pickerington Ponds • Portage Lakes Wetland • Prairie Road Fen • William C. McCoy • Raven Rock • Rhododendeon Cove • Rockbridge • Rome • Rothenbuhler Woods • Saltpetre Cave • Sears Woods • Seymour Woods • Shallenberger • Sharon Woods Gorge • Sheepskin Hollow • Sheick Hollow • Sheldon Marsh • Shoemaker • Siegenthaler-Kaestner Esker • Smith Cemetery • Spring Beauty Dell • Spring Brook Sanctuary • Springville Marsh • Stage's Pond • Strait Creek Prairie • Stratford Woods • Swamp Cottonwood • Edward Thomas • Tinker's Creek • Travertine Fen • Triangle Lake Bog • Trillium Trails • Walter Tucker • Tummonds • Warder-Perkins • Whipple • White Pine Bog Forest • Zimmermand Prairie
State
scenic riversBig Darby Creek • Chagrin River • Conneaut Creek • Cuyahoga River • Grand River • Greenville Creek • Kokosing River • Little Beaver Creek • Little Darby Creek • Little Miami River • Maumee River • Mohican River • Olentangy River • Sandusky River • Stillwater River
Regional Ashtabula County Metroparks • Cleveland Metroparks • Columbus Metro Parks • Erie MetroParks • Five Rivers MetroParks • Geauga Park District • Hamilton County Park District • Johnny Appleseed Metro Parks • Lake Metroparks • Lorain County Metro Parks • Metroparks of Butler County • Metro Parks, Serving Summit County • Metroparks of the Toledo Area • Mill Creek MetroParks • Trumbull County MetroParks •
National parks of the United States Acadia • American Samoa • Arches • Badlands • Big Bend • Biscayne • Black Canyon of the Gunnison • Bryce Canyon • Canyonlands • Capitol Reef • Carlsbad Caverns • Channel Islands • Congaree • Crater Lake • Cuyahoga Valley • Death Valley • Denali • Dry Tortugas • Everglades • Gates of the Arctic • Glacier • Glacier Bay • Grand Canyon • Grand Teton • Great Basin • Great Sand Dunes • Great Smoky Mountains • Guadalupe Mountains • Haleakalā • Hawaiʻi Volcanoes • Hot Springs • Isle Royale • Joshua Tree • Katmai • Kenai Fjords • Kings Canyon • Kobuk Valley • Lake Clark • Lassen Volcanic • Mammoth Cave • Mesa Verde • Mount Rainier • North Cascades • Olympic • Petrified Forest • Redwood • Rocky Mountain • Saguaro • Sequoia • Shenandoah • Theodore Roosevelt • Virgin Islands • Voyageurs • Wind Cave • Wrangell-St. Elias • Yellowstone • Yosemite • ZionNational Register of Historic Places in Cuyahoga Valley National Park National Historic Landmark District Other historic districts Botzum Farm | Camp Manatoc Foresters Lodge and Kit Carson-Dan Boone Cabins Historic District | Edward Cranz Farm | William and Eugene Cranz Farm | Michael Duffy Farm | Everett Historic District | Everett Knoll Complex | Jaite Mill Historic District | Virginia Kendall State Park Historic District | Peninsula Village Historic District | Terra Vista Archeological District | Valley Railway Historic District
National Register properties Barker Village Site | Jim Brown House] | Jim Brown Tavern | William Burt House | H. Karl Butler Memorial | Camp Manatoc Concord Lodge and Adirondacks Historic District | Camp Manatoc Dining Hall | Camp Manatoc Legion Lodge | Albert Cofta Farmstead | Jonas Coonrad House | Fort Island Works | Stephen Frazee House | Furnace Run Aqueduct | Edmund Gleason Farm | Hunt-Wilke Farm | William Knapp House | Lock No. 26 | Lock No. 27 | Lock No. 28 | Lock No. 29 and Aqueduct | Lock No. 30 and Feeder Dam | Lock No. 31 | Lock No. 32 | Lock No. 33 | Lock No. 34 | Lock No. 35 | Lock No. 37 and Spillway | Lock No. 38 and Spillway | Lock No. 39 and Spillway | Lock Tender's House and Inn | Lutz-Martin Farm | Ohio and Erie Canal Deep Lock | Packard-Doubler House | Nathaniel Point Farm | Charles B. Rich House | Russ and Holland Snow Houses | South Park Site | George Stanford Farm | Station Road Bridge | Stebbens Farm | Stumpy Basin | Daniel Tilden House | Tinkers Creek Aqueduct | Abraham Ulyatt House | Richard Vaughn Farm | Wallace Farm | Allen Welton House | Wilson Feed Mill
Categories:- IUCN Category II
- Greater Cleveland
- Cuyahoga Valley National Park
- Protected areas of Cuyahoga County, Ohio
- Protected areas of Summit County, Ohio
- Protected areas established in 2000
- Civilian Conservation Corps in Ohio
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