Joseph Battell Wilderness

The Joseph Battell Wilderness is one of eight wilderness areas in the Green Mountain National Forest in the U.S. state of Vermont. The wilderness area, created by the New England Wilderness Act of 2006,[1] is named in honor of Joseph Battell (1839–1915), a philanthropist and environmentalist from Middlebury, Vermont. The wilderness consists of 12,336 acres (4,992 ha) managed by the U.S. Forest Service.[2]

Joseph Battell Wilderness
Map showing the location of Joseph Battell Wilderness
Map showing the location of Joseph Battell Wilderness
LocationAddison County, Vermont, U.S.
Nearest cityBrandon, Vermont
Coordinates43°54′N 72°58′W / 43.900°N 72.967°W / 43.900; -72.967
Area12,336 acres (4,992 ha)
Established2006
Governing bodyUnited States Forest Service

There are numerous mountains in the area with altitudes of at least 3,000 ft (910 m), including (from south to north to east): the Great Cliffs (3,000 ft or 910 m), Mount Horrid (3,216 ft or 980 m), Cape Lookoff Mountain (3,320 ft or 1,010 m), Gillespie Peak (3,366 ft or 1,026 m), Romance Mountain (3,145 ft or 959 m), Worth Mountain (3,234 ft or 986 m), Monastery Mountain (3,224 ft or 983 m), and Philadelphia Peak (3,203 ft or 976 m).[3] The core of the area, from Monastery Mountain to Worth Mountain to Romance Mountain, was bequeathed as a "park" to Middlebury College by Battell in 1915. Middlebury College sold nearly all of Battell's lands to the Forest Service in the 1930s and 1950s. It was the sale of these lands that prompted the Federal government to create the northern unit of the Green Mountain National Forest.[4]

The Long Trail crosses the entire length of the Joseph Battell Wilderness from Brandon Gap on its south edge to Middlebury Gap on its north edge.[3] The wilderness is traversed by several other hiking trails including the Sucker Brook Trail.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "S. 4001 — 109th Congress: New England Wilderness Act of 2006". GovTrack. 2006. Retrieved 26 December 2019.
  2. ^ "Joseph Battell Wilderness". Wilderness Connect. Retrieved 17 December 2019.
  3. ^ a b Green Mountain Club (2015). Vermont's Long Trail: A Footpath in the Wilderness (Topographic map) (5th ed.). 1:85,000. Cartography by Center for Community GIS. § Map 5: Middlebury & Lincoln Gaps. ISBN 978-1-888021-46-2.
  4. ^ "Joseph Battell Wilderness". United States Forest Service. Retrieved 17 December 2019.