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![]() Destinations: History of Shenandoah National Park
To truly understand Shenandoah National Park is to know her stories. Shenandoah is a natural world of air, water, trees and rocks, plants and animals. Entwined in this natural world is a human history: the people who lived here; the people who establish and built the park; all the traces of human life which remain today. These, too, are among the stories of the park.The true beginning of Shenandoah National Park is over a billion years ago, when magma deep beneath the earth's surface moved upward, eventually to become the park's granite peaks. Eons later, after many geographic and geologic changes, Native Americans began the human history of the park area, followed by the early European settlers and mountain residents.
In the 20th century, human beings have continued to make the history of what is now the park; those who envisioned and established the park; those who built Skyland, Rapidan Camp, and the Skyline Drive; those who cleared the Appalachian Trail; those who worked here as part of the CCC. Today, everyone who visits or works here is becoming a part of the history of Shenandoah National Park for future generations. Shenandoah National Park includes 300 square miles of the Blue Ridge Mountains in the southern Appalachians. The park rises above the Virginia Piedmont to its east and the Shenandoah Valley to its west. Two peaks exceed 4,000 feet. The range of elevation, slopes and aspects, rocks and soils, precipitation, and latitude create a mix of habitats. Tens of thousands of living creatures make their homes in the park, from black bear resting beneath rock overhangs, to tiny aquatic insects darting through cool mountain streams. The park's many worlds are fascinating to explore.Before the Park. Shenandoah''s is a long history, filled with many themes and tales. Some are known, many are being researched, and others await future study. Creating a National Park. But the early boosters did not, at first, take into account the impact park establishment would have on the families that owned land and lived within the park boundary. Nor did they envision the traumatic events that would be initiated in late October, 1929. The Great Depression, its impact on two Presidents, and the creation of the Civilian Conservation Corps, are themes that are intimately woven into the fabric of the park story. Shenandoah National Park Today. Related Articles
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