Allamuchy Mountain is a mountain in Sussex and Warren Counties, New Jersey . The major peak rises to 1,222 feet (372 m), and is located in Byram Township . The mountain also covers portions of Allamuchy Township in Warren County and Green Township in Sussex County. It overlooks the Musconetcong River to the southeast, and forms part of the divide between that river and the Pequest to the northwest. It is part of the New York–New Jersey Highlands of the Reading Prong .
5-753: Allamuchy Mountain State Park covers portions of the mountain. An 1834 description read, Alamuche Mountain is one of the chain of hills which bounds the valley of the Musconetcong creek in Warren county. This Sussex County, New Jersey state location article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This Warren County, New Jersey state location article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Allamuchy Mountain State Park Allamuchy Mountain State Park
10-800: Is located in Allamuchy Township and Byram Township in the Allamuchy Mountain region of New Jersey . The park is operated and maintained by the New Jersey Division of Parks and Forestry . There are more than 20 miles (32 km) of unmarked trails in the northern section of Allamuchy, and 14 miles (23 km) of marked multi-use trails. The park is in the Northeastern coastal forests ecoregion . The 2,440 acres (9.9 km ) of mixed oak and hardwood forests and maintained fields of this natural area display various stages of succession . It
15-473: Is situated on the Musconetcong River . Waterloo Village has exhibits from many different time periods from a 400-year-old Lenape (Delaware) Native American village to a port along the once prosperous Morris Canal . The early 19th-century village contains a working mill with gristmills and sawmills, a general store, a blacksmith shop and restored houses. The Sussex Branch Trail , a rail trail on
20-581: The estate with an eight-lane highway. In the 1970s, the Allamuchy Mountain land became part of Allamuchy Mountain State Park. Tranquillity Farms, on the other side of the highway, remains a privately operated commercial farm. Locally, the ruins of the Rutherfurd-Stuyvesant Estate have become known as "Profanity House" because many of the buildings and ruins have been vandalized and covered in explicit and graphic graffiti. In recent years,
25-483: The former Sussex Railroad , has a trail head on Waterloo Road. It travels 3 miles (4.8 km) to Cranberry Lake. The Rutherfurd-Stuyvesant Estate dates back to the 1700s and featured a large mansion and many outbuildings. By the mid 20th century, the mansion had burned down and the remaining buildings were in very poor condition. In the 1960s, the estate was purchased by the State to build route 80, which divided sections of
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