Echo Bluff State Park

Echo Bluff State Park is a public recreation area comprising 476 acres (193 ha) of land in Newton Township, Shannon County, Missouri.[3] The state park occupies the site of former Camp Zoe, a summer camp for children that opened in 1929. The park was named for the massive cliff that towers over one side of Sinking Creek.[4]

Echo Bluff State Park
Echo Bluff State Park, May 2019
Location in Missouri
Echo Bluff State Park (the United States)
LocationNewton, Shannon, Missouri, United States
Coordinates37°18′41″N 91°24′22″W
Area476.62 acres (192.88 ha)[1]
Established2013[2]
Governing bodyMissouri Department of Natural Resources
WebsiteEcho Bluff State Park

History

The state acquired the former Camp Zoe site at auction from the federal government in 2013 for $640,000. An additional 80 acres was purchased for $455,000.[4] Some $52 million was spent building a new lodge, playground, campgrounds, pavilions, and cabins. Federal grant money totalling $10.5 million helped pay for improving area roads and creating a new bridge over Sinking Creek. The park opened to the public on July 30, 2016.[5]

Activities and amenities

The park features a lodge, cabins and campsites for overnight stays, bluff-top shelter for special events, and 50-seat amphitheater as well as hiking and mountain biking trails.[3]

gollark: I decided to do it on Friday instead.
gollark: I sent this message before I wrote it.
gollark: It doesn't even have fixed per-column types, exactly.
gollark: SQLite is able to make it work *fine* with entirely variably sized everything.
gollark: Performance is for people who care about performance.

References

  1. "Echo Bluff State Park: Data Sheet" (PDF). Missouri Department of Natural Resources. November 2017. Retrieved April 19, 2018.
  2. "State Park Land Acquisition Summary". Missouri State Parks. Retrieved April 19, 2018.
  3. "Echo Bluff State Park". Missouri Department of Natural Resources. Retrieved February 8, 2016.
  4. "It's not Camp Zoe anymore: New state park gets a name". Springfield News-Leader. Springfield, Mo. November 10, 2015. Retrieved February 8, 2016.
  5. "Missouri's newest state park to open on storied piece of the Ozarks". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. July 30, 2016.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.