Sky Meadows State Park
Template:Short description Template:Use mdy dates Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Sky Meadows State Park is a Template:Convert park in the Virginia state park system. In addition to preserved woodland, meadow and swamp, sections of the park are farmed, in part because it contains the former Mt. Bleak-Skye Farm which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2004.[1] Located in extreme northwest Fauquier County, Virginia in the Blue Ridge Mountains, near Paris, Virginia off U.S. 17, Template:Convert south of U.S. 50 and Template:Convert north of Interstate 66, it is an International Dark Sky Park located about an hour outside the Washington, D.C. metro region.
History
Mt. Bleak-Skye Farm
Mt. Bleak-Skye Farm is a national historic district located in Sky Meadows State Park. Before the American Civil War, it was farmed by Abner Settle and his family using enslaved labor. Son Dr. Thomas Settle was the physician who proclaimed John Brown dead after his execution for treason. Two other Settle sons fought for the Confederate States of America under the direction of John S. Mosby. The Settle family sold the property in 1866, after the war ended, and it had several subsequent names.[2]
Formation
Philanthropist Paul Mellon donated Template:Convert of land which became the park in 1975. The name Sky Meadows came from former owner Sir Robert Hadow, a British diplomat (consul general) who lived on the farm during World War II and who named the property "Skye Farm" after the Isle of Skye in the Inner Hebrides of Scotland.[3] The park opened to the public on 27 August 1983.[4] It has expanded its borders twice since then—Template:Convert were added in 1987, containing the Appalachian Trail, and in 1991 Mellon donated an additional Template:Convert, bringing the park to its present size.
Historic listing
The historic district encompasses 23 contributing buildings including barns, 1 contributing site, and 3 contributing structures dating between 1780 and 1954. The oldest is the <templatestyles src="Fraction/styles.css" />1+1⁄2-story, Wayside Cottage which was built about 1780. It also includes the Timberlake farmstead (Template:Circa), Federal-style Mount Bleak mansion (Template:Circa), and the frame Meeting House (Template:Circa).[5]
Ecology, star-watching and camping amenities
It starts in a valley between the foothills and the Blue Ridge Mountains, then has meadows and forests stretching up to the ridge of the mountain and the Appalachian Trail.
There is a basic walk-in campground, over Template:Convert of hiking trails and Template:Convert of bridle paths. The horse trails are east of US 17 and the hiking trails (and most of the park) is west of US 17.
With a combination of meadows, grazed fields, forest, scrub, and streams, it has a wide variety of ecological zones.
Most of the year, there are monthly "astronomy nights" where amateur astronomers bring their telescopes and use them to show attendees various celestial objects. Typically, an astronomer from the Smithsonian Institution is among the leaders. The park was designated as an International Dark Sky Park by DarkSky International in April 2021.[6]
Sky Meadows is a year-round bird watching site. It is known for a colony of red-headed woodpeckers that live in an oak grove just past the contact station. Depending on the time of the year, it is almost certain that this and the other six species of woodpeckers—downy, hairy, red-bellied, yellow-bellied sapsucker, pileated, and northern flicker—commonly found in this part of Virginia will be present.
Except for "astronomy nights", the park closes at dusk, and campers must be in the park and others out of the park at that time.
See also
References
External links
- Official website of Sky Meadows State Park
- Sky Meadows State Park in World Database on Protected Areas
- Audubon Society of Northern Virginia (ASNV) Birding Hotspot Factsheet
Template:Protected areas of Virginia Template:National Register of Historic Places in Virginia
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- Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in Virginia
- Farms on the National Register of Historic Places in Virginia
- Federal architecture in Virginia
- Houses completed in 1780
- Houses in Fauquier County, Virginia
- National Register of Historic Places in Fauquier County, Virginia
- State parks of Virginia
- Parks in Fauquier County, Virginia
- Blue Ridge Mountains
- Protected areas established in 1975
- 1975 establishments in Virginia
- Pages with reference errors