Minnie Island State Park Explained

Minnie Island State Park should not be confused with Minnie Island (British Columbia).

Minnie Island State Park
Photo Width:280
Map:Connecticut#USA
Map Width:280
Relief:1
Label:Minnie Island State Park
Location:Montville and Salem, Connecticut, United States
Coordinates:41.5056°N -72.2217°W
Area:1acres
Elevation:394feet
Established:1925
Designation:Connecticut state park
Administrator:Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection

Minnie Island State Park is a public recreation area occupying a tiny island at the southern end of 529acres Gardner Lake that is split by the townline between Salem and Montville, Connecticut. It is accessible only via boat and offers opportunities for picnicking and fishing as well as general exploration in a largely deserted setting. The 0.88acres island is the state's smallest state park.

History

In the 19th century, the island was owned by a popular music teacher, the founder of Salem's Music Vale Seminary, Oramel Whittlesey (1801-1876). Whittlesey named the island for a niece nicknamed Minnie. In the 1920s, an attempt by squatters to take possession led to the discovery that although the island was claimed by both Salem and Montville, it was not on the tax rolls of either town. In solving the dilemma, the state assembly rejected the squatters' proposed legislation, instead passing a law in 1925 that took possession of the island for the state and turned its management over to the state park's commission.

Features

Writers working for the WPA in the 1930s described Minnie Island as "a pine-grown knoll rising from the lake's depths." It has a steep shoreline with gray outcropped ledges that offers few opportunities for docking. It rises approximately sixteen feet from the surface of Gardner Lake which lies at an elevation of . Its northern shore drops off into the deepest portion of Gardner Lake, some . The island is thickly forested with mountain laurel undergrowth amidst large red oaks. A clearing at the summit may be littered with the detritus of previous visitors. There are no facilities of any kind and no signage.

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