Mohawk Mountain Ski Area Explained

Mohawk Mountain Ski Area
Location:Cornwall, Litchfield County, Connecticut, United States
Coordinates:41.8368°N 73.3134°W
Vertical:650 ft
Number Trails:26
Skiable Area:112 acres (0.175 km²)
Longest Run:1.25 mi Deer Run
Liftsystem:8 total: 5 Triples, 3 Surface Lifts
Snowmaking:99%
External Link:Mohawk Mountain

Mohawk Mountain is a ski area located in Cornwall, Litchfield County, Connecticut. The ski area was built on the northwest slope of Mohawk Mountain by Walt Schoenknecht in 1947. It is a popular destination for both day and night skiers and snowboarders in the tri-State area (NYC/CT/northern NJ). Mohawk Mountain is approximately a 95miles ride to Mohawk Mountain from Manhattan. Like most ski areas on the East Coast south of Massachusetts, the resort has struggled with dependable snow in winter, and has depended on its efforts in creating and popularizing the snow gun and artificial snow.

History

Mohawk Mountain ski area was first opened by Walt Schoenknecht, later of Mount Snow fame, in 1947.

In 1969, a new Carlevaro-Savio double chairlift was installed.

In 1978, a new Hall triple chairlift was installed.

In 1989, a tornado destroyed many of the ski area's lifts and trees.[1] While the lifts were reconstructed, to this day the tree destruction is still visible from the base area.

In the summer of 2008, Mohawk Mountain installed a CTEC triple chairlift to replace the Mohawk Double. Formerly placed at Loon Mountain from 1984 to 2004, it is now the Mohawk Triple Chair as seen on their Trail Map.

In 2019, Mohawk Mountain introduced snowtubing to its list of services.

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Snowy Slopes, Within Easy Reach . Bill . Pennington . New York Times . January 28, 2009.