Punderson State Park Explained

Punderson State Park
Photo Width:280
Photo Alt:Sunset over water
Map:Ohio#USA
Relief:1
Label:Punderson State Park
Location:Geauga County, Ohio, United States
Coords:41.4564°N -81.2136°W
Elevation:1171feet
Established:1951
Free Label:Named for
Free Data:Lemuel Punderson
Designation:Ohio state park
Administrator:Ohio Department of Natural Resources
Website:Punderson State Park

Punderson State Park is a 741acres public recreation area in Newbury, Ohio. The state park features a 150acres lake and a lodge that enjoys a reputation for being haunted. The state park has facilities for swimming, fishing, camping, golf, disc golf, and sledding in wintertime.

History

The site was developed as a castle in the early 1800s by land agent Lemuel Punderson, one of the area's first settlers. After summer cottages, a hotel and Tudor-style lodge were constructed, the Ohio Division of Wildlife purchased the land and lake in 1948, then transferred control to the Division of Parks and Recreation for development as a state park in 1951.

In popular culture

On August 22, 1882, the pioneers of Newbury held a reunion on the lake, with a reading of Albert G. Riddle's poem, "Punderson's Pond." Numerous guests at the Manor House have reported over the years that Lemuel Punderson's ghost is haunting the place and that he has frightened several of them.

External links