Mount Electra (New York): Difference between revisions

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| accessdate = 2017-12-10 }}</ref>

| accessdate = 2017-12-10 }}</ref>

| topo = [[United States Geological Survey|USGS]] ”Nehasane Lake”

| topo = [[United States Geological Survey|USGS]] ”Nehasane Lake”

| map = USA New York rivers locator map.svg

| map = New York

| map_caption = Location of Mount Electra within New York

| map_caption = Location of Mount Electra within New York

| type =

| type =

Mountain in New York, United States

Mount Electra

Location of Mount Electra within New York

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Mount Electra (the United States)

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Highest point
Elevation 2,260 feet (690 m)
Coordinates

43°58′59″N 74°50′41″W / 43.9831180°N 74.8446252°W / 43.9831180; -74.8446252

[1]
Geography
Location NW of Little Rapids, New York, USA
Topo map USGS Nehasane Lake

Mount Electra is a 2,260-foot-tall (690 m) mountain in the Adirondack Mountains of New York. It is located north-northeast of Little Rapids in the Town of Webb in Herkimer County. Deer Mountain is located north-northwest of Mount Electra. The mountain was previously known as Rock Lake Mountain. Around 1920, a 60-foot-tall (18 m) steel fire lookout tower was built on the mountain. The tower was dismantled in 1989 and left at the mountain top.

Around 1920, the Webb Estate constructed a 60-foot-tall (18 m) Aermotor LS40 steel tower on the mountain. The tower was privately owned but cooperated with the Conservation Commission during periods of high fire danger. The State and Webb family had an agreement that the State would share in the cost of paying the observer but the Webb family would do the hiring. In the late 1970s, the mountain and the tower became a part of the New York State Forest Preserve. The land was added to the Five Ponds Wilderness Area, which classified the tower as a “non-conforming” structure. The tower was dismantled in 1989 and left at the mountain top.[2]

  1. ^

    “Mount Electra”. Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior. Retrieved December 10, 2017.

  2. ^ “Searchable list of NY Fire Towers”. nysffla.org. The New York State Chapter of the Forest Fire Lookout Association. Retrieved December 6, 2021.

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