The Nawakwa Outdoor Association of New York, Inc.

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Reminder: Please join us this weekend for the Summer Work Weekend

June 23, 2020 Leave a Comment

Hello Nawakwans – this weekend is your opportunity to contribute to the welfare and safety of The Camp.

  • Your attendance is needed June 27 and/or 28 for the first of two Summer Work WeekendsJune 27 and/or 28 for the first of two Summer Work Weekends. Please refer to the guidelines on ADKNY.org, as we have a limit of 15 keyholders at a time along with other restrictions.
  • Please fill out the Restricted Access Form on ADKNY.org, that will be your RSVP or Sign-up. Be sure to specify which day, and approximately what time you will begin working
  • Please also be sure to bring your own bag lunch (there is no cooking or preparing food), refreshments, and Mask.

 

Thank you. We look forward to seeing you! – The Board

Filed Under: News

Reminder: Snakes!!! Join the Zoom meeting Saturday June 27

June 20, 2020 Leave a Comment

Click for details on how to attend

Camp Activities: Virtual Talk on Snakes & Reptiles

Filed Under: News

100 Years: 1929 – 1930

June 19, 2020 Leave a Comment

This period was a busy one in the formation of Harriman State Park.  As the attached photo reflects, the land was bare and in need of replanting.  During this period the mountain laurel was purchased and transplanted in the Park.  112 Group Camps were in operation. Franklin Roosevelt, Governor of NYS, toured the Palisades parks of which he was very familiar.  He said the parks would “relieve us of the dangers of overcrowding in the cities and the strain on our nervous systems.” (1)

 

On October 24, 1929, “Black Thursday”, the stock market fell by five hundred points.  The onset of the Great Depression was at hand and the Palisades Interstate Park Commission would be severely impacted. The residents of Sandyfields, a mountain hamlet in a remote section of Harriman Park opposed construction of a dam as it would flood their properties.  Most residents agreed to sell their lands but some held out as properties had been in their families since the 1700s.  Other settlements including Baileytown, Johnsontown, Pine Meadows, Queensboro, Doodletown and others succumbed to the PIPC.  (1)

The Depression caused the dayliners on the Hudson River to stop operation.  Wages were cut across the board for Park employees.  Raymond Torrey’s salary was cut in half from $3,000 to $1,500 per year.  (1)

During this time, single women could not camp in the park.  Married women could camp as long as they were accompanied by their husbands.  (1)

The Park received needed assistance through Governor Roosevelt’s newly created Work Relief Program.  Within weeks, 2,500 men were employed in the park system.  They were paid $4.00 per day minus 50 cents for transportation.  They took the train arriving at Bear Mountain. (1)

Back at Camp Nawakwa, in 1929 “a new sleeping cabin was erected (cabin 2) and the washrooms in the Main Cabin were added.  The trap door and steep stairs leading to the basement were eliminated and a real staircase was constructed from what was previously the front sleeping room.  The pack room was created with shelves and hooks for packs, camping and sports equipment, coats and hats, etc.  The kitchen was enlarged.  The purpose of the new sleeping cabin was to accommodate the girls’ bunks removed from the main lodge.”  (2)  The new Women’s Cabin was completely weather proofed.  (3) The partition in cabin 1 were removed.  Originally the cabin was partitioned into four sections, one of which had a stove.  The intention was to provide a small place for a small group coming up during the winter without opening the main building.  The idea never worked out.  (4)

The January 1930 Trail Marker – “The Editor takes the liberty of again suggesting that we would all do well to get out on the trail much more frequently than we do.  Perhaps we are getting too “camp minded”.

WHO SHOULD DO THE DISH WASHING

The question has arisen again as to the desirability of having paid help about camp on the week-ends.  This question has been much discussed and very definite views both “Pro” and “Con” have been brought up.  After considerable discussion, the Camp Committee was asked to investigate as to the practicality of securing such “help”.

Footnotes:

  1. Palisades 1000 Acres in 100 Years, Robert O. Binnewies (including attached photo)
  2. The Trail Marker – April 1929
  3. The Trail Marker – December 1929
  4. The Trail Marker – January 1930
  5. A History by Ira Ayres

 

Ellen King

Archivist

Filed Under: News

Camp is Fully Booked June 20-21

June 18, 2020 Leave a Comment

All,

We have reached our mandated limit on visitors for this weekend. Please try for mid-week or next weekend if you’d like to visit.

We would love to have you at camp this summer!

Filed Under: News

Notice: No Swimming Yet!

June 16, 2020 Leave a Comment

As the warm weather approaches, keyholders need to know that there is no swimming until the swim dock is in place.

The Park will not allow swimming until the safety ropes are in place. Don will be in camp Saturday afternoon and is hoping there will be enough hands to help set everything up.

Until then, no swimming please.


Filed Under: News

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Recent Posts

  • Cancelled: Winter Social February 21, 2026
  • Now available: the 2026 Nawakwa Passport February 20, 2026
  • View of snowy Camp Nawakwa January 27, 2026
  • RESCHEDULED: Winter Social February 22 December 6, 2025
  • Photos from the Post-Thanksgiving weekend at Nawakwa December 1, 2025

Founded in 1923, the Nawakwa Outdoor Association of New York, Inc. is a membership organization dedicated to the enjoyment of the outdoors through hiking, walking, camping, swimming, skiing, sailing, canoeing, and kayaking, and to the conservation and preservation of our wilderness, particularly the mountains, lakes, trails, and camping areas of the metropolitan New York region.

 

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