Devil's Backbone State Forest

Coordinates: 39°02′42″N 78°25′41″W / 39.04500°N 78.42806°W / 39.04500; -78.42806
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Devil's Backbone State Forest
IUCN category IV (habitat/species management area)
Map showing the location of Devil's Backbone State Forest
Map showing the location of Devil's Backbone State Forest
Location within Virginia
LocationShenandoah County, Virginia
Coordinates39°02′42″N 78°25′41″W / 39.04500°N 78.42806°W / 39.04500; -78.42806
Area705.5 acres (285.5 ha)
Established1995
Governing bodyVirginia Department of Forestry
Devil's Backbone State Forest

Devil's Backbone State Forest is a 705.5-acre (285.5 ha)

Cedar Creek near Star Tannery west of Strasburg
. The forest was established by a grant by John and Bernice Hoffman, who owned the land since 1950.

The forest is managed by the Virginia Department of Forestry, with a focus on research relating to the re-establishment of American chestnut trees. Public access is not permitted.[1]

History

Although much of future state forest was too steep and the soil too thin for agriculture, it nonetheless was part of a growing Virginia economy. The first industry to use the forest was

iron furnaces
established in the mid-18th century and existing until after the Civil War. Isaac Zane, a Quaker from Pennsylvania, built the first two of these furnaces (Zane's Old Furnace 1768-74 and The Marlboro Works 1772-95) and received grants of forest land which included the future state forest to be used to make charcoal as fuel.

In 1868 a

quicklime from limestone in the Shenandoah Valley
. By the middle of the 20th century very little forest remained on the slopes of North Mountain.

John and Bernice Hoffman established the current forest on the land by planting timber stands of

loblolly pine and encouraging natural regeneration of native hardwoods. They also worked to re-establish the American chestnut, formerly a dominant tree in the Appalachian forest prior to the outbreak of the chestnut blight
in the early 20th century. John hopes his trees will help restore the chestnuts to their former glory and that some of them will resist the blight.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Devil's Backbone State Forest". Virginia Department of Forestry. Retrieved December 29, 2016.

External links