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June 1999
The Three Ghosts of Forest View
A favorite springtime hike in the
Palisades begins at Alpine Boat Basin and follows the
Shore Trail north to the area called Forest View. The first mile takes you up an old
cobblestone road and then winding along a broad ledge above the Hudson, shaded by
century-old tulip and maple trees, the spring birdsong gently punctuated by a waterfall
steeped in green moss. In the second mile, the Shore Trail drops down to river level
again, the pathway becoming rockier, shade replaced by sunlight, ancient trees by a riot
of tangled new growth (yes, including robust stands of poison ivy). Before mile three
is reached, the rocky footing finally gives way to a wide grassy path, and the Hudson,
here almost a mile wide, is never more than a few feet to your right beyond the stone sea
wall. To the left a perpetually young forest climbs the steep slope, offering a bit of
shade, now and again. And then that vanishes, tooand all at once you meet the
Palisades, as only a relatively few of the millions of people who live near them or travel
over or through or around them have.
You are now at the base of a true talus
slope, a vast jumble of boulders fallen from the cliffs over the millenniasome are
the size of small housesinterlaced with grown trees that cling to improbable niches.
Above the talus, sheer brown-gray columns of cliff-face, 300
to 400 feet tall,
extend for over a mile ahead. Butterflies flit over the grassy path. Once in a while as
you walk, from deep within the talus, a mysteriously steady blast of cold air blows across
the trail, even on a scorcher of a day.
Still farther along, the area between the
talus and the river widens, the trail staying closer to the talus than the water. A hike
in the New Jersey Palisades could not feel any wilder, any more remote. Indeed, with the tall
cliffs always looming overhead, the feeling is of no longer being in New Jersey
at all, but
somewhere Western, wild, canyon-like. Though still only a foot or two above sea level, the
view of the Hudson is lost to a tangle of green meadow, alive with crickets and
grasshoppers and still more butterflies. Several small treesits impossible to tell what they areeach only a dozen feet tall or so, stick up like
hairy sentinels above the meadow, each completely enmeshed in vines. And here, amid the
bright sun and fragrant green growth and butterflies, lurks the first ghost of Forest
View. For one of those vine-covered sentinels in the meadow is not a tree at all. It is
instead the chain-link backstop from an overgrown ballfield.
A second ghost is much more
obviousif youre willing to climb the steep Forest View Trail to where the
Womens Federation Monument stands cliff-top watch over
the river. From this vantage point, with each turn of the tides the outline of an
abandoned marina becomes slowly apparent and then vanishes twice each day, dozens of
wooden pilings and a long stone jetty emerging from and returning to the murk of the
Hudson. Also more apparent from above than from ground level is a large square area in the
meadow, littered with discarded timberand our third ghost. This was the site of the
Forest View pavilion, once set in the midst of several acres of mowed lawns beside the
marina and the ball field.

Even for those of us who have worked in
the park for a number of years, it can be surprising to learn that one of our largest
recreational areasa “playground,” to use the parlance of its dayonce
existed here, at what is today a rugged and remote corner of the Palisades. It may tell us
something about how our recreational habits have changed, and what the word
“park” has come to mean over the years.
Forest View was one of the first large
“playground” areas built by the Palisades Interstate Park Commission in the
decades after its creation in 1900a time when automobiles, while no longer a
novelty, were not yet truly commonplace. As such, the area was built without a parking
lot. Access to the facilitiesthe pavilion, restrooms, water fountains (with
“city water”), ballfieldwas meant to be by foot (three miles from the
Yonkers Ferry landing, or downand, at the end of the day, back upthe
steep trail to Federation Park) or by boat. By “boat,” we mean
excursion craft that, for the most part, left from Yonkers and stopped at jetties by
several of the picnic groves and campsites now also all but vanished along the Shore
Trail: Quinns, Excelsior Dock, Twomblys Landing, Forest View. By the early
1930s, as privately owned motor boats became more common, the marina was built, intended for
weekend use. (This did not prove cost effective, and the slips were closed after
1940, though boats were still permitted to moor off-shore, at no charge.)

In the first decade after World War
II,
the area still received a fair amount of use. The lawns were mown, the pavilion painted,
various facilities repaired. But in time, fewer and fewer picnickers made the trek to
Forest View. The excursion boats no longer ran, while the now ubiquitous automobile made
previously far-flung areas, such as the Jersey Shore, accessible to most everyone. And so
it came to be that in the early 1960s, the lawns at Forest View were mown for the last
time.
A sad story, in some ways. Yet were
sure, too, that a great many hikers and nature lovers (not to mention crickets and
butterflies) would be only too glad to know that a tangled meadow today exists in this New
Jersey “park,” where each spring thousands once crowded together to cook wieners
or crack a bat...


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© 1999
Palisades Interstate Park Commission |