Kids love it: A castle, scaled to kid size and set in the middle
of nowhere, off in the woods. We led a family hike past it in
mid-August. From
State Line
Lookout we took the group south along the
Long Path, then
down the
Forest View ravine and over the new bridge. As we started up the
other side of the ravine, we let the kids go ahead, so they would get to
the castle first.

“What is
this place?”
It was the grownups who asked; the kids had already scrambled up the
little flight of stairs to the miniature battlement, whooping—“Whoa!”
“Check it out!”—out over the Hudson, a mile wide and more than fifty
stories below.

We told them how the “castle” was a
monument built in 1929 to honor the
role the New Jersey State Federation of Women’s Clubs played in
preserving the Palisades. Its design was meant to evoke the ancient
watchtowers along the River Rhine in Europe: poets had called the Hudson
“the Rhine of the New World” or “America’s Rhine” because of its scenic
beauty. (Its beauty was so
revered that a group of prominent American landscape artists in the
nineteenth century went by the name “Hudson River School,” even though
their paintings were sometimes of scenes far beyond the Hudson Valley.)

By the 1890s, several big quarries had begun blasting the Hudson’s
famous Palisades Cliffs for gravel for roadbeds and for broken stone for
concrete. Many people who lived across the river in New York or who
traveled on the river by steamship, or along its banks by train, felt
outrage at the destruction these quarries were causing. Newspapers
labeled the quarrymen “vandals.” A group calling itself the American
Scenic and Historic Preservation Society studied the problem, to see if
they could find a way to stop the quarries; some lawmakers suggested
turning the Palisades into a military reservation, just to preserve them
from the quarries—but the army wasn’t interested.

The blasting went on.
In Englewood, members of the Englewood Women’s Club decided that they
would champion the cause of the Palisades. These women, mostly wealthy,
knew the Palisades well; their families picnicked and hiked around the
tall cliffs. Women’s Clubs had been formed all across the country as
part of the movement for women’s suffrage; the Englewood women worked to
get the
New Jersey State Federation of Women’s Clubs, with sister clubs all
across the state, interested in the Palisades cause. In 1897, the
Englewood women convinced the Federation to hold its annual convention
in the northern part of the state. During that convention, some of the
leaders of the Federation ventured out in a yacht to view the quarry
devastation first-hand. Their minds were made up: the Palisades must be
saved.

The Palisades quarries were big business. They employed hundreds of men.
At Carpenter Brothers’ Quarry in Fort Lee alone, it was claimed, 12,000
cubic yards of rock were blown down daily. They shipped the stone
as far as New Orleans, for a dollar a ton. For the men who owned the
quarries, the fact that the prehistoric stone columns of the Palisades
could be blasted down and broken and loaded onto barges—with no need for
costly overland transportation—spelled big profits. No way would they
close down their operations without a political fight.

It was the women of New Jersey, a generation before suffrage, who gave
them that fight.
In 1900, Governor Foster Vorhees of New Jersey joined with Governor
Theodore Roosevelt of New York to sign legislation passed in each state
to form an Interstate Commission empowered to acquire and manage the
Palisades lands. Money and support from powerful figures, including J.
P. Morgan, enabled the Commission to buy out the quarries.
And so a unique Interstate Park had been created.
Early on, the Commission acquired a piece of land on top of the cliffs
at Alpine that they named “Federation Park,” where they planned to place
a monument for the Women’s Clubs, with soaring views across the famous
Hudson so far below…
And it was time to move on, to continue our hike. (It so happened that
the very next day was the ninetieth anniversary of the passage of
the Nineteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution: The right
of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged
by the United States or by any State on account of sex. The little
“castle” on the Palisades, now part of
New Jersey’s Women’s Heritage
Trail, marks one stop along the long journey that led to that day in
1920—when the right to vote was extended to more Americans than on any
other day in our nation’s history.)

Dedication of the Women’s Monument, 30 April 1929.

Interpretive sign about the Women’s Monument for the
New Jersey
Women’s Heritage Trail.