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Bash Bish Falls State Park is a Massachusetts state park located in the town of Mount Washington. The park is named after Bash Bish Falls , Massachusetts' highest single-drop waterfall (60 feet (18 m)), [ 4 ] which lies within its borders.
Bash Bish Falls, a waterfall in Bash Bish Falls State Park in the Taconic Mountains of southwestern Massachusetts (Berkshire County), is the highest waterfall in the state. [citation needed] The falls are made up of a series of cascades, nearly 200 feet (61 m) in total. The final cascade is split into twin falls by a jutting rock, dropping in a ...
In Ohio, State Route 22 may refer to: U.S. Route 22 in Ohio , the only Ohio highway numbered 22 since 1927 Ohio State Route 22 (1923-1927) , now US 23 (Marion to Carey), SR 15 (Carey to Ney), and SR 249 (Ney to Indiana)
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View east along US 22 east of County Route 13 (CR 13) in Weirton, West Virginia. Known as the Robert C. Byrd Expressway, the expressway route that began roughly 30 miles (48 km) to the west near Cadiz, Ohio, continues for approximately five miles (8.0 km) within the state of West Virginia (the highway runs concurrent with West Virginia Route 2, or WV 2, for one of those miles, or 1.6 km) as it ...
class=notpageimage| Massachusetts State Parks (Hover mouse over pog to popup clickable link) Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap Download coordinates as: KML GPX (all coordinates) GPX (primary coordinates) GPX (secondary coordinates) This list of Massachusetts State Parks contains the state parks and recreation areas in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts managed by the Massachusetts ...
New York State Route 344 (NY 344) is a state highway located in Columbia County, New York, in the United States. The route is 1.90 miles (3.06 km) in length and serves primarily as an access road to the Bash Bish Falls state parks on both sides of the New York–Massachusetts border. The western terminus of NY 344 is at NY 22 in Copake Falls.
A 1987 USGS map (republished until 1997) labeled the entire mountain "Mount Everett" and its immediate summit area "Bald Peak." [28] Earlier and later USGS maps for the area don't reference "Bald Peak" on Mount Everett. [29] A wholly separate "Bald Peak" at 588 meters' elevation is also labeled on USGS maps a few miles to the southwest of Everett.