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Mount Crawford also refers to the Mount Crawford Forest which is a grouping of several government forest lands in the area, the largest encompassing the area around Mount Crawford - others are to the west at Mount Gawler and south around Cudlee Creek and Kangaroo Creek Dam. The Barossa Valley is directly to the north. The forest headquarters ...
It travels from Crawford Notch to the summit of Mount Washington (Agiocochook). The first iteration of the Crawford Path was cut in 1819 by Ethan Allen Crawford and his father, Abel Crawford. The trail ascends a cumulative 4,900 feet (1,500 m), first through densely wooded forest for about 3.1 miles (5.0 km), then following the exposed southern ...
Mount Crawford is a mountain located in Coos County, New Hampshire, in the United States. The mountain is on a spur of Montalban Ridge within the White Mountains and overlooks Crawford Notch . It is accessible via the Davis Path, which climbs from Crawford Notch near the Notchland Inn.
The Heysen Trail (a long-distance hiking trail) also crosses Mount Crawford. Mount Crawford is located within the local government areas of the Adelaide Hills Council and the Barossa Council. [1] It is within the boundaries of the Adelaide Hills wine region. [5] In 1846, Mount Crawford's population was recorded as 530; [6] by 1855 it was down ...
Crawfords State Forest is a 258-acre (104 ha) state forest in New Kent County, Virginia. [1] It is covered in mixed hardwoods, including bald cypress, tupelo, and loblolly pine. [2] Crawfords State Forest is owned and maintained by the Virginia Department of Forestry. The forest is open to the public for horseback riding and hiking.
Mount Crawford is the name of several places in the world including: Mount Crawford (Antarctica) Mount Crawford (New Hampshire) in the US White Mountains; Mount Crawford (South Australia) a hill in the Mount Lofty Ranges of Australia Mount Crawford, South Australia, a locality containing the hill
Kaiserstuhl (literally "emperor's chair") is a mountain of about 600 metres (2,000 ft) height located in a northern part of the Mount Crawford Forest (Kaiserstuhl Native Forest Reserve) in the locality of Pewsey Vale.
Section of Geo. T. Crawford's map of the White Mountains of New Hampshire, ca. 1896, showing Hart's Location and Nash and Sawyer's Location The Notch of the White Mountains (Crawford Notch) by Thomas Cole (1839, oil on canvas). The building is "the Crawford house" [1]