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The state acquired the land for the park in 1933 from the City of Bonham. Civilian Conservation Corps Company 894 developed the park between 1933 and 1936, landscaping the rocky, hilly terrain for erosion control and recreational purposes, and constructing an earthen dam to impound a sixty-five-acre lake.
[2] [3] The park provides publicly accessible recreational facilities on Lake Bonham, including a boat ramp, restrooms, and camping sites. [4] At the eastern edge of the park, the road reaches its eastern terminus, an intersection with CR 2610 (Old Bonham Lake Road), [2] [3] after traveling a total distance of 2.037 miles (3.278 km). [5]
Bentsen-Rio Grande Valley State Park: Big Bend Ranch State Park: Presidio, Brewster 311,000 acres (125,857 ha) 1988 Big Bend Ranch State Park: Big Spring State Park: Howard 381.99 acres (154.59 ha) 1936 Big Spring State Park: Blanco State Park: Blanco 104.6 acres (42.3 ha) 1934 The Blanco River in Blanco State Park: Bonham State Park: Fannin ...
Bonham State Park. Cooper Lake State Park. Lake Bob Sandlin State Park. Daingerfield State Park. Atlanta State Park. This article originally appeared on Austin American-Statesman: Total solar ...
Columbus-Belmont State Park: Hickman County [3] 156 acres (0.63 km 2) Dawkins Line Rail Trail: Johnson and Magoffin Counties E. P. "Tom" Sawyer State Park: Louisville: 370 acres (1.5 km 2) Fort Boonesborough State Park: Richmond: 153 acres (0.62 km 2) General Burnside State Park: Pulaski County [3] 430 acres (1.7 km 2) Grayson Lake State Park ...
The area was named after Nicholas Bonham, a freeholder from the 17th century. Along with New Dover, New Durham, and Stelton it is one of the older historical communities established before the present-day municipality was incorporated. [8] The historical community of Bonhamtown was originally part of Woodbridge Township.
This is a list of 63 state parks and recreation areas in Iowa. These state parks of the U.S. state of Iowa can be split into two groups based on management. The first group are those state parks managed by the Iowa Department of Natural Resources.
Paw Paw State Park – (c.1921–c.1927) in Paw Paw on Maple Lake; Pere Marquette River State Park – (1927–c.1940s) four sites—33, 12, 77 and 189 acres, respectively, along the Pere Marquette River in Mason County; Pictured Rocks State Park (1953–1966) - incorporated into the westernmost portion of the Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore