Lapham Peak is a Wisconsin state park located in the Kettle Moraine State Forest park system. It is just south of Delefield and seven miles west of Waukesha. The park entrance is two miles north of the Glacial Drumlin State Trail.
Activities
The park includes three picnic areas,
birdwatching, a
butterfly garden, a
prairie restoration area and over 25 miles of dirt and
accessible paved nature trails. A backpacking campsite located beside a four mile segment of the
Ice Age Trail is also within the park. There is a 5 mile multi-use trail for horse riding,
mountain biking,
snowshoeing and
dog sled training. Over 20 miles of trails are open in the winter for
cross-country skiing. As of 2006, a nature center is under construction.
Lapham Peak
The park takes its name from a hill found within its borders. Lapham Peak has an elevation of 1233 feet above sea level, and is the highest point in
Waukesha County. At the top of Lapham Peak is a wooden observation tower that is 45 feet high and offers a dynamic view of southeastern Wisconsin and the northern edge of
Illinois. The Waukesha County Historical Society named the peak in memory of
Increase Lapham to honor his efforts in scientific study and his founding of the
United States Weather Bureau.
History
The Lapham Peak area was formed 10,000 years ago by a glacier that covered much of Wisconsin (see
Wisconsin glaciation). Examples of
moraines,
eskers and
kettles can be found in the park.
The land was developed in 1851 by Charles Hanson as a tourist attraction. He built a 20 foot tower on top of the hill and charged visitors to picnic and climb the tower. Later, the hill was named Government Hill after the government teams that used it for surveying.
In 1870, the
Army Signal Corps built a signal station to relay data about approaching storms from
Pikes Peak,
Colorado, to
Great Lakes ports.
Pioneering meteorologist
Increase Lapham, who proposed the creation of a national weather service, made weather observations here and issued the first published national
weather forecast.
The state of Wisconsin purchased the land in 1907 for a
tuberculosis sanitarium, which is now the Ethan Allen School for Boys. In 1939, 50 acres of the land was turned over to the Conservation Department for use as a park. The peak's 45 foot tower was erected a year later by a crew from the WPA (
works Project Administration) who also constructed trails, picnic grounds and benches.
External Links
Wisconsin state parks