Mount Marcy is at 5,344 ft the highest mountain in the Adirondack Mountain Range and the highest point in New York State.
The first recorded ascent of Mount Marcy was in 1837 by a large party led by Ebenezer Emmons. Today the ascent is easier due to existing trails that require no technical skills, allowing ascent and descent to be made in a day. The popularity of climbing this mountain virtually assures that there will be no solitary contemplation of nature at the peak during the summer season.
Roosevelt and his party hiked 10 miles down the southwest face of the mountain to Long Lake, New York where he got a stage coach and took a legendary midnight stagecoach ride through curvey 40 miles of Adirondack roads to the closest train station at North Creek, New York. When he arrived he found out McKinley had died and that he was President. He took the train to Buffalo, New York where McKinley had been shot and he was sworn in there. The route from Long Lake to North Creek has been designated the Roosevelt-Marcy Trail.
The shortest and most frequently used route up the mountain is from the northwest, the Van Hoevenberg Trail, which starts at the popular Adirondak Loj near Heart Lake. From there it is 7.4 miles (11.2 km) to the summit, a lengthy roundtrip which can nevertheless be done in a day. A large section of the trail is suitable for alpine sking and snowboard on the way down, although there are a few locations where snowboarders will have to take off their snowboard and walk up a little.
Hikers starting up the Johns Brook Trail from the popular Garden parking north of the mountain in Keene Valley have a 9-mile (14.4 km) journey to the summit, and sometimes spend a night at Johns Brook Lodge in the process.
A lengthier southern approach can be made from either of the two major trailheads for the southern High Peaks, Upper Works or Elk Lake.
Mount Marcy is in the Town of Keene in Essex County.
Mountains of New York | Hudson River | Essex County, New York
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