The Shawangunk Mountains―the Gunks―are renowned for stunning landscapes
on and off the ridge in a region that has remained a favorite
destination for visitors since the middle of the nineteenth century.
While the mountain elevations are not high―nowhere exceeding 2240
feet―they present rugged topography with glistening grey-white
escarpments, jumbled boulders at the base of cliffs, deep crevices, as
well as precipitation-fed sky lakes. Arnold Guyot, the first Professor
of Geology and Geography at Princeton University, remarked in 1887 that
Few spots on our continent unite so much beauty of scenery, both grand
and lovely, within so small a compass, to be enjoyed with so much ease,
a sentiment echoed by many today. Three magnificent Victorian hotels
were constructed in the northern Shawangunk Mountains in the decades
after 1869, one situated along Lake Mohonk and two others on cliffs
above Lake Minnewaska. Only the grand Mohonk Mountain House remains.
Framing the Gunks are the valleys of the Rondout Creek and the Wallkill
River where one finds New Paltz, which lays claim to being one of the
oldest towns in America because of the stone houses aligned along
Huguenot Street, as well as quaint hamlets like Gardiner, Rosendale,
Accord, High Falls, and Marbletown.