Ownership of the watershed including the park land can be traced back to the late 1700s and included ownership by the New Rawley Springs Company. In 1883 this entity sold 237 acres of its non-resort land to Mssrs. Silbert, Sprinkel, and Lowenbach. The City of
The Dry River often lived up to its name and endangered a constant water supply to the City. The City Council sought ways to overcome this problem. In October 1930 it engaged a geologist to advise on the feasibility of constructing an impounding reservoir near Rawley Springs. The ensuing exploration revealed the existence of large subterranean stream beds below the river’s surface that could be dammed to improve the water supply. Unable to get federal WPA construction funds, the City turned to local banks to underwrite the project. The locally-financed project provided needed employment opportunities in the area during the Great Depression. The dam construction project also required building an office, tool sheds, a blacksmith shop, and cement making sheds at the site.
In 1947, the City Council donated $1,000 to turn the site into a City park. The Daily News Record,
Dick Keane [a recent veteran]…spent the summer clearing out brush, building picnic tables and outhouses, and supervising a crew of students….His crew built 18
oak picnic tables, moved an enormous old stove from the Masonic Temple downtown to the pavilion and added a gate to the swinging bridge…They gave me an old police car….we used it to haul rocks out of the river for fireplaces and chimneys ….He estimated the summer’s expense, including labor, at about $800.
Fifteen years later, in 1962, vandalism closed the Park.
For a third time, in 1978, the Young Adult Conservation Corps, a Federal program, assisted in the restoration of the Park. The park reopened on August 1, 1978 with the cabin refurbished as an information, nature and arts and crafts center, but authorities closed the swinging bridge for safety reasons and to prevent public to the dam site. The cleanup revealed what was believed to be the tallest sassafras tree in the state.
To maintain the Dry River watershed, the City awards small contracts to private logging operators. In 1992, residents living near the Park protested the removal of about 300 trees. The City defended the tree cutting as a way to keep the Park safe, to maintain the forest, and to protect the water supply. The project provided lumber for other City Park projects and as well as earned some revenue for the City. The City’s Public Works Department continues to permit limited harvesting of timber in the 1450 acres in the Rawley Springs to Skidmore Fork watershed. The funds earned are used to maintain the property and currently to study the feasibility of adding recreation uses.
Deed Books: 22:311; 57:181ff; 63:471
Daily News Record: 10/8/30 ; 8/22/78 ; 5/19/83 ; 3/5/92 ; 11/7/92 ; 8/15/94 ; 8/22/94 ; 5/24/02 ;
Interviews: David S. Wigginton, Asst. Director, Harrisonburg Parks & Recreation
Ande Banks, Director of Special Projects, City of Harrisonburg .
Great article. Very informative. Lots that I did not know about the park.
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