Catoctin Mountain

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Catoctin Mountain

Catoctin Mountain vista (from Chimney Rock)
Elevation 1,885 feet (575 metres)
Location Maryland & Virginia, USA
Range Blue Ridge Mountains of the Appalachian Mountain Range
Coordinates 39°38′54″N, 77°28′00″W
Topo map USGS Blue Ridge Summit
Easiest route road (restricted access)

Catoctin Mountain is the easternmost mountain ridge of the Blue Ridge Mountains, which are in turn a part of the Appalachian Mountain Range. The ridge runs northeast/southwest for about 50 miles (80 km) departing from South Mountain near Emmitsburg, Maryland and running south past Leesburg, Virginia where it disappears into the Piedmont. The ridge forms the eastern rampart of the Loudoun and Middletown valleys.

The ridge has no single peak or knob called "Catoctin Mountain" and so is sometimes referred to as the "Catoctin Mountains" (plural).

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[edit] Geography

Catoctin Mountain traverses Frederick County, Maryland and extends into northern Loudoun County, Virginia. It rises to its greatest elevation of 1,885 feet (575 m) above sea-level in Catoctin Mountain Park and is transected by gaps at Point of Rocks on the Potomac River and Clarks Gap west of Leesburg. The mountain is much lower in elevation in Virginia reaching its highest peak just south of the Potomac at Furnace Mountain (891 feet/271 m).

From its northern terminus in Maryland headed south, the range is composed mainly of a single north-south running ridge with periodic low-lying gaps, though it does contain several spur ridges, most notably near its intersection with South Mountain at its northern terminus. Its ridge character continues south of the Potomac in northern Loudoun County, losing elevation, until just north of Leesburg, where the range widens into a broad plateau of undulating hills separated by deep stream valleys. The range reaches its widest point north of Goose Creek at nearly three miles. South of the creek the Catoctin vanishes into the Piedmont countryside near the northern terminus of the Bull Run Mountains at Aldie.

[edit] Recreation

A hiking trail, the Catoctin Trail, traverses the northern half (almost 27 miles) of the range. It is maintained by the Potomac Appalachian Trail Club.

The trail starts at Gambrill State Park, which contains several shorter hiking and mountain biking trails as well as picnic pavilions, and continues north to Cunningham Falls State Park and Catoctin Mountain Park. Both parks contain may shorter hiking trails and organized campgrounds.

The Catoctin Mountain Byway, a Maryland Scenic Byway, loops and weaves through the northern part of the range.

[edit] Names

According to the USGS, variant names of Catoctin Mountain include Kittochiny Mountains, Kittockton Mountain, Kittocton Mountain, and South Mountain. However, in Maryland, South Mountain and Catoctin Mountain are separate, roughly parallel, mountains.

The portion of the ridge directly west of Frederick, Maryland is known locally as Braddock Mountain, although the name is not recorded in the federal Geographic Names Information System. (The GNIS does, however, recognize the community of Braddock Heights, which is located on the ridgecrest at this point.)

[edit] Geology

The mountain consists of Catoctin greenstone interspersed by white quartz and Precambrian basalt flows.


[edit] Flora and fauna


[edit] History

The name "Catoctin" probably derives from the Kittoctons, an American Indian tribe or clan which once lived between the mountain and the Potomac River. (Note that a local tradition asserts that "Catoctin" means "place of many deer" in an Indian language.)

Catoctin Mountain is best-known as the site of Camp David, a mountain retreat for Presidents of the United States. It was first used by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in the 1930s, who called it "Shangri-La". In the 1950s President Dwight Eisenhower renamed it Camp David, after his grandson David Eisenhower. The resort is extremely well-guarded by the United States Secret Service, and only approved guests of the President are allowed into the retreat. Due to its proximity to Washington, DC and its beautiful mountain scenery, Camp David has proven to be a popular weekend "getaway" for many United States Presidents.

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