| Barton Knob | |
| Summit | |
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View looking south towards Barton Knob
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| Country | United States |
|---|---|
| State | West Virginia |
| County | Randolph |
| Part of | Cheat Mountain |
| Range | Allegheny Mountains |
| Elevation | 4,434 ft (1,351.5 m) [1] |
| Prominence | 574 ft (175 m) [1] |
| Coordinates | 38°37′01″N 79°55′47″W / 38.61694°N 79.92972°W |
| Management | Monongahela National Forest |
| Owner | USDA Forest Service |
| Easiest access | hike from |
| Topo map | USGS Snyder Knob |
| Nearest city | Huttonsville, West Virginia |
Barton Knob is a mountain summit located on Cheat Mountain in southeastern Randolph County, West Virginia. Easily accessible during warm-weather months, Bickle Knob is also home to one of the few remaining fire towers in Monongahela National Forest.
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One of the most notable features is its fire tower, which has graced the top of the mountain since at least 1939.[2] While the tower is still in place today, it has been abandoned and is no longer safe to climb. As of June 2010, the Forest Service plans to remove the tower as part of a project to construct a radio repeater on Barton Knob.[3]
The area surrounding Barton Knob is also notable for having been strip mined prior to its acquisition by Monongahela National Forest as part of the Mower Tract in 1986.[4] Today, MNF's Strip Mine Trail (Trail #350) traverses much of the area mined on the south side of Barton Knob and a ledge created continuing east along Cheat Mountain.
In 2005, the Rainbow Gathering considered using (and some may have used) strip-mined land near Barton Knob after being displaced from the original meeting site near Alpena.
In late 2010, the Forest Service designated a 90-acre (36 ha) section of Barton Knob as the Barton Bench Ecological Restoration Site. After strip mining, the land had been replanted with non-native grasses to protect the soil. This also led to an arresting of ecological development as the grasses kept out any native growths. The Forest Service is conducting experiments on various ways to restart ecological succession on the site with an eye towards eventual reforestation with native red spruce and hardwood trees.[5]
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