Point Lookout State Park

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Parks Directory of the United States:

Point Lookout State Park

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US State Park, Maryland

11175 Point Lookout Rd
Scotland, MD 20687
www.dnr.state.md.us/publiclands/southern/pointlookout.html

Phone: 301-872-5688; Fax: 301-872-5084
Size: 1,042 acres. Location: On the southern tip of Saint Mary's County, at the junction of the Potomac River and the Chesapeake Bay. Reached by MD 5. Facilities: 143 improved campsites (27 with electric hookups, 26 with full hookups; some sites wheelchair access), 6 camper cabins, cottage, youth group camp, camp store, showers, restrooms, picnic areas (wheelchair access), pavilion, playground, hiking trails, fishing pier (wheelchair access), boat launch, boat rentals, museum, nature center, visitor center. Activities: Camping, boating, flatwater canoeing, windsurfing, saltwater fishing, swimming, hiking, bicycling, interpretive programs. Special Features: The park's peaceful surroundings belie its history as the site of a prison camp that held as many as 52,264 Confederate soldiers during the Civil War. Park facilities include a Civil War Museum as well as the Marshland Nature Center. In 2006, the park sustained significant damage from Tropical Storm Ernesto. Though most facilities were reopened during the 2006 season, it is recommended that visitors contact the park to check on the status prior to making travel plans.

Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Point Lookout State Park

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Point Lookout State Park
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Point Lookout Confederate Cemetery Monument, July 2009
Point Lookout State Park is located in Maryland
Location Saint Mary's County, Maryland, USA
Coordinates 38°3′52″N 76°20′4″W / 38.06444°N 76.33444°W / 38.06444; -76.33444Coordinates: 38°3′52″N 76°20′4″W / 38.06444°N 76.33444°W / 38.06444; -76.33444
Area 1,042 acres (4.22 km2)

Point Lookout is a Maryland state park at the southern tip of St. Mary's County, Maryland. It is a peninsula formed by the confluence of the Chesapeake Bay and the Potomac River.

Captain John Smith first explored the Point in 1612. Leonard Calvert used the Point for his personal manor in 1634. During the American Revolution, and again in the War of 1812, it was subject to British raids.

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Civil War

In 1862 during the American Civil War, much of the land around Point Lookout was transformed into a bustling port, temporary city of civilians and military personnel and numerous buildings, a large army hospital, an army garrison at Fort Lincoln, and a Union prisoner of war camp to hold Confederate captives. Of the 50,000 soldiers held in the army prison camp, who were housed in tents at the Point between 1863 and 1865, according to the Maryland Department of Natural Resources, nearly 4,000 died, although this death rate of 8 percent was less than half the death rate among soldiers who were in the field with their own armies.[1] The camp, originally built to hold 10,000 men, swelled to between 12,000 to 20,000 prisoners after the exchange of prisoners between armies was placed on hold. The result was crowded conditions with up to sixteen men to a tent in poor sanitary conditions.[2] By far, it was the largest Union-run prison camp in the North and also, one of the worst during the war.[citation needed] Today, a Confederate prisoner of war memorial and cemetery exist on the former grounds of the Point Lookout Prisoner of War Camp.[3] Because of the extensive water erosion of the Chesapeake Bay shoreline, in the last 150 years, half of the original site of the prisoner of war stockade has been obliterated and washed away by the bay.

Present day

Today Point Lookout is a Maryland State Park and retains Point Lookout Light, the original light house built in 1830, a fishing pier, boat launch facilities, public beaches and facilities, overnight camping, Civil War historical remains, and, reputedly, ghosts.[4] The Civil War Museum/Marshland Nature Center is open Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday from 9 A.M until 5 P.M. and Saturday and Sunday from 10 A.M. until 6 P.M. until the end of October.

In popular culture

The park is used as the setting in the Point Lookout add-on for the video game Fallout 3, which includes references to its use as a POW camp as well as various features of the park, including Calvert's manor and the lighthouse.[5]

See also

Notes

External links


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