Audra State Park | |
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Location | Barbour & Upshur, West Virginia, United States |
Coordinates | 39°02′25″N 80°03′55″W / 39.04028°N 80.06528°W |
Area | 355 acres (144 ha) |
Elevation | 1,811 ft (552 m) |
Established | 1950 [2] |
Named for | Audra, West Virginia |
Governing body | West Virginia Division of Natural Resources |
Website |
wvstateparks |
Audra State Park is a West Virginia state park located on 355 acres (1.44 km2) [3] in southwestern Barbour County. It was established around the remnants of an early 19th-century gristmill and the tiny community of Audra. A gristmill spillway is still visible in the river. [4]
The park is a hilly, secondary forest area bisected by the Middle Fork River. The deep pools, large, flat rocks, and riverside beach have provided generations of campers, local teens and college students a place to swim or work on their tans. [5] Audra State Park is the site of Alum Cave, which is accessible by a boardwalk built along this overhanging sandstone ledge.
The park serves as the put-in point for a 6.6 mile kayak run along about 2.8 miles the Middle Fork River and about 3.8 miles of the Tygart Valley River to the confluence of the latter with the Buckhannon River. [6]
Accessibility for the disabled was assessed by West Virginia University. The assessment found the campground, picnic area, and park offices to be accessible. [7] The main swimming hole (just below the site of the former gristmill), with wet, slippery rocks and unpaved approaches is not considered accessible.
Audra State Park | |
---|---|
Location | Barbour & Upshur, West Virginia, United States |
Coordinates | 39°02′25″N 80°03′55″W / 39.04028°N 80.06528°W |
Area | 355 acres (144 ha) |
Elevation | 1,811 ft (552 m) |
Established | 1950 [2] |
Named for | Audra, West Virginia |
Governing body | West Virginia Division of Natural Resources |
Website |
wvstateparks |
Audra State Park is a West Virginia state park located on 355 acres (1.44 km2) [3] in southwestern Barbour County. It was established around the remnants of an early 19th-century gristmill and the tiny community of Audra. A gristmill spillway is still visible in the river. [4]
The park is a hilly, secondary forest area bisected by the Middle Fork River. The deep pools, large, flat rocks, and riverside beach have provided generations of campers, local teens and college students a place to swim or work on their tans. [5] Audra State Park is the site of Alum Cave, which is accessible by a boardwalk built along this overhanging sandstone ledge.
The park serves as the put-in point for a 6.6 mile kayak run along about 2.8 miles the Middle Fork River and about 3.8 miles of the Tygart Valley River to the confluence of the latter with the Buckhannon River. [6]
Accessibility for the disabled was assessed by West Virginia University. The assessment found the campground, picnic area, and park offices to be accessible. [7] The main swimming hole (just below the site of the former gristmill), with wet, slippery rocks and unpaved approaches is not considered accessible.