Standing Stone State Park

Standing Stone State Park
Standing Stone Lake
Map
TypeTennessee State Park
LocationOverton County, Tennessee
Coordinates36°28′16″N 85°24′56″W / 36.47113°N 85.41553°W / 36.47113; -85.41553
Area855 acres (346 ha)
Created1939; 1955
Operated byTennessee Department of Environment and Conservation
WebsiteOfficial website Edit this at Wikidata
Standing Stone Rustic Park Historic District
Home of prominent early Overton County pioneer Moses Fiske (1754-1843), near the park entrance; Now demolished.
Nearest cityLivingston, Tennessee
Built1880s-1949
NRHP reference No.86002794
Added to NRHP1986

Standing Stone State Park is a state park in Overton County, Tennessee, in the southeastern United States. The park consists of 855 acres (3.46 km2) along the shoreline of the man-made 69-acre (0.28 km2) Standing Stone Lake. The 11,000-acre (45 km2) Standing Stone State Forest surrounds the park.[1]

The park and forest were developed in the 1930s as part of New Deal-era initiatives to relocate impoverished farmers and restore forests from degraded and heavily eroded lands. The park was named after the Standing Stone, a mysterious rock believed to be of Native American origin or importance that once stood along the old Walton Road at what is now Monterey. The park offers canoeing, camping, lodging, hiking and many other activities.

  1. ^ The Smartwood Program, "Forest Management Public Summary for Tennessee Department of Agriculture — Forestry Division." 2002-2005, p. 10. Retrieved: 19 July 2008.