State Park Information
Peaks-Kenny State Park
  (No Ratings Yet)
  401 State Park Rd
      Dover-Faxcroft, Maine 04426
  United States
  (207) 564-2003
  Unknown
Description

On State Park Road in Dover-Foxcroft and nestled on the shore of Sebec Lake.

Hours / Season Open from May 15 to October 1. The main entrance gate opens for campers daily at 7:00 a.m. and closes at 10 p.m. The day-use area is open daily from 9 a.m. until sunset. Fee Charged. Visitors may continue to enjoy the park during the off season by parking outside the gate and walking in during these same hours. Please be aware that facilities are closed during the off season.

Peaks-Kenny State Park lies on the shores of Sebec Lake, offering day visitors and campers a peaceful, wooded setting in which to enjoy boating, fishing, swimming, hiking and picnicking. With 56 sites set among stately trees and large glacial boulders near the lake, the campground fosters quiet and private enjoyment of a beautiful natural setting. The 839-acre park lies in the Central Maine Highlands, an area renowned for its natural beauty and outdoor opportunities with Moosehead Lake, the Appalachian Trail, the southern end of Baxter State Park and other outdoor destinations all within a morning's drive.

The Park encompasses more than a mile of shoreline along Sebec Lake. A sandy swimming beach, staffed by a lifeguard in summer, offers lovely views across Sebec Lake to Borestone Mountain, a 1600-acre nature sanctuary with a summit trail (see Nearby Destinations). A grassy picnic area with playground adjoins the beach, providing picnic tables and barbecue grills enjoyed by both camping parties and day visitors. The camping area, a five-minute walk from the beach, has many glacial boulders that children camping at the park enjoy climbing.

The clean and deep waters of Sebec Lake, which stretches 10 miles in length, make it an appealing destination for wildlife watchers and those seeking cold-water fish like landlocked salmon and lake trout (togue). Campers can bring canoes or rent ones on site. Those with trailered boats can launch at a public ramp two miles from the campground (at Greeley?s Landing where Route 153 ends at Sebec Lake).

Ten miles of gentle hiking trails within the park offer visitors of all ages and skill levels a chance to enjoy old-growth hardwood forests, hemlock and pines. For more challenging terrain nearby, see the Nearby Destinations section.

History
An ice sheet that covered Maine roughly 15,000 years ago scoured out the basin underlying Sebec Lake. The entire region was shaped by a mile-thick ice sheet that carried off most of the soil, leaving exposed bedrock and a deep bowl where the lake now lies.

Not long after the glaciers receded 11,000 years ago, the first Paleo Indians came to this area, but there is scant evidence of their temporary encampments. More artifacts reveal the habits of native people from the Archaic period (between 4,000 and 9,000 years ago), who camped on lake shores and river banks - hunting deer, trapping fur-bearers, and trapping shad and salmon in fish weirs. These early inhabitants used dugout canoes initially, but about 3,000 years ago, they began using birch bark for baskets, houses, buckets and canoes.

European settlers first arrived in this area in the early 1800s, with many working in the lumbering trades (as much of the area's timber was harvested - first for shipbuilding, and later for wood sent to lumber mills and paper mills). Steamboats hauled logs across the lake. There was a spool mill along the lake for a time, along with a short-lived slate quarry and fish hatchery. Eventually these industries gave way to sporting camps (and a few summer camps), where visitors enjoyed fishing, picnics and hikes to ice caves and local mountains.

A famous landmark along the lake is a shorefront home known as the 'Castle,' built in 1890 by a Foxcroft attorney who was impressed with European castles. He later became Maine's first Commissioner of Inland Fisheries and Game, instituting conservation measures like the single deer limit and state fishing licenses.

The land that now constitutes the developed portions of Peaks-Kenny State Park was given to the State in 1964 by a prominent citizen and lawyer in Dover-Foxcroft, Francis J. Peaks, who served in the Maine House of Representatives. The gift of this beautiful recreational site, including a white sand beach at South Cove that had long been a favorite picnicking spot, was made in memory of his sister, Annie Peaks Kenny, and their parents, Joseph and Eliza Peaks - for whom the park was named. The park first opened on July 4, 1969.

Park Stats
Campgrounds: 1 Campsites: 56
Photos: 0 Reviews: 0
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   Peaks-Kenny State Park Campground
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