Camp Salmen Nature Park
USA /
Louisiana /
Slidell /
World
/ USA
/ Louisiana
/ Slidell
World / United States / Louisiana
park
Add category
Located on scenic Bayou Liberty near Slidell, Louisiana, Camp Salmen is historically significant for many reasons:
-It consists of land originally awarded as land grants by Spanish governor Estevan Miro in 1785 and 1787.
-It hosted a trading post in the Bayou Liberty region which was probably built in the early years of the 1800s.
-It is the site of a major ferry across Bayou Liberty which operated from the early 1800s into the early 1900s.
The Salmen Brick and Lumber Co. acquired the property in 1901, and conducted timber operations there for many years before donating the property to the Boy Scouts in 1924.
The scouts used the property for nearly 60 years as its regional camp reservation for the Greater New Orleans Area
Illuminating the property’s heritage is a 200-year-old French Creole-style building, which was probably built in the first decade of the 1800s and served as the major trading post in the Bayou Liberty region for over a century. The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2006. An enduring scout culture–one which developed from the collective experiences of tens of thousands of young scouts–endures in the shadows of this building, nicknamed Salmen Lodge by the scouts. Dominating the property, however, is a rich ecological endowment of native landscapes and an unusually diverse community of plants and animals, which make the Camp Salmen Nature Park a living museum.
www.campsalmennaturepark.org/
-It consists of land originally awarded as land grants by Spanish governor Estevan Miro in 1785 and 1787.
-It hosted a trading post in the Bayou Liberty region which was probably built in the early years of the 1800s.
-It is the site of a major ferry across Bayou Liberty which operated from the early 1800s into the early 1900s.
The Salmen Brick and Lumber Co. acquired the property in 1901, and conducted timber operations there for many years before donating the property to the Boy Scouts in 1924.
The scouts used the property for nearly 60 years as its regional camp reservation for the Greater New Orleans Area
Illuminating the property’s heritage is a 200-year-old French Creole-style building, which was probably built in the first decade of the 1800s and served as the major trading post in the Bayou Liberty region for over a century. The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2006. An enduring scout culture–one which developed from the collective experiences of tens of thousands of young scouts–endures in the shadows of this building, nicknamed Salmen Lodge by the scouts. Dominating the property, however, is a rich ecological endowment of native landscapes and an unusually diverse community of plants and animals, which make the Camp Salmen Nature Park a living museum.
www.campsalmennaturepark.org/
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 30°17'37"N 89°49'8"W
- Pearl River Wildlife Management Area 17 km
- Bayou Sauvage NWR 20 km
- Big Branch Marsh National Wildlife Refuge 20 km
- Tammany Trace Trail 33 km
- Central Wetlands 38 km
- Bogue Chitto National Wildlife Refuge 41 km
- Gulf Islands National Seashore 65 km
- Chandeleur Island 94 km
- Conecuh National Forest 301 km
- St Joseph State Park 426 km
- Eden Isle 7.2 km
- Lakeshore Harbor Inlets 11 km
- Salt Bayou 15 km
- Honey Island 19 km
- Rigolets 19 km
- Lake Catherine Neighborhood 19 km
- Bay Jaune 20 km
- Lake Saint Catherine 21 km
- Hog Island 23 km
- Lake Borgne 34 km