



The
land that became Promised Land State Park was hunting grounds for the
Minsi Tribe of the Wolf Clan of the Lenni-Lenape Indians (Delaware).
The religious group, the Shakers, purchased land in the area. After contracting
the forests to be timbered, the Shakers left the area.
Early settlers of the area erected sawmills to process the large stands
of conifer and hardwood trees. The land was repeatedly clear-cut. With
the loss of trees came erosion and forest fires, and migration of wildlife
from the area.
The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania purchased the land in 1902. Promised
Land was the fourth Pennsylvania state park. The Commonwealth worked to
protect and reclaim the area and the forest and wildlife began to return.
The first park facilities were open to the public in 1905.
In 1933, to relieve the rampant unemployment of the Great Depression,
President Roosevelt created the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC). The
young men in the CCC received food, clothes and a small paycheck, in return
for building roads, trails and recreational facilities, fighting fires,
planting trees and performing many other conservation activities. Camp
S-139 opened in May of 1933 and closed in July of 1941. The hard working
young men transformed the land in and around Promised Land State Park.
For more information on the CCC, explore the Civilian Conservation Corps
Online Archive.
On Sunday evening, May 31, 1998, an F-2 tornado (winds of 113 -157 mph)
passed through Promised Land State Park. It cut a northeasterly path through
the park and crossed Lower Lake Road, PA 390 and North Shore Road near
Sucker Brook. Over 500 people were trapped overnight in the park, but
no one was seriously hurt. The park office has copies of After the Wind
Died Down, a booklet about the tornado and its aftermath.