Trap Pond State Park

February 1, 2012, Department, by National Recreation and Park Association

Trap Pond State Park canoers paddle amonth the last remaining bald cypress trees in what was once a massive cypress swamp.A recipient of Land and Water Conservation Fund 2010 grant monies (for a nature center and interpretive programs), the 2,100-acre Trap Pond State Park is the largest surviving fragment what was once a massive cypress swamp. The region is home to the northernmost natural stands of bald cypress in the East. The 90-acre pond was created in the late 1700s to power a sawmill during the harvest of large baldcypress from the area. The federal government later purchased the pond and surrounding farmland during the 1930s, and the Civilian Conservation Corps began to develop the area for recreation. Trap Pond became one of Delaware's first state parks in 1951.