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Quinnipiac River State Park

Quinnipiac River State Park provides excellent habitat for wildlife because of the its combination of location, water availability, and forest cover.
Trail Activity
Accessible Experience Hiking Walking Paddling
Length
1.7 miles, One Way
Difficulty
Easy, Moderate
Town
North Haven
Surface
Packed Earth/Dirt, Paved/Cement, Wetland
Pets
Permitted on leash
Fees
No

Description

Today, the Quinnipiac River State Park is accessible for hikers and walkers. The 300 plus acres of forested floodplain embrace nearly six serpentine miles of the Quinnipiac River’s meandering western shoreline.

Cleaner waters over the years have provided an increased quality of wildlife habitat, although various river segments still lack diversity of sensitive species. Still, a testament to the greatly improved water quality of the lower river is the first recorded overwintering and possible permanent residence, of two bald eagles in the winter of 2006-07. Look for wild turkey and deer, an occasional otter, great blue heron, kingfishers, osprey, owls, and wood duck nests in dead trees.

The four-mile Banton Quinnipiac Trail passes through the Park. Sometimes following the river bank, sometimes somewhat upland, the trail leads north/south from Toelles Road (north) to the barred gate access at the abandoned Banton Street (south). Since it is an active floodplain, the forest floor can be seasonally muddy and the river’s many cutoffs meanders (oxbows) inundated.

The Quinnipiac River flows 38 miles from its headwaters in Plainville to its mouth in New Haven. Nearly six of those miles and 323 acres of the floodplain are protected in this park, which is an assemblage of four sections. The most accessible of these is the southernmost which is crossed by the Banton Quinnipiac Trail.

Other Information

History

The parcel of land that became Quinnipiac River State Park was first acquired by the State Highway Commission during the construction of the Wilbur Cross Parkway in the 1930s. A little over a decade later when the Parkway was complete the Commission deemed those lands east of the new roadway to be excess property. By the end of 1948 that property was transferred to the State Park and Forest Commission.

But long before the Parkway construction, land in what is now the southern portion of the Park was home to a riverside community that grew up literally right on the banks of the Quinnipiac River. From the 1920s on, the community grew and spread ultimately totaling more than three dozen structures. In those days the summer residents experienced only minor and nuisance flooding. But as upstream development and impervious surface in the watershed expanded, stormwater runoff and flooding events became increasingly dangerous in both velocity and quantity.

By the mid-1970s the decision was made and carried out not to protect the community with flood control structures but to buy out the residents and remove the buildings. That community was within what is now the southerly end of the Park. Today’s main access into the Park, Banton Road, was their access into and out of the community.

In 1960 when the Headquarters of the 2nd Company of the Connecticut Horse Guard was searching for a permanent home these parklands were under consideration. But the same limiting factors that forced the end of the Banton Street community made the property unsuitable for the several dozen horses of the Guard which ultimately settled in Newtown.

Because of its southerly location in its watershed and its proximity to south-central Connecticut’s vast transportation network, the park was often asked to compromise its integrity for a variety of rights of way. Fortunately, as time passed the value of open space in combination with water quality and floodplain protection rendered applications for this type of proposal less and less frequent until today they are nearly non-existent.

The park came under the direction of the Connecticut Department of Energy Environmental Protection (CT DEEP) when it formed in 1972.

This property was acquired and/or developed with the assistance of the Land and Water Conservation Fund

Rules

  • This park is handicapped accessible for hunting.
  • The park is open from 8 am to sunset.
  • Pets on a maximum seven-foot leash are permitted.

Trail Manager

This park is managed by the following CT DEEP Park Headquarters:

CT DEEP: Sleeping Giant State Park
CT DEEP: Sleeping Giant State Park
200 Mount Carmel Avenue
Hamden, CT 06518
(203) 287-5658
View website

Trail Tips

Travel and Camp on Durable Surfaces
Stick to established trails and campsites. If there's no trail, try to walk on rock, gravel, or snow and spread out so that your group doesn't create a trail.
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Trailhead Information

Park Location: Quinnipiac River State Park, North Haven, CT

Directions
From I-91 northbound

From I-91 take Exit 11. Take a left onto Route 22. Turn right onto State Street. Turn right onto Banton Street. The parking area is 0.3 mile on the left. A canoe launch is on the right, behind the Mobil station.

From I-91 southbound

From I-91 South, take Exit 12. Take a left onto Route 5, Washington Avenue. Turn right onto Route 22. Turn right onto State Street. Turn right onto Banton Street.

From Route 15 northbound

From Route 15 take Exit 63. Turn right onto Route 22. Turn left onto State Street. Turn right onto Banton Street.

From Route 15 Southbound

From Route 15 south take Exit 63. Turn left onto Route 22 and left again onto State Street. Take the first right onto Banton Street.

Click on a parking icon to get custom directions
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