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Giant City State Park
Makanda, Illinois (Just S of Carbondale)

Situated in the Northern part of the Shawnee Hills, Giant City State Park is roughly 4,000 acres of camping, hiking trails, unusual geological formations and wldlife viewing.

Park Address: Giant City State Park, 235 Giant City State Park, Makanda, Illinois, 62958
Admission: FREE
20 Miles of Hiking Trails
Visitor Center
Lodging

Dogs are allowed if kept on a leash.
The water tower in Giant City State Park. The 1972 Winner of the American Water Tower Assn's Award of Excellence.
The visitor center (completed in late 2000) has museum exhibits, park employees on duty, rest rooms, and a gift shop. Campsites are available and RV spaces are full service with electricity and water. There are also primitive sites and equestrian camping sites (without amenities).

The Park Lodge was a 1930s CCC product furnished with carved oak furniture. Built on the park's highest elevation, the water tower great views of the Shawnee Hills.
History in a Illinois Nutshell

The park's “Stone Fort” is an archeological site dating to about 600 AD. Constructed of heavy sandstone blocks in a half-acre circle. The fort's real function remains unknown. With statehood in 1818, Illinois named the region after the huge sandstone slabs that have broken away from a bluff. People viewed the slabs as a street for giants - hence the name. Over the years visitors have carved their names and initials into the slabs - some dating back to the early 1800s.

Hiking trails range from a beginner's 1/3 mile trail to a strenuous16 miler. Another short trail leads to the geological feature of Devil’s Standtable, a free-standing mushroom-shaped sandstone outcropping. The Giant City Nature Trail is the park's most popular since it leads to the "main street” of Giant’s City - the stones that give the park its name.

More sandstone formations are here - including another balanced rock. Drip rocks and small waterfalls make this trail a delight - especially for hikers fond of ferns and moses - and what hiker isn't? The Trillium Trail is a short two-miler best seen in the spring for its abundant wildflowers.

The park's "monster" trail is the 16-miler called by the innocuous name of Red Cedar Trail. It is recommended that one visit the park a few times to "warm up" on the shorter trails before attempting the Red Cedar.

Wildlife that might be seen - but doesn't necessarily want to be seen, includes coyotes, wild turkeys, white-tailed deer, red fox, weasels, and mink. Snakes are present (including copperheads and timber rattlers) and for birders there are red-tailed hawks, warblers, turkey vultures (somebody finds them interesting even though you don't) and then you have your more run-of-mill woodland creatures like raccoons, possums, skunks, turtles, squirrels, and rabbits.

The park is run by the Illinois Department of Conservation.

Website
http://dnr.state.il.us/Lodges/gc.htm


Anyone wishing to share information, memories or photos of Giant City State Park, Illinois, please contact us.

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This page last modified: June 19, 2006