MacNaughton Mountain, High Peaks Wilderness Area
#36 among attractions in High Peaks Wilderness Area
Facts and practical information
MacNaughton Mountain is a mountain located in Essex County, New York, named after James MacNaughton, the grandson of Archibald McIntyre. The mountain is part of the Street Range of the Adirondack Mountains. ()
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MacNaughton Mountain – popular in the area (distance from the attraction)
Nearby attractions include: Avalanche Lake, Lake Colden, Algonquin Peak, Mount Colden.
- 4.8 miENature, Natural attraction, Lake
Avalanche Lake, High Peaks Wilderness Area
124 min walk • Avalanche Lake is a 9-acre mountain lake located in the Adirondack High Peaks in New York. Avalanche Lake sits at 2885 feet between 4,714-foot Mount Colden and-3816 foot Avalanche Mountain.
- 4.4 miENature, Natural attraction, Lake
Lake Colden, High Peaks Wilderness Area
112 min walk • Lake Colden is a 41-acre lake located in the Adirondack High Peaks in New York, United States. Lake Colden sits at 2764 feet at the western base of 4,714-foot Mount Colden.
- 3.9 miENature, Natural attraction, Mountain
Algonquin Peak, High Peaks Wilderness Area
99 min walk • Algonquin Peak is in the MacIntyre Range in the town of North Elba, in Essex County, New York. It is the second highest mountain in New York, and one of the 46 Adirondack High Peaks in Adirondack Park.
- 5.2 miENature, Natural attraction, Mountain
Mount Colden, High Peaks Wilderness Area
134 min walk • Mount Colden is the eleventh-highest peak in the High Peaks of the Adirondack Mountains, New York, United States. The peak was named after David S. Colden, an investor in the McIntyre Iron Works, in 1836. The peak was briefly renamed "Mount McMartin" the next year, but the older name persisted.
- 4.3 miENature, Natural attraction, Mountain
Wright Peak, High Peaks Wilderness Area
110 min walk • Wright Peak is the 16th highest peak in the High Peaks of the Adirondack Park, and is located in the MacIntyre Range in the town of North Elba, New York, in Essex County, New York. Named for N.Y.
- 3.3 miENature, Natural attraction, Mountain
Iroquois Peak, High Peaks Wilderness Area
84 min walk • Iroquois Peak is the eighth-highest peak in the Adirondack Mountains in New York State, U.S. and is part of the MacIntyre Range, which also includes Wright Peak, Mount Marshall, and Algonquin Peak.
- 5.2 miSWNature, Natural attraction, Mountain
Santanoni Peak, High Peaks Wilderness Area
132 min walk • Santanoni Peak is a mountain located in Essex County, New York. The mountain is part of the Santanoni Mountains of the Adirondacks.
- 1.4 miENature, Natural attraction, Mountain
Wallface Mountain, High Peaks Wilderness Area
35 min walk • Wallface Mountain is a mountain located in Essex County, New York. The mountain is named after the cliff on its southeastern side. Wallface is flanked to the west by MacNaughton Mountain, and faces Mount Marshall to the southeast across Indian Pass.
- 4.4 miSWNature, Natural attraction, Mountain
Panther Peak, High Peaks Wilderness Area
113 min walk • Panther Peak is a mountain located in Essex County, New York. The mountain is part of the Santanoni Mountains of the Adirondacks. Panther Peak is flanked to the west by Couchsachraga Peak, and to the south by Santanoni Peak.
- 5.5 miWNature, Natural attraction, Mountain
Seymour Mountain, High Peaks Wilderness Area
141 min walk • Seymour Mountain is a mountain located in Franklin County, New York, named after Horatio Seymour, Governor of New York. The mountain is part of the Seward Mountains of the Adirondacks.
- 3.3 miSNature, Natural attraction, Lake
Henderson Lake, High Peaks Wilderness Area
85 min walk • Henderson Lake is a lake in the Adirondack mountains in the town of Newcomb, Essex County, New York in the United States. It was named in 1826 after David Henderson, one of the founders of the Elba Iron Works near Lake Placid, New York, and of the Upper Works at Tahawus, New York.