Jackson Lake Ranger Station, Grand Teton National Park
Facts and practical information
The Jackson Lake Ranger Station is the last Depression-era U.S. Forest Service ranger station in its original location in Grand Teton National Park. When first established, the park comprised only the mountainous terrain above Jackson Hole, while the remainder of what would eventually become the park was administered by the Forest Service as part of Teton National Forest. The Jackson Lake Station was built in 1933 as close as possible to Park Service property as possible as a kind of resistance to the park's expansion. The station was one of five Forest Service stations in the area, and was taken over by the National Park Service when Jackson Hole National Monument was established in 1943, later becoming an enlarged Grand Teton National Park. It is the only such station not to have been moved or altered by the Park Service. ()
Grand Teton National Park
Jackson Lake Ranger Station – popular in the area (distance from the attraction)
Nearby attractions include: Emma Matilda Lake Trail, Signal Mountain, Two Ocean Lake, Colter Bay.