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Final Installment of New York State Parks’ Interactive Digital Timeline Looks to the Future of New York State Parks and Historic Sites

Jun 24, 2025

Educational tool to be used as a lasting legacy of yearlong Centennial celebration

The New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation today announced the release of the final installment of the interactive, online timeline, ‘Blazing a Trail: A History of New York State Parks and Historic Sites’, completing a project begun in 2024 in celebration of New York State Parks’ Centennial. This comprehensive project employs photographs, illustrations, paintings, documents, archival footage, maps, and narrative to tell the story of the development of the New York State Parks system. A banner exhibit based on the digital timeline will launch in fall 2025 and travel to locations across the state.

“This final installment of ‘Blazing a Trail’ is a powerful statement of our goals as an agency,” said OPRHP Commissioner Pro Tempore Randy Simons. “Throughout this inspiring journey, we’ve explored the effect of major historic events like the Great Depression and World War II on the development of our system. Here, we share how our agency intends to contribute to shaping the future: uniting New Yorkers by interpreting Our Whole History; protecting our public lands in the face of climate change; meeting the recreational needs of new generations. I’m excited to announce the completion of this ambitious project and look forward to furthering our mission in the future.”

The eighth and final installment of ‘Blazing a Trail’ discusses the agency’s work to meet the challenges and opportunities of the present day and the future. The agency has incorporated new technology in its work, from using social media and developing the State Parks Explorer app to engage visitors, to deploying drones to monitor marine wildlife activity and assist in rescue operations, to creating online databases of historic and cultural resources. The Division of Historic Preservation implemented the Our Whole History initiative to tell the stories of all who called New York home. To cope with climate change, State Parks’ environmental stewardship division has expanded staffing and improved the use of technology to mitigate its effects on the agency’s parklands and to reduce State Parks’ impact on the environment.

‘Blazing a Trail’ is the first time the agency has told its own story in a comprehensive narrative shared with the public. Fragments of the story of New York State Parks and Historic Sites had been told in visitors centers, on interpretive trails, at conferences, and in state publications. ‘Blazing a Trail’ brought them together using a format available to anyone with an internet connection, to learn about the people who shaped the system and to view New York State and American history through the lens of New York’s state park system. As the enduring legacy of the Parks Centennial celebration, it will be a useful tool for years to come.

The project is organized into eight eras of system development. In the first era, users learned about the drive to conserve natural spaces during the rapid development of the late 1800s and the shift in focus from preservation to recreation. In the second era, they met the leaders who created and developed the system of parks and historic sites we know today. The third era took users into the Great Depression, New Deal, and World War II years, exploring how this challenging time for the nation became a watershed moment for the park system with the creation of the Civilian Conservation Corps, and examining the role of the park system during World War II. In the fourth era, users got a look at the seismic societal shifts in the post-war period through the lens of the park system, which developed more recreational opportunities to accommodate the pent-up demand from wartime rationing, the needs of the burgeoning population of young families, and the advance of technology that made modern car camping popular. The fifth era explored the maturation of the system in the 1960s and the passing of the torch from Robert Moses to the Rockefeller brothers. The sixth era covered the close of the twentieth century, with trends towards urban and linear parks and an increased interest in historic preservation sparked by the nation’s bicentennial. The seventh era traced the ups and downs of the twenty-first century, as the system faced budget cuts due to the dot-com bust and the Great Recession, but forged strong community partnerships with advocacy groups and Friends groups to help weather the crises and prevent park closures.

‘Blazing a Trail’ was one of several initiatives celebrating the Parks Centennial. Others included an exhibit in the New York State Capitol’s State Street Tunnel; the Share Your Story project; and the launch of the documentary “From Land to Legacy,” produced by PBS affiliate WMHT. Throughout 2024, many parks and historic sites in the system hosted special Centennial events, including guided hikes and paddles, parties, exhibits, and talks.

About New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation 

The New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation oversees more than 250 parks, historic sites, recreational trails, golf courses, boat launches and more, which saw a record 88 million visits in 2024. For more information on any of these recreation areas, visit parks.ny.gov, download the free NY State Parks Explorer app or call 518.474.0456. Connect with us on Facebook, Instagram, X, LinkedIn the OPRHP Blog or via the OPRHP Newsroom