Ragged Mountains
The Ragged Mountains are a small chain of rugged hills—an offshoot of the Blue Ridge Mountains—southwest of Charlottesville, Virginia. 980 acres (4.0 km2) have been preserved as the Ragged Mountain Natural Area.
The region provided the atmospheric setting for Edgar Allan Poe's short story, "A Tale of the Ragged Mountains", which described it as a "chain of wild and dreary hills." Poe was familiar with the area from his days as a student at the University of Virginia.
The Ragged Mountain Natural Area was established in 1997 and opened to the public in 1999. It encompasses a reservoir for the city of Charlottesville and the surrounding watershed, forested primarily with oak and yellow poplar.
External links
- Ragged Mountain Natural Area
- "A Tale of the Ragged Mountains by Edgar Allan Poe"
- "A Tale of the Ragged Mountains"
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- Allegheny Mountain
- Peters Mountain
- Reddish Knob
- Shenandoah Mountain
- Apple Orchard Mountain
- Battle Mountain
- Broken Hills
- Buck Mountain
- Bull Run Mountains
- Catoctin Mountain
- Elk Pond Mountain
- Furnace Mountain
- Hawksbill Mountain
- High Knob
- Hogback Mountain
- Holston Mountain
- Humpback Rock
- Knob Mountain
- Loudoun Heights
- Maintop Mountain
- Mary's Rock
- Mine Bank Mountain
- Mount Jefferson
- Mount Rogers
- Neighbor Mountain
- Old Rag Mountain
- Paris Mountain
- Peaks of Otter
- Pignut Mountain
- Poor Mountain
- The Priest
- Purcell Knob
- Ragged Mountains
- Rocky Mountain
- Short Hill Mountain
- Smith Mountain
- Southwest Mountains
- Stony Man Mountain
- Turkeycock Mountain
- Twelve O'clock Knob
- Whitetop Mountain
- High Knob
- Pine Mountain
- Tri-State Peak
- Camp Rock
- Carpenter Mountain
- Cedar Mountain
- House Mountain
- Kate's Mountain
- McAfee Knob
- Nakedtop
- Pantops Mountain
- Roanoke Mountain
- Short Mountain
- Signal Knob
- Willis Mountain
38°02′N 78°34′W / 38.03°N 78.56°W / 38.03; -78.56
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