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1350 Ford Road |
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![]() Entrance to Bur Oak and the southern gateway to the Bridgeway Trail |
Welcome to the Black River Reservation homepage. With almost half a million visitors each year, this may well be the most popular park in the Lorain County Metro Park system. The most notable feature is the Bridgeway Trail— 3-1/2 miles of paved all-purpose trail that follows the Black River through its meanderings from Elyria to Lorain, spanning four city jurisdictions altogether. The reservation also features three separate picnic areas: High Meadows, Bur Oak and Day's Dam, each contributing its own special character to the variety and natural beauty of this impressive park.
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When the Bridgeway Trail opened in 1993, the Metro Parks had a vision of extending the trail further north. This became a reality in 2008 as the Steel Mill Trail Extension was opened. The trail connects to the Bridgeway Trail at Days Dam Picnic Area and continues north through the slag fields of the U.S. Steel Mill to Colorado Ave in Lorain. The trail is about 2 miles long and crosses the Black River and French Creek. You are able to get a glimpse inside the Steel Mill property as you walk, bike, run, or skate along the trail. The steel mill and slag fields are to one side and the natural landscape is to the other side.
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The Black River Reservation features three
separate picnic areas: High Meadows, Bur Oak and Day's Dam. All three
offer reservable shelters, picnic areas and restrooms, with individual
features of their own. |
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![]() Entrance to High Meadows picnic area |
High Meadows High Meadows picnic area lies at the southern tip of the reservation in Elyria and is not connected to the Bridgeway Trail, but there are plenty of other reasons to visit. With three reservable shelters, a playground and sand volleyball court with lots of open space, it's a great place for young and old to spend a little time on the green grass and in the open air. High Meadows is located just south of Bur Oak along Ford Road.
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| Bur Oak The most popular of the three picnic areas, Bur Oak opens one gateway to the Bridgeway Trail, with plenty of parking for its many visitors. You can take the loop trail for a short walk along the river and re-growth meadow where butterflies and eastern bluebird have recently been calling home. You don't need to walk the Bridgeway Trail to enjoy yourselves here. The area includes two reservable picnic shelters, a third available on a first-come, first-served basis, and plenty of open space to throw a Frisbee.
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![]() The Black River near Day's Dam picnic area |
Day's Dam
Besides being the northern gateway to the Bridgeway Trail, Day's Dam at 31st street in Lorain also features a large reservable shelter, picnic tables and a modern play set for the kids. It's also the starting place for the tram service, which is reservable for groups any time during the week (click here for details.) If you take the Bridgeway Trail you might want to check out two scenic loop trails along the way: the Cottonwood Trail takes you to what might be the largest and oldest tree in Lorain County, and the Waterfall Trail gives you a glimpse of a year-round waterfall we'll bet you never knew was there. |
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The Black River Reservation features a variety of habitats, but most unique are the re-growth meadow areas. Just south of the Day's Dam picnic area lies a basin that was once under water (under the Day's Dam reservoir) and is now being brought back to its natural state. The meadow areas are burned each spring to encourage the re-growth of native prairie grasses such as Big Bluestem (also known as Turkey Foot), Switchgrass and Indian grass. Periodic fires stimulate growth for these and other native species, giving them an advantage over non-native, invasive species. If you look around, you'll find areas of Big Bluestem growing larger each year.
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![]() Bottomland meadow area just south of Day's Dam, as seem from the Bridgeway Trail |
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Some of the wildflowers that
might catch your eye include Ironweed, Wingstem, Joe Pye Weed, Hockweed
and Chicory (to name only a few!) Dame's Rocket (pictured) is a member of
the mustard family and common throughout the reservation and northeast Ohio
as well. Members of the mustard family (or cruciferae which is
Latin for "cross") share a cross-like arrangement of four petals
as a common characteristic.
Wildlife in the reservation is rich and varied as well, including beaver, eagle, wood duck, various songbirds and more recently as the meadows return, Meadowlark and Eastern Bluebird. |
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Although Native Americans lived in the area just as they did around French Creek (see the French Creek Reservation for more details) most of the European settler's history in the Black River Reservation took place in the Day's Dam area. The Day family came here in 1816, the same year as the Burrells, and began farming the area west of the Black River (the Burrell farm was on the east side.) The Days eventually dammed the river to power a gristmill and very likely a sawmill as well. The site of the dam lay just south of the Day's Dam Bridgeway Trail entrance, marked by a short stone wall. Much of the surrounding area just south of this point had been under water until the dam came down, probably around the turn of the century. Much of the landscape, population and economy of the area changed when the Johnson Steel Rail company came here in 1894 (soon to become the National Tube Company after it was purchased by US Steel.) Since the city of Lorain was quite small at that time, Elyria was the nearest town large enough to house the many people needed to work the mill. Because of the distance, the National Tube Company built a streetcar line to transport workers back and forth. The line ran in part along 31st street, and the original trestle supports can still be seen from the south side of the 31st street bridge and the overlook at Day's Dam.
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Eventually the Day's Dam area fell into disuse until it was given to the Lorain County Metro Parks by the City of Lorain. The Black River Reservation as a whole was opened to the public in 1994, an accomplishment highlighted by the fact that it joins the communities of Elyria and Lorain.
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