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Big Walker Lookout

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Phone
  
+1 276-663-4016

Big Walker Lookout

Address
  
8711 Stoney Fork Rd, Wytheville, VA 24382, USA

Hours
  
Open today · 10AM–5PMWednesday10AM–5PMThursday10AM–5PMFriday10AM–5PMSaturday10AM–5PMSunday10AM–5PMMonday10AM–5PMTuesday10AM–5PM

Similar
  
The Big Walker Mountain, Wythe Raceway, Wytheville Community College, US Stony Fork Campgro, Wythevill Chamber

Big walker lookout in southwest virginia


Big Walker Lookout is a 100-foot observation tower located in the Blue Ridge Highlands Region at the top of Big Walker Mountain in Wythe County, Virginia on US Route 52 about 12 miles from Wytheville. The tower is accessible from Interstate 77 in Bland County and Interstate 81 in Wythe County. The tower is atop a peak near the Big Walker Mountain Tunnel and overlooking the East River Mountain Tunnel.

Contents

Big walker lookout


Tower Location

The tower is accessed from the Big Walker General Store, just off US Route 52 about 12 miles from Wytheville, Virginia. The first store building burned in 2003 and a new store was built just to the right of the first. Originally, visitors crossed to the tower by way of a swinging bridge that connected to back of the old general store. The swinging bridge was not destroyed in the fire and still stands. Visitors can cross to the edge where the original staircase connected to the bridge.

Big Walker Lookout hosts traditional arts demonstrations on weekends. The lookout tower is open to the public, and the cost to climb the tower is $6 for adults and $4 for children.

Tower views

Located at an elevation of 3405 feet, the view from the top of the tower encompasses mountain peaks in five different states.

History of the Tower

The tower was originally built in 1953 and has been run continuously by the Kime family. According to the Virginia Department of Tourism, the tower is located at a mountain pass used by Molly Tynes, a woman who warned the town of Wytheville of impending raids by John Toland during the Civil War. The tower is the beginning of a Virginia Civil War Trails driving tour detailing the Battle of Wytheville, which occurred on July 18, 1863 when "a Federal raiding party marched to the Wytheville area intending to destroy the Virginia and Tennessee Railroad tracks and bridges". Troops also hoped to destroy key telegraph lines and damage nearby salt mines and lead mines.

Thanks in part to the warnings brought by Tynes, the battle was largely unsuccessful for the Union forces. "After some skirmishing and confusion on the advance, Union Col. John Toland ordered his men into Wytheville. Hastily organized Confederate resistance succeeded in killing Toland in the street and limiting the damage to the railroad track and stock. The raid did not succeed in its mission as the track was quickly repaired".

Hiking and Attractions

Big Walker Lookout Tower is a stop on a network of hiking trails on the Big Walker Mountain Loop, part of the Virginia Birding and Wildlife Trail network, which includes the following trails and recreation areas:

  • Big Survey Wildlife Management Area
  • Seven Sisters Trail
  • East Fork Stony Fork Creek
  • Big Bend Picnic Area
  • Big Walker Lookout
  • Monster Rock Trail
  • Dark Horse Hollow Picnic Area
  • Crawfish Valley
  • Rural Retreat Lake
  • Appalachian Trail (near the Settler's Museum in Groseclose)
  • Birds sited at the Big Walker Lookout include: wild turkey; black vultures; bald eagles and golden eagles; American kestrels; peregrine falcons; and sharp-shinned, Cooper's, broad-winged, and red-tailed hawks.

    References

    Big Walker Lookout Wikipedia