Simpson-Wood Preserve
114 acres in Mansfield, CT
Parking: Small lot across from 627 Warrenville Rd, Mansfield Center, CT
Trail Map Trails: 2 miles Rating: ★★☆☆☆
I first became aware of Mansfield’s newest park acquisition (move over Southworth Preserve) after reading this article in The Chronicle in 2019. In early Spring 2020 I was coming back from a different hike and spotted the new parking area on Rt 89 so I swung in to see if any work had been done on the trails. I revisited in November to see how much progress had been made. Trails were a little clearer, bridges had been build, and as I suspected new trails had been added. On my 2023 visit, overgrowth had begun to narrow the trails again and the trailhead was a tangle.
Hiking
Heading out from the parking area the trail quickly forks into the Main Loop. Either direction is roughly the same, but take the left if you’d like to see the ridges from their base or take the right if you’d like a shorter hike to Lunch Rock. This review will follow the left fork.
The trail soon crosses a well built bridge over a wet area likely thanks to Boy Scout Troop 56. Past the bridge the properties rock ridges rise up amidst the forest. The trail soon meets an old woods road which ascends deeper into the forest. The blazed path takes an alternate route up the steepest part of the hill, but was still not cleared on my last visit though it quickly rejoins the old road.
I had suspected this property had more to offer after my first visit and I was correct noting the new sign for the Lunch Rock Trail. It is a short cross loop trail which provides a forested view from a rocky outcrop. At the summit of the outcrop is a stone cairn pillar likely built by the Simpson family on some outing. While simple, finding these sorts of things hidden in the woods makes the hike.
Back on the Main Loop the trail continues on fairly level ground now as the trees switch from open hardwoods to closer pines. There is another shorter cross-over trail that I did not explore. As the loop returns towards the parking area the trail could still use some clearing as low brush grabbed at my legs. Easily passable just not well established yet. Then passing the Lunch Rock Trail, a swift descent on another old road, and another freshly built bridge to the original fork.
History:
Acquired by the town in 2018 for $207,000 grant through the Open Space and Watershed Land Acquisition Program. The property (along with Mt Hope Park) was part of a pre-Revolutionary land grant that was farmed by the Wood Family from approximately 1719 to 1939.
Links:
Town of Mansfield – Parks and Natural Resources Meeting – Tuesday, September 17, 2019
Town of Mansfield – Parks and Natural Resources Meeting – Tuesday, August 20, 2019
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Last updated July 2023
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