History & Culture · Hudson Valley
Wawarsing Climbs to Sam's Point
Wawarsing's Shawangunk edge links Cragsmoor, ice caves, pine barrens, and Rondout Valley canal memory.
Published June 23, 2026 · Last verified June 23, 2026
Wawarsing has a mountain story and a valley story, and both help the town make sense.
Up high, Sam’s Point sits near the historic hamlet of Cragsmoor, about eight miles off Route 52. New York State Parks and Ulster County tourism materials point people toward hiking, a nature center, cave-like settings, and the Ice Cave Trail, where the path uses narrow passages, ladders, and boardwalks.
Down lower, the town’s growth followed water and work. Ulster County describes Wawarsing’s development around the D&H Canal and the power of Rondout Creek for mills and factories. That gives the town more than a scenic mountain edge. It has creek-side industry, canal memory, and upland drama in the same local frame.
This is why Wawarsing can feel bigger than one hamlet name on a road sign. Cragsmoor points you up to rock, pine, and cold crevices. Rondout Creek points you back toward mills, canal movement, and the valley floor.
Sam’s Point may be the easy headline, but the town is also roads, hamlets, creek bends, and old work sites. Wawarsing is at its best when those pieces stay together: a Shawangunk overlook above, and a canal-and-creek story below.