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DeSoto State Park Attractions
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13883 County. Road. 89
Fort Payne, AL 35967
1-800-568-8840
256-845-8286 (fax)
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Day-Use Area:
7 a.m until sundown

Side view of DeSoto Falls

DeSoto Falls
This beautiful waterfall is formed by Little River dropping about 104 feet into a gorge. In the 1920s North Alabama's first hydro-electric dam was built above DeSoto Falls, which supplied power to nearby Fort Payne, Mentone, Valleyhead, Collinsville , Alabama and Menlo, Georgia. DeSoto Falls is about 6 miles from the main part of DeSoto State Park, near Mentone, Alabama and is accessible by County Road 89 that goes thru the park.

Read more about A. A. Miller(builder of DeSoto Dam)PDF

A.A. Miller's Brochure(PDF)

A.A. Miller Dam located above DeSoto Falls, 1930s

Visit the famous 'Rock Church"

Located just outside DeSoto State Park.

Located just outside DeSoto State Park

Services are held every Sunday at 10:00 a.m.

Sallie Howard Memorial Chapel

Built by Colonel Milford Howard in the late 1930s in memory of his first wife, this unique chapel is an interesting place to visit. The altar is made up of a huge mountain boulder and river rocks. When Colonel Howard died in 1937 he was cremated and interred in the huge stone. Over the Altar are the words"God has always been as good to me as I would let him be" immortalized from Sallie Howard's last letter to her husband.

Howard's Chapel is open to the public and still welcomes visitors to services every Sunday.
Learn more about Colonel Milford Howard & Howard's Chapel(PDF)

Company 472

 

CCC Quarry

DeSoto State Park was developed by the Civilian Conservation Corps in the 1930s during the Great Depression. Several structures can be seen throughout the park that are still standing as testimony to their hard work and dedication. The main part of Desoto’s Lodge and other buildings were built using stone taken from the rock Quarry found off of the white trail. Drill marks and dynamite blasts can still be seen if you look closely enough. The quarry can be reached by getting on the White trail at the end of the Country Store parking lot and hiking on a moderate trail with uphill climbs. CCC artifacts can be seen inside Desoto’s Nature Center next to the Country Store.

Civilian Conservation Corps(PDF)

Legends of Lookout Mountain

Complete list of Events for 2009 (PDF)

Access to Alabama State Parks and State Park Programs is available without regard to race, color, national origin, religion, sex or disabilities.