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The wind is known to blow briskly at the highest point in Indiana. At an elevation of 1,257 feet about sea level, it is hidden in a woods, a short rise above Elliot Road, northwest of Bethel in Wayne County. Marked by a cairn of field stones supporting a wooden sign that once bore a stapled-on message, the highpoint gives birth to tiny white spring flowers amid the peaceful rustle of the trees. The greatest climb to the point is
the one made over the stile into the woods. The United States Geodetic Survey says
the point's latitude is 40 degrees, 0 minutes and 1 second North latitude and its
longitude is 84 degrees, 51 minutes and 4 seconds west. Property owner Kim Gobel gets at least 20 calls a year asking permission to visit the site and more stop by without permission. One visitor who asked for and received permission, thanked Gobel by sending her fresh peaches from his home state of Georgia. Robert J. White, a farmer who lives nearby, finds people on his doorstep once or twice a week searching for the highpoint. "It's just a solid stream in the summer from different states," White said. White and his family have been
photographed at the point for a book about state highpoints. Between December 8, 1996 and April 29, 1997, more than 25 people signed in from California to Maine. Many noted the weather as "windy." Some mentioned how many highpoints they had visited and others remarked on their travel plans for the day.
One of the more interesting entries, which may have been submitted in jest, came from the "Randolph County Highway Department" which claimed that its members had come to return the highpoint to Randolph County "where it was stolen away by the rebels in Wayne County..." Some visitors to the area may not realize the highpoint is in the wooded area west of the roadway beyond some hay rolls and discarded field stones, because a witness post and marker of the U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey are to its east.
This article originally
appeared in the Sept./Oct. 1997 issue of Outdoor Indiana.
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