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The Upper Delaware Scenic and Recreational River is a favorite with many paddlers/NPS

Without water, there’d be no paddling or floating, and without the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act we’d be missing, and losing, some incredible landscapes and habitat.

It was not-quite 50 years ago that President Lyndon Baines Johnson signed the Wild and Scenic Rivers Act into law. The legislation was driven by such environmental legends as John and Frank Craighead and Olaus Murie, who appreciated and were concerned about the damage that decades of damming, development, and diversion had inflicted on the country’s river systems.

The act sought to preserve “certain rivers with outstanding natural, cultural and recreational values in a free-flowing condition for the enjoyment of present and future generations.” Under the Act, rivers are classified as wild, scenic, or recreational.

Rivers that roll and tumble through the National Park System are well represented on the list of Wild and Scenic Rivers. From Alaska’s remote rivers to streams that weave through the bucolic countryside of Vermont and Wisconsin, each preserves a natural setting as well as part of American history and heritage.

The following list focuses on river miles within jurisdiction of the National Park Service. Some designated rivers are longer as segments flow outside units of the National Park System.

Wild River Areas

Those rivers or sections of rivers that are free of impoundments and generally inaccessible except by trail, with watersheds or shorelines essentially primitive and waters unpolluted. These represent vestiges of primitive America.

Scenic River Areas

Those rivers or sections of rivers that are free of impoundments, with shorelines or watersheds still largely primitive, and shorelines largely undeveloped but accessible in places by roads.

Recreational River Areas

Those rivers or sections of rivers that are readily accessible by road or railroad, that may have some development along their shorelines, and that may have undergone some impoundment or diversion in the past.

Alatna River, Alaska

NPS Unit: Gates of the Arctic National Park and Preserve

Classification: 83 miles Wild, 83 miles total

Anikchak River, Alaska

NPS Unit: Anikchak National Monument and Preserve

Classification: 67 miles Wild, 67 miles total

Bluestone National Scenic River/NPS

Prized for its scenery, the Bluestone River offers limited paddling during the spring runoff/NPS

Bluestone River, West Virginia

NPS Unit: Bluestone National Scenic River

Classification: 10 miles Scenic, 10 miles total

Charley River, Alaska

NPS Unit: Yukon-Charley Rivers National Preserve

Classification: 208 miles Wild, 208 miles total

Chilikadrotna River, Alaska

NPS Unit: Lake Clark National Park and Preserve, Alaska

Classification: 11 miles Wild, 11 miles total

Eightmile River, Connecticut

NPS Unit: National Park Service, Northeast Regional Office

Classification: 25.3 miles Scenic, 25.3 miles total

Noatak River, Gates of the Arctic National Park and Preserve/NPS

The “wild” designation is readily apparent for the Noatak River, which drains the largest mountain-ringed river basin in the United States/NPS

Farmington River, West Branch, Connecticut

NPS Unit: National Park Service, Northeast Regional Office

Classification: 14 miles Recreational

Flathead River, Montana

NPS Unit: Glacier National Park, U.S. Forest Service

Classification: 40.7 miles Scenic, 62.6 miles

Recreational, 103.3 miles total

John River, Alaska

NPS Unit: Gates of the Arctic National Park and Preserve

Classification: 52 miles Wild, 52 miles total

Kern River, California

NPS Unit: Sequoia National Park

Classification: 27 miles Wild, 27 miles total

Obed Wild and Scenic River/NPS

Running a rapid at Obed Wild and Scenic River and coming out upright is cause for celebration/NPS

Kings River, California

NPS Unit: Kings Canyon National Park

Classification: 49 miles Wild, 6.5 miles

Recreational, 55.5 miles total

Kobuk River, Alaska

NPS Unit: Gates of the Arctic National Park and Preserve

Classification: 110 miles Wild, 110 miles total

Lamprey River, New Hampshire

NPS Unit: National Park Service, Northeast Regional Office

Classification: 23.5 miles Recreational

Lower Delaware River, New Jersey and Pennsylvania

NPS Unit: Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area

Classification: 25.4 miles Scenic, 41.9 miles Recreational, 67.3 miles total

Lower St. Croix River, Minnesota and Wisconsin

NPS Unit: St. Croix National Scenic Riverway

Classification: 12 miles Scenic, 40 miles Recreational, 52 miles total

Maurice River, New Jersey

NPS Unit: National Park Service, Northeast Regional Office

Classification: 28.9 miles Scenic, 6.5 miles Recreational, 35.4 miles total

Merced River, California

NPS Unit: Yosemite National Park

Classification: 53 miles Wild, 14 miles Scenic, 14 miles Recreational, 81 miles total

Rio Grand Wild and Scenic River/Rebecca Latson

The Rio Grand Wild and Scenic River will carry you through Big Bend National Park/Rebecca Latson

Middle Delaware River, New Jersey and Pennsylvania

NPS Unit: Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area

Classification: 35 miles Scenic, 5 miles Recreational

Missisquoi & Trout Rivers, Vermont

NPS Unit: National Park Service, Northeast Regional Office

Classification: 46.1 miles Recreational

Missouri River, Nebraska and South Dakota

NPS Unit: Missouri National Recreational River

Classification: 98 miles Recreational

Mulchatna River, Alaska

NPS Unit: Lake Clark National Park and Preserve

Classification: 24 miles Wild

Musconetcong River, New Jersey

NPS Unit: National Park Service, Northeast Regional Office

Classification: 3.5 miles Scenic, 20.7 miles Recreational, 24.2 miles total

Caribou swimming in the Kobuk River/NPS

Noatak River, Alaska

NPS Unit: Gates of the Arctic National Park and Preserve and Noatak National Preserve

Classification: 330 miles Wild

Niobrara River, Nebraska

NPS Unit: Niobrara National Scenic River

Classification: 68 miles Scenic, 28 miles Recreational, 96 miles total

North Fork Koyukuk, Alaska

NPS Unit: Gates of The Arctic National Park and Preserve

Classification: 102 miles Wild

Obed River, Tennessee

NPS Unit: Obed Wild and Scenic River

Classification: 43.3 miles Wild, 2 miles Scenic, 45.3 miles total

Rio Grande River, Texas

NPS Unit: Big Bend National Park

Classification: 95.2 miles Wild, 96 miles Scenic, 191.2 miles total

River Styx (Cave Creek), Oregon

NPS Unit: Oregon Caves National Monument

Classification: 0.4 miles Scenic, 0.4 miles total

Virgin River, Zion National Park/NPS

Various sections of the Virgin River are viewed as Wild, Scenic, and Recreational/NPS

St. Croix River, Minnesota and Wisconsin

NPS Unit: St. Croix National Scenic Riverway

Classification: 181 miles Scenic, 19 miles Recreational, 200 miles total

Salmon River, Alaska

NPS Unit: Kobuk Valley National Park

Classification: 70 miles Wild

Snake River Headwaters, Wyoming

NPS Unit: Grand Teton and Yellowstone parks

Classification: 52.7 miles Wild, 44.1 miles Scenic, 96.8 miles total

Sudbury, Assabet, Concord Rivers, Massachusetts

NPS Unit: National Park Service, Northeast Regional Office

Classification: 14.9 miles Scenic, 14.1 miles Recreational

Taunton River, Massachusetts

NPS Unit: National Park Service, Northeast Regional Office

Classification: 26 miles Scenic, 14 miles Recreational

Tinayguk River, Alaska

NPS Unit: Gates of the Arctic National Park and Preserve

Classification: 44 miles Wild

Tlikakila River, Alaska

NPS Unit: Lake Clark National Park and Preserve

Classification: 51 miles Wild

Tuolumne River, California

NPS Unit: Yosemite National Park

Classification: 37 miles Wild, 17 miles Scenic, 54 miles total

Upper Delaware River, New York and Pennsylvania

NPS Unit: Upper Delaware Scenic and Recreational River

Classification: 23.1 miles Scenic, 50.3 miles Recreational

Virgin River, Utah

NPS Unit: Zion National Park, and U.S. Bureau of Land Management

Classification: 123.6 miles Wild, 11.3 miles Scenic, 12.6 miles Recreational

Kings River, Kings Canyon National Park/Patrick Cone

The Kings River in Kings Canyon National Park/Patrick Cone

Wekiva River, Florida

NPS Unit: National Park Service, Southeast Regional Office

Classification: 31.4 miles Wild, 2.1 miles Scenic, 8.1 miles Recreational

White Clay Creek, Delaware and Pennsylvania

NPS Unit: National Park Service, Northeast Regional Office

Classification: 7.4 miles Scenic, 1.6 miles Recreational

Wolf River, Wisconsin

NPS Unit: Wolf National Scenic Riverway

Classification: 24 miles Scenic

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