Mt. Scott

Type: Two-story 14×14 tower
Status: Not staffed
Elevation: 8,929 feet
Visited: September 28, 2025

I visited Mt. Scott on a gorgeous September weekend.

I got an early start on my hike, which you can read about here. There was no one around as I approached the summit and its fire lookout at 8:40:

Mt. Scott Hike

Mt. Scott Hike

Mt. Scott Hike

Mt. Scott Hike

The 1952 fire lookout is no longer staffed, but houses USGS seismic monitoring equipment:

Mt. Scott Hike

Mt. Scott Hike

Mt. Scott Hike

Mt. Scott Hike

Mt. Scott Hike

Mt. Scott Hike

The summit of Mt. Scott is promoted as being a place where you can see the entire lake end-to-end. My lens wasn’t quite wide enough to capture that here:

Mt. Scott Hike

Looking north at Mt. Thielsen:

Mt. Scott Hike

And distant Three Sisters barely visible:

Mt. Scott Hike

Looking east:

Mt. Scott Hike

Looking southwest at Union Peak:

Mt. Scott Hike

Looking west across the lake at The Watchman:

Mt. Scott Hike

Mt. Scott Hike

View northwest of Mt. Bailey:

Mt. Scott Hike

More information
Forest Lookouts
Rex’s Forest Fire Lookout Page
National Historic Lookout Register
Peakbagger
Panorama Photos

History

The first lookout on Mount Scott was a cupola cabin built in the 1920s.

When the lookout became so run-down and unstable that getting an accurate location on smokes became impossible, the cabin was replaced. The current lookout was built in 1952 and is a two-story 14×14 structure with a fold-up catwalk. The lookout is no longer staffed and is home to USGS seismic monitoring equipment.