Maybe it is already out there and I can't find it, but I'd like a concise list of all the memorials on the AT either NoBo or SoBo....or a link to where it is. Maybe if it doesn't already exist it should and in the articles here at WB.THANKS!
Maybe it is already out there and I can't find it, but I'd like a concise list of all the memorials on the AT either NoBo or SoBo....or a link to where it is. Maybe if it doesn't already exist it should and in the articles here at WB.THANKS!
Start out slow, then slow down.
Not sure if this is the direction you are going... This is the Meredith Emerson Memorial is on the blue blaze side trail to the Byron Reese parking area
http://whiteblaze.net/forum/vbg/show...&cutoffdate=-1
The trail was here before we arrived, and it will still be here when we are gone...enjoy it now, and preserve it for others that come after us
Medicine Man it would be helpful to frame this a little better and define exactly what you mean by a "Memorial".
In other words, does a "dedicated" foot bridge count? If a shelter is marked "In Memory" to someone would that count as well?
The devil's in the details you know............
"Fish Camp Woman.... Baby, I like the way you smell"
- Unknown Hinson
There's the Wade Sutton memorial right on the Trail several miles after leaving Wessor. The Shelton Graves and a few others are up on the Southern Balds, too. I'm not sure those fit the definition, though.
If you really need an answer to this, especially as regards permenent memorial markers on or immediately adjacent to the Trail, I'd ask Laurie Potteiger at the A.T.C.
I was surprised by the number of gravesites/memorials between Max Patch and the waterfall just north of Devil Fork Gap/Rector Laurel Road:
- Grave south of Deer Park Mountain Shelter
- Memorial on ridgeline south of Spring Mountain Shelter
- Shelton Graves
- Graves about a quarter-mile north of Rector Laurel Road
GA←↕→ME: 1973 to 2014
I was thinking more like what Kerosene posted, not shelters. I guess the goal is that possibly you could miss a memorial if you didn't know it was there...fog, in a hurry, etc. The memorials at least to me are a big part of the trail; but for people who are just now discovering the AT it might be of interest, motivation-example the Murphy Memorial was especially interesting to me and led to more research on Audy.....
Start out slow, then slow down.
Just says Jack's response. I don't need to know, as mentioned it is just a curiosity and something I think might be of interest to others; but contacting laurie is an excellent idea.
Start out slow, then slow down.
I both saw memorials (such as headstones) and missed memorials completely (which saddened me). I "enjoyed" seeing Howard Bassett's memorial, after reading his account of his thru-hike in the two volume set "Hiking the Appalachian Trail."
But I'm curious, what would be a NOBO memorial and not a SOBO memorial, and vice versa? Since you say you want both NOBO and SOBO memorials?
RainMan
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[I]ye shall not pollute the land wherein ye are: ... Defile not therefore the land which ye shall inhabit....[/I]. Numbers 35
[url]www.MeetUp.com/NashvilleBackpacker[/url]
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nah, didn't matter NoBo or SoBo,just a list.
Start out slow, then slow down.
There a number of rather permanent personal memorials as well.
Just across the outlet to Gentian Pond is one such, though I have long forgotten the story behind it.
Off the trail you sometimes find others left by friends and family.
i found a small monument to a hiker off the brp just a small stone on top of a hill.. something like if i could build a road to heaven i'd hike there to see ya or something like that and his hat was there...
There are several monuments erected by BMECC in the 1920s and 1930s known locally as markers recognizing the contributions of early trail builders and also historical markers now on NPS A.T. corridor lands and/or state-owned land which protects the trail.
I'm not certain whether these would be included in the request, but would be happy to list them if someone wishes.
There is one between rt.225 and Peter's MTn Shelter in PA. If I remember correctly it is on the south facing side of the power line clearance. If I remember correctly, it was for a geologist and backpacking enthusiast.