Wednesday, March 24, 2021

The Intersection of Two Great Trails



She Who Must Be Obeyed and I biked from Brunswick, Maryland to Harper's Ferry, West Virginia on the C&O Canal.  It's not too long a ride, and on the e-bikes it was fast and pain-free.

Harper's Ferry was where John Brown tried to spark a slave insurrection (he failed) by capturing the armory there.  Brown and 18 of his men were finally captured by Robert E. Lee (not yet a traitor to the nation) and Brown was convicted and hung in Charles Town for treason on December 2, 1859.

Today Harper's Ferry is a small tourist destination and the crossroads of two great American trails -- the C&O Canal and Greater Allegheny Passage which, combined, are a perfect and quite beautiful nearly-level bike trail from Georgetown in Washington, D.C. to Pittsburgh, Pennsylania -- a combined distance of 335 miles, and the Appalachian Trail, which stretches from 15 miles south of Springer Mountain, Georgia, to Mount Katahdin in Main -- a distance of between 2,100 and 2,200 miles depending on the occasional detour, etc.

Harper's Ferry is about the halfway mark, and the farthest north I have hiked (not all in one throw) starting south of Springer Mountain in Georgia.  



2 comments:

Jo Mercer said...

I thought the GAP's southern terminus was at Cumberland.

PBurns said...

It is, but that’s also the northern terminus of the C&O — they literally connect. I’ve bike all of both.