Doggin'
Cumberland Gap National Historic Park: Hike With Your Along America's
Most Famous Road
Wandering animals, buffalo and deer, were the first to discover
this natural break in the daunting Appalachian Mountains. These
migratory mammals blazed the trail that American Indian tribes
would later follow. American settlers seemed destined to be bottled
up on the East Coast until April 1750 when Dr. Thomas Walker
discovered the gap through the mountains.
Later, Daniel Boone blazed the Wilderness Road through the Gap
in 1775. Over the next 20 years, although no wagons rolled through
the pass, more than 200,000 people made the journey west into
the wilderness of Kentucky and beyond. The Cumberland Gap was
honored as a national Historic Park in 1940 and a new tunnel
through the mountains will enable the Wilderness Road to one
day be restored to its 1700s appearance.
The Cumberland Gap National Historic Park encompasses more than
20,000 acres of dog-friendly forest lands in the mountains on
the Kentucky-Virginia border. The best spot to view the gap with
your dog is at Pinnacle Overlook, accessible on a 4-mile paved
road. Most visitors don't make it beyond the overlook but canine
hikers can take off on a wide, rolling walk at the top of mountains
with good views through thin trees and from rocky perches. The
Ridge Trail is an easy walk from the tourist parking lot or can
be climbed to from a campground. It runs for 19 miles through
the woods on the ridgetop; all told, there are more than 50 miles
of marked trail in the park.
To walk on the Wilderness Road, try the Tri-State Peak Trail,
a steady 1.3-mile climb around the mountain. After a narrow,
rocky beginning up switchbacks, the trail goes through the historic
gap before heading to the 1,990-foot summit on a wide logging
road. From the pavilion on the summit are views of Virginia,
Kentucky and Tennessee.
At the base of the Tri-State Peak Trail are the remains of a
30-foot-high, charcoal-burning blast furnace that produced iron
through much of the 19th century. Built of limestone slid down
the mountain, the Newlee Iron Furnace was the focal point for
an iron-making community here. The furnace could produce about
3 tons of iron a day to be shipped down the Powell River to Chattanooga.
The Visitor Center for the Cumberland Gap National Historic Park
is located on the Kentucky side, on US 25E.
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