Willard Munger State Trail
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The Willard Munger State Trail is a system of recreational trails between Hinckley, Minnesota and Duluth, Minnesota. There are actually three segments of the trail.
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[edit] Hinckley to Duluth Segment
The most well-known trail is a paved trail that starts in Hinckley and goes northeast, to Duluth. With a length of 63 miles, it is one of the longest paved trails in the world. It passes through Willow River, Moose Lake, Barnum, and Carlton before terminating in Duluth. Along the way, it goes through Jay Cooke State Park and close to Banning State Park. The 15-mile segment between Carlton and Duluth is particularly scenic, as it passes through forested areas and rock cuts before opening up to scenic views of the Lake Superior harbor and downtown Duluth.
The trail was originally part of the St. Paul and Duluth Railroad, originally built as the Lake Superior and Mississippi Railroad and later part of the Northern Pacific Railway.
The trail is named after Willard Munger, a Minnesota state legislator who devoted his legislative career to trail development and environmental protection from 1954 until his death in 1999. The Munger family owns the Willard Munger Inn near the end of the trail in Duluth.
[edit] Alex Laveau Memorial Trail
This segment of the trail connects Carlton and Wrenshall, running just south of Jay Cooke State Park, and terminates at Minnesota State Highway 23. From there, bicyclists can ride paved shoulders into the Gary-New Duluth neighborhoods of Duluth. Alex Laveau was a former county commissioner who advocated reusing abandoned railways as recreational trails.
[edit] Boundary Segment
The Boundary Segment, as its name implies, runs along Minnesota's eastern boundary. It starts in Chengwatana State Forest, runs northeasternly along the St. Croix River through the St. Croix State Park and into the St. Croix State Forest, and then in a northerly direction through the Nemadji State Forest before terminating near Holyoke. This segment of the trail is unpaved, and is intended for snowmobile and ATV use, horseback riding, and mountain biking. The area is more remote, and certain areas may be impassable in the summer.
[edit] References
- Minnesota DNR - Willard Munger State Trail. Accessed March 31, 2006.
- Willard Munger Inn. Accessed April 1, 2006.
- Hofsommer, Don L. (2005). Minneapolis and the Age of Railways. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 0-8166-4501-9.