Chief Ladiga Trail
Chief Ladiga Trail | |
---|---|
Length | 33 mi (53 km) |
Location | Calhoun / Cleburne counties, Alabama, USA |
Designation | Piedmont and Jacksonville sections are National Recreation Trail designated[1] |
Trailheads | Alabama-Georgia state line (33°57′1″N 85°23′46″W / 33.95028°N 85.39611°W); Anniston, Alabama (33°44′16″N 85°49′5″W / 33.73778°N 85.81806°W) |
Use | Hiking, Biking |
Elevation | |
Highest point | about 950 ft (290 m) near the Alabama-Georgia state line [2] |
Lowest point | about 650 ft (198 m) in Jacksonville[2] |
Hiking details | |
Right of way | former Southern Railway |
The Chief Ladiga Trail /ləˈdaɪɡə/ is a rail trail in Alabama. It is the state's first rail trail project.
History
Trail background
The 33-mile (53 km) trail stretches from the Alabama-Georgia state line to Weaver. The Chief Ladiga is on the same rail corridor as the Silver Comet Trail in Georgia as far as Piedmont, Alabama. From there it parallels an abandoned Southern Railway line for a few miles west of town until it leaves the old Seaboard rail line, heading south on the Southern Railway route until the trail ends just north of Anniston. As of August, 2007, pavement is continuous between the Ladiga and Comet trails.[citation needed] A new gateway marks the connecting point at the state line. Now that the Chief Ladiga and the Silver Comet trails are connected, there is a 90-mile (145 km) paved corridor for non-motorized travel from just west of Atlanta, Georgia to Anniston, making it the 2nd longest paved trail in the U.S. (the longest being the Paul Bunyan in Minnesota.)
Chief Ladiga
Chief Ladiga was a Muscogee chief who relinquished his tribe's lands when he signed the Treaty of Cusseta in 1832. The Treaty was part of a broader policy of indian removal perpetrated by the Jackson Administration. Ladiga sold half his land (which would later become Jacksonville) to speculators for $2000.
Route
The Chief Ladiga Trail starts at the Alabama-Georgia state line. At about mile marker 7.0, the trail crosses the Pinhoti National Recreation Trail.[3] It travels west to Piedmont then on to Jacksonville and Weaver and finally ending at Mike Tucker Park in north Anniston. It travels through wetlands, across streams, through forests and farmlands, and includes a horizon view of the Talladega Mountains. There are several bridges and both new and restored railroad trestles.
See also
References
- ↑ New NRT designated for 2011. National Recreation Trails. 2010-06-02. U.S. Department of Interior. Accessed 2011-06-15.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Blalock, Clarence. Chief Ladiga Trail Map. Trail Elevation Profile. 2005. Hosted on the Jacksonville State University website. Accesses 2011-06-15.
- ↑ TrailsNet webpage about "Chief Ladiga Trail". Picture caption. Image date: 2008-01-28. "While riding the Chief Ladiga Trail in Alabama, you will come to junction for the Pinhoti Trail, an Alabama hiking trail. The turnoff is located between two river/bridge crossings very near mile marker 7.0." Accessed 2011-06-14.
External links
- Home Page hosted by Jacksonville State Environmental Policy Information Center (EPIC)
- Information about the Chief Ladiga Trail at TrailExpress
- Chief Ladiga Trail Map (google mashup)
- Chief Ladiga Trail Page on RailsToTrails.us
- Chief Ladiga Trail Page on Traillink