Tales From the Appalachian Trail
The stories of ten hikers who have traveled the 2,000-mile-path through the eastern United States tell the history of the trail
- By Megan Gambino
- Smithsonian.com, July 14, 2009, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
6. Hikers, Young and Old
Believe it or not, there have been older 2,000-milers than Grandma Gatewood. Ernie Morris started section hiking the A.T. when he was 82 years old and finished in 1975 at age 86, becoming the oldest man to have hiked the trail. The oldest thru hiker is Lee Barry, who completed his fifth hike (three were section and two were thru hikes) in 2004 at the age of 81. Nancy Gowler, the oldest female thru-hiker, completed her second in 2007, at age 71. As for the youngest, 6-year-old Michael Cogswell hiked the entire trail with his parents in 1980. Another 6-year old boy tied his age record in 2002. And an 8-year-old girl became the youngest female A.T. hiker in 2002.
7. The Good Samaritan
In her lifetime, Genevieve Hutchinson only walked a bit of the Appalachian Trail, picking wild flowers one day on Bald Mountain in Massachusetts. Nevertheless, she was a legend on the trail, and her house in the A.T. town of Washington, Massachusetts, a welcoming watering hole. Guidebooks often directed hikers to Hutchinson’s home from a lean-to about a half-mile away. She’d have visitors sign a register, marking thru hikers with a red star, and she kept a scrapbook of photographs, postcards and letters from hikers she met. She cherished her relationships with them and even wrote a memoir called “Home on the Trail,” not for publication, but, as she put it, “for my family, so they’ll know what it has meant to me to live here on the Trail.” Hutchinson lived to be 90 years old, passing away in 1974.
8. The Record Breakers
It might go against the spirit of Benton Mackaye’s “stop and smell the roses” philosophy, but for some, just walking the trail isn’t enough. They need to be the fastest one to thru-hike it. The trend really took off when two hikers, David Horton and Scott Grierson, hiked the trail neck and neck, vying for a speed record in 1991. Grierson, a hiker from Bar Harbor, Maine, had a two-day head start on Horton, an ultramarathoner. But the two had different strategies, and Horton, who walk-ran 10-11 hours per day eventually gained on Grierson, who walked 16-17 hours per day. Ultimately, Horton finished in 52 days 9 hours and Grierson in 55 days 20 hours 34 minutes. Horton held the record until 1999, when ultrarunner Pete Palmer smashed it, hiking the trail in 48 days 20 hours and 11 minutes. Palmer held it for six years, but speed hiker Andrew Thompson broke it in 2005, completing his thru hike in 47 days 13 hours 31 minutes. In 2008, 25-year-old Jennifer Pharr Davis set the female record: 57 days 8 hours 35 minutes.
9. The First Blind Thru-Hiker
“For most hikers, the rewards of the Appalachian Trail were primarily visual,” writes Bill Irwin in his book Blind Courage. But Irwin had an entirely different experience. He lost his sight in his mid-30s from a degenerative disease, and in 1990, at age 49, became the first blind person to hike the entire Appalachian Trail. With the help of his Seeing Eye dog, Orient, Irwin hiked it over the course of eight and a half months, falling an estimated 5,000 times along the way. “I never enjoyed the hiking part,” writes Irwin. “It was something I felt compelled to do. It wasn’t my choice.” He had struggled with troubled relationships and alcoholism, and with blindness came a loss of independence and deep depression. But for Irwin, the miraculous feat of doing it was a life-changing event.
10. A Writer in the Woods
When travel writer Bill Bryson moved to Hanover, New Hampshire, in 1995, after living in Britain for 20 years, he experienced culture shock. Happening upon a nearby trailhead to the Appalachian Trail one day, he got the idea to hike it and reacquaint himself with America. After telling his family, friends and publisher (he would later write A Walk in the Woods, a New York Times bestseller recounting his trip) about his plan, he got a call from Stephen Katz, a childhood friend from Iowa, who wanted to join him. An overweight, Little-Debbie-loving guy, Katz was an unlikely hiker, but Bryson agreed to his coming along. After all, his company, as well as that of the characters they would meet along the way, provided fodder for Bryson’s signature humor. The two set out on March 9, 1996, traveling south to north. But by Gatlinburg, Tennessee, they came to terms with the fact that they were never going to walk the entire way to Maine. They revised their plan and decided that they would walk the Appalachian Trail, just not all of it (joining the nearly 90 percent of thru hikers who never make it). They’d hike sections in between stints at home, nights in motels or occasional pit stops. In the end, Bryson trekked 870 miles, or 39.5 percent of the A.T. He regrets never making it to Mount Katahdin or looking real danger in the eye. But he gained an admiration for those who have, a respect for the beauty of the wilderness and a good deal of patience, strength and perspective.
Editor's Note: This article erroneously placed Mt. Monadnock in the White Mountains. It is not a part of any mountain range, according to the New Hampshire State Park Service. The article has been modified to fix the error.
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Comments (30)
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For Steve Lemonakis-I am not an AT thru hiker but have been on parts of it while hiking the New England 4000 Footers. A handy source of reference besides the many books and guides one can purchase is www.trailjournals.com which hikers can post to as they hike various trails, the AT included. One thing I would advise from what I have read...don't start your hike thinking you will hike 20 miles or more each day. Weather, sickness, injury, so many factors can defeat that. Take each day as it comes and enjoy it...hike your own hike as the saying goes. I am sure you will need to take nero and zero days for resupply, getting laundry done, sleeping in a real bed. Be thankful for every day you are out there. Check out rules, etc. for Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Shenandoah, Baxter State Park. (I know the latter has a group area reserved for thru hikers.) Stay well and safe and Live Your Dream.
Posted by Loretta L. Lavoie on October 17,2011 | 08:57 AM
As I approach my 65th birthday a high school friend and I have agreed to walk the Trail beginning in March 2013. I began researching the trek and am astounded and a bit leary now. I've never camped out. Currently I am working on conditioning myself to walk 20 miles a day and making day by day plans for the hike,, I have a book about Thru Walking which offers good suggestions. What I'd like to know is how far in advance does one need to book camp sites, cabins and such. Is a year and a half enough. How many miles a day should one consider sufficient.. Is 20 enough? Also, have others had friends or spouses drive along as supply and even shelter providers? My wife isn't thrilled about this but I am suggesting she drive an RV as a support convoy. It appears there are enough wonderful sights for a person to experience while driving. OF course while we're plodding away at 20+ miles a day what can my wife be doing?
Posted by Steve Lemonakis on October 1,2011 | 12:46 PM
His name is actually michael williams and I know him, he is one of my moms best friends and I know him really well.......
Posted by taylor cohen on June 1,2011 | 06:30 PM
Earl Shaffer was a good friend of my father. They went to auctions together and bought and resold antiques. Earl was an early "American Picker" and one of the most interesting people I ever met. When I was a young boy he would come to visit and spent hours talking about war stories. He only ever briefly mentioned walking the trail, he was much too humble for high praise for the accomplishment. I didn't realize the importance of the feat until long after Earl's death, and I was an older man myself. I know he would say something like " A lot of hubbub about a long walk" if he knew how many people revered his efforts. He was a great guy.
Posted by Daniel Foltz on April 5,2011 | 09:47 AM
For those who are confused about whether Grandma Gatewood or Mildrid Norman Ryder (Peace Pilgrim) was the first woman to complete a thru-hike, Mrs. Ryder did complete it first with a companion.
Grandma Gatewood was the first woman to complete a SOLO thru-hike.
Just saying..
Posted by Tina on February 7,2011 | 03:11 AM
I have always been interested in the story about the Appalachian Trail. In 2009 my son gave me a book about Earl Shaffer for Christmas---I nealy fell over when I saw the picture of Earl Shaffer.He was the man that arrived in the town of Onawa,Maine where I was born. He said he had walked the Appachian Trail. He had one candy bar left. My parents gave him food and a place to sleep and he left the next day. I was very young when that happened. I just had to post my comment
Posted by Lucille Gagnon Duhaime on January 9,2011 | 04:31 PM
The Appalachian Trail is only the beginning. There are now ten other national scenic trails. All are beautiful and intriguing. Plus there is also the transcontinental Sea-To-Sea Route from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ocean. [See ronstrickland dot com] The best is still ahead!
Posted by Ron Strickland on August 29,2010 | 03:52 PM
I hiked the first 300 miles (South to North) in 2000. I plan to return, to benefit my faith-based hospital employer, perhaps in 2010. When I arrived at Hot Springs, N.C. in 2000, soaked off the sweat and grime, then thought to myself, "now THIS is what I should be doing, not looking for ticks on my head." (grin) THANK YOU to all the volunteers who made my experience immeasurably splendid. Trail name: The Phone Lady. New trail name to be announced.
Posted by Catherine Palmer on November 23,2009 | 12:29 PM
FYI: Mount Katahdin stands more like 5,200 feet, not the 4,292 stated in an otherwise informative story.
Posted by David Corriveau on November 10,2009 | 03:19 PM
I just discovered this when I was doing a search for a new blog of mine that should be on everyday health. Glad I found it. And Dog Bone, I didn't meet you but my first hike was in 1999 and it changed my life. For the much much better.
Posted by Nancy Gowler (Magellan) on August 27,2009 | 07:31 PM
I met my wife in Virginia. Both of us were thru hiking in 1999, we walked 1,700 miles together and decided we wanted to continue for the rest of our lives. That was just one of the reasons it was the best challenge and journey in my life.
Posted by Kenny (Wadi) Evans on August 8,2009 | 11:47 AM
Interesting article overall, though I'd call attention to two mistaken details. I believe the Pacific Crest Trail between the borders of Mexico and Canada runs at least 2,600 miles, making it the longer. And Mount Katahdin stands 5,200-feet-and-change above sea level, not 4,292.
Oh, and Earl Shaffer did go by a trail name -- Crazy One. He took it on after meeting a family in Tennessee during his first trip. When he told them what he was doing, the matriarch declared him crazy.
While writing for my local paper on the New Hampshire/Vermont state line, I covered the passing-through of Earl Shaffer and the Orient Express (Bill Irwin and seeing-eye dog Orient). They're still my favorites in 21 years. So far have hiked most of the AT in New Hampshire (except for Glencliff to Lonesome Lake and parts of the Mahoosucs) and about 50 miles in Vermont and 10 in Maine. Someday ...
Posted by David Corriveau on August 3,2009 | 04:42 PM
Great article Bought back so many fabulous memories of the trail that I thru hiked in 1999 .The best part of the trail experience was meeting all the different people who became instant friends once you knew them to be thru hikers..... a breed unto ourselves.
Posted by Al ( Dog Bone) Wilson on July 31,2009 | 09:40 PM
^ Lee Starkey!
I hiked the AT in 1999 and it has remained one of the most valuable experiences of my entire life. Not only did I meet a lot of great people, but I developed an appreciation of the wilderness and a sense of self-reliance that I could not have attained otherwise.
The AT is enshrined in American history, but it should be noted that it is just one trail on the larger Eastern Continental Trail which stretches from Key West, Florida to the Cliffs of Forillon, Cap Gaspé, Québec, spanning sixteen states and three Canadian provinces. Regional hiking groups are cutting and maintaining trails all along the ECT's route, and more hikers are taking it on every year. One day the ECT will hopefully become as important as the AT has been for the past 50 years.
Posted by McDowell Crook on July 30,2009 | 03:56 PM
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