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Finding Virginia’s Lost AT with Dakota Jackson and Mills Kelly

The Green Tunnel

Release Date: 03/07/2023

The End of the Trail show art The End of the Trail

The Green Tunnel

Today’s episode is bittersweet because we have reached the end of our hike. After three years and 50 episodes, we are wrapping up The Green Tunnel with something a little different. Every episode of The Green Tunnel has focused on some aspect of the history of the Appalachian Trail, but today we’re looking forward. What will the AT’s future look like? How will the trail evolve? What will the greatest challenges be for the trail we all love? 

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Hogs, Chipmunks, and Bears, Oh My! show art Hogs, Chipmunks, and Bears, Oh My!

The Green Tunnel

On today’s episode of The Green Tunnel, we are exploring a central reason why hikers head to the Appalachian Trail in the first place, to see wildlife. We’ll also talk about how the animals along the trail are changing the way hikers experience the AT and the ecology of the mountains the AT passes through.

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Iconic Locations: The Katahdin Sign show art Iconic Locations: The Katahdin Sign

The Green Tunnel

What long-distance AT hiker hasn’t dreamed of reaching that sign on the summit of Katahdin at the end of their hike? Today, we are headed to the top of the mountain to explore the history of the iconic sign. 

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Trail Writing show art Trail Writing

The Green Tunnel

The Appalachian Trail winds its way through Appalachia which is a place where people make sense of their world through stories. Stories of their lives in the mountains. Stories of the land and its riches. Stories, both fiction and non-fiction, about their journeys. In this episode of The Green Tunnel, we are exploring the history of writing about the Appalachian Trail. 

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Iconic Locations: Priest Mountain Shelter show art Iconic Locations: Priest Mountain Shelter

The Green Tunnel

Did you know a significant number of hikers confess their sins in the logbook in the shelter on Priest Mountain? Why do they do this and what do they confess? Find out on today’s Iconic Locations episode. 

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Becoming a National Park show art Becoming a National Park

The Green Tunnel

Benton MacKaye wanted to be sure that anyone who chose to spend a few hours, a few days, or a few weeks on the trail would have the opportunity to really get away from civilization. However, most of the lands MacKaye hoped to route his future trail through were in private hands, owned either by individuals or corporations. If an Appalachian Trail was really going to be built, then its leaders would have to find a way to reconcile their desire to build a trail with the rights of private landowners.

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Iconic Locations: Delaware Water Gap show art Iconic Locations: Delaware Water Gap

The Green Tunnel

The Delaware Water Gap is one of the most breathtaking spots along the entire Appalachian Trail and has been a favorite subject of landscape painters since at least the middle of the 19th century. It's an important marker for northbound hikers, but it's also a torturous landscape that many hikers call "Rocksylvania." 

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Wayfinding show art Wayfinding

The Green Tunnel

There is no better way to turn a good hike into a bad hike than taking a wrong turn and hiking miles out of your way. Especially if that means you climbed an extra mountain or two. Today, we are exploring the history of blazing, signing, and mapping the trail from Georgia to Maine.

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Iconic Locations: Bear Mountain Bridge show art Iconic Locations: Bear Mountain Bridge

The Green Tunnel

Bear Mountain Bridge sits just north of the oldest section of the entire Appalachian Trail and on today's Iconic Location episode we are what was once the world’s longest suspension bridge. 

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Constructing the Trail show art Constructing the Trail

The Green Tunnel

Today we’re going back to the earliest days of the Appalachian Trail to learn more about the critical role that the Civilian Conservation Corps played in making the trail a reality. 

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More Episodes

On this special episode of The Green Tunnel, Dakota Jackson, Director of Visitor Experience at the Appalachian Trail Conservancy, talks with Mills Kelly about his new book, Virginia's Lost Appalachian Trail. Dakota and Mills explore the process of digging up the story of Virginia's Lost AT in the archives, and in the memories of the people who remember it. We hope you enjoy this deeper dive into the history of the old section of the trail, and learn a little about how historians recover and interpret the past.

Don't forget to listen to "The Lost AT."
https://www.r2studios.org/show/the-green-tunnel/the-lost-at/

Purchase your own copy of Mills Kelly's book.
https://www.arcadiapublishing.com/Products/9781467153393