National-Trails-Map.Pdf

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

National-Trails-Map.Pdf Note: Abbreviations at right National Park System National Forest System Fish and Wildlife Service Bureau of Land Management are for federal lands shown on this map. In many places, Mount Baker P exact trail locations have not ACIF NF IC NO yet been determined. Portions RTH MEM Memorial NP National Park NF National Forest NWR National Wildlife Refuge North W of the trails indicated on this Okanogan EST NB National Battlefield N PRES National Preserve NG National Grassland Cascades NF NAT map may not be accessible for IONA public use. Please check with NBP National Battlefield Park NRA National Recreation Area NP L SCE Olympic Lake Chelan Colville NIC individual trail clubs and man- NHP National Historical Park NRR National Recreational River Only national park, forest areas, and NP TRA NRA NF IL aging offices for the latest NHS National Historic Site N RES National Reserve wildlife refuges that relate to the Olympic NF SEATTLE Kaniksu available trail locations. NL National Lakeshore NS National Seashore National Trails System are shown. Wenatchee NF Kootenai NM National Monument NSR National Scenic Riverway NF NF Glacier N MEM National Memorial PKWY Parkway NP NMP National Military Park S OLYMPIA E Mount Rainier Willapa NWR WASHINGTON Lake of T NP A Snoqualmie the Woods A Bear Paw CANADA Lewis and Clark Julia Butler NF D Flathead T NHP Hansen NWR Battlefield 90 NF S Lewis U A Gifford NITED Lolo and Benton STATES Lewis and Clark NWR Pinchot NF N NF Lake Fort Union D 82 Clark Ul Bend Ridgefield Fort Vancouver NHS NWR Trading Post A E McNary NWR NF NWR Missouri Three Arch NWR Steigerwald Lake NWR NHS T RICHLAND C Rocks NWR Franz Lake NWR PASCO Nez Perce GREAT FALLS I PORTLAND Umatilla NHP MISSOULA ion KENNEWICK NORTH DAKOTA at N Columbia NWR Clearwater loc re OREGON CITY NF U Pierce LEWISTON Charles M. Russell d SUPER Lee Metcalf NWR Audubon NWR se IOR NWR NWR Lake Ilo po E SALEM 84 Lewis and Clark Little Pro LAK Mount Umatilla Lolo NF NWR Superior NF O NF NF Missouri MAINE Hood NF HELENA Chippewa CORVALLIS 5 R NG NF E Deer Lodge MONTANA Knife River William L. Finley G Nez Perce NF Helena Indian Villages L 95 Umatilla O NF NF E NWR Bitterroot NHS W NOR Whittlesey Pictured NF N Wallowa e TH L SC TRA Willamette NF n FARGO Des Creek A ENIC IL Rocks NL AUGUSTA NF o I 94 Tamarac igna N Big t S t O NF Gallatin Yellows BISMARCK ed ro DULUTH NWR I EUGENE Whitman NF Hole NWR ute C T Hiawatha Long Lake NWR A A Ottawa N NB NF O U N NF A N NTRY NF VT. Salmon Hiawatha T Beaverhead BILLINGS D White I NF BOZEMAN 35 NF O Mountain NF C Sheyenne ix MONTPELIER N Gallatin ro SR NF L MINNESOTA C N Chequamegon L Deschutes A NG A 93 NF A 89 NF OREGON Custer t NF K L n Umpqua NEZ PERCE (NEE-ME-POO) R i E NF a K NF S N.H. IDAHO NATIONAL HISTORIC TRAIL H Yellowstone H NATIONA U Green CONCORD Crater Lake N GE L IS NP ICE A R Mountain NP A 81 Rogue T O O T NF 91 River I N S NEW ENGLAND Deer Flat NWR R O WAUSAU NF I Targhee 29 90 C MEDFORD C N ST. PAUL Winema BOISE Sawtooth NF SOUTH DAKOTA 75 Fort Stanwix 87 NATIONAL SCENIC TRAIL E S IO NF n 15 A MINNEAPOLIS AR NM NF WISCONSIN N NT Boston Harbor Islands NRA a T Shoshone L M O P k I E Bear Valley NWR e R i C K SYRACUSE MASS. BOSTON A NF H ss A UTICA Lower Klamath NWR A i L ALBANY AMHERST C s I I s 39 T I Tule Lake NWR L S ip Manistee ROCHESTER PIERRE R N 90 Klamath F Teton T p NF PITTSFIELD I Clear Lake NWR O i A NF C Caribou A NF Ft Pierre SPRINGFIELD PROVIDENCE R I Finger NF L Modoc Hagerman Fossil NG I 90 G NEW YORK I C Beds NM POCATELLO C 94 MICHIGAN Lakes ITHACA CONN. NF A Grays Lake NWR BUFFALO NEWPORT C H L T 88 HARTFORD R I The four trails shown here as E F 86 Bridger R 43 C MUSKEGON L S O 90 I I Shasta separate lines actually follow A 90 Finger POUGHKEEPSIE R.I. T R NF WYOMING A 95 NF Humboldt the same route in much of I GRAND RAPIDS Lakes N Sawtooth L M 69 R NF T REDDING I NF CASPER Nebraska and Wyoming. MADISON NF Lassen A Humboldt MILWAUKEE 96 84 Bear Lake Lake Andes NWR 84 NF NF City of Curlew LANSING NWR NG 90 E Lassen Volcanic Rocks Karl E. Mundt NWR DETROIT I E R S ONA NP TI L N RES E a A Cache NF ra JANESVILLE 43 Allegheny Wallkill River NWR a K 196 c N L br NF Delaware Water Gap NRA r I M Nio 35 E a A Cokeville A TR O issouri NR K NEW YORK m H M R 94 94 Plumas L 79 ISTORIC Meadows Seedskadee NWR RM SIOUX CITY BATTLE 75 LA Morristown NHP CITY e NF 80 Great NWR O North Platte NWR CREEK 80 n Pyramid Fort Laramie N IOWA t N Humboldt Salt CLEVELAND 81 78 o OGDEN TOLEDO A Lake NF 80 NHS CHICAGO 80 Lake P WASHINGTON-ROCHAMBEAU T I O 90 TRENTON I N PENNSYLVANIA O C REVOLUTIONARY ROUTE Tahoe Scotts Bluff EE 88 NI NF N Medicine R DES MOINES AKRON CE N.J. NATIONAL HISTORIC TRAIL Wasatch NM 39 S A RENO NEBRASKA 80 NEVADA Ruby Lake NWR NF Bow NF N OMAHA 69 HARRISBURG Independence NHP L SALT LAKE Chimney Rock AT Desoto NWR 75 PITTSBURGH I PHILADELPHIA Eldorado CITY NHS ONAL Boyer Chute NWR 71 NF H te 76 Routt CHEYENNE IS t COUNCIL BLUFFS 65 83 WILMINGTON CARSON ATIONAL T la 77 S N HI Unita NF Roosevelt O P CITY PO PRES STO R HAGERSTOWN SACRAMENTO NY EX RIC NF NF IC 14 TR n 76 TR 74 55 68 AIL Fish Springs e Rocky AIL Walker e 80 OHIO MD. BALTIMORE SAN FRANCISCO Toiyabe Humboldt NWR r Mountain COLUMBUS DOVER Stanislaus NF Lake NF G LINCOLN CUMBERLAND Harpers 70 OAKLAND NF NP INDIANA 16 2 STOCKTON NAUVOO 70 Chesapeake Ferry Toiyabe NF BOULDER ANNAPOLIS Golden Gate NRA UTAH 29 and Ohio NHP DEL. S ILLINOIS INDIANAPOLIS C White Arapaho DAYTON Canal NHP George WASHINGTON, D.C. E 10 SAN JOSE S Fishlake NF Squaw Creek NWR Washington 8 Yosemite N 70 River DENVER 72 a NF SPRINGFIELD Wayne Memorial STAR-SPANGLED BANNER n NP I NF 74 WEST 18 1 C NF 4 ST. JOSEPH 57 PKWY NATIONAL HISTORIC TRAIL J Humboldt GRAND JUNCTION Shenandoah 19 o Devils Postpile Pike 25 Swan Lake NWR CINCINNATI a NF VIRGINIA NP 7 q NM NF ATCHISON 17 SALINAS u Colorado M Inyo NF 13 i 15 Arches 70 KANSAS CITY 65 79 George 81 POTOMAC HERITAGE n NM i o Sierra ss i CHARLOTTESVILLE 5 NP h MONTEREY NF Gunnison COLORADO o O Washington NATIONAL SCENIC TRAIL u CHARLESTON T Two Rivers NWR Ohio River NF NF ri L 64 Pinnacles NM Kings R WILLIAMSBURG Los KANSAS TOPEKA Islands NWR A Canyon A L San 70 71 Padres I INDEPENDENCE N RICHMOND 12 3 NP I Isabel LAWRENCE CALIFORNIA L A Curecanti FRANKFORT 64 20 11 NF Dixie NF Big Muddy NWR 64 IO 6 R NRA ST. LOUIS 5 Sequoia T NF A Jefferson T 15 Glen Canyon rka IL Jefferson National NF A VIRGINIA NP C ns TRA JEFFERSON CITY 64 N Death RI ST. GEORGE NRA as SANTA C 55 Expansion MEM VIRGINIA 95 9 BEACH O Rio FE N RI Valley T San Grande ATIO O ROANOKE J S N T NORFOLK Toiyabe I Juan Great Sand Dunes Bent’s Old AL HIS U NP H NF Fort Larned 135 MISSOURI NF L NF NP Fort NHS 35 See inset map below SAN LUIS A A KENTUCKY Sequoia N NHS Shawnee N Y OBISPO N O Kaibab NF TI LAS VEGAS DURANGO Comanche Cypress NF A W NA I K H NF NG Creek 77 S H P 85 I Guadalupe-Nipomo Dunes Grand Canyon NWR 75 ABINGDON C N A e NWR A NP A g P R Mark Twain d B Los L i WINSTON- S I SPRINGFIELD R A Lake Mead do Z NF A Padres lora TOR P ELKIN SALEM O S IC ELIZABETHTON U D NRA Co Cimarron Ozark Cavefish NWR HI T P e RALEIGH NF L L RA A lu T N Carson NF NG NA I 24 JOHNSON CITY B IS O Kaibab O L 40 A Maxwell NWR I Cherokee TA AT NF N NF NORTH CAROLINA 44 S MORGANTON SANTA BARBARA AR TENNESSEE Angeles TE 81 CAPTAIN JOHN SMITH CHESAPEAKE D Mojave F N Fort Union O E NF N PRES L Kiowa Pea Ridge NMP AIL NASHVILLE Great Smoky OVERMOUNTAIN VICTORY NATIONAL HISTORIC TRAIL A I Santa Fe NM R A NG T W Tennessee NWR Mountains NP Pisgah NATIONAL HISTORIC TRAIL A FLAGSTAFF T R NF Santa Fe MURFREESBORO NF N T h Santa Monica Z I it Stones River A O NF FAYETTEVILLE e CHARLOTTE 83 95 Mountains NRA Walnut Canyon NM C SANTA FE an Ozark NB Cherokee LOS N N I di Chickasaw NWR N.J.
Recommended publications
  • 82 STAT. ] PUBLIC LAW 90-543-OCT. 2, 1968 919 Public
    82 STAT. ] PUBLIC LAW 90-543-OCT. 2, 1968 919 Public Law 90-543 AN ACT October 2, 1968 To establish a national trails system, and for other purposes. 1^^- ^^'^l Be it enacted hy the Senate and House of Refresentatives of the National Trails United States of America in Congress assembled, System Act. SHORT TITLE SECTION 1. This Act may be cited as the "National Trails System Act". STATEMENT OF POLICY SEC. 2. (a) In order to provide for the ever-increasing outdoor rec­ reation needs of an expanding population and in order to promote public access to, travel within, and enjoyment and appreciation of the open-air, outdoor areas of the Nation, trails should be established (i) primarily, near the urban areas of the Nation, and (ii) secondarily, within established scenic areas more remotely located. (b) the purpose of this Act is to provide the means for attaining these objectives by instituting a national system of recreation and scenic trails, by designating the Appalachian Trail and the Pacific Crest Trail as the initial components of that system, and by prescrib­ ing the methods by which, and standards according to which, addi­ tional components may be added to the system. NATIONAL TRAILS SYSTEM SEC. 3. The national system of trails shall l)e composed of— (a) National recreation trails, established as provided in section 4 of this Act, which will provide a variety of outd(M)r recreation uses in or reasonably accessible to urban areas. (b) National scenic trails, established as provided in section 5 of this Act, which will be extended trails so located as to provide for maximum outdoor recreation potential and for the conservation and enjoyment of the nationally significant scenic, historic, natu­ ral, or cultural qualities of the areas through which such trails may pass.
    [Show full text]
  • Continental Divide National Scenic Trail Management Tool: Managing Recreational Uses April 5, 2019
    Continental Divide National Scenic Trail Management Tool: Managing Recreational Uses April 5, 2019 Purpose This document serves as a tool to promote consistent management of recreational uses on the congressionally-designated Continental Divide National Scenic Trail (CDT). This is a living document that will be reviewed annually to determine if updates are needed based on lessons learned from implementation. This document contains: 1. Guiding Principles for managing recreational uses on the CDT, 2. A table of considerations for managing authorized special uses on the CDT (Table 1), and 3. A table to assist line officers when making decisions on whether to allow mechanized use, such as bicycle use, on a newly constructed or relocated CDT segment1 (Table 2). Scope of this Document This document generally applies to CDT segments where mechanized use and/or recreation special uses are not expressly prohibited by law or policy.2 This document does not create new policy, rather, it clarifies CDT management within existing law and policy, and is consistent with the core values outlined in the Forest Service’s National Strategy for a Sustainable Trail System (Trails Strategy).3 Background National Scenic Trails are to be “so located as to provide for maximum outdoor recreation potential and for the conservation and enjoyment of the nationally significant scenic, historic, natural, or cultural qualities of the areas through which such trails may pass” (16 U.S.C. 1242(a)(2)). 4 The CDT’s nature and purposes are “to provide high-quality, scenic and primitive hiking and horseback riding opportunities and to conserve the natural, historic and cultural resources along the CDNST corridor” (2009 CDT Comprehensive Plan).
    [Show full text]
  • Electricity Transmission, Pipelines, and National Trails. an Analysis Of
    About Argonne National Laboratory Argonne is a U.S. Department of Energy laboratory managed by UChicago Argonne, LLC under contract DE-AC02-06CH11357. The Laboratory’s main facility is outside Chicago, at 9700 South Cass Avenue, Argonne, Illinois 60439. For information about Argonne and its pioneering science and technology programs, see www.anl.gov. DOCUMENT AVAILABILITY Online Access: U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) reports produced after 1991 and a growing number of pre-1991 documents are available free via DOE’s SciTech Connect (http://www.osti.gov/scitech/) Reports not in digital format may be purchased by the public from the National Technical Information Service (NTIS): U.S. Department of Commerce National Technical Information Service 5301 Shawnee Rd Alexandra, VA 22312 www.ntis.gov Phone: (800) 553-NTIS (6847) or (703) 605-6000 Fax: (703) 605-6900 Email: [email protected] Reports not in digital format are available to DOE and DOE contractors from the Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI): U.S. Department of Energy Office of Scientific and Technical Information P.O. Box 62 Oak Ridge, TN 37831-0062 www.osti.gov Phone: (865) 576-8401 Fax: (865) 576-5728 Email: [email protected] Disclaimer This report was prepared as an account of work sponsored by an agency of the United States Government. Neither the United States Government nor any agency thereof, nor UChicago Argonne, LLC, nor any of their employees or officers, makes any warranty, express or implied, or assumes any legal liability or responsibility for the accuracy, completeness, or usefulness of any information, apparatus, product, or process disclosed, or represents that its use would not infringe privately owned rights.
    [Show full text]
  • Wyoming National Historic Trails Interpretive Center Assistance 112 Stat
    PUBLIC LAW 105±290ÐOCT. 27, 1998 WYOMING NATIONAL HISTORIC TRAILS INTERPRETIVE CENTER ASSISTANCE 112 STAT. 2782 PUBLIC LAW 105±290ÐOCT. 27, 1998 Public Law 105±290 105th Congress An Act Oct. 27, 1998 To authorize the Secretary of the Interior to provide assistance to the National [H.R. 2186] Historic Trails Interpretive Center in Casper, Wyoming. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of 16 USC 1244 the United States of America in Congress assembled, note. SECTION 1. FINDINGS AND PURPOSES. (a) FINDINGS.ÐThe Congress finds and declares the following: (1) The City of Casper, Wyoming, is nationally significant as the only geographic location in the western United States where four congressionally recognized historic trails (the Oregon Trail, the Mormon Trail, the California Trail, and the Pony Express Trail), the Bridger Trail, the Bozeman Trail, and many Indian routes converged. (2) The historic trails that passed through the Casper area are a distinctive part of the national character and possess important historical and cultural values representing themes of migration, settlement, transportation, and commerce that shaped the landscape of the West. (3) The Bureau of Land Management has not yet estab- lished a historic trails interpretive center in Wyoming or in any adjacent State to educate and focus national attention on the history of the mid-19th century immigrant trails that crossed public lands in the Intermountain West. (4) At the invitation of the Bureau of Land Management, the City of Casper and the National Historic Trails Foundation, Inc. (a nonprofit corporation established under the laws of the State of Wyoming) entered into a memorandum of under- standing in 1992, and have since signed an assistance agree- ment in 1993 and a cooperative agreement in 1997, to create, manage, and sustain a National Historic Trails Interpretive Center to be located in Casper, Wyoming, to professionally interpret the historic trails in the Casper area for the benefit of the public.
    [Show full text]
  • The 2009 Continental Divide National Scenic Trail Comprehensive Plan
    The 2009 Continental Divide National Scenic Trail Comprehensive Plan Table of Contents CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTION ......................................................................................................................................... 1 A. Comprehensive Plan Amendment .................................................................................................... 1 B. History and Administration ............................................................................................................... 1 C. Purpose of the Comprehensive Plan ................................................................................................. 2 II. PURPOSE OF THE CONTINENTAL DIVIDE NATIONAL SCENIC TRAIL ......................................................... 3 A. Nature and Purposes Description ..................................................................................................... 3 B. Description of the Route ................................................................................................................... 4 III. PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT PROCESSES .......................................................................................... 4 A. Bureau of Outdoor Recreation Study Report .................................................................................... 4 B. Agency Responsibilities ..................................................................................................................... 5 C. National Environmental Policy Act Requirements ...........................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Continental Divide National Scenic Trail
    Continental Divide National Scenic Trail The Continental Divide Scenic Trail (CDNST) was established by congress under the National Trails System Act of 1968. The trail will extend 3,100 miles, in its entirety, from Canada to Mexico. This northern-most portion follows the backbone of the Rocky Mountains for 795 miles through Montana and Idaho. It passes through some of our nation's most spectacular scenery--Glacier National Park, ten national forests with wildernesses such as the Bob Marshall and Anaconda Pintler, several Bureau of Land Management Resource Areas, State lands and short segments of private lands. This segment begins at the U.S./Canada border between Glacier and Waterton Lakes National Parks, following a route near the divide and through the Blackfeet Indian Reservation to Marias Pass. Southward the trail passes through the Bob Marshall and Scapegoat Wildernesses, skirting the Chinese Wall. After crossing Rogers and MacDonald Passes, it continues through historic mining districts and ghost towns. West of Anaconda the trail traverses the length of the Anaconda-Pintler Wilderness, reaching the Montana-Idaho border near Lost Trail Pass on the 1805 route of Lewis and Clark. Winding through the Bitterroot Range, the trail passes high above the Big Hole National Battlefield, scene of conflict between the Nez Perce Tribe and the U.S. Army in 1877, and on to Lemhi Pass, headwaters of the Missouri River and marked by the Sacajawea Memorial. Continuing on through the Bitterroots, it crosses Monida Pass and winds along the crest of the Centennial Mountains above Red Rock Lakes National Wildlife Refuge. Staying near the divide, the trail crosses Raynolds and Targhee Passes with views of Henry's Lake to the south and Hebgen Lake to the north, before continuing on to the end of this segment of the CDNST, at the western boundary of Yellowstone National Park.
    [Show full text]
  • National Trails Map3
    Note: Abbreviations at right National Park System National Forest System Fish and Wildlife Service Bureau of Land Management are for federal lands shown on this map. In many places, Mount Baker exact trail locations have not NF yet been determined. Portions of the trails indicated on this MEM Memorial NP National Park NF National Forest NWR National Wildlife Refuge North Okanogan NB National Battlefield N PRES National Preserve NG National Grassland Cascades NF map may not be accessible for NP public use. Please check with NHP National Historical Park NRA National Recreation Area Lake Chelan individual trail clubs and man- NHS National Historic Site NRR National Recreational River Only national park, forest areas, and NRA Trail ends 14 miles north aging offices for the latest NL National Lakeshore N RES National Reserve in Waterton, Alberta wildlife refuges that relate to the SEATTLE available trail locations. NM National Monument NS National Seashore National Trails System are shown. Wenatchee N MEM National Memorial NSR National Scenic Riverway NF Glacier NMP National Military Park PKWY Parkway Map revised September 2007. NP OLYMPIA S E Mount Rainier WASHINGTON Willapa NWR Lake of T NP Snoqualmie the Woods A C A Lewis and Clark Julia Butler Bear Paw ANADA NF Flathead D Battlefield T NHP Hansen NWR 90 NF Lewis UNI A S Gifford TED Lolo and Benton STATES Lewis and Clark NWR Pinchot NF NF N Lake Fort Union D 82 Clark Ul Bend Ridgefield Fort Vancouver NHS A McNary NWR NF NWR Missouri Trading Post E Three Arch NWR Steigerwald Lake NWR NWR NHS C T Rocks NWR Franz Lake NWR Nez Perce GREAT FALLS I PORTLAND Umatilla NHP MISSOULA Columbi NWR Clearwater NORTH DAKOTA N OREGON CITY a NF Pierce Charles M.
    [Show full text]
  • The Potomac Heritage National Scenic Trail in Virginia February 2006 Acknowledgements
    A Development and Managment Plan For The Potomac Heritage National Scenic Trail In Virginia February 2006 Acknowledgements The authors of this report gratefully acknowledge participation by and contributions from the ad hoc Virginia Potomac Heritage Trail Public Land Managers Committee in the production of this plan. This document is a collaborative effort initiated in summer 2005 in response to the growing awareness that agencies and partners responsible for planning, constructing and maintaining segments of the Potomac Heritage National Scenic Trail in Virginia would benefit from guidelines that fostered continuity and consistency in the development and management of Trail segments. Members of the Committee included: Tim Baroody, Stafford County Department of Economic Development Claire Blanchard, Northern Virginia Regional Park Authority David Brickley, East Coast Greenway Alliance Pamela Cressey, Ph.D., Alexandria Archeology, City of Alexandria Jerry Davis, Northern Neck Planning District Commission John Davy, Virginia Department of Conservation & Recreation Deborah Feldman, George Washington Memorial Parkway, National Park Service Paul Gilbert, Northern Virginia Regional Park Authority Todd Hafner, Northern Virginia Regional Park Authority Jim Klackowicz, Virginia Department of Conservation & Recreation, Division of State Parks Sheng Leu, Fairfax County Department of Planning and Zoning George Liffert, Prince William Forest Park, National Park Service Judy Lo, Department of Parks, Recreation and Cultural Affairs, City of Alexandria
    [Show full text]
  • Basic Facts About the Oregon Trail
    Basic Facts About the Oregon Trail The Oregon Trail was a wagon road stretching 2170 miles from Missouri to Oregon's Willamette Valley. It was not a road in any modern sense, only parallel ruts leading across endless prairie, sagebrush desert, and mountains. From the 1840s through the 1880s, thousands trekked westward, carrying only a few belonging and supplies for the journey, and settling on the western frontier, forever changing the American West. The first Europeans and Euro-Americans to see the far west were mountain men, trappers, overland explorers, and maritime explorers of the fur trade era. Maps and reports published information about landscapes and resources. Fur trading posts began to spring up throughout the interior. John Jacob Astor of the American Fur Company established Astoria on the west coast in 1811, and the next year sent Robert Stuart eastward with dispatches. Weaving together a series of Indian trails, Stuart found South Pass through the Rockies, a route with an elevation of 7000 feet and easy grades which allowed passage through this barrier. Stuart's route would ultimately become the Oregon Trail. National Historic Oregon Trail Interpretive Center | 541-523-1843 | oregontrail.blm.gov As frontiersman and fur traders from Canada and the United States began to populate the west, the network of trading posts and small settlements set up a political debate between England and the US on claims to land in the Pacific Northwest in the 1830s and 1840s. Increasing American settlers would cement US claims to the territory, in the mind of political leaders, who encouraged westward migration.
    [Show full text]
  • CDNST Legislative History and Planning Guidance
    Continental Divide National Scenic Trail Legislative History and Planning Guidance Legislation, Policy, and Direction Regarding National Scenic Trails The National Trails System Act, P.L. 90-543, was passed by Congress on October 2, 1968. It established policies and procedures for a nationwide system of trails including National Scenic Trails. The Appalachian Trail and the Pacific Crest Trail were designated as the nation's first National Scenic Trails. The National Parks and Recreation Act of 1978 established the Continental Divide National Scenic Trail (CDNST) (Pub. L. No. 95-625, 92 Stat. 3467), which amended the National Trails System Act of 1968 (16 U.S.C. 1241-1251). The Chief of the Forest Service adopted the 1976 CDNST Study Report and 1977 CDNST Final Environmental Statement on August 5, 1981 (46 FR 39867) pursuant to the National Trails System Act (16 U.S.C. 1244(b)). In addition, in 2009 the Chief amended the 1985 CDNST Comprehensive Plan and issued conforming FSM 2353.4 policy—see http://www.fs.fed.us/cdt. General National Scenic and Historic Trail information is found at: http://www.fs.fed.us/cdt/protected_areas/nat_trails.shtml. The National Trails System Act describes National Scenic Trails as, “extended trails so located as to provide for maximum outdoor recreation potential and for the conservation and enjoyment of the nationally significant scenic, historic, natural, or cultural qualities of the areas through which such trails may pass, (Sec. 3(b)). The Act goes on, in the section entitled Administration and Development to state, “The appropriate Secretary shall select the rights-of-way for national scenic and national historic trails and shall publish notice in the Federal Register, together with appropriate maps or descriptions… Development and management of each segment of the National Trails System shall be designed to harmonize with and complement any established multiple-use plans for the specific area in order to insure continued maximum benefits from the land.” House Report No.
    [Show full text]
  • The National Trails System Act (P.L
    National Trails System: National Trails System Act Page 1 of 37 THE NATIONAL TRAILS SYSTEM ACT (P.L. 90-543, as amended through P.L. 111-11, March 30, 2009) (also found in United States Code, Volume 16, Sections 1241-1251) AN ACT To establish a national trails system, and for other purposes. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, SHORT TITLE SECTION l. This Act may be cited as the "National Trails System Act". STATEMENT OF POLICY SEC. 2. [16USC1241] (a) In order to provide for the ever-increasing outdoor recreation needs of an expanding population and in order to promote the preservation of, public access to, travel within, and enjoyment and appreciation of the open-air, outdoor areas and historic resources of the Nation, trails should be established (i) primarily, near the urban areas of the Nation, and (ii) secondarily, within scenic areas and along historic travel routes of the Nation which are often more remotely located. (b) The purpose of this Act is to provide the means for attaining these objectives by instituting a national system of recreation, scenic and historic trails, by designating the Appalachian Trail and the Pacific Crest Trail as the initial components of that system, and by prescribing the methods by which, and standards according to which, additional components may be added to the system. (c) The Congress recognizes the valuable contributions that volunteers and private, nonprofit trail groups have made to the development and maintenance of the Nation's trails.
    [Show full text]
  • The National Trails System Act (Pl 90-543)
    THE NATIONAL TRAILS SYSTEM ACT (P.L. 90-543) (16 U.S.C. 1241 et. seq.) as amended through P.L. 103-145, November 17, 1993 AN ACT To establish a national trails system, and for other purposes. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, SEC 1. SHORT TITLE This Act may be cited as the "National Trails System Act". SEC 2. STATEMENT OF POLICY (a) In order to provide for the ever-increasing outdoor recreation needs of an expanding population and in order to promote the preservation of, public access to, travel within, and enjoyment and appreciation of the open-air, outdoor areas and historic resources of the Nation, trails should be established (i) primarily, near the urban areas of the Nation, and (ii) secondarily, within scenic areas and along historic travel routes of the Nation which are often more remotely located. (b) The purpose of this Act is to provide the means for attaining these objectives by instituting a national system of recreation, scenic and historic trails, by designating the Appalachian Trail and the Pacific Crest Trail as the initial components of that system, and by prescribing the methods by which, and standards according to which, additional components may be added to the system. (c) The Congress recognizes the valuable contributions that volunteers and private, nonprofit trail groups have made to the development and maintenance of the Nation's trails. In recognition of these contributions, it is further the purpose of this Act to encourage and assist volunteer citizen involvement in the planning, development, maintenance, and management, where appropriate, of trails.
    [Show full text]