Appalachian Trail Histories

Menu

Description:

As the Appalachian Trail was being constructed in the 1920s and 1930s, the various trail clubs at first used their own methods for blazing the Trail's route. However, it soon became clear that a common approach was needed to help hikers know how to stay on the new trail's path. The executive committee of the Appalachian Trail Conservancy agreed at its 1929 meeting to an official insignia for the trail blazes utilizing the now familiar AT logo.

Trail clubs experimented with several different means of marking the Trail, with the ATC ultimately settling on a galvanized metal marker like the one seen here. Ultimately, the metal markers were replaced by the now familiar (and easier to maintain) white blaze. This particular marker was photographed on the Trail north of Troutville, Virginia in 2016.


Date:

07/23/2016

Creator:

Appalachian Trail Conservancy

Subject

Trail Signs

Contributor

Mills Kelly

Format

Color photograph

Source:

Mills Kelly

Rights

No known copyright

Citation

Appalachian Trail Conservancy, “Trail Marker (old version),” Appalachian Trail Histories, accessed November 22, 2024, https://appalachiantrailhistory.org/items/show/457.

Geolocation

ATSign.jpg