According to a new report published by Jim McNeely, one could say, technically, that Earl Shaffer did not complete the first thru-hike of the Appalachian Trail.
According to McNeely's research, Shaffer bypassed at least 170 miles of the trail during his historic 1948 hike. Most of those miles were the result of taking shortcuts on country roads, mainly due to not being able to find poorly marked sections of the trail at that time.
On two occasions Shaffer accepted short rides in cars - of 5.5 miles and 4.8 miles.
Jim McNeely, a lawyer and avid hiker, focussed his research on the section of Appalachian Trail between Mount Oglethorpe in Georgia (which was the southern terminus of the trail in 1948) and Rockfish Gap in Virginia. His report is based on Shaffer's daily journal, his report to the ATC in 1948 that led to his recognition as the first thru-hiker, and his 1983 book, "Walking With Spring."
In his conclusions, McNeely makes his final arguments:
Since Shaffer voluntarily skipped such a substantial portion of the AT in the South, and particularly in Virginia, in 1948, his hike can be accepted as a thru-hike only by acceptance of his attitude that he hiked an “equivalent” hike to one actually following the AT. What constitutes such an “equivalent” hike is a matter of community standards and ATC policy, and is therefore beyond the scope of this Report.
He also points out that:
Given the new information now available about the true nature of Shaffer’s 1948 hike, should the question of certification of that hike as the first thru-hike be revisited? From Shaffer’s own point of view, revisiting the question of a previously listed “high-profile” thru-hike would seem entirely appropriate. In fact, Shaffer personally requested that the ATC remove the name of a previously listed thru-hiker whose hike is of considerable public interest. According to December 2000 ATC correspondence found in the NMAH Shaffer collection, Shaffer sought removal of the name of Max Gordon from the ATC “2,000-miler registry” once and, when the ATC Board of Managers refused to do so, renewed his request a second time. The Board refused that second request as well. By that precedent, Shaffer’s 1948 hike could appropriately be subject to the same reexamination that he requested of the 1936 Gordon hike.
This brings up another interesting piece of Appalachian Trail history that I had never heard of. Six Boy Scouts from the New York City area, including Max Gordon, purportedly hiked the A.T. in 1936, a year before the Appalachian Trail was completed as one continuos, unbroken footpath. However, this story was recalled late in life, and is obviously disputed, but is no less an interesting tale.
My take is that, although Myron Avery and the ATC knew that Shaffer had by-passed several miles of the trail, they decided to recognize his thru-hike as the first in order to garner publicity and support for the trail. I have nothing to really back that up, but rather offer it up as a possibility for their decision.
Jeff
HikingintheSmokys.com
Archive for the ‘Earl Shaffer’ Category
Was Earl Shaffer the first person to thru-hike the Appalachian Trail?
Sunday, July 3rd, 2011Appalachian Trail Hall of Fame inducts its first class
Tuesday, June 21st, 2011
The Appalachian Trail Hall of Fame inducted its first class of honorees last Friday night, with trail founder Benton MacKaye and trail builder Myron H. Avery leading the inaugural group of six inductees.
Rounding out the list are Earl Shaffer, the first person to report an end-to-end thru-hike of the trail; Gene Espy, the second person to thru-hike the trail; Arthur Perkins, the first person to begin making MacKaye's dream a reality; and Ed Garvey, a trail maintainer and hiker whose seminal book on his 1970 northbound hike helped popularize thru-hiking in the 1970s.
Of the six, only Espy is still alive and in Boiling Springs, PA to receive the award in person, traveling up from his native Georgia to not only attend the ceremony but also to make his first visit to the Appalachian Trail Museum.
"The hike (in 1951) meant a lot to me but my appreciation goes to all the maintainers over these years and the people of the A.T. museum who made this award possible," a brief and humble Espy said as he received his award.
The induction banquet took place at Allenberry Resort, a few miles from the A.T. Museum in Pine Grove Furnace State Park, where the Hall of Fame will be housed.
Each inductee was presented with a beautifully handcarved walking stick made by John Bodet, aka "Bodacious," that will serve as the Hall of Fame's rendition of an Oscar statuette. Each honoree or his representative received a stick engraved with the person's name. And one additional walking stick was created with all of their names engraved -- that stick will be housed in the Museum.
To read more about the ceremony, as well as short biographies on each of the inductees, please click here.
Jeff
HikingintheSmokys.com
Rounding out the list are Earl Shaffer, the first person to report an end-to-end thru-hike of the trail; Gene Espy, the second person to thru-hike the trail; Arthur Perkins, the first person to begin making MacKaye's dream a reality; and Ed Garvey, a trail maintainer and hiker whose seminal book on his 1970 northbound hike helped popularize thru-hiking in the 1970s.
Of the six, only Espy is still alive and in Boiling Springs, PA to receive the award in person, traveling up from his native Georgia to not only attend the ceremony but also to make his first visit to the Appalachian Trail Museum.
"The hike (in 1951) meant a lot to me but my appreciation goes to all the maintainers over these years and the people of the A.T. museum who made this award possible," a brief and humble Espy said as he received his award.
The induction banquet took place at Allenberry Resort, a few miles from the A.T. Museum in Pine Grove Furnace State Park, where the Hall of Fame will be housed.
Each inductee was presented with a beautifully handcarved walking stick made by John Bodet, aka "Bodacious," that will serve as the Hall of Fame's rendition of an Oscar statuette. Each honoree or his representative received a stick engraved with the person's name. And one additional walking stick was created with all of their names engraved -- that stick will be housed in the Museum.
To read more about the ceremony, as well as short biographies on each of the inductees, please click here.
Jeff
HikingintheSmokys.com
Earl Shaffer’s Journal
Sunday, November 21st, 2010
The other day I was surfing the internet looking for any new and interesting outdoor blogs, and came across a website called Trail Journals. Actually I landed on Earl Shaffer's 1965 Appalachian Trail Journal.
Shaffer is best known for being the first person to complete the entire length of the Appalachian Trail in 1948 - taking him 124 days. Interestingly, the Appalachian Trail Conference thought his claim of hiking the entire Georgia-to-Maine trail was fraudulent. Eventually the ATC came around on his claim. His trek had the effect of raising public awareness of the trail, especially after he published a memoir of his experiences; Walking With Spring.
In 1965 Shaffer became the first person to thru-hike the trail in both directions. On this occasion, at the age of 46, he completed his southbound hike in just 99 days. Earl kept a daily journal during this hike which Trail Journals has re-produced in electronic format, and is the first time it's ever appeared in print.
Shaffer would go on to hike the A.T. on a third occasion. In 1998, at the age of 79, he completed the trail on the 50th anniversary of his first thru-hike. This hike made him the oldest person, at that time, to ever thru-hike the Appalachian Trail (that record has since been broken). The story of this journey is told in the book, "The Appalachian Trail, Calling Me Back to the Hills."
For more information on the rich life of Earl Shaffer you can click here.
Jeff
HikingintheSmokys.com
Shaffer is best known for being the first person to complete the entire length of the Appalachian Trail in 1948 - taking him 124 days. Interestingly, the Appalachian Trail Conference thought his claim of hiking the entire Georgia-to-Maine trail was fraudulent. Eventually the ATC came around on his claim. His trek had the effect of raising public awareness of the trail, especially after he published a memoir of his experiences; Walking With Spring.
In 1965 Shaffer became the first person to thru-hike the trail in both directions. On this occasion, at the age of 46, he completed his southbound hike in just 99 days. Earl kept a daily journal during this hike which Trail Journals has re-produced in electronic format, and is the first time it's ever appeared in print.
Shaffer would go on to hike the A.T. on a third occasion. In 1998, at the age of 79, he completed the trail on the 50th anniversary of his first thru-hike. This hike made him the oldest person, at that time, to ever thru-hike the Appalachian Trail (that record has since been broken). The story of this journey is told in the book, "The Appalachian Trail, Calling Me Back to the Hills."
For more information on the rich life of Earl Shaffer you can click here.
Jeff
HikingintheSmokys.com
Appalachian Trail Museum set to open next June
Thursday, November 5th, 2009
Don't know if any of you have heard about this or not, but a new Appalachian Trail Museum will be opening next year, on National Trails Day, June 5, 2010. It will be located in a 200-year-old grist mill at Pine Grove Furnace State Park in Pennsylvania, roughly the mid-point along the 2175-mile, Maine-to-Georgia trail.
One of the really cool things about the new museum is that thru-hikers will become living history "interpreters". The museum will feature a "hikers' center," a lounge area of sorts, designed to promote interaction between visitors and hikers who stop in for breaks as they pass through the park.
The museum will also feature a hikers shelter built by Earl Shaffer, the first person to walk the entire trail in one season in 1948. The shelter, which stood atop Peters Mountain in Dauphin County, was painstakingly dismantled in order to to preserve it for the museum.
The museum will also have plenty of standard museum fare: artifacts and archives of
Appalachian Trail records and photos. Other attractions will include a children's discovery area, where kids can play with camping equipment.
There will also be a video wall that will display the Appalachian Trail Conservancy's archive of more than 12,000 photographs of hikers taken as they passed through the trail's headquarters in Harpers Ferry, W.Va. Those photos will also will be available on the museum website.
Speaking of the website, it looks like you'll be able to spend many days surfing the site once it's complete. The site is in the process of collecting the best short stories from the trail. The site has categorized the stories into areas of interest such as; origins of trail names, shelter life, unexplained happenings, trail magic, weather stories, ranger encounters and many others.
To build an Appalachian Trail historical timeline, the site is also in the process of assembling trail journals that are categorized by year going back to 1927.
The grist mill building, which is just a few steps off the trail, is within two miles of the Appalachian Trail's midpoint. The building is next to the Pine Grove General Store, home of the Half Gallon Club, a favorite stop for long-distance hikers where they try to eat an entire half gallon of ice cream in a single sitting.
You can visit the museum's website by clicking here.
Jeff
HikingintheSmokys.com Detailed information on trails in the Smoky Mountains; includes trail descriptions, key features, pictures, video, maps, elevation profiles, news, hiking gear store, and more.
One of the really cool things about the new museum is that thru-hikers will become living history "interpreters". The museum will feature a "hikers' center," a lounge area of sorts, designed to promote interaction between visitors and hikers who stop in for breaks as they pass through the park.
The museum will also feature a hikers shelter built by Earl Shaffer, the first person to walk the entire trail in one season in 1948. The shelter, which stood atop Peters Mountain in Dauphin County, was painstakingly dismantled in order to to preserve it for the museum.
The museum will also have plenty of standard museum fare: artifacts and archives of
Appalachian Trail records and photos. Other attractions will include a children's discovery area, where kids can play with camping equipment.There will also be a video wall that will display the Appalachian Trail Conservancy's archive of more than 12,000 photographs of hikers taken as they passed through the trail's headquarters in Harpers Ferry, W.Va. Those photos will also will be available on the museum website.
Speaking of the website, it looks like you'll be able to spend many days surfing the site once it's complete. The site is in the process of collecting the best short stories from the trail. The site has categorized the stories into areas of interest such as; origins of trail names, shelter life, unexplained happenings, trail magic, weather stories, ranger encounters and many others.
To build an Appalachian Trail historical timeline, the site is also in the process of assembling trail journals that are categorized by year going back to 1927.
The grist mill building, which is just a few steps off the trail, is within two miles of the Appalachian Trail's midpoint. The building is next to the Pine Grove General Store, home of the Half Gallon Club, a favorite stop for long-distance hikers where they try to eat an entire half gallon of ice cream in a single sitting.
You can visit the museum's website by clicking here.
Jeff
HikingintheSmokys.com Detailed information on trails in the Smoky Mountains; includes trail descriptions, key features, pictures, video, maps, elevation profiles, news, hiking gear store, and more.

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