Mason-Dixon Trail

The Mason-Dixon Trail is a 195.9-mile (315.3 km), blue-blazed footpath that connects the Appalachian Trail with the Brandywine Trail, passing through Gifford Pinchot State Park and White Clay Creek Preserve in Pennsylvania and White Clay Creek State Park in Delaware.[1] About 30 per cent of the "trail" is a route marked along public roads; the remainder is actual trail.[2]

Mason-Dixon Trail
Upper Mill Creek Falls as seen from the Mason-Dixon Trail in York County
Length193 mi (311 km)
LocationDelaware / Maryland / Pennsylvania, USA
DesignationNational Recreation Trail
TrailheadsSouth: Appalachian Trail at Whiskey Springs, Pennsylvania
North: Brandywine Creek at Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania
UseHiking

The trail starts near Mount Holly Springs at Whiskey Springs on the Appalachian Trail, in Cumberland County, Pennsylvania. It then heads east towards the Susquehanna River, passing through Gifford Pinchot State Park. The trail then follows the west bank of the Susquehanna south, first to Wrightsville, Pennsylvania, and then to Havre de Grace, Maryland. In the 65-mile (105 km) section between Wrightsville and Havre de Grace, it passes Long Level, Holtwood Dam, Susquehanna and Tidewater Canal Lock 12, Peach Bottom, and Conowingo Dam. The trail then crosses the Susquehanna River, passes through Elk Neck State Park, and crosses the border between Maryland and Delaware. After heading northeast through Newark, Delaware, the Mason-Dixon Trail ends at Chadds Ford on the banks of Brandywine Creek near the Delaware border.

A rough overview of the 200-mile-long Mason-Dixon Trail
"Mason Dixon Trail- York County" This 30 mile section follows across the lower Susquehanna River in Pennsylvania.

See also

References

  1. Backpacking Pennsylvania: 37 Great Hikes, Mitchell, Stackpole Books, 2004, ISBN 0-8117-3180-4
  2. Blue Ridge Outdoors


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