APPALACHIAN TRAIL
POTOMAC RIVER TO HIGH
ROCKS
JULY 9-12, 1994
The Appalachian Trail crosses the Potomac River on a 600
foot long bridge and enters Maryland on the C&O Canal
towpath. The C&O Canal began operations in the early 1930's and it was
used to by horses to pull barges up the river and transport goods from
Georgetown in Washington, D.C. to Harpers Ferry (which was at the edge of the
frontier at the time).
Weverton Cliffs sit above the C&O towpath and has
excellent views down to the Potomac River. A plaque is set in stone on the
cliffs for Congressman Goodloe E. Bryan who lived from 1928-1978 and was a great
supporter of the A.T.
Crampton Gap and the Gathland State Park are eight miles
north of the cliffs, and it was the site of heavy fighting during the Civil War
in 1862. Maryland has more Civil War history than any other state on the
A.T., and a stone memorial was erected here to honor newspaper correspondents
from the war.
The Appalachian Trail continues past the
small town of Boonsboro and onto the Washington Monument State Park which has
picnic tables, restrooms, and a public telephone. The park site surrounds
the first Washington Monument that was built in 1827 by the people of Boonsboro.
From here, the A.T. crosses Interstate 70 on a small
footbridge then ascends a ridge to the Annapolis Rocks, a cliff with excellent
views to Greenbrier Lake to the west. High Rock, near Pen Mar State Park,
is another site with spectacular views in the area and it is only a short
distance from the Maryland and Pennsylvania Border.