APPALACHIAN TRAIL
KEYS GAP (WV 9) TO HARPER'S FERRY
JUNE 11, 1996
West Virginia officially has only 2.3 miles of the
Appalachian Trail and part of it runs right past the Appalachian Trail Conference (ATC)
headquarters and visitor center at Harpers Ferry.
However, nearly twenty-three miles of the Trail hug the Virginia/West Virginia
border in both Northern and Central Virginia.
At Keys Gap, the Appalachian Trail follows
a wooded ridge
above the Shenandoah River and
passes
Jefferson Rock, an
overlook with impressive views of the Potomac and Shenandoah rivers.
It then climbs to a ridge that overlooks Harpers Ferry from the south via a blue
blazed side trail leading to Loudoun Heights. This site was an important
and strategic location during the Civil War and the Confederacy bombarded the
town from these heights during a siege lasting from September 13-15, 1862.
In Harpers Ferry, the Appalachian Trail passes the ATC
headquarters and continues along the river. There is a
Harpers
Ferry National Historical Park located here with
interpretive exhibits that tell the detailed history of the
area, including the destructive floods which have ravaged the community since
the 1700's.
The Trail leaves the State of West Virginia via a
footbridge over the Potomac River just past the historical park and joins
briefly with the C&O Canal Towpath in the State of Maryland.