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The New England Trail is a proposal for an 800+ mile footpath which would run from Long Island Sound to Quebec.




The New England Trail would link together pre-existing hiking trails  and conservation land, creating a three-pronged greenway spanning the length of central New England, from the coasts of Rhode Island and Connecticut to Mount Megantic, Quebec. Along with the Appalachian Trail,  the Long Trail, and other  trail systems, it would serve as the "spine" for an eventual network of community greenways and wildlife corridors that would extend through nearly every community in the Northeast. Potential extensions of the route might include a trail through Canada to James Bay, creating and "Atlantic to the Arctic" greenway. 



~New

»Trail Tour (Revised with photos, information, and resource links)

»New Haven to West Rock proposed route

»Quinnipiac to Mattabessett Connector

»Monad-Pack connector

»Bog Mountain-Cardigan connector

»Cardigan-Squam connector

~News
--Long distance hiker Ryan Linn through-hiked most of the proposed route from the Canadian Border south to Long Island Sound--a fantastic accomplishment. See his trail journal here.

-- The proposed route is now hikeable from the Cohos Trail north to Mount Megantic in Quebec! See the Cohos Trail website for more details!

~Did you know. . .

  • More than 90% of the proposed 800 mile footway is already in place.
  • More than 90% of the proposed footway is on land that is accessible to the public;
  • More than 74% of the proposed footway is currently on land owned by the public or by conservation agencies.
  • Recreational trails spur land conservation efforts, increase the volunteer base of existing recreational groups and land stewardship organizations, preserve vital wildlife corridors and habitats, and help educate people about the environment. 
  • Long distance trails, such as The Appalachian Trail and The Long Trail, have long been powerful motivating forces in the milieu of open space conservation. 
  ~Want to know more ?

Mount Cardigan

New England Trail, New England National Scenic Trail, New England Trail greenway proposal  

 

Current Status of the Project 

This project exists as a proposal only.  Although it has prompted interest leading to increased land conservation and trail building, no concerted effort has been made to make the proposal a reality. 

The New England Trail project began in 1995 as an idea loosely based on Benton MacKaye's original proposal for the Appalachian Trail, and quickly grew into a preoccupation that consumed thousands of hours of my free time (click here for a detailed history of this project)

Benton MacKaye, 'the father of the Appalachian Trail', originally envisioned the A.T. as having many spur paths connecting communities and cities to the main spine of the Appalachian Trail. The New England Trail Proposal is an extension of that spirit--the skeletal beginnings of a greenway system that would eventually reach into every single community in New England.

I began to construct this prototype website in 2000. Clearly, the next step would be to present the project across New England. However, in 2000, due to the demands of life, I found I no longer had the free time or money to devote to this project.  Some of the statistics and information are out of date; in my spare time I continue to pluck away at it. 

It is my hope that the proposal, incomplete as it is, will continue to inspire others, whether or not the New England Trail itself is actualized. Ideas, suggestions, assistance, of the project are welcome; if anyone would like to take it off my hands, please let me know.

New news: In March 2007 the U.S. National Park Service began studying roughly 200 miles of the New England Trail route, independently of this proposal (but encompassing the Metacomet Trail, the Mattabesett Trail and the Metacomet- Monadnock Trail as does this proposal) as the New England National Scenic Trail. The NENST route differs slightly from the NET route in that it begins on Long Island Sound in Guilford Connecticut, not New Haven. I'm especially pleased to hear that the congressional bill has open-ended language in it that encourages possible extensions of the route in the future.  

   
Sincerely,

Paul-William Gagnon
Proposal Developer
pgagnon999@yahoo.com
508-885-4522

 

 

 



Proposal and web design; all pages & sub-pages © 2000 by Paul Gagnon
New England Trail
TM 2000 by Paul Gagnon