The Appalachian Trail Bill of 1978
Mar 18, 2018
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Mar 18, 2018
We are celebrating this year more than the arrival of spring (finally!). Every March 21, we celebrate the anniversary of a pivotal moment in the history of the Appalachian Trail (A.T.) and the Appalachian Trail Conservancy (ATC): the signing by President Jimmy Carter of H.R. 8803, “An Act to amend the National Trails System Act,” known throughout its overwhelmingly favorable legislative passage as the “Appalachian Trail Bill.”
That law, Carter said when signing it, “means that the federal government can now work more effectively with the states and citizens to provide the protection necessary to preserve — and ultimately enhance — this important part of our American heritage.” For the A.T., it put teeth in the 1968 act and pushed ATC into a new era.
In a note to ATC, Carter recalled that the A.T.’s future was “a constant concern as governor” and he made “frequent visits to the area.” As president, “I was eager to address the issue [and am] proud of the results.”
The A.T. bill:
Within ATC, having made the commitments implied within the legislative history, it meant a rebirth of sorts and new, focused energies and restructuring:
The chief sponsor of the bill was backpacking Rep. Goodloe E. Byron of Frederick, Maryland, just north of ATC’s headquarters in Harpers Ferry, West Virginia. The A.T. footbridge north out of Harpers Ferry across the Potomac River is named for him. Only 49 and a marathon runner, Byron died not quite seven months after the bill’s enactment — he suffered a heart attack while jogging on the C&O Canal along the Potomac.
Rep. Goodloe E. Byron and his family at Weverton Cliffs near Harpers Ferry, West Virginia.
Yet the force behind the bill Byron carried forward was strong, varied and persistent from 1974 on. The ATC membership meeting in Boone, North Carolina, that year nearly turned into a rage against Park Service inaction until the leader of the protest, author and Potomac A.T. Club leader Ed Garvey, was persuaded not to take it to a vote, to let the momentum gather in the shadows.
The sole NPS official assigned to the A.T. — and effectively the first NPS superintendent for the A.T. as a scenic trail — was Dave Richie, staff to an Interior advisory council that would be strengthened by the amendments. He started drafting plans and detailing the resources needed. The council, dominated by state-agency officials, energized itself and its home-state partners, such as Tom Deans of the Appalachian Mountain Club. Deans had a connection to New Hampshire Sen. John Durkin, who in 1977 called in a favor to get full Senate committee consideration and then took the bill to the Senate floor.
Just before the Carter administration took office in 1977, ATC Executive Director Paul Pritchard went over to the transition team and then to a job at Interior. His successor, Hank Lautz, developed key relationships with two congressional staffers who became lifelong assets to the A.T. project and came out for hikes between legislative tasks. Within a month, top officials began signaling their affection for the A.T.
Then, in March 1977, Carter appointed Robert L. Herbst assistant interior secretary for fish, wildlife and parks. Herbst almost immediately took up the A.T. cause with the fervor, and leadership skills, of a born-again true believer. Two months later, Herbst addressed the next ATC membership meeting with a “We will do this” stump speech. The next month, the bill was introduced by Byron.
The House overwhelmingly approved the A.T. bill with a vote of 409-12. Two months later — without objection — the bill passed the Senate in February 1978, ensuring protections for the Appalachian Trail that are clearly seen by visitors today.
For more history on the A.T., check out these books from the Ultimate A.T. Store®:
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