| Wallkill Valley Rail Trail | |
|---|---|
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| Length | 23.7 miles (38.1 km)[3] |
| Location | Ulster County, New York[1] |
| Designation | National Recreation Trail, 2007[2] |
| Trailheads | |
| Use | Hiking, jogging, bike riding, horseback riding, and cross-country skiing |
| Sights | |
| Website | Wallkill Valley Land Trust |
| Trail map | |
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TheWallkill Valley Rail Trail is a 23.7-mile (38.1 km)rail trail andlinear park that runs along the formerWallkill Valley Railroad rail corridor inUlster County, New York, United States. It stretches fromGardiner throughNew Paltz,Rosendale andUlster to theKingston city line, just south of a demolished, concrete Conrail railroad bridge that was located on a team-track siding several blocks south of the also-demolished Kingston New York Central Railroad passenger station. The trail is separated from theWalden–Wallkill Rail Trail by two state prisons inShawangunk, though there have been plans to bypass these facilities and to connect the Wallkill Valley Rail Trail with other regional rail-trails. The northern section of the trail forms part of theEmpire State Trail.[5]
Plans to create the rail trail began as early as 1983, when New Paltz considered uses for the then-defunct Wallkill Valley rail corridor; the railroad had ceased regular traffic in 1977 and, by 1983, had begun to remove itstracks. In 1991, a localland trust, the Wallkill Valley Land Trust, purchased the 12-mile (19 km) section of the former rail corridor between New Paltz and Gardiner, and conveyed the New Paltz section to the town and village of New Paltz with permanent land protection agreements, held by the Wallkill Valley Land Trust. The trail was formally opened between New Paltz and Gardiner in 1993, though Gardiner did not purchase its section from the Wallkill Valley Land Trust until 2007: again, with a land protection agreement placed on it. The length of the trail was effectively doubled by an Ulster County unpaid-tax foreclosure land seizure, in 2009. The Wallkill Valley Land Trust, in partnership with Open Space Institute, acquired the additional property from Ulster County and began several capital campaigns to open-up public access. The extension included theRosendale trestle, a 940-foot (290 m) bridge acrossRondout Creek. There are several other bridges that carry the trail, though none are as long.
The trail serves hikers, joggers, bikers, horseback riders and cross-country skiers. It passes through several historic districts, such asHuguenot Street in New Paltz, and theBinnewater Historic District andSnyder Estate in Rosendale. The trail also traversesU.S. Route 44 (concurrent withState Route 55), and state routes299 and213. Several natural features are visible from clear points along the trail, such as theShawangunk Ridge to the west and thePlattekill Creek between New Paltz and Gardiner. The trail passes through dense vegetation, and is frequented by many types of animals andoverwintering birds.

Stretching 33 miles (53 km)[6] fromMontgomery to Kingston,[7] theWallkill Valley Railroad operated from 1866[8] until its last regular freight run on December 31, 1977.[9] During the 1980s, its owner,Conrail, began to salvage the former corridor's steel rails and sell-off sections of the rail bed.[10] State law mandated that, in such sales, offers must be made first to the state; then to the involved counties and municipalities.[11] The state bought a 1.4-mile (2.3 km) portion of rail bed betweenShawangunk and Gardiner in November 1985, for the construction of theShawangunk Correctional Facility in thehamlet of Wallkill.[12][13]
While Montgomery and Shawangunk purchased their sections of the railroad – 2.0 and 2.3 miles (3.2 and 3.7 km), respectively[14] – in 1985, eventually creating the 3.22-mile (5.18 km)Walden–Wallkill Rail Trail,[15][16] the towns of New Paltz, Gardiner and Rosendale initially declined to purchase their sections of the rail line.[17] The town of Shawangunk has been evaluating plans to bypass the state prison to connect the Walden–Wallkill and Wallkill Valley trails since 2004,[18] and such a connection was listed as a project in a 2008 county-wide transportation plan.[19] The latest proposal involves diverting the trail along Birch Road.[20] The Wallkill Valley Rail Trail was the seventeenth rail trail created in New York state,[21] and became aNational Recreation Trail in 2007.[2]

Converting the former corridor to a rail trail was first considered in a 1983 environmental report commissioned by the town of New Paltz.[22] The study considered repurposing the corridor as a road for cars, but determined that the right-of-way, "lend[ing] itself to multiple and simultaneous 'people-oriented' transit", was "ideally suited for use as a trail for hiking, strolling, running, cycling and cross-country skiing".[23] In 1988, New Paltz invited a local non-profit, the Wallkill Valley Land Trust, to acquire the portion of the rail line between New Paltz and Gardiner. The Wallkill Valley Land Trust in turn requested assistance fromThe Trust for Public Land, and the purchase was completed on January 18, 1991.[24]
While the town andvillage of New Paltz immediately purchased their sections from the Wallkill Valley Land Trust, with conservation easements on them – roughly 4 and 3 miles (6.4 and 4.8 km), respectively[25] – Gardiner did not purchase its 6-mile (9.7 km) section until much later; again, at that time, the Wallkill Valley Land Trust stewards held the conservation easements.[26][27] Portions of the New Paltz–Gardiner section were informally open since June, 1991, but the formal opening ceremony of the full 12.2-mile (19.6 km)[1] trail between New Paltz and Gardiner took place on October 9, 1993.[28]

The Gardiner section was in such a state of disrepair in 2004 that the Wallkill Valley Land Trust almost closed it.[29] Gardiner received a $100,000 grant from theNew York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation in December 2006,[30] and the purchase was completed in 2007.[27] The state provided an additional $5,000 to maintain the trail.[31]
Purchasing the section allowed Gardiner to fix the drainage problems that had deteriorated the surface of the trail and to ban the use of motor vehicles. Though the section was worth $307,300, the Wallkill Valley Land Trust sold it to Gardiner for $70,000.[29]
In 2009 and 2010, theTea Party movement held protests along the Gardiner section of the trail.[32] In November 2009, New Paltz received grants from the Greenway Conservancy, a state organization, to fund several rail trail–related projects. This included $17,750 to create a link[33] between the New Paltz section of the trail and theHudson Valley Rail Trail in nearbyLloyd,[34] which was in turn being extended eastward to thePoughkeepsie Bridge;[33] the connection with the bridge was completed in October 2010.[35] The Wallkill Valley Railroad had considered such a connection after the bridge opened in 1889, but never built one.[36] The grants also included $7,000 to create 400 feet (120 m) ofADA-accessible trail, to connect the parking area of a local park, named afterSojourner Truth, with the rail trail.[33] The town had intended to connect the parking area with the trail since the late 1990s, but concerns over traffic, as well as state requirements, had added to the time and cost of the path; it was completed by June, 2010.[37][38] The connections are part of a county-wide plan to create a bicycle path alongNY 299, to link regional rail trails.[19]

The Rosendale portion of the rail bed runs 11.5 miles (18.5 km) from Rosendale through Ulster to Kingston and contains the 940-foot-long (290 m)Rosendale trestle.[3][39] The trestle rises 150 feet (46 m) aboveRondout Creek andState Route 213,[40] and also spans the formerDelaware and Hudson Canal.[41] At the time of its construction it was the highestspan bridge in the United States.[42]
Conrail sold the Rosendale section, including the bridge, in 1986 to a private area businessman, John E. Rahl, for one dollar. Rahl maintained that the purchase granted him the right to "restore rail service on the whole Wallkill line",[25] and to joint ownership of Conrail.[43] Between 1989 and 1991, Rahl installed planking and guard rails on the southern half of the bridge,[44] which was then opened to the public.[28] He intended to allowbungee jumping off the bridge,[25][39] and did so until a January, 1992 court order held that it violated zoning laws.[45][46] Douglas Hase, anentrepreneur who had run both bungee jumping andhot air ballooning companies,[47] tried unsuccessfully in 2003 and 2004 to get avariance for such a venture.[44][46][48]

After Rahl failed to pay $13,716 in property taxes over a period of three years,[39] Ulster County foreclosed on the 63.34-acre (25.63 ha) property on April 15, 2009. The Wallkill Valley Land Trust andOpen Space Institute placed a bid on the land parcels comprising the Rosendale section on April 22, 2009,[49] and agreed to pay all outstanding taxes before receiving full ownership on July 8, 2009,[50] with the intention of adding it to the Wallkill Valley Rail Trail.[51] Following an engineering survey, the bridge was closed to the public in June 2009, for repairs.[52][53] Renovations were completed in 2013, allowing for the bridge to be opened to the public.
Canopy Development, agreen development company fromNorthampton, Massachusetts,[54] owns a portion of the former rail bed in Rosendale. It has agreed to establish aright-of-way,[55] rerouting the trail to allow public access.[56] Another obstruction between Rosendale and Ulster is a private swimming pool, which will be bypassed.[57] TheMohonk Preserve and Open Space Conservancy were given a $20,000 state grant in March 2011, to maintain the portion of the trail by Kingston.[58] By the end of summer, 2013, the last outstanding trail segment along the Rosendale-Kingston extension was opened to the public, completing the entire 23.7-mile rail trail.[4]
A regional business association has proposed a link between the trail, in Rosendale, and a series of regional rail trails. The proposal would create a 35-mile (56 km) network of rail trails across the towns ofMarbletown,Rochester, andWawarsing.[59] Several involved towns have been working toward accomplishing such a connection.[60]

The trail begins at Denniston Road, in the southern part of thetown of Gardiner.[61] Movement farther south is impossible, because the corridor south of Denniston Road is fenced off bybarbed wire.[62] After roughly1+1⁄2 miles (2.4 km), it crosses Sand Hill Road before approaching thehamlet of Gardiner at the2+1⁄2-mile (4.0 km) mark. Once in the hamlet, the trail intersectsU.S. Route 44 (concurrent withState Route 55).[61]
Located within the hamlet are a defunct, former dairycreamery and the site of the former Gardiner railroad station.[63] Built in 1881[64] and opened the following year, the creamery was one of the dairies that transported its products toNew York City by way of the Wallkill Valley Railroad.[63] It was originally the property of theBorden family, but closed in the 1920s,[64] and has since been renovated as an apartment complex.[29] The former Gardiner railroad station ceased operations when the rail line closed. It became a sporting goods store by 1981,[65] a video store by the early 1990s,[66] and an antique store by 1995.[67] The station burned down on October 10, 2002.[66]
The trail crosses Phillies Bridge Road 1 mile (1.6 km) north of the hamlet, with anoverpass carrying the trail over Forest Glen Road3⁄4 mile (1.2 km) farther. The road overlies theCatskill Aqueduct andDelaware Aqueduct.[68] Originally supported by trestles and a stone foundation, the overpass was rebuilt in 1910 during the construction of the Catskill Aqueduct. The reconstruction removed the trestles and added a concrete foundation. Though a local legend holds that the bridge was originally built in response to the death of a prominent woman at the Forest Glen railroad crossing, it is more likely that it was built to maintain the rail line at a consistent grade.[69] A little over1⁄10 mile (0.16 km) from the bridge is the site of the former Forest Glen station.[70] The trail crosses Bridge Creek Road and Old Ford Road about1⁄4 and 1 mile (0.40 and 1.61 km) from the Forest Glen bridge, respectively, before entering thetown of New Paltz.[68]

Shortly after entering New Paltz, the trail crosses a bridge overPlattekill Creek.[68] Themasonry for the bridge was completed by late June 1870,[71] andtrestle work was done by July.[72] Originally made of wood, the bridge was accidentally set on fire in 1880 by ashes or sparks from a passing train. This prompted the railroad to coat itsrail ties with tin while replacing its wooden bridges with ones made of stone.[73][74] The bridge's originalabutments were made ofShawangunk conglomerate. It was rebuilt in 1912, and crosses the Plattekill Creek at a height of 35 feet (11 m).[75] TheShawangunk Ridge is visible from the bridge.[68]
Plains Road is shortly after the bridge, and the trail continues for3⁄10 mile (0.48 km) before crossing Cedar Lane. It crosses Plains Road again after another1+1⁄5 miles (1.9 km), reaching the Sojourner Truth park in thevillage of New Paltz.[76] The trail is connected to the park via a small footbridge constructed in 2010 by theAlexandria, Minnesota–based construction company Contech. It has a weight limit of 5 short tons (4.5 t)[38][77] and is able towithstand earthquakes.[78]
At the edge of the park, the trail crosses Water Street and enters the Water Street Market, a "restored area of boutiques, galleries, and cafés". It then crossesState Route 299 and passesLa Stazione, the former railroad station.[76] The refurbished depot had been originally built in 1870,[79] rebuilt after a 1907 fire,[80] and sold to private interests in 1959.[81] The building was in a state of disrepair by the early 1980s,[82] but renovated in 1988[83] and converted to an Italian restaurant in 1999.[84] Over the next1⁄2 mile (0.80 km), the trail passes North Front Street, Broadhead Avenue, and Mulberry Street. After another1⁄2 mile (0.80 km) the trail traversesHuguenot Street,[76] a historic district containingcolonial-era stone houses. Some of the houses date to the late 1600s.[85]

About 1 mile (1.6 km) from Huguenot Street, the trail reaches the 413-foot (126 m) Springtown bridge spanning theWallkill River.[86] The bridge was originally made of wood and completed by the middle of December 1870,[73][87] but was rebuilt between 1880 and 1881, using iron, byClarke, Reeves & Co.[88] It was rated by the superintendent of the Wallkill Valley Railroad to be safe for rail traffic as fast as 40 miles per hour (64 km/h).[89] The bridge's decking and benches were put in place in 1993 by volunteers and members of the nearbyHutterite community in thehamlet of Rifton.[90] The design of the bridge's railings was influenced byequestrians to better accommodate horses.[22] Immediately after the bridge is Springtown Road.[76]
The trail continues west of the Wallkill River. Roughly1+1⁄2 miles (2.4 km) from the Springtown bridge, the trail crosses Cragswood Road. Another3⁄10 mile (0.48 km) farther, it reaches the New Paltz–Rosendale boundary line, continuing another 3 miles (4.8 km) on formerly private property to Mountain Road in thehamlet of Rosendale.[91] Restorations to the Rosendale trestle were completed, and the bridge was opened to the public in June, 2013.[92] This added11+1⁄2 miles (18.5 km) over the Rondout Creek to Kingston,[53] crossingInterstate 87 and terminating byState Route 32.[93] The extension passes through thetown of Ulster and includes four small bridges between Rosendale and Kingston.[94]
The road between the former railroad station and Water Street Market was the first site of a new town crosswalk system that opened on March 29, 2008.[95] Under the new system, pedestrians can use flags placed in roadside containers to signal traffic.[96] The trail connects with the Sojourner Truth park, which has had access to theWallkill River forkayaking andcanoeing since April 27, 2003.[97] TheMinnewaska Preserve andMohonk Preserve, featuring 60 miles (97 km) of combined walkways, can be reached through New Paltz.[98]

The trail connects to theBinnewater Historic District in Rosendale. The district was the location of several local quarries which opened throughout the region after the 1825 discovery of rocks capable of producingRosendale cement in the nearbyhamlet of High Falls. At its peak, the district was producing 4,000,000 barrels a year and employed 5,000 people.[99]
Though the Binnewater rail station was once part of the historic district,[100] it was located too close to Binnewater Road and was hit repeatedly by trucks until it fell apart in May 1989. The station was subsequently demolished by the county highway department.[101] Another historic district, theSnyder Estate, runs along the Rosendale section. The Snyder Estate is a former mining site once used by all four major regional cement producers.[100] The Rosendale trestle has been the site of numerous picnics, barbecues, and at least one wedding. One person has tried bungee jumping off the bridge without a restraining cord.[102]
Severalshaleoutcrops are visible along the trail,[103] with views of theShawangunk Ridge to the west;[104] the skytop tower of theMohonk Mountain House is visible on one of the cliffs.[105] Parking for the trail is provided at a municipal lot on Farmers Turnpike in Gardiner.[106] In New Paltz, there are parking lots at the Sojourner Truth park,[33] off Springtown Road, at the Huguenot Historical Society, and at aBoard of Cooperative Educational Services (BOCES) conference center. The trail runs parallel to state routes208 and 32;[107] there are twopark and rides on Route 32,[108] a 63-spot lot in New Paltz,[109] and a 58-spot lot in Rosendale.[110] There are two bicycle shops along the trail in both Gardiner and New Paltz.[111]
The surface of the Rail Trail is mostly gravel, while road crossings are paved.Mountain bikes are recommended to traverse to trail by cycle, as the trail is fairly rough. Cars are not allowed on the trail. In the winter, you can docross-country skiing on the trail.
Flora along the northern end of the trail includessumac (Rhus) andhoneysuckle (Lonicera) shrubs,American elm (Ulmus americana),bigtooth aspen (Populus grandidentata) andquaking aspen (Populus tremuloides). As the trail approaches Gardiner to the south, there are occurrences ofsugar maple (Acer saccharum),American beech (Fagus grandifolia),tulip-tree (Liriodendron tulipifera) andblack birch (Betula lenta).[75] Other trees common on the trail includered maple (Acer rubrum),shagbark hickory (Carya ovata),northern pin oak (Quercus ellipsoidalis),eastern red cedar (Juniperus virginiana),white ash (Fraxinus americana) andeastern white pine (Pinus strobus).[112]
Many animals pass through the trail unobserved, leaving behindtracks. This includes bears, deer, coyotes, dogs, bobcats, cats, skunks and rabbits.[112] Several bird speciesoverwinter in the region and can be observed from the trail, such as themourning dove (Zenaida macroura),blue jay (Cyanocitta cristata),bluebird (Sialia),cardinal (Cardinalis cardinalis),starling (Sturnus vulgaris),downy woodpecker (Picoides pubescens),American goldfinch (Spinus tristis),tufted titmouse (Baeolophus bicolor),black-capped chickadee (Poecile atricapillus),sparrow (Passer) andpurple finch (Carpodacus purpureus).[113]
The Springtown Truss Bridge was used as a location for key scenes in theJohn Krasinski horror filmA Quiet Place, as well as itssequel.[114]
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