I have wanted to explore the Natchez Trace for a long time, and we're finally doing it!! On Wednesday we drove from Poplar Bluff to the Natchez Trace Wilderness RV Park in Tennessee. This is a Thousand Trails park, and we got in through RPI. We were going to be here 5 nights, but have decided to go to Tupelo on Saturday to explore some of the southern parts of the Trace.
On the way in, Google maps took us about 5 miles on the Trace out of Hohenwald, TN, and the road that it took us on to to get to the RV park has an 11 foot bridge. Our motorhome needs about 13 feet of clearance. OH CRAP! LUCKILY there was a dirt bypass - still going under the bridge - but gave us JUST ENOUGH clearance to get by.
We measured the rig when we got in, just to be sure. Yep, it's 12.5 feet high!
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Mike measuring the height |
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Our spot in the RV park |
This park is huge, with mostly water/electric hookups. Most of the full hookups have full time members living there. The park is kind of junky, they allow all sorts of stuff around the rig. Nothing like Hart Ranch.
You also pick your spot when you drive in. Luckily we got one of the few full hookup sites left for the weekend.
Thursday we drove from the RV park north toward Nashville. I just love the history here. A lot of the Trace crosses the Trail of Tears - which was actually 4 or 5 routes from the southeastern states to Oklahoma when the Feds decided to relocate the Cherokee, Chickasaw and Chocktaw tribes. The Seminoles refused to go, they stayed in Florida.
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The house where Meriwether Lewis died |
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Meriwether Lewis gravesite |
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There are lots of spots where you can see the original Trace |
The fall colors are spectacularly beautiful, and these pictures do not do them justice.
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An old tobacco drying barn along the old Trace road |
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You can actually drive in spots along the original Trace |
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Monument to the War of 1812. Andrew Jackson's men marched along the Trace to return home after the Battle of New Orleans. Many are buried in unmarked graves along the Trace. |
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An original home along one of the rivers. The owners ran a ferry service. |
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A view of the longest bridge on the Trace. |
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The same bridge from down below |
On Friday we drove south out of the RV park about 80 miles. One of the first spots we saw was a "sunken Trace". These are spots that would get so muddy the carts and wagons would get bogged down, so they would cut new routes around the old ones. This spot has three separate paths that they had used.
The next spot we stopped was Bear Creek Mound. We've seen lots of Indian mounds around the southeast, but were surprised to find that this was used as early as 8000 BC.
Next we stopped at Cave Spring. There is a spring of water in the cave. Now it's mostly a sinkhole, and we tried to get pictures in the cave of the spring, but they didn't turn out well.
We stopped at a spot where George Colbert, a Chickasaw Chief, ran a ferry service across the Tennessee River. We also had a picnic there.
A cotton field along the Trace
We left Hohenwald two days early, and drove south along the Trace to Tupelo. We figured we could see more of the southern portion toward Jackson. Then, when we leave Georgia in the spring, we'll stay in Natchez, MS and explore north and south out of there, finishing the Trace!
On Sunday we explored as far south as milepost # 195.
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Owl Creek Mounds |
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Owl Creek Mounds |
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