News Release

Cherokee County Awarded FLAP Grant to Develop Overmountain Victory National Historic Trail and Carolina Thread Trail

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Date: April 29, 2024
Contact: Diana Bramble, 864-461-2828

CHEROKEE COUNTY, SC – Cherokee County was the recent recipient of a Federal Lands Access Program (FLAP) grant that will provide significant funding to plan and design approximately 26 miles of trail associated with the Overmountain Victory National Historic Trail (OVVI) corridor and Carolina Thread Trail (CTT). The Federal Lands Access Program was created to improve state and local transportation facilities that provide access to and through federal lands.

The OVVI is one of 21 congressionally designated national historic trails and was established in 1980 as the first national historic trail east of the Mississippi. Approximately 35 miles of the historic trail corridor traverse Cherokee County as it extends from the city of Chesnee to its terminus at Kings Mountain National Military Park. It commemorates the route of patriot militia in their pursuit of British Major Patrick Ferguson and the loyalist militia under his command to Kings Mountain, where the patriots defeated Ferguson’s loyalist forces in a battle that shifted the momentum of the American Revolution.

“The FLAP grant will take us one step closer to the day when people will be able to traverse across this land as was done in 1780, all the way to the Battle of Kings Mountain, to retrace the path and to experience it as one of the formative events of this nation.” Trail Administrator Jeff Ellison said.
The CTT is a 501©3 nonprofit organization that advocates and supports the development of greenways, trails, and blueways across fifteen counties in North and South Carolina. Their mission is to create a legacy of conservation and connectivity through a regional network of trails.

“The FLAP grant demonstrates how important this trail project is to our nation’s history. But it will also be meaningful for thousands of residents of the Carolinas, expanding access to nature in one of the most beautiful parts of the Piedmont,” Carolina Thread Trail Director Bret Baronak said. The grant provides funding, which continues the momentum of developing the OVVI and CTT in Cherokee County.

Cherokee County has had tremendous cooperation from multiple partners, including the National Park Service, Carolina Thread Trail, Gaffney Board of Public Works, Cherokee County Recreation District, City of Gaffney and Town of Blacksburg both in providing and pursuing the resources required to develop, design and construct the OVVI and CTT,” said Paul LeFrancois, chair of the county’s OVVI/CTT Steering Committee.

The grant will be used to create a trail design within the historic OVVI corridor that would provide a safe and more inviting means for walkers, hikers and bicyclists to access Kings Mountain National Military Park, while reducing environmental, social, and health costs associated with accessing the park by motor vehicle. It will connect key population centers and natural and cultural resources, including Gaffney, Lake Whelchel, the Broad River, Blacksburg and Kings Mountain. It complements two trail projects currently underway: construction of a two-mile segment of the OVVI/CTT connecting Chesnee and Cowpens National Battlefield, and construction of three miles of trail and a new trailhead/parking area at Lake Whelchel.

“Today, we have the honor of working together to plan out a trail system that preserves the natural environment and provides a place for outdoor recreation,” said Diana Bramble, Superintendent of Cowpens National Battlefield, Kings Mountain National Military Park, and the Overmountain Victory National Historic Trail. “Visitors will have a chance to engage in experiential learning about an important part of the history associated with the forming of our nation, as they walk in the footsteps of the Overmountain men. This trail serves as an important reminder that everything is connected. We can make incredible things happen when we work together."

www.nps.gov

The Carolina Thread Trail is a regional network of trails that connect 2.9 million people in 15 counties in North and South Carolina. The Thread Trail is an example of unprecedented regional collaboration that works to connect people and communities to nature and each other through its 1,610 miles of trails, greenways and blueways. For more information about the Carolina Thread Trail, visit their webpage at https://www.carolinathreadtrail.org/ or Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/CarolinaThreadTrail

The Overmountain Victory National Historic Trail commemorates, preserves, and interprets, through public and private partnerships, the spirit of patriot militia and their routes through Virginia, Tennessee, North Carolina, and South Carolina to the Battle of Kings Mountain on October 7, 1780. The 330-mile commemorative route was established on September 8, 1980. For more information about the Overmountain Victory National Historic Trail, visit the trail webpage at www.nps.gov/ovvi or Facebook at www.facebook.com/overmountainvictoryNHT/

About the National Park Service. More than 20,000 National Park Service employees care for America's 429 national parks and work with communities across the nation to help preserve local history and create close[1]to-home recreational opportunities. Learn more at www.nps.gov, and on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and YouTube.



Last updated: April 29, 2024

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