- Stampede Trail
The Stampede Trail in
Alaska was amining trail blazed in the 1930s by an Alaska miner namedEarl Pilgrim , to access hisantimony claims onStampede Creek , above the Clearwater Fork of theToklat River . Located inDenali Borough , what is now known as Stampede Road begins near theNenana River at the Alaska Railroad's Anchorage-Fairbanks route in the village of Lignite.In 1961, Yutan Construction won a contract from the new state of Alaska to upgrade the trail as part of Alaska's Pioneer Road Program, building a road on which trucks could haul ore from the mines year-round to the railroad. The project was halted in 1963 after some fifty miles of roads were built, but no bridges were ever constructed over the several rivers it crossed, and the route was shortly rendered impassable by thawing
permafrost and floods. The trail has since been used by backcountry travelers on foot, bicycle, snowmachine andmotorcycle .The trail gained notoriety in 1992 with the death of
Christopher McCandless , who had lived in a bus that had been left behind by the Yutan Construction Company during the road building to serve as a backcountry shelter for hunters and trappers. In recent years, the trail has seen a pilgrimage of visitors wanting to see the bus where McCandless perished. The September 2007 release of the film version ofJon Krakauer 's book about McCandless, "Into the Wild ", has revived interest in the trail.USGA Quads: Healy (D-5 and D-6), Mount McKinley (D-1 and C-1)
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.