- Moosup Valley State Park Trail
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The Moosup Valley State Park Trail is a rail trail in Windham County, Connecticut.
The trail is located on the railbed of a former New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad line. The rail line was abandoned in the late 1960s, and was designated by the state as a multi-use trail in 1987. The trail is owned and operated by the State of Connecticut Department of Environmental Protection. It runs for 6 miles (9.7 km) from the center of the village of Moosup (41°42′47″N 71°52′52″W / 41.713°N 71.881°W) to the Rhode Island state line (41°41′44″N 71°47′19″W / 41.6956°N 71.7887°W), where the trail continues into Rhode Island as the Coventry Greenway.
The entire length of the trail is part of the East Coast Greenway.
Current trail conditions
The trail is a work in progress. It is open to the public for its entire length, and all major gaps and obstructions have been removed or filled in, but many sections are rough and unimproved.
The following is a section-by-section description of current trail conditions.
Trailhead at Route 14 in Moosup to Barber Hill Road, Plainfield: This section of trail is completed. It has trailhead parking and starts by crossing the Moosup River on a refurbished railroad bridge. The trail is paved with a smooth, wide asphalt surface for this section. Most of this part was completed as part of the project to replace the Barber Hill Road bridge over the Moosup River.
Barber Hill Road, Plainfield to bridge over Providence Road, Sterling: This section of trail is mostly undeveloped. It was cleared and graded several years ago, and has a dirt, rocky surface. It is suitable for horses and mountain bikes, but not for street bikes. The bridge over the Moosup River in Sterling was repaired and given a new deck for trail use.
Bridge over Providence Road, Sterling to Spring Lake Road, Sterling: A brand new bridge was recently completed to carry the trail over Providence Road. This bridge replaces the original rail bridge which was removed when the rail line was first abandoned. As part of the new bridge project, a 3/4 mile section of trail from the new bridge east to Spring Lake Road was completed and paved with a wide, smooth asphalt surface. This is the first section in Sterling to be officially completed and the new bridge removes the last physical obstacle along the trail's route.
Spring Lake Road, Sterling to RI State Line: This section is open but is undeveloped. It has a rough dirt surface and is best traveled on foot or mountain bike.
The trail continues into RI as the Trestle Trail, a multi-use trail that is operated by the Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management.
Trail access
The trail crosses the following roads at-grade, providing access:
- Main Street / Route 14, Plainfield - parking area
- River Street, Plainfield
- Barber Hill Road, Plainfield - parking area
- Brunswick Avenue, Plainfield - parking area
- Main Street, Sterling
- Industrial Park Road, Sterling
- Route 14, Sterling
- Babcock Road, Sterling - parking area
- Spring Lake Road, Sterling
- Route 14A, Sterling
The trail crosses the following roads via over- or underpasses, and does not provide access:
- Route 14, Plainfield
- Providence Road, Sterling
Multi-Use Trail Systems in Connecticut National Historic Trails Long Distance or Regional Multi-Use Trails in Connecticut Airline State Park Trail • Charter Oak Greenway • East Coast Greenway • Farmington Canal Heritage Trail • Farmington River Trail • Hop River State Park Trail • Larkin State Park Trail •
Moosup Valley State Park Trail •Connecticut Municipal Multi-Use Trails Bethany • Branford • East Haven • Farmington • Guilford • Hamden • Madison • Manchester • Meriden • Milford • New Haven • North Branford • North Haven • Orange • Shelton • Wallingford • West Haven •
Woodbridge •Hiking Trails in Connecticut Airline State Park Trail • Alain and May White Trails • American Legion • Appalachian Trail • Aspetuck Valley • Bigelow Hollow • Case Mountain • Charter Oak Greenway • Chatfield • Cockaponset • East Coast Greenway • Falls Brook • Farmington Canal Heritage Trail • Gay City • Hancock Brook • Hop River State Park Trail • Housatonic Range • Jericho • Kettletown • Lillinonah • Lone Pine • Macedonia Brook • Mattabesett • Mattatuck • McLean Game Refuge • Menunkatuck • Metacomet • Mohawk • Moosup Valley State Park Trail • Muir • Narragansett • Natchaug • Naugatuck • Nayantaquit • Nehantic • New England National Scenic Trail • Nipmuck • Old Furnace • Patchaug • Paugussett • Peoples • Pequot • Pine Knob • Pomperaug • Quinebaug • Quinnipiac • Ragged Mountain • Regicides • Salmon River • Saugatuck • Shenipsit • Sleeping Giant • Sleeping Giant State Park • Stony Creek Quarry • Sunny Valley Preserve • Tunxis • Washington–Rochambeau Revolutionary Route • Westwoods • Whitestone Cliffs • Wolcott Trail • Zoar
Protected areas of Connecticut National Park Service National Wildlife Refuges Silvio O. Conte • Stewart B. McKinney National Wildlife Refuge
National Trails State Parks Airline • Beckley Iron Furnace Industrial Monument • Bigelow Hollow • Black Rock • Bluff Point • Burr Pond • Camp Columbia • Campbell Falls • Chatfield Hollow • Collis P. Huntington • Connecticut Valley Railroad • Day Pond • Dennis Hill • Devil's Hopyard • Dinosaur • Fort Griswold Battlefield • Fort Trumbull • Gardner Lake • Gay City • George W. Seymour • Gillette Castle • Haddam Meadows • Haley Farm • Hammonasset Beach • Hampton Beach • Harkness Memorial • Haystack Mountain • Hop River State Park Trail • Hopeville Pond • Housatonic Meadows • Hurd • Indian Well • John A. Minetto • Kent Falls • Kettletown • Lake Waramaug • Larkin State Park Trail • Levy • Lovers Leap • Macedonia Brook • Mansfield Hollow • Mashamoquet Brook • Millers Pond • Mohawk Mountain • Moosup Valley State Park Trail • Mount Tom • Old Furnace • Osbornedale • Penwood • Putnam Memorial • Quaddick • Quinnipiac River • River Highlands • Rocky Neck • Selden Neck • Seth Low Pierrepont • Sherwood Island • Silver Sands • Sleeping Giant • Southford Falls • Squantz Pond • Stratton Brook • Talcott Mountain • Wadsworth Falls • West Rock Ridge • Wharton Brook • Windsor Locks Canal State Park Trail
State Forests Algonquin • American Legion • Centennial Watershed • Cockaponset • Enders • James L. Goodwin • Housatonic • Massacoe • Mattatuck • Meshomasic • Mohawk • Mohegan • Nassahegon • Natchaug • Nathan Hale • Nehantic • Nepaug • Nipmuck • Nye-Holman • Pachaug • Paugnut • People's • Pootatuck • Quaddick • Salmon River • Shenipsit • Topsmead • Tunxis • Wyantenock
Connecticut Department of Environmental Protection (web)Categories:- Rail trails in Connecticut
- Connecticut state parks
- East Coast Greenway
- Plainfield, Connecticut
- Protected areas of Windham County, Connecticut
- Parks in Windham County, Connecticut
- Sterling, Connecticut
- Protected areas established in 1987
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