Albuquerque Journal

In with the NEW

America’s latest national park is one of West Virginia’s hidden gems

- BY KATE MORGAN

There are moments, as you drift through the deep canyon walls of the New River Gorge, when it feels like you’ve got the whole world to yourself. It’s just you and the river, littered with massive, prehistori­c boulders that were here when the coal mining camps were built, and the fur trading posts before them, and the Shawnee and Cherokee villages before those. In a river that geologists say could be one of the world’s oldest, you can lose yourself in time. Then the current picks up, and you’re back to paddling like mad, navigating the chutes and eddies of heart-pounding white water.

Since the 1960s, West Virginia’s New River Gorge has drawn adventure seekers to its rapids and rock walls, and those rafters and climbers have long considered it a hidden gem. But the curtain is being drawn back on the canyon because part of it has become America’s 63rd national park.

At the end of December, Congress passed an omnibus spending bill that included a proposal from Sens. Shelley Moore Capito, a Republican, and Joe Manchin III, a Democrat, of West Virginia to re-classify the New River Gorge National River’s 72,186 acres as a national park and preserve.

“It’s a real victory,” Capito says. “These things aren’t easy.”

There has been a local push for national park status for years, both for the prestige of the title and the tourism dollars. But there also has been some local resistance.

Capito first proposed a bill in 2019, and the natural attributes of the gorge helped move the measure along. “It’s an ancient river that flows south to north, which is very unusual,” she says.

The gorge also offers a “spiritual aspect” and a “solitary kind of quiet,” Capito adds. “People are coming here from places that are busy and congested, and I think they appreciate that quiet. When you get down into the gorge, you’re removed from what’s going on in modern America. And it’s very unspoiled. We call West Virginia ‘wild’ and ‘wonderful,’ and this certainly is.”

A special place

The New River Gorge is located in southern West Virginia. The new designatio­ns encompass 53 miles of the New River (locally called “the New”) and the rugged tangle of Appalachia­n forest around it, which is crisscross­ed by hiking and mountain biking trails, railroad tracks and winding country roads. The area has been administer­ed by the National Park Service, which maintains several visitor centers on the gorge, since it was given conservati­on status as a national river in 1978.

The updated title of park and preserve makes the New River Gorge only the second site outside Alaska to receive that designatio­n. Most of the land — just over 65,000 acres — will be preserve. The park will cover 7,021 acres at the center, where the gorge is a mile wide and spanned by the New River Gorge Bridge, the longest steel arch span in the Western Hemisphere and the third-highest bridge in the United States.

The legislatio­n was crafted with a nod toward tradition. Because hunting is not permitted in national parks, most of the area was designated as a preserve, which will allow continued access for hunters who have stalked whitetail deer on the sandstone bluffs for generation­s. And although BASE jumping is banned at Park Service sites, the legislatio­n includes a provision that will allow Bridge Day — an annual event that features jumpers parachutin­g from bridge to river — to continue.

Aside from the visitation increase that’s expected to come with official park status, altered signage, additional parking, and the closure of the park’s 7,000 acres to hunting, not much will change at the New River Gorge, and that’s the whole point.

“Part of the deal was to change as little as possible, in making this shift to a national park,” says Roger Wilson, president and CEO of Adventures on the Gorge. “That was extremely important to getting local buy-in from the communitie­s.”

There are some opponents to the re-designatio­n, including sportsmen who protest the loss of the hunting grounds within the park, and those who worry the new status will lead to the overcrowdi­ng that plagues many national parks. But the move is generally a popular one among locals who would see the gorge afforded the highest possible level of protection.

History and heritage are woven into the fabric of West Virginia, where many residents can trace their lineage back centuries. Wilson’s forebears arrived at the New River Gorge in 1745.

It’s a family affair for Capito, too. Her late father was West Virginia’s governor in the 1970s, when the New was being considered for national river status, but she recently discovered he always believed it ought to be a national park. Her bill’s passage feels a bit like fulfilling a legacy.

‘A natural wonder’

Even for those without familial ties to the West Virginian landscape, the New River Gorge, with its unusually warm cascades, towering stone ramparts and oldgrowth forest groves, speaks for itself.

“It is a natural wonder in the category of the Grand Canyon and Niagara Falls,” says Chelsea Ruby, the state’s tourism commission­er.

Ruby says the New River Gorge and nearby areas welcome roughly 1.4 million annual visitors, but numbers at the new national park are expected to jump almost immediatel­y.

Wilson hopes those visitors will leave with a new impression of West Virginia, and of Appalachia as a whole. He recalls seeing a tourism survey, from “probably 25 years ago, asking people around the country, ‘What is your opinion of West Virginia?’ The top response was, ‘No opinion,’” Wilson says. “I do think it gets overlooked.” Of the state’s 15.5 million acres, nearly 12 million is forested land, much of it open to recreation.

It’s a state of tiny towns, adds Ruby; the largest city in West Virginia, state capital Charleston, is home to fewer than 50,000 people. Small places like Fayettevil­le, with a population of less than 3,000, face both challenges and opportunit­ies as they prepare to be the hosts for a national park within a day’s drive of roughly 40% of the U.S. population.

Safeguardi­ng the area’s charm and rural way of life, no matter how many outof-towners arrive, is a priority, says Sharon Cruikshank, mayor of Fayettevil­le.

But growth is, of course, inevitable, for the town and for the outfitters that already cater to rafters, zip-liners and climbers. At Adventures on the Gorge, there are plans to expand campground­s, build a new welcome center, and renovate dining facilities.

Wilson hopes the New River Gorge National Park and the growth it sparks will do more than bring visitors to southern West Virginia. He hopes it’ll keep people there, too. “What’s the old movie where they build that baseball field?” he muses, thinking of “Field of Dreams.” “I truly believe this may be a way to keep your child or grandchild living in West Virginia. There are so many young people who leave the state to find employment, and they almost all return home for retirement. They want to be here — they just need the opportunit­y. If you build it, they will stay.”

 ?? COURTESTY OF BRIDGE DAY JAY YOUNG ADVENTURES ON THE GORGE ?? An annual event features jumpers parachutin­g from the New River Gorge Bridge, the longest steel arch span in the Western Hemisphere.
The New River Gorge Bridge spans the canyon 876 feet above the river. Hiking and mountain biking trails and railroad tracks cross the rugged Appalachia­n forest surroundin­g the gorge.
COURTESTY OF BRIDGE DAY JAY YOUNG ADVENTURES ON THE GORGE An annual event features jumpers parachutin­g from the New River Gorge Bridge, the longest steel arch span in the Western Hemisphere. The New River Gorge Bridge spans the canyon 876 feet above the river. Hiking and mountain biking trails and railroad tracks cross the rugged Appalachia­n forest surroundin­g the gorge.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ?? WEST VIRGINIA TOURISM OFFICE ?? Rock climbers, along with white-water enthusiast­s and other adventurer­s, have long prized West Virginia’s New River Gorge, which was redesignat­ed as a national park and preserve in December.
WEST VIRGINIA TOURISM OFFICE Rock climbers, along with white-water enthusiast­s and other adventurer­s, have long prized West Virginia’s New River Gorge, which was redesignat­ed as a national park and preserve in December.
 ?? WEST VIRGINIA TOURISM OFFICE ?? Rafters ride the rapids on the New River, which, despite its name, is considered by geologists to be one of the oldest rivers in the world.
WEST VIRGINIA TOURISM OFFICE Rafters ride the rapids on the New River, which, despite its name, is considered by geologists to be one of the oldest rivers in the world.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States