Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Chief Logan State Park: Coal Mine Trail (Blog Hike #1124)

Trail: Coal Mine Trail
Hike Location: Chief Logan State Park
Geographic Location: north of Logan, WV (37.88324, -82.02230)
Length: 3 miles
Difficulty: 5/10 (Moderate)
Date Hiked: April 2026
Overview: A loose loop around the state park campground passing numerous old coal mining sites.
Park Information: https://wvstateparks.com/parks/chief-logan-state-park/
Hike Route Map:
On The Go Map
Photo Highlight:
Hike Video: (coming June 25, 2027)

Directions to the trailhead: From the intersection of US 119 and SR 73 in Logan, take US 119 north 3.4 miles to the entrance for Chief Logan State Park on the right.  Turn right to enter the park, then turn right at the first major intersection to head for the campground.  Drive a total of 2.8 miles from the park entrance to the campground entrance on the right.  Turn right to enter the campground, and park beside the campground activities building on the left in another 0.4 miles.

The hike: Chief Logan's name appears on many counties, cities, parks, and trails across southeast Ohio and western West Virginia, but few people today know who Chief Logan actually was.  Chief Logan was the son of Iroquois Chief Shikellamy, who ruled a village in central Pennsylvania near present-day Shikellamy State Park.  Logan moved to the Ohio River region in the 1760s and became a leader of the Iroquois Confederacy there.  He gained the title Logan the Orator for a legendary lament he gave after the Shawnee lost the Battle of Point Pleasant in 1774.  Logan made the mistake of allying with the British during the American Revolution, and he was killed in a mysterious altercation near Lake Erie in 1780.
            Today Logan is commemorated in many places, not the least of which is Chief Logan State Park near the City of Logan in Logan County, West Virginia.  Established in 1969, the 3988-acre park has a fantastic set of amenities.  The Chief Logan Lodge is one of 10 West Virginia State Park lodges, and it is a full-service lodge with a fantastic restaurant and a conference center.  The park also has a cozy 25-site developed campground, a recreation center with some athletic fields, a museum with a locomotive display, and 7 picnic shelters.
            For hikers, the park offers 13 trails totaling over 18 miles, and they range in difficulty from flat 0.5 mile walks to difficult 6-mile one-way journeys over the park's steep hills and ravines.  Near the midpoint of those difficulties is the Coal Mine Trail described here.  The Coal Mine Trail takes you through the woods past some old coal mine openings.  This hike offers enough distance to make you feel like you've hiked, but it follows an old coal mining tram path for most of the way, which keeps the difficulty manageable.
Trailhead at campground activities building
    
        From the campground activities building, find the start of the Coal Mine Trail as it heads west into the woods with the campground road on your right.  A small wooden sign advertising the Rattlesnake and Coal Mine Trails marks this trailhead.  Going this direction begins a clockwise journey around the Coal Mine Trail.  The Coal Mine Trail is marked with yellow plastic diamonds, and while trail markers are not plentiful, there are enough of them to keep you on track.  The narrow trail climbs initially before levelling out about 50 feet above the campground road, which can be seen through the trees downhill to the right.
Trail markers for the Coal Mine Trail
    
        At 0.15 miles, the Rattlesnake Trail exits at a sharp angle to the left.  Angle softly right to continue the Coal Mine Trail.  The trail descends almost to road level before curving sharply left to begin the steepest climb of the hike.  This climb shows you the advantage of hiking this loop clockwise: you only gain about 100 feet of elevation, and this climb is far easier than the descent you will do at the end of the loop.
Hiking the old tram path
    
        At 0.4 miles, you reach the top of the hill, where you intersect the old coal mining tram path.  Angle right to begin following the old tram path.  For the next 1.7 miles the trail follows the old tram path as it goes in and out of as many as 8 hollows, depending on how you count hollows.  Like any old railroad grade, the tram path provides a wide treadway with a gentle grade.
Old coal tipple site
    
        Just past 0.5 miles, you pass the old coal tipple site, which today is marked by a sign and a wood/concrete construction on the edge of the hill to the right.  Tipples used gravity to sort coal by size and load it onto railroad cars heading for market.  Thus, all of the coal that came out of any of the old mine openings served by this tram would have ended up here.  The mines shut down just before the park opened in 1969.  Imagine what it would have been like to live in this hollow back then!
Disturbed area
    
        Continuing on the old tram path, the trail winds in and out of many hollows, imperceptibly climbing all the time.  Some wet areas and downed trees need to be negotiated, but overall the going is fairly easy.  At 1.4 miles, you pass an old concrete building, which is probably mine-related although I could not determine how.  I did not see any mine openings, but I did notice some disturbed areas that probably date to the park's mining days.  Outside of the disturbed areas, the trail passes through nice beech/maple forest, and this would be an excellent fall leaf peeping hike.  I saw many asters in bloom and butterflies in flight when I hiked here on a warm and humid day in late April.
End of the old tram path
    
        2.1 miles into the hike, the Wilderness Trail exits at a sharp angle to the left.  Angle softly right to stay on the Coal Mine Trail.  Very quickly you reach this hike's highest elevation and the end of the old coal mine tram path.  The trail narrows and curves right as you begin the final part of the hike.
Campsite #15
    
        The final descent to the campground may be the hardest part of this hike: you lose 220 feet of elevation over 0.3 miles, and the footing is quite bad.  The last couple hundred feet are narrow and rocky, almost like hiking in a small stream.  At 2.4 miles, you come out beside campsite #15.  Walk the paved campground road gradually downhill past the campground entrance for a total of 0.6 miles to return to the campground activity building and complete the hike.


Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Cabwaylingo State Forest: Tick Ridge Fire Tower (Blog Hike #1123)

Trails: ORV Trails #11, #29, and #10
Hike Location: Cabwaylingo State Forest
Geographic Location: south of Wayne, WV (37.98677, -82.37477)
Length: 4.3 miles
Difficulty: 5/10 (Moderate)
Date Hiked: April 2026
Overview: An out-and-back on ORV trails to a CCC-built campground and fire tower.
Park Information: https://wvstateparks.com/parks/cabwaylingo-state-forest/
Hike Route Map:
On The Go Map
Photo Highlight:
Hike Video: (coming March 19, 2027)

Directions to the trailhead: From Wayne, take SR 152 south 24 miles to CR 35.  Alternatively, you can reach this intersection by taking SR 152 north 5.7 miles from US 52 along the Kentucky/West Virginia state line.  Turn east on CR 35, and drive the winding paved road 2.9 miles to the Cabwaylingo Trailhead on the right.  Turn right to cross a stream on a bridge, then park near the park office in the large gravel parking lot that ORVs use for unloading.

The hike: Between 1863 and 1891 the Hatfield family of West Virginia and the McCoy family of Kentucky engaged in one of the most bitter and famous feuds in American history.  The feud had its roots in the American Civil War.  Although most members of both families fought for the Confederacy, Asa Harmon McCoy chose to fight for the Union, and he was killed by Hatfields and other Confederate allies on his way home from the war.
            The Kentucky/West Virginia border was a remote and lawless area in the late 1800s, and both families took justice into their own hands, causing continued escalation for many years.  The feud climaxed with the 1888 New Years Massacre and the ensuing Battle of Grapevine Creek, when a group of Hatfields went to Kentucky, surrounded the McCoy cabin, and opened fire on the sleeping McCoy family.  After such a brazen, violent, and egregiously illegal act, county sheriffs, state governors, and even the United States Supreme Court became involved to end the feud and bring peace to the area.  Many Hatfields and McCoys were tried and convicted of major crimes with the last trial ending in 1901.
            Today the feud is commemorated by a vast network of ORV trails in western West Virginia called the Hatfield-McCoy Trails, and one of the main trailheads for this system is in vast, rugged, and remote 8125-acre Cabwaylingo State Forest.  The state forest dates to the early 1930s, and the depression-era Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) worked here to restore the forest and build the park's facilities.  The CCC's constructions include but are not limited to the park headquarters, 14 cabins, and several picnic shelters.  The forest is named for the 4 counties in which it occupies land: Cabell, Wayne, Lincoln, and Mingo.
            Cabwaylingo State Forest offers both ORV trails and hiking trails, but many of the hiking trails are poorly maintained and therefore do not make for pleasant hiking.  Thus, I chose to hike some of the ORV trails up to this park's most famous CCC construction: the Tick Ridge Fire Tower.  Built in 1935, the Tick Ridge Fire Tower is eligible for the National Register of Historic Sites.  Although the tower is not open for climbing, hiking to the fire tower not only allows you to view a piece of history, but it also passes a nice overlook and some other interesting CCC constructions.
Hatfield and McCoy Trailhead at Cabwaylingo State Forest
    
        Pick up a trail map at the park office, then head southwest down the wide gravel road with a basketball court and picnic shelter on your right.  Where the road splits, go left to start heading up the hollow that contains Wiley Branch on ORV Trail #11.  This trail is one of the main trails in the park's ORV trail system, and it is wide and easy enough that an ordinary car could traverse this part of the trail most of the time.
Exiting the developed area
    
        After passing a primitive campground, you exit the developed area and begin climbing along Wiley Branch.  B
eech and maple trees dominate the forest, and this hike would be great for fall leaf peeping.  I saw many butterflies when I came here in late April, and I saw lots of birds including a yellow-throated warbler.
Continuing to climb
    
        Just shy of 0.5 miles, the Indian Trail exits right.  The Indian Trail is a very steep and poorly maintained hiking trail that could be used to form a loop.  Unless you want a very rough and challenging hike, I recommend staying on the wide dirt/gravel ORV Trail #11 and doing this hike as an out-and-back.  The trail continues climbing, and soon ORV Trail #79 exits left.  This is another trail that could be used to form a difficult loop, but again I recommend staying with the main trail.
Picnic shelter at Tick Ridge Campground
    
        The wide gravel road continues climbing on a moderate grade via several switchbacks.  1.8 miles into the hike, you reach the Tick Ridge Campground.  Some vault toilets and an excellent CCC-built picnic shelter sit here.  To continue to the fire tower, turn sharply right on ORV Trail #29, then 0.1 miles later angle left on ORV Trail #10, which is the final leg to the fire tower.
Looking down the power line corridor
Tick Ridge Fire Tower
    
        At the only switchback on ORV Trail #10, you reach a bench that looks down a power line corridor.  While this westward viewpoint is somewhat narrow and does not overlook anything of note, it is the only ridgetop viewpoint on this hike.  A couple hundred feet later, you reach the Tick Ridge Fire Tower.  A fence and removed stairs prevent you from climbing the tower, but interpretive signs tell you about the tower and the people who built it.  The dense forest allows no views.  After viewing and learning about the tower, retrace your steps down to the park office to complete the hike.