A sign of the times: First sign erected on the Arizona trail to be preserved

Williams-Grand Canyon News (May 3, 2022) by Joe Giddens

The historic wooden sign, which marks the first officially recognized section of the Arizona National Scenic Trail, is getting a new permanent home.

“It’s weathered badly and been renovated a couple of times,” said Arizona Trail Director Shawn Redfield. “But that’s a losing battle. It’s going to be taken down and put in the Forest Service visitor center at Jacob Lake.”

The sign was installed to help proclaim the first seven miles of the Arizona Trail when it was inaugurated and officially opened on July 1, 1988, just east of Jacob’s Lake, 40 miles north of the North Rim of the Grand Canyon.

Two hundred and fifty people were in attendance in the middle of the Arizona summer for the event, with guests from both sides of the political aisle. From Republican Rep. Bob Stump. Democratic Sen. Dennis DeConcini to timber company employees and representatives of the Sierra Club.

“It took a diverse interest group to make the Kaibab Plateau Trail a reality,” Kaibab Industries’ CEO and Chairman Milton Whiting said to Grand Canyon News at the event in 1988. “We think this shows that the private industry and government can work effectively together, retaining scenic character and providing multiple use management for American outdoor enthusiasts.”

The refurbishment follows several other upgrades to the Arizona Trail in the area. The Arizona Trail Association received permission from Babbitt Ranches to reroute the Arizona Trail off ranch roads and build improvements on the stretch from the Grand Canyon to Flagstaff. Additionally the log fences at the Kaibab Plateau and Murray Lake trailheads were replaced by trail association volunteer labor and trees from a local forest service thinning, according to the Arizona Trail Association’s 2019 annual report.

“We’ll have a work event in August to work on some reroutes up there,” Redfield said. “There’s a three mile realignment from the Magnum Fire. The trail … burned intensely and so the erosion is looking pretty bad on the trail. We’re hoping to reroute it up along the sides of the canyon.”

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