The 2025 Hall of Fame class is Richard B. Anderson of Camden, Maine; the late Walter Greene of New York City, New York, the late Marion Park of Washington, DC, and Ronald Tipton of Rockville, Maryland.
In addition to the luncheon Banquet and Induction, Hall of Fame Day featured interviews with the Hall of Fame inductees and representatives, a panel discussion on a century of Appalachian Trail Conservancy and a preview screening of a movie on the life of George Masa, a 2018 Hall of Fame inductee. Music during the Induction reception was provided by Randy “Windtalker” Motz.
Richard Anderson, credit Maine Historical Society In 1993, Richard Anderson, the Commissioner of the Maine Department of Conservation, developed a plan to create just such a trail connecting Maine’s Katahdin to Mont Carleton in New Brunswick and then on to Mount Jacques Cartier in Quebec’s Gaspé Peninsula. On Earth Day, April 22, 1994, the proposal to build a hiking trail through the northern Appalachian Mountains was announced at a news conference in Portland, Maine. That idea became the International Appalachian Trail.
Since then, this mission has been embraced in Greenland and Iceland and across the arc of the North Atlantic to Europe and North Africa. The IAT now comprises 23 Chapters on three continents from Maine to Morocco. Progress to maintain and improve the trail experience continues in work with landowners, hikers, conservation organizations, and local, regional and national governments. The A.T. Museum applauds this as a logical extension of Benton MacKaye’s concept of a trail linking the Appalachians in the U.S.
Walter Greene, credit Dave Field
The original route of the A.T. from Katahdin to Blanchard was due more to his scouting than that of anyone else. He joined the famous expedition of 1933 that blazed the Trail from Katahdin to the West Branch of the Pleasant River and then led the group from there to Blanchard. He continued to explore and refine the route during 1934. In 1935 Greene worked with the Civilian Conservation Corps crews who were building much of the new A.T. and also the critical cable bridge across the West Branch of the Penobscot River. He spent the winter of 1936 making 40 of the signs to be used on the new route.
His health began to fail late in the year and he was hospitalized in New York in November. After a long battle with colon cancer he passed away in 1941. He's not well known today because he accomplished so much within just a five-year period and because he died so young.
Marion Park, credit ATC
In addition, Park and Jean Stephenson maintained a side trail to the A.T. from the Meadow Spring and Buck Hollow trails in Shenandoah. Every organization needs a Marion Park at its quiet center to keep it grounded, without recognition, documenting decisions and plans and doing all of the things essential to its success.
Ron Tipton
Ron then accepted an assignment from the National Park Service lands office to use his hike of the entire Appalachian Trail to prepare a report on priorities for protection of the Trail. Ron served on the ATC Board of Directors from 1981 to 1985 and was one of the founders of the Appalachian Long Distance Hikers Association. He then spent 14 years on senior staff for the Wilderness Society and 14 more at the National Parks Conservation Association, working with ATC and the Trail clubs to secure annual funding for protecting and managing the Trail.
In 2013, Appalachian Trail Conservancy was in a difficult place. The CEO who was hired to replace the irreplaceable Dave Startzell had not worked out well. Luckily, the ATC Board made an excellent choice this time and selected Ron. Ron stabilized the organization, reconnected its strong relationships with the 31 Trail clubs and dozens of agency partners, and raised more private and foundation money for the Conservancy than anyone in its history.
After his “retirement” in 2018, he continued to work with on the Appalachian Trail Landscape Conservation Initiative, on the Board for the Partnership for the National Trails System, as well as the A.T. Museum’s Hall of Fame selection committee.
Also honored at the Induction were Steve Paradis, recipient of the Museum’s Lifetime Achievement Award and Sandi Marra, retiring CEO of Appalachian Trail Conservancy.
Follow THIS LINK for more on the Banquet, including pictures.
RSS Feed