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It may be impossible to pinpoint the first
person to propose the Pacific Crest Trail, but Clinton C. Clarke, founder of
the Pasadena (CA) Playhouse and chairman of the Mountain League
of Los Angeles, is often credited with the idea since he organized
the Pacific Crest Trail System Conference in 1932 to support
the concept.
Clarke's federation of hiking clubs and youth groups was devoted to
developing an interconnected system of existing trails and new
construction that would extend all the way from Canada to Mexico on or
close to the crest of the western states. This was not a new idea, but
unifying the many hiking groups for this cause was.
Clarke organized the YMCA-PCT Relays, held during the summers of 1935
through 1938. During these relays, 40 teams of young hikers (ages 14-18)
under the direction of a young YMCA outdoorsman, Warren Rogers, scouted a route
for the trail. They carried a log book north from Campo on the Mexican
border, eventually reaching milepost 78 on the Canadian border.
Rogers became more involved and served as the Conference executive
secretary with Clarke, organizing support for a border-to-border trail for
the next twenty-five years until Clarke's death in 1957. The result of
this effort and others, was the enactment of the National Trails Act in 1968.
The Act called for the appointment of a Pacific Crest National Scenic
Trail Advisory Council to develop the route, design and management plan
for the trail. The Council held its first meeting in 1970. The Pacific
Crest Trail System Conference was well represented on the Council. Rogers
served as a member along with the co-founder of the American Hiking
Society and Conference member, Louise Marshall; Conference leader and
California trail equestrian, Charles Vogel; and Oregon Obsidian Club
member and eventual Conference president, Larry Cash. Other members
represented cattle ranchers, timber and mineral interests, youth
organizations, Native Americans and the governors of each of the three
trail states.
The Pacific Crest Trail Association was first incorporated as the
Pacific Crest Trail Conference in 1977 under the leadership of Rogers and
M. Merritt Podley. It was the natural outgrowth of the old Pacific Crest
Trail System Conference, and Pacific Crest Trail Club, an individual
membership group that Rogers founded for hikers and equestrians.
Rogers ran the Conference and Club from his home in Santa Ana until his
health failed him. He relinquished the helm to Vogel, Cash, and Marshall
in the early 1980's. The Club was merged into the Conference, and the name
was changed to Pacific Crest Trail Association in 1992 to reflect the
focus and volunteer structure of the group as an individual membership
organization, rather than a federation of outdoor clubs. The board of
directors developed bylaws for governance of the organization and took
charge.
Board members are elected for three year terms, with one third of the
members being elected each year by the entire membership. Committees were
established to deal with various aspects of the organization, and
financial records were maintained in an orderly fashion and available for
all to see.
In June, 1993, the Pacific Crest Trail Association joined the U.S.
Forest Service and other land management agencies in celebrating the
completion of the trail with a "Golden Spike" ceremony near Soledad Canyon
in the Angeles National Forest.
That same year, the Association signed a memorandum of understanding
with the U.S. Departments of Agriculture and Interior, the Forest Service,
Park Service and the BLM. This agreement recognizes the Association as the
federal government's major partner in the management and operation of the
Pacific Crest National Scenic Trail.
With help in the form of a USFS grant, the Association hired its first
paid staff in 1993. The Forest Service's intent was to have the staff
design and develop an Association structure that would give leadership to
a membership expansion effort, maintain the trail with volunteer work
parties, and become self-supporting.
Full color brochures promoting the trail were printed and distributed
through the federal agencies, but membership numbers remained relatively
stagnant. A long range plan to guide the growth of the Association was
developed and adopted by the board of directors in 1995. Growth and
serving the needs of its members became the Association's main focus.
An executive secretary was employed, a toll-free telephone number was
installed, an Internet website was developed, and greater attention was
given to the timely publication of the Association's bi-monthly magazine.
Arrangements were made with the USFS to allow the Association to issue
visitor permits to members who were traveling more than 500 miles on the
PCT. To help fund these added services and recognize those members who
support the Association with an annual membership of $1,000 or more, the
Trail Guardian Club was established.
However, developing the financial resources to fulfill its role as the
protector and promoter of the Pacific Crest National Scenic Trail, while
supporting an enlarged volunteer structure, required special skills. An
executive director with association management and financial development
experience was hired, and an administrative assistant added, in 1996.
Copyright (C) 1999... 2001 Pacific Crest Trail
Association ... All Rights Reserved
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