Information launch shared by the Appalachian Path Museum, June 27. Images courtesy of the Appalachian Path Musuem.
The Appalachian Path Museum proclaims that the 2024 Class of the Appalachian Path Corridor of Fame will probably be honored on the A.T. Corridor of Fame Induction on Saturday, September 21, 2024. The Induction will start at 1 pm and will probably be held on the Military Heritage Schooling Heart, situated at 950 Troopers Dr, Carlisle, PA 17013.
The induction ceremony will probably be a free occasion, however registration is required attributable to restricted house. To register, ship an electronic mail to [email protected] The induction ceremony will probably be one in all a full schedule of occasions happening through the Corridor of Fame weekend.
The M.C. for the 2024 Banquet will probably be Brook Lenker. Brook is Govt Director of Keystone Trails Affiliation (KTA). Based in 1956, KTA promotes, supplies, preserves, and protects mountaineering trails and mountaineering alternatives in Pennsylvania. KTA can also be one of many 30 golf equipment that keep the Appalachian Path. Brook got here to KTA in October 2021, bringing a long time of service to the surroundings. He most just lately served because the Govt Director of FracTracker Alliance, a
nationwide group addressing the dangers of fossil gas growth. Beforehand, Brook served as
Supervisor of Schooling and Outreach for the Pennsylvania Division of Conservation and
Pure Sources, as Director of Watershed Stewardship with the Alliance for the Chesapeake
Bay and because the Recreation Program Director with Dauphin County Parks and Recreation Division. His training contains grasp’s and bachelor’s levels in geography and
environmental planning from Towson College.
As beforehand introduced, the 2024 Corridor of Fame class honorees are the late Edward B.
Ballard of Washington, DC; the late Arno Cammerer of Arlington, Virginia, the late
Raymond Hunt of Kingsport, Tennessee, and Ronald S. Rosen of Poughkeepsie, NY.
The Appalachian Path Museum Society, a 501-C-3 not-for revenue group fashioned in 2002, organizes packages, displays, volunteers and fundraising nationwide for the Appalachian Path Museum. The museum opened on June 5, 2010, as a tribute to the hundreds of males, ladies and households who’ve hiked and maintained the roughly 2,190-mile-long mountaineering path that passes by way of 14 states from Maine to Georgia. Situated within the Pine Grove Furnace State Park in Gardners, Pennsylvania, the museum is conveniently situated close to Carlisle, Gettysburg and Chambersburg, Pennsylvania. Extra info is out there at www.atmuseum.org.
CONTACT
Jim Foster
Appalachian Path Museum
717-649-5505
[email protected]
www.atmuseum.org