Recreation and Parks | Projects

Greenways

 The Jackson County Greenways Project is intended to enhance the quality of life in Jackson County by implementing and promoting a comprehensive greenway trail system throughout the county, emphasizing the benefits to the health of our citizens, the environment in which we live, and the protection of our natural resources. Our county and municipal leaders believe strongly that conservation of natural lands, preservation of water quality, increased economic development, enhanced wellness opportunities and expanded educational centers are key factors for the health of our communities and for generations to come.

 Jackson County Greenways will enhance the current and future quality of life for our citizens and visitors by implementing and promoting a comprehensive greenway trail system that emphasizes benefits to our health and wellness and our environment. Jackson County’s citizens recognize the importance of our natural and scenic resources, as well as the responsibility for sustainable growth. Reflecting this, a commitment to preservation and conservation projects should be combined with a practical and flexible commitment to providing safe, multi-modal transportation among the county’s communities and towns.

Judaculla Rock

The JRPP is a collaborative effort between Jackson County, the CFCDC, the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians (EBCI), the U.S. Forest Service (USFS), Western Carolina University (WCU), the North Carolina Rock Art Survey (NCRAS), and other agencies to preserve and protect one of the Southeast’s most famous soapstone petroglyphs. Judaculla Rock is one of North Carolina’s most-visited cultural sites, in a region that is home to countless Native American Indian settlements and trails on some of the most rural and undeveloped land in the Appalachians. Nearly 11,000 visitors per year travel to the rock, a soapstone boulder carved with petroglyphs of unknown origin and meaning as early as 1,500 BCE. 

The JRPP is a collaborative effort between Jackson County, the CFCDC, the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians (EBCI), the U.S. Forest Service (USFS), Western Carolina University (WCU), the North Carolina Rock Art Survey (NCRAS), and other agencies to preserve and protect one of the Southeast’s most famous soapstone petroglyphs. Judaculla Rock is one of North Carolina’s most-visited cultural sites, in a region that is home to countless Native American Indian settlements and trails on some of the most rural and undeveloped land in the Appalachians. Nearly 11,000 visitors per year travel to the rock, a soapstone boulder carved with petroglyphs of unknown origin and meaning as early as 1,500 BCE. 
 The JRPP is a collaborative effort between Jackson County, the CFCDC, the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians (EBCI), the U.S. Forest Service (USFS), Western Carolina University (WCU), the North Carolina Rock Art Survey (NCRAS), and other agencies to preserve and protect one of the Southeast’s most famous soapstone petroglyphs. Judaculla Rock is one of North Carolina’s most-visited cultural sites, in a region that is home to countless Native American Indian settlements and trails on some of the most rural and undeveloped land in the Appalachians. Nearly 11,000 visitors per year travel to the rock, a soapstone boulder carved with petroglyphs of unknown origin and meaning as early as 1,500 BCE.

Mark Watson Park

This connector trail at Mark Watson Park, a little more than ¼ mile, will be completed by fall of 2011, and connects the new Sylva-Dillsboro sidewalk to two points of access into downtown Sylva. The path will also provide safe, off-road walking areas within the park, which is popular with walkers and pet owners. It will be a flat, concrete path that meanders through trees and landscaped areas well away from the busy traffic on Business 23.

This trail is partially funded by the Blue Cross Blue Shield Foundation of North Carolina, and supports the new sidewalk, which was co-funded by the Greenways Project, NCDOT and the Town of Sylva.

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