J.B. Duke founded the
American Tobacco Company in 1890, which subsequently acquired the
Lucky Strike Company and over 200 other firms. The company built processing plants and warehouses in Durham which were served by several rail lines built in 1905. The rail line to the south which is now the ATT, connected from Durham to
Bonsal, NC and onwards to
Duncan. It was known as the New Hope Valley Railway and later Durham & South Carolina (it never got as far as SC), and later became part of the
Norfolk Southern Railway system. In the 1970s the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers built the
Jordan Lake reservoir in
Chatham County necessitating the relocation of a large portion of the tracks. A portion of the original right-of-way is presently a natural surface trail accessible off of Stagecoach Rd. in Durham. A new rail line was built on higher ground a few miles to the east. However, only about 10 years later, the tracks were removed from this new railroad as Norfolk Southern had been bought out, and trains could access the American Tobacco complex via the
Southern Railway more economically. The Triangle Rails-to-Trails Conservancy Inc. (TRTC), founded in 1989, aimed to preserve abandoned railroad corridors in North Carolina's Triangle area for future transportation and recreational use, particularly through rail-to-trail conversions. TRTC's first president, Jon Parker, and his successor, John Goebel, along with Robert Payne, Al Capehart, Libby Searles, and Rick Burt, secured funding to develop the American Tobacco Trail (ATT), a 22-mile trail spanning Durham, Wake, and Chatham counties on the former Norfolk & Southern railroad line. The project's early stages, beginning with a $2,500 grant, involved extensive planning led by Greenways Incorporated and collaboration with the North Carolina Department of Transportation (NCDOT), local governments, and various organizations. In 1994, TRTC leadership passed to Tom Mappes, who coordinated planning efforts to address trail design challenges, such as the I-40 “gap” and widening standards. Advocacy from Leslie Kennedy and the NC Horse Council led to the construction of a tunnel under US Hwy 64 to maintain the trail's continuity in Wake County. Sig Hutchinson and the Triangle Greenways Council envisioned a connected network of trails, incorporating the ATT as a key segment. Curt Devereux and Rick Burt contributed by maintaining TRTC's website and newsletters, while Bill Bussey later led TRTC, overseeing continuous improvements and community engagement efforts. The ATT officially opened in phases, starting in Durham in the year 2000, followed by sections in Wake and Chatham counties. Key milestones included the addition of a 3.2-mile section in 2002, a 3.5-mile equestrian-friendly segment in Wake County in 2003, and federally funded expansions secured by Congressman David Price, which helped complete the Chatham section by 2010. The final Durham section, featuring a pedestrian bridge over I-40, was completed in 2014. TRTC continues to advocate for the ATT and related projects, including the Timberlake and Duke Beltline Corridors, expanding recreational and transportation opportunities in the region. == See also ==