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Branching out: Montour Trail opens new stretch of trail in Muse

By Jon Andreassi 3 min read
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Brenna and Alden Lee walk their dog, Dakota, on the Muse branch of the Montour Trail after Thursday’s opening ceremony.
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Julian Wolfe, president of the Montour Trail Council, speaks at Thursday’s event.
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Washington County Commissioner Nick Sherman speaks about the importance of the Montour Trail for economic development and tourism in the county.
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A crowd listens to Julian Wolfe speak Thursday at the opening of the Muse branch of the Montour Trail.

The Montour Trail spreads out a bit farther now with the official opening of the Muse branch.

The Montour Trail Council held a ribbon-cutting ceremony attended by local and statewide elected officials Thursday morning to commemorate the new 0.6 mile stretch of trail.

“The railroad built a branch railroad down to serve the mine in Muse back in the 1920s,” said Ned Williams, the project manager for the Muse branch, prior to Thursday’s ceremony. “When we purchased the trail through here, we also purchased the Muse branch for a ways. Our strategy had been to develop the mainline first, and then develop branches.

The Montour Trail stretches about 47 miles, and including the branches has more than 60 miles of trail. The Muse branch connects to the trail near the 24.3 milepost in Cecil Township, and is easily accessible from the McConnell Trails housing development.

The Montour Trail Council has worked with developer NVR since they began work on McConnell Trails more than a decade ago. Williams explained how they helped bring the Muse branch to fruition.

“They graded it, roughed it, established some ditches, and then these guys, our volunteer maintenance crew … finished it into what you see now,” Williams said.

The Muse branch goes off of the main trail and extends to Burnside Road near its intersection with Dogwood Lane. According to Williams, Montour Trail Council plans to extend the branch another mile into Muse.

Julian Wolfe, the president of Montour Trail Council, opened Thursday’s ceremony by recognizing the organization’s founders, some of whom were in attendance.

“This small band of intrepid, recreational enthusiasts founded and established this trail 36 years ago, and today it still remains all volunteer, a nonprofit organization,” Wolfe said.

Washington County Commissioner Nick Sherman spoke Thursday about the importance of the trail for the county’s economic development.

Sherman described the trail as “great tourism” for the county.

“I always joke and say, look, no one is in Seattle, Washington, saying they are going to vacation in Washington County. So what is tourism in Washington County? It’s getting people from Upper St. Clair, and Bethel Park, and South park to come down and spend money in our stores. To go to Tandem and get an ice cream cone, and to stop at the Tanger Outlets when you’re done,” Sherman said. “It may seem like a bike trail, but it’s so much more. It’s making this a livable, workable place.”

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