The Bozeman Trail was an overland route connecting the gold rush territory of Montana.
The Iditarod Trail was a trail used to transport goods that ran from Seward, passed through Iditarod, then ended in Nome. Iditarod was named after the Iditarod River. In the early 1900s, it saw a boom due to gold mining. After the gold was exhausted, the town became a ghost town.
umm....... a trail that ran through 5 peoples villages and was a WINDING trail.
I'm not entirely sure what you are asking but yes there was a trail, called the Ho Chi Minh trail, that ran partly through Laos and Cambodia to transport supplies and vietcong troops to south Vietnam.
Wee Willie Winkie.
The west orange trail
the trail is what the dogs ran on
The 600-mile Chisholm Trail was used extensively until 1871. Illinois cattle buyer Joseph G. McCoy laid out the trail along an old trade path initially developed by merchant Jesse Chisholm. It ran north from San Antonio to Fort Worth, Texas, through Oklahoma and ended at Abilene, Kansas.
It was the Chisholm Trail.
The church is usually in the center of the town or at the top of "high" street that ran through the town. A market square was also in front of the church. You can still see this lay out today in many cities in Europe.
I was told by our guide on the trail that a local porter ran the trail from the first bridge to machu picchu in 4 hours
Right now the Appalachian Trail runs along it's entire length from Maine to Georgia. Daniel Boone was a trapper and trader and established what some call the Boone trail. It ran between different trading posts in the mountains.