Hiking Project Logo

A loop trail through the forests of the Piedmont following the entirety of King Mountain National Recreation Trail.


Your Rating: Rating Rating Rating Rating Rating      Clear Rating
Your Difficulty:
Your Favorites: Add To-Do · Your List
Zoom in to see details
Map Key

15.6

Miles

25.1

KM

Loop

957' 292 m

High

618' 189 m

Low

1,148' 350 m

Up

1,148' 350 m

Down

3%

Avg Grade (2°)

17%

Max Grade (10°)

Dogs Leashed

Features Fall Colors · Historical Significance · Lake · River/Creek · Views

Overview

This trail winds through both the Kings Mountain National Military Park as well as South Carolina's Kings Mountain State Park. Here directions are provided for joining the trail from the State Park's Kings Mountain Campground, but you can also start from the visitors center of Kings Mountain National Military Park.

There are several locations for camping along the loop. One is at the marked start of this trail in the state park. However, the linked map of the Federal park indicates the location of three other campgrounds.

Description

From Kings Mountain Campground in Kings Mountain State Park, head west where the trail splits. Turn left to head south on the trail to start. The trail winds through the woods and intersects the Ridgeline Trail which connects Kings Mountain and Crowder Mountain parks.

As the trail continues, you intersect several equestrian trails. About halfway through the loop, there is a clearly marked fork that allows you to hike to the Peak of Browns Mountain. This is a short out-and-back spur that provides good views. Shortly after this, the trail becomes more heavily traveled and easier. The higher traffic is found in the vicinity of the visitor center. The final segment follows the rolling valleys back to the state park.

Much of the trail follows the rivers and has relatively gentle climbs, but there are a few sustained climbs with moderate incline. The trail is very well marked with blue blazes—these include blue-cyan paint, blue diamonds and round blue markers with an icon of a hiker.

The trail is relatively narrow, and some roots can become wet after rain. The trail also gets covered in leaves during the autumn which can make the trail slippery. The trail crosses creeks at numerous points. Many of these crossing have bridges, but some require stepping across rocks.

Good resources include:
nps.gov/kimo/index.htm
carolinathreadtrailmap.org/…
southcarolinaparks.com/king…

History & Background

Kings Mountain National Military Park was established to commemorate the Battle of Kings Mountain, which was fought October 7, 1780. For more information on the battle and the Revolutionary War, check out the Kings Mountain Visitors Center and the Kings Mountain Battlefield Loop.

Contacts

Shared By:

Christopher Rorden

Trail Ratings

  4.1 from 11 votes

#3132

Overall
  4.1 from 11 votes
5 Star
45%
4 Star
27%
3 Star
18%
2 Star
9%
1 Star
0%
Recommended Route Rankings

#3,132

Overall
23 Views Last Month
2,023 Since Nov 26, 2017
Intermediate Intermediate

14%
14%
71%
0%
0%
0%

Photos

Ferguson's grave marker
May 24, 2018 near Clover, SC
The trail crosses small creeks at several places
Nov 26, 2017 near Clover, SC
Clear mile markers
Nov 26, 2017 near Clover, SC
At some locations the trail is blazed with round blue markers with an icon of a hiker
Nov 26, 2017 near Blacksburg, SC

0 Comments

Weather


Current Trail Conditions

Unknown
Add Your Check-In

Check-Ins

Jan 2, 2020
Brett D
Nov 8, 2019
Meggie Tran
Sep 21, 2019
Dirk Stugg
Jan 26, 2019
Holly Jordan
We went an hour before sunset, cool, sunny, pretty. Michael, Holly, Crosby, Nora, Simon, Ruby. Kids were too loud and whiny. Go earlier next time. 0.5mi
Dec 30, 2018
Tim A
14.9mi
Dec 22, 2018
Brett D
Oct 28, 2018
Sarah Genay
Long loop. Low traffic and good conditions. An underused gem.
Jun 21, 2018
Gabriel Sanchez Suarez
Welcome

Join the Community! It's FREE

Already have an account? Login to close this notice.