Natchez Trace Parkway
United StatesTennessee, United States

Natchez Trace Parkway

161.92 kmDistance
643 mElevation
90.0 km/hØ speed
1h 48mDuration
Twistiness
1.10x
Gentle
Technicality
50deg/km
Relaxed
Driving Score
27.2/100

The Natchez Trace Parkway is a limited-access national parkway in the Southeastern United States that commemorates the historic Natchez Trace and preserves sections of that original trail. Its central feature is a two-lane road that extends 444 miles (715 km) from Natchez, Mississippi, to Nashville, Tennessee. Access to the parkway is limited, with more than 50 access points in Mississippi, Alabama, and Tennessee. The southern end of the route is in Natchez at its intersection with Liberty Road, and the northern end is northeast of Fairview, Tennessee, in the suburban community of Pasquo, at an intersection with Tennessee State Route 100. In addition to Natchez and Nashville, larger cities along the route include Jackson and Tupelo, Mississippi, and Florence, Alabama. Historian and preservationist Paul Hardin Kapp describes the Parkway as "the most enjoyable and romantic way to arrive in the city," and the "greatest legacy" of the Natchez Garden Club activist group, but "not the real Natchez Trace," rather a "masterpiece in both landscape design and narrative" constructed of "carefully planned vignettes...rolling topography, landscaped with live oaks and hanging Spanish moss."

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