1 00:00:01,800 --> 00:00:06,920 Speaker 1: Welcome to brain Stuff, a production of iHeart Radio. Hey 2 00:00:07,040 --> 00:00:11,920 Speaker 1: brain Stuff, Lauren bobabam here. Sometimes you've had enough and 3 00:00:11,960 --> 00:00:15,440 Speaker 1: you just need to go for a walk. It's understandable 4 00:00:15,520 --> 00:00:18,560 Speaker 1: a walk can clear the mind, and it's possible the 5 00:00:18,640 --> 00:00:21,280 Speaker 1: extent to which your mind needs to be cleared should 6 00:00:21,280 --> 00:00:25,520 Speaker 1: determine the length of the walk. This isn't necessarily scientific, 7 00:00:25,840 --> 00:00:29,600 Speaker 1: but the story of Emma Gatewood provides anecdotal evidence that 8 00:00:29,640 --> 00:00:34,479 Speaker 1: it might be true. Emma Gatewood, called Grandma Gatewood by 9 00:00:34,479 --> 00:00:37,400 Speaker 1: her family and later the world, was one of the 10 00:00:37,440 --> 00:00:41,479 Speaker 1: early through hikers of the Appalachian Trail, the longest walking 11 00:00:41,520 --> 00:00:45,920 Speaker 1: only footpath in the world. When she left Ohio in ninet, 12 00:00:46,560 --> 00:00:48,640 Speaker 1: she told her family that she was going for a 13 00:00:48,680 --> 00:00:51,839 Speaker 1: walk in the woods. So it was surprising to her 14 00:00:51,920 --> 00:00:55,600 Speaker 1: eleven children and twenty three grandchildren that the sixty seven 15 00:00:55,640 --> 00:00:59,800 Speaker 1: year old matriarch of their family had undertaken this hype. 16 00:01:00,040 --> 00:01:03,080 Speaker 1: It stretches some two thousand, one hundred and ninety miles 17 00:01:03,120 --> 00:01:06,560 Speaker 1: that's three thousand, five hundred and thirty kilometers from Georgia 18 00:01:06,600 --> 00:01:09,800 Speaker 1: to Maine. Her family only found out when one of 19 00:01:09,840 --> 00:01:12,880 Speaker 1: them stumbled across a newspaper feature about their mother's truck. 20 00:01:14,600 --> 00:01:17,919 Speaker 1: Gatewood was not the first person, or even the first woman, 21 00:01:18,080 --> 00:01:22,600 Speaker 1: to hike the trail. In ninety nine, year old Earl 22 00:01:22,680 --> 00:01:25,440 Speaker 1: Schaeffer was the first person to hike the entire trail 23 00:01:25,480 --> 00:01:29,720 Speaker 1: by himself. In nineteen fifty two, Mildred Norman Ryder, in 24 00:01:29,760 --> 00:01:32,559 Speaker 1: her mid forties at the time, completed the entire trail 25 00:01:32,600 --> 00:01:36,240 Speaker 1: with a companion. Gatewoods hike was notable because of her 26 00:01:36,280 --> 00:01:39,080 Speaker 1: age and because she was the first woman ever to 27 00:01:39,120 --> 00:01:43,760 Speaker 1: complete the trail in a single season. For the article 28 00:01:43,800 --> 00:01:46,080 Speaker 1: this episode is based on Hows to Work spoke with 29 00:01:46,200 --> 00:01:50,080 Speaker 1: Larry Luxembourg, president of the Appalachian Trail Museum in Pennsylvania. 30 00:01:50,840 --> 00:01:53,880 Speaker 1: He said, when Grandma Gatewood did her first through hike 31 00:01:53,920 --> 00:01:57,080 Speaker 1: in ninetti, there were few hikers and it was hard 32 00:01:57,120 --> 00:02:00,520 Speaker 1: to follow the trail. There were also many fewer resources 33 00:02:00,560 --> 00:02:03,600 Speaker 1: for hikers, fewer stores near the trail, and much less 34 00:02:03,600 --> 00:02:07,000 Speaker 1: information about the trail. She saw very few hikers along 35 00:02:07,000 --> 00:02:12,000 Speaker 1: the Appalachian Trail, but still Gatewood hiked it alone. Wearing 36 00:02:12,080 --> 00:02:15,360 Speaker 1: canvas sneakers. She walked through seven pairs of them that summer, 37 00:02:15,800 --> 00:02:19,080 Speaker 1: Carrying a denim Duffel bag over one shoulder. She brought 38 00:02:19,160 --> 00:02:22,120 Speaker 1: a change of clothes, a blanket, a plastic shower curtain 39 00:02:22,200 --> 00:02:24,920 Speaker 1: for shelter at night, a Swiss army knife, a canteen, 40 00:02:25,080 --> 00:02:28,320 Speaker 1: a flashlight, a length of rope, and a few other essentials. 41 00:02:28,919 --> 00:02:31,640 Speaker 1: She ate a lot of vienna, sausages, trail mix, and 42 00:02:31,720 --> 00:02:35,200 Speaker 1: bullion from cubes. Sometimes she ran out of food and 43 00:02:35,400 --> 00:02:39,720 Speaker 1: ate berries she recognized in the forest. By the time 44 00:02:39,760 --> 00:02:42,320 Speaker 1: Gatewood became a famous hiker, she had lived the kind 45 00:02:42,360 --> 00:02:44,600 Speaker 1: of life it would take a few thousand miles to 46 00:02:44,639 --> 00:02:49,480 Speaker 1: walk off. Born in Ohio in seven, Gatewood's father had 47 00:02:49,520 --> 00:02:51,919 Speaker 1: lost his leg in the Civil War, and her mother 48 00:02:52,080 --> 00:02:55,480 Speaker 1: single handedly raised fifteen children in a small log cabin, 49 00:02:55,880 --> 00:03:00,160 Speaker 1: sleeping four kids to a bed. Gatewood completed school only 50 00:03:00,200 --> 00:03:02,480 Speaker 1: through the eighth grade, but she loved reading and writing 51 00:03:02,480 --> 00:03:06,519 Speaker 1: poetry and walking in the woods. In nineteen o seven, 52 00:03:06,600 --> 00:03:09,120 Speaker 1: at the age of nineteen, she married a primary school 53 00:03:09,160 --> 00:03:12,880 Speaker 1: teacher and later tobacco farmer by the name of PC Gatewood. 54 00:03:13,600 --> 00:03:16,160 Speaker 1: For the next thirty years, she would endure frequent assault 55 00:03:16,160 --> 00:03:19,120 Speaker 1: from her husband while also doing strenuous farm work and 56 00:03:19,200 --> 00:03:23,400 Speaker 1: raising their eleven children. She tried to escape a few times, 57 00:03:23,440 --> 00:03:26,280 Speaker 1: but it's hard to disappear with multiple children. In Tow 58 00:03:27,360 --> 00:03:30,360 Speaker 1: In ninety nine, after being nearly beaten to death by 59 00:03:30,360 --> 00:03:33,160 Speaker 1: her husband, Gatewood was arrested for throwing a sack of 60 00:03:33,200 --> 00:03:36,120 Speaker 1: flower at him. She spent the night in jail before 61 00:03:36,120 --> 00:03:39,000 Speaker 1: the mayor of the town saw her cracked teeth, bruised face, 62 00:03:39,080 --> 00:03:41,520 Speaker 1: and broken ribs and took her into his own home. 63 00:03:42,520 --> 00:03:44,880 Speaker 1: She stayed there until she healed, at which point she 64 00:03:44,960 --> 00:03:47,840 Speaker 1: filed for divorce, a difficult thing to obtain at the time, 65 00:03:48,680 --> 00:03:51,320 Speaker 1: but her divorce was granted in nineteen forty one and 66 00:03:51,400 --> 00:03:53,800 Speaker 1: she was given custody of the three children who still 67 00:03:53,840 --> 00:03:58,400 Speaker 1: remained at home. In nineteen fifty one, after all of 68 00:03:58,480 --> 00:04:01,040 Speaker 1: her children were out in the world, Gatewood found a 69 00:04:01,080 --> 00:04:04,320 Speaker 1: back issue of National Geographic, which included photos and a 70 00:04:04,360 --> 00:04:08,480 Speaker 1: story about the Appalachian Trail. Gatewood was intrigued and decided 71 00:04:08,520 --> 00:04:10,680 Speaker 1: she wanted to be the first woman to hike it alone. 72 00:04:12,440 --> 00:04:16,680 Speaker 1: Gatewood's first attempt at hiking the entire trail was unsuccessful. 73 00:04:16,920 --> 00:04:19,520 Speaker 1: In nineteen fifty four, she started out from Maine, but 74 00:04:19,680 --> 00:04:23,359 Speaker 1: broke her glasses, lost her way, and was rescued by rangers. 75 00:04:24,480 --> 00:04:27,320 Speaker 1: The next year, she tried again and successfully hiked an 76 00:04:27,360 --> 00:04:30,240 Speaker 1: average of fourteen miles that's twenty two kilometers a day 77 00:04:30,320 --> 00:04:34,800 Speaker 1: from Georgia do Main. She didn't necessarily enjoy everything about 78 00:04:34,800 --> 00:04:38,600 Speaker 1: the experience. After her nineteen fifty five hike, Gatewood was 79 00:04:38,640 --> 00:04:41,719 Speaker 1: interviewed by Sports Illustrated and she had this to say 80 00:04:41,720 --> 00:04:44,720 Speaker 1: about the trail. I thought it would be a nice lark. 81 00:04:45,160 --> 00:04:48,520 Speaker 1: It wasn't. There were terrible blowdowns, burnt over areas that 82 00:04:48,560 --> 00:04:52,279 Speaker 1: were never remarked, gravel and sand, washouts, weeds and brushed 83 00:04:52,320 --> 00:04:54,799 Speaker 1: her neck, and most of the shelters were blown down, 84 00:04:55,040 --> 00:04:57,520 Speaker 1: burned down or so filthy. I had to sleep out 85 00:04:57,520 --> 00:05:00,520 Speaker 1: of doors. This is no trail. This is a nightmare. 86 00:05:00,880 --> 00:05:02,640 Speaker 1: I would never have started this trip if I had 87 00:05:02,640 --> 00:05:04,960 Speaker 1: known how tough it was. But I couldn't and I 88 00:05:05,000 --> 00:05:10,480 Speaker 1: wouldn't quit all things considered, the only thing more improbable 89 00:05:10,520 --> 00:05:13,200 Speaker 1: that Emma Gatewood's completing the trail from Georgia do Main 90 00:05:13,279 --> 00:05:15,840 Speaker 1: in a single summer under these conditions at the age 91 00:05:15,839 --> 00:05:19,080 Speaker 1: of sixty seven is that she did it again twice, 92 00:05:19,720 --> 00:05:22,640 Speaker 1: once in nineteen fifty seven and again in nineteen sixty 93 00:05:22,680 --> 00:05:25,240 Speaker 1: four at the age of seventy six, though that time 94 00:05:25,279 --> 00:05:29,479 Speaker 1: in sections. Also in nineteen fifty nine at the age 95 00:05:29,520 --> 00:05:32,600 Speaker 1: of seven one Gatewood walked some two thousand miles or 96 00:05:33,360 --> 00:05:36,680 Speaker 1: d kilometers of the Oregon Trail, inspired by the pioneer 97 00:05:36,680 --> 00:05:39,400 Speaker 1: women who walked from Missouri to Oregon a hundred years 98 00:05:39,400 --> 00:05:43,960 Speaker 1: before her. By then, newspapers had dubbed Gatewood America's most 99 00:05:44,040 --> 00:05:48,559 Speaker 1: celebrated pedestrian, and she's been inspiring other hikers ever since. 100 00:05:53,640 --> 00:05:56,600 Speaker 1: Today's episode is based on the article Grandma Gatewood Hiked 101 00:05:56,640 --> 00:05:59,599 Speaker 1: into Appalachian Trail History at age sixty seven on House 102 00:05:59,640 --> 00:06:02,720 Speaker 1: to Fork dot com, written by Justlyin Shields. Brain Stuff 103 00:06:02,760 --> 00:06:04,919 Speaker 1: is production by Heart Radio in partnership with how stuff 104 00:06:04,920 --> 00:06:07,440 Speaker 1: Works dot Com, and it's produced by Tyler Clang. For 105 00:06:07,640 --> 00:06:10,480 Speaker 1: more podcasts my heart Radio, visit the I Heart Radio app, 106 00:06:10,560 --> 00:06:13,360 Speaker 1: Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows,