Ray Hunt Profile

TEHCC Patch
Last Revised: March 08, 2007

This page is dedicated to Ray Hunt, long-time TEHCC member and Chairman of the Appalachian Trail Conference Board of Managers from 1983 to 1989.

bullet Living Memory - Raymond F. Hunt
bulletThe Final Miles - Ray Hunt completes hiking the A.T.
bulletRaymond F. Hunt, 1923-2005

This article was originally posted in the July-August 2000 edition of the Appalachian Trailway News, which commemorated the 75th Anniversary of the Appalachian Trail Conference.  Reprinted here with permission.

Living Memory

Six Conference Chairs in an Evolving Trail Landscape
Raymond F. Hunt

By Judy Jenner

Ray Hunt, right, with Senator (and presidential candidate) Robert Dole, who wandered into a 1987 celebration in Hanover, N.H., of the 50th anniversary of the Trail. (ATC Photo) The Appalachian Trail "is a living, changing thing" that requires a "vigorous and flexible organization," Raymond F. Hunt, sixth ATC chair, once wrote.  The chemical engineer from Kingsport, Tennessee, was vigorous and flexible himself and continued Blackburn's tradition as peacemaker and consensus-builder throughout the six years he served as chair, beginning in 1983.  He also was the first of three chairs in a row to be elected to the full three-term limit in that position.

A native of Pennsylvania, Hunt began a lifelong career at Tennessee Eastman Company soon after graduating from Yale University.  His introduction to the Trail project began in the early 1950's, with the Tennessee Eastman Hiking Club in one of its biggest undertakings.  Members rerouted the Trail over the Roan Mountain in a project Hunt thought "would be the ruination of the club" because it was so extensive in scope (three years and sixty-five miles).  He began working closely with the Forest Service partners in the South and wound up coordinating many of his club's relocations.

During his first three decades as a Trail maintainer, Hunt hiked many sections of the A.T.  He began venturing farther from home with his hikes, often joined by club colleagues, putting the pieces together until, in 1988, he wound up at Thornton Gap, Virginia, where he officially completed his 38-year, 2,100 mile odyssey.  Joining him at the end were his wife, Martha, and close friends.  "You really can't do it [a Trail hike] without a support system," he observed.

Hunt began volunteering for Board assignments in the mid-1970's.  He was a strong advocate of ATC's publications program and edited two editions of the Tennessee-North Carolina guide.  In 1977, he created the first Data Book and continued revamping and perfecting the annual publication for five more years.

He said his engineering background led to a fascination with numbers and making sets of numbers into graphs he'd use to simplify an issue.  In 1983, he quipped that, by the year 2228, the Trail would be four thousand miles long due to relocations.  On another occasion, pondering the geographic center of the A.T., he suggested ATC build a portable cairn atop a wagon and move it each year to the actual midpoint.  The variability of the Trail's center, he said, would persist "as long as maintainers North and South keep trying to pull it closer to them by implementing longer relocations."

It was just such humor Hunt often injected into tense situations.  Then, he'd laugh heartily and so infectiously that others simply had to join him.

He once revealed his "secret" backpacking: When hiking uphill, he let his companions do the talking and ask questions.  He'd wait until the downhill treks to answer them.  Another time, he proposed a society for people so attached to their old boots they couldn't discard them.  He wrote an ATN article about it and hosted a conference workshop to discuss the matter - to which no one came.

In 1988, knowing of a powerful congressional chairman's penchant for golf, Hunt tailored his testimony accordingly.  He presented a large map showing golf courses close to the A.T.

Hunt appeared many times before Congress, appealing for funding to complete the federal acquisition of Trail lands.  Of the first such occasion, in 1984, he wrote, "We appeared as volunteers and amateurs, rather than skilled professionals, and that was probably helpful."

As chair, Hunt extensively organized Board committees and championed ATC's first steps toward a more comprehensive fund-raising program.  He signed the historic 1984 document in which the Park Service turned over management responsibility for the Trail to ATC and its clubs.  The hardest part about implementing the agreement, he wrote in 1985, was "mobilizing the volunteer effort and resisting being drawn into the complications of bureaucracy."  He characterized it as "the most important document that I ever hoped to sign."  (Years later, he admitted, "I had overlooked my marriage license.")

Hunt convened the first-ever weekend meeting of A.T. club presidents in 1985 and called it "an event waiting to happen."  He created a public-relations committee because he felt ATC had a "good story to tell."  Public knowledge "of our efforts builds a strong constituency that yields political and financial support," he wrote in 1987.

In 1989, he addressed the need for a resource-management policy to protect the Trail's flora and fauna and other natural features.  ATC, he said, needed to add a land ethic "that goes beyond what is required by laws and regulations but is a direct descendant of the values that inspired the Trail project in the first place."

Hunt retired from his job at Tennessee Eastman in 1987.  Now 76, he remains an active committee member as chair emeritus.

   

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