A section of the Cumberland Trail will, when completed, traverse Crab Orchard from north to south.
It is also located alongside the famed National Road (Cumberland Trail).
The Cumberland Trail became Tennessee's 53rd state park in 1998 and the state's only linear park.
The Cumberland Trail gives hikers access to areas preserved for their natural or scenic beauty that cannot be otherwise accessed.
A future segment of the Cumberland Trail is planned to connect to the falls.
He traveled west in 1767, taking the Cumberland Trail to Brownsville, Pennsylvania.
The company's fleet of Conestoga wagons carried food and supplies west over the Cumberland Trail.
The landform is near the Laurel-Snow state natural area and the Cumberland Trail.
It has many trails for hiking, of which the most notable is the Cumberland Trail.
A leg of the Cumberland Trail passes near the park's northern boundary, connecting the park to nearby mountaintops.