Everyone Can Enjoy the Parkway
The Parkway is generally accessible, and we strive to provide meaningful experiences to all people.
If your questions concerning accessibility are unanswered after reading information in this section of our website, please contact us.
Access to the Parkway is free for everyone. You can learn about the The America the Beautiful National Parks and Federal Recreational Lands Access Pass—or more simply, the Access Pass—which provides a wide range of discounts on activities and services when you visit federal lands that charge fees. The pass is available online or at other locations where park passes are sold. (The Parkway does not sell passes.)
Some Parkway brochures are available in Braille, and most public facilities within the Parkway are wheelchair accessible as are the pull offs and overlooks found along the drive. Each campground has handicapped accessible campsites.
We provide closed captions and audio descriptions on all of our videos.
Accessible Options by Milepost
(Under Construction...we will finish soon)
Milepost
|
Facility
|
Services Available
|
Links to More Information
|
8 |
Exhibit Shelter |
Info Panel A "10,000 Years of History" |
Jump to Audio Description and Transcription |
8 |
Exhibit Shelter |
Info Panel B "Pathway to the Past" |
Jump to Audio Description and Transcription |
8 |
Exhibit Shelter |
Info Panel C "Territorial Lifeline" |
Jump to Audio Description and Transcription |
8 |
Exhibit Shelter |
Info Panel D "A Hard Trip Home" |
Jump to Audio Description and Transcription |
10 |
Emerald Mound |
Info Panel A "A Remarkable Feat" |
Jump to Audio Description and Transcription |
10 |
Emerald Mound |
Info Panel B "A Well-Organized Society" |
Jump to Audio Description and Transcription |
10 |
Emerald Mound |
Info Panel C "Still Sacred" |
Jump to Audio Description and Transcription |
10 |
Emerald Mound |
Info Panel D "One Mound Among Many" |
Jump to Audio Description and Transcription |
15.5 |
Mount Locust |
Restroom, exhibit shelter, and grounds of historic house |
Jump to Mount Locust |
17.5 |
Coles Creek |
Restroom, designated picnic table |
Jump to Coles Creek |
54.8 |
Rocky Springs |
Restrooms in campground, designated campsite with picnic table |
Jump to Rocky Springs |
102.4 |
Parkway Information Cabin (closed) |
Restrooms and paved multi-use recreational trail
|
Jump to Chisha Foka Trail |
122.6 |
River Bend |
Restrooms, designated picnic table |
Jump to River Bend |
154.3 |
Holly Hill |
Restrooms, designated picnic table
|
|
159.9 |
Kosiusko Visitor Center |
Restrooms, city visitor center |
|
193.1` |
Jeff Busby |
Restrooms, designated campsite with picnic table |
Jump to
Jeff Busby Picnic Area
Jeff Busby Campground
|
232.4 |
Bynum Mounds |
Loop trail to exhibit shelter and mounds, slight grade |
Jump to Bynum Mound |
233.2 |
Witch Dance |
Restrooms, designated picnic table |
Jump to Witch Dance |
261.8 |
Chickasaw Village |
Exhibit shelter and stry to the hiking trail, Natchez Trace National Scenic trail. |
Jump to:
Chickasaw Village Site
Audio Descriptions
Blackland Praire Trail |
266
|
Parkway Visitor Center |
Restroom, visitor center, nature trail. The park film is closed captioned and audio described. A Braille trail guide to the Natchez Trace National Scenic Trail is available. |
Jump to
Parkway Visitor Center |
327.3 |
Colbert Ferry |
Restroom at boat launch, designated picnic table |
Jump to Colber Ferry:
Stand Site
Boat Ramp and Picnic area |
364.5 |
Glenrock Branch |
Restrooms |
Jump to Glennrock Branch |
377.8 |
Jacks Branch |
Restrooms |
Jump to Jacks Branch |
385.9 |
Meriwether Lewis |
Restrooms, visitor center (hours vary), interpretive trail, designated campsite with picnic table |
Jump to Meriwether Lewis
Burial Monument
I |
407.7 |
Gordon House Historic Site |
Trail to interpretive exhibits near home |
Jump to Gordon House |
427.9 |
Garrison Creek |
Restrooms |
Jump to Garrison Creek |
In addition to the above locations, each pullout along the Parkway has a routed sign that can be read from the vehicle. Interpretive signs at trailheads and parking areas are also wheelchair accessible.
National Park Service Disability History
Loading results...
 The Telling All Americans’ Stories Disability History series brings attention to some of the many disability stories interwoven across the National Park Service’s 400+ units and its programs. “Disability stories” refer to the array of experiences by, from, and about people with disabilities represented across our nation. People with disabilities are the largest minority in the United States, but their stories often remain untold.  Education for people with disabilities developed in an era shaped by the Civil War, abolition, and scientific discoveries. These events impacted education and the reformers who pushed for it. The reform of education for people with disabilities in the 1800s was a reaction to the absence of educational opportunities for these populations.  Treatment and perceptions of disability have undergone transformation since the 1900s. This has happened largely because people with disabilities have demanded and created those changes. Like other civil rights movements, the disability rights movement has a long history. Examples of activism can be found among various disability groups dating back to the 1800s. Many events, laws, and people have shaped this development.  Before Dorothea Dix and other healthcare reformers advocated for better treatment in hospitals and almshouses, what were the experiences of people with disabilities like in the 1700s and 1800s? How can studying this history help us understand the everyday lives of people with disabilities, their perceptions of themselves and society’s perceptions of them?  The United States has a long history of caring for its service men and women. Since the Civil War era, the Federal Government has provided doctors to support its veterans’ physical and emotional well-being. Battlefields and military hospitals help tell this story. All sites related to war and military action have disability history, since war inevitably means some soldiers will come home with short-term or long-lasting disabilities.  Nearly 50 million people live with disabilities in the US. This population has included our nation's presidents. Dwight Eisenhower had a learning disability. Abraham Lincoln lived with depression. James Madison had epilepsy. Franklin D. Roosevelt had polio. John F. Kennedy lived with several medical issues. Places associated with these presidents, including those in NPS parks and recognized by NPS programs, continue to honor these presidents' memories.  The National Park Service strives to make its parks, monuments, and historic sites available to all. Programs, services, and products, such as Braille alternatives of print material, sign language interpretation of tours, accessible camping sites and trails, ramps and elevators make parks more accessible. These are essential to allowing the public to fully enjoy NPS resources.
|