Gudy Gaskill | |
Birth Name: | Gudrun Timmerhaus |
Birth Date: | 1927 |
Birth Place: | Palatine, Illinois, US |
Death Date: | July 14, 2016 (age 89) |
Death Place: | Denver, Colorado |
Education: | B.A. education, Western State College of Colorado M.A. recreation, University of New Mexico |
Known For: | Driving force behind creation of the Colorado Trail |
Gudrun "Gudy" Gaskill (1927 – July 14, 2016)[1] was an American mountaineer who is regarded as the driving force behind the creation of the Colorado Trail, a 567miles hiking, biking, and horseback riding path between Denver and Durango, Colorado. Beginning in the 1970s, she helped plan out the route, solicited donations, and recruited teams of volunteers to work in one-week shifts developing the Trail each summer. She was named executive director of the newly formed Colorado Trail Foundation in 1987. She was inducted into the Colorado Women's Hall of Fame in 2002.
Gudrun Timmerhaus was born in Palatine, Illinois, to Paul and Elsa Timmerhaus.[2] She became fond of hiking at age 14[3] when her father got a job as a summer ranger at Rocky Mountain National Park. As a youth, she also competed in downhill and cross country skiing. She studied at the Western State College of Colorado in Gunnison, earning a degree in education. She later earned her master's degree in recreation from the University of New Mexico.[2]
See main article: Colorado Trail. Gaskill is credited as the visionary and driving force behind the Colorado Trail, a 567miles long, wide hiking, biking, and horseback riding path between Denver and Durango, Colorado.[4] [5] Gaskill and her husband had joined the Colorado Mountain Club in 1952.[4] In her capacity as chairwoman of the club's Huts and Trails Committee in the 1970s, Gaskill helped plot the early portions of the Trail[6] and recruited teams of volunteers to build several miles of trail each summer in one-week shifts. In 1984, when the Governor of Colorado threw his support behind the project, the project moved more quickly toward completion. Gaskill, who was named executive director of the Colorado Trail Foundation, helped plan new sections, solicited private and corporate donations, and recruited volunteers nationwide.[5] [4] These volunteers numbered more than 10,000.[4] In 1988 the first of the route were dedicated.
Gaskill became the first woman president of the Colorado Mountain Club in 1977.[2] [4] She also served on the board of the American Hiking Society.[7]
Gaskill was honored by President Ronald Reagan in his Take Pride in America campaign, and by President George H. W. Bush in his Points of Light recognition program for volunteerism.[4] [8] She was inducted into the Colorado Women's Hall of Fame in 2002.[5]
Several Trail features were named in her honor. The Gudy Gaskill Bridge, a 141feet span over the South Platte River, was built at the start of Segment 2 of the Colorado Trail. Gudy's Rest is a 1400feet high scenic overlook of the San Juan Mountains outside Durango.[9] The Gudy Gaskill Loop is a 2.5miles scenic trail connecting with the Beaver Brook Trail outside Golden, Colorado.[10]
Posthumously, the Colorado Mountain Club established an annual Gudy Gaskill Award which recognizes female club members who are "a positive and inspirational example of volunteerism".[11] In March 2017 the Colorado General Assembly honored her legacy, with legislators recalling their experiences on the Colorado Trail and a slideshow presentation.[12]
A new elementary school in Littleton public schools has been named in her honor
She and her husband David Gaskill, a geologist, had four children.[4] They resided in Golden. An active mountaineer, she climbed all 54 of Colorado's fourteeners as well as other major mountains of the world.[4] [5]
Gaskill suffered a stroke in early July 2016. She died on July 14, 2016, in Denver, aged 89.[4]