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His mother, whom he lost in his midteens to complications from surgery, encouraged him to read and appreciate poetry and literature. He went on to graduate from William Penn High School in 1935. This was during the depression and jobs were hard to find for adults much less a young man just out of high school. He worked on area farms and hunted and trapped for furs in the winter. Later, he gained employment as a carpenter.
In 1941, when the military draft was looming, Earl was awaiting his turn for entering the service when he decided to volunteer for active duty in order to get it over with. When Pearl Harbor was attacked, he was already in advanced training in the States. He spent his entire army career in the Pacific Theater, spending a great amount of time "down under" on small islands constructing radar and communications facilities. Much of that time was spent on small islands where the Japanese occupied parts of the island. Any spare time was spent writing poems and other manuscripts about the wartime experience that mostly remain unpublished at this time.
After discharge in 1945, Earl returned to York and was self-employed buying and selling antiques as well as refinishing some of the more valuable ones. He also clerked at auctions and did some contract carpenter work to supplement his income.
In late 1947, the urge to hike the Appalachian Trail started to grow within him when he learned from a magazine article that no one had hiked the entire Trail in one season. It was thought to be an impossible feat by the Appalachian Trail Conference leadership and hiking public. This urge to thru-hike had first surfaced during the late 30's while hiking with his close friend Walter Winemiller, a neighbor in York. He and Earl had planned on hiking the Trail after the war. Walter was killed during the landing at Iwo Jima, though, so Earl headed for Mt. Oglethorpe in Georgia alone in May of 1948 to begin his historic journey. Four months later he became the first person to thru-hike the A.T. in one continuous journey. His hike was in many ways a memorial to his friend.
After his 1948 hike, Earl's first book Walking With Spring was published privately and later, in 1982, published commercially by The Appalachian Trail Conference. Earl took to the trail again in 1965, hiking from Mt. Katahdin in Maine south to Springer Mountain, which had recently been designated as the Trail's Southern terminus, replacing Mt. Oglethorpe. He was the first to complete a thru-hike in both Georgia to Maine and Maine to Georgia directions.
After half a century of on and off Trail work with the ATC and local A.T. clubs, Earl decided to try a third thru-hike in 1998 ... at the age of 79 years! He completed this "anniversary" hike just two weeks prior to his 80th birthday. While on the 1998 trip, Earl kept a handwritten journal upon which the manuscript for The Appalachian Trail: Calling Me Back To The Hills was based.
Earl V. Shaffer succumbed to cancer on May 5, 2002, after a brief illness and hospitalization. He was 83 years old. David Donaldson ("The Spirit of '48"), his hiking partner from 1998, was at his bedside. Earl finished his life as he finished his anniversary hike ... with one of his newest and closest friends by his side. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Review by Lois,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Appalachian Trail: Calling Me Back to the Hills (Hardcover)
A great book for the outdoor and hiking person. Great pictures and very interesting personal experiences by Earl Shaffer. Poetry very good. Best book I've seen on the Appalachian Trail so far.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Beautiful Book,
By riprapnc (Matthews, NC United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Appalachian Trail: Calling Me Back to the Hills (Hardcover)
Earl Shaffer was an incredible spirit. This book, released in the year of his death (May 2002) is a beautiful tribute to his life. His writing is simple and straightforward. The photography is gorgeous. This book is one to be enjoyed by hikers and nonhikers alike. There's no way you can look through "Calling Me Back to the Hills" and not want to lace up your boots and take a long walk in the woods or find your way to a mountaintop somewhere. Thanks, Earl.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Appalachian Trail Calling Me Back to the Hills,
By Rita C. Fleischmann (Lakewood, WA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Appalachian Trail: Calling Me Back to the Hills (Hardcover)
This book was a gift, but I would have bought one, and I have since given two for gifts and will not hesitate to do so again. The text was written by the legendary Earl Shaffer, who was the trail's first thru-hiker (in one season) in 1948, and repeated the feat in 1998 for the 50th anniversary of that event. The narrative is of this now famous anniversary Anniversary Trip, interspersed with some of Shaffer's poetry. Unfortunately, Shaffer died right after the book was published. Bart Smith, who is currantly behind the Katahdin Art Project, provides the wonderful color photos. To say he is talented is an understatement. His next book will be on the Florida Trail, and I cannot wait to see it. I disagree on one thing he wrote in the preface, however. Smith said, "I couldn't capture the feel of an autumn breeze, the smell of a deciduous forest ...". He is wrong. I COULD feel the autumn breeze. I could smell the deciduous forest. If this is an example of his work, he will be one of the great nature photographers of our time. I highly recommend this book. Buy it!
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