Marshall Forest Preserve (TNC)

Marshall Forest Preserve (TNC)

Horseleg Creek Road Rome, Georgia 30165

Official Website
Marshall Forest (Georgia’s Rome office of tourism) website

About this Location

Once part of the Cherokee Nation’s lands, Marshall Forest covers 301 acres of pine-hardwood forest in Floyd County, near Rome in northwest Georgia. The site is one of the last remaining stands of old-growth forest in the Ridge and Valley Province, a geographical corridor that runs from Pennsylvania to Alabama. Ranging in elevation from 600-900 feet, the site is home to over 300 species of plants and 55 tree species in 3 distinct plant communities: pine-oak, chestnut oak, and mixed hardwood forest. It is thought that periodic ice storms (like the 1993 blizzard) and fires open the canopy for pine growth, preventing domination by a single plant community.

The forest is home to the largest population in Georgia of the endangered large-flowered skullcap, a perennial herb in the mint family. Also found in the Black’s Bluff preserve, the large-flowered skullcap was discovered by Alvin Wentworth Chapman, a physician and botanist who explored the mountains near Rome in the 1870s. The site is also home to a wealth of fauna, including frogs, salamanders, at least six species of snake, and dozens of bird species.

Marshall Forest was the first National Natural Landmark in Georgia, designated by the U.S. Department of the Interior in 1966. Currently, TNC participates in the Alternative Spring Break program, through which college students from across the country volunteer to assist nonprofit organizations. At the Marshall Forest Preserve, they aid TNC by removing invasive species like English Ivy and Chinese privet, marking boundaries, and participating in other management activities.

The Marshall Forest is open to the public during daylight hours.

The Big Pine Braille Trail offers interpretive braille signs. This preserve also offers a short trail that has been improved for wheelchair access with a gravel surface. This trail can be navigated by most wheelchairs with wide tires.

Notable Trails

Big Pine Braille Trail. 

  • The trail is self-guided and travelson the southwest side of the forest, with plant identification tags and 20 stations with plaques written in Braille and English.
  • The trail can be easily walked in 30 minutes.

Dorsey Loop Trail

Flower Glen Trail

The AllTrails website has a description and map of a hike at Marshall Forest. https://www.alltrails.com/trail/us/georgia/marshall-forest-hiking-trail

Features

  • Wheelchair accessible trail

  • Roadside viewing

  • Restrooms on site

  • Entrance fee

Content from Official Website, Marshall Forest (Georgia’s Rome office of tourism) website, and Matthew Middleton

Last updated October 20, 2023

Matthew Middleton