Getting there:
Recently, the WV Division of Highways closed the Jenkinsburg bridge due to safety concerns. If you plan to visit, we highly recommend traveling from Rt. 26 via Bruceton Mills/Valley Point. You will not be able to cross the bridge in a vehicle. Please avoid entering from the Rt. 7/Masontown side of Bull Run Rd. as there is no public parking on this side of the bridge and do not block gates or pull-offs– these are needed by commercial whitewater companies, emergency responders, and for passing vehicles. We are working with partners to learn more about the future of the bridge and will release updates as we have them.
Historically, Jenkinsburg was a small a logging town. The Jenkinsburg Bridge was built in 1912 by the Canton Bridge Company, and is an example of a rare design, known as a pin-connected Pennsylvania through-truss bridge. Canton Bridge Company became American Bridge Company, one of the nation’s biggest bridge-builders during the early 20th century and has numerous structures listed on the National Register of Historic Places. A corner of the property abuts the bridge.
We are partnering with Friends of the Cheat on the site management. Please support this effort by donating today and selecting Jenkinsburg Recreation Area on your gift designation.
Both whitewater sections of the Cheat River (Cheat Canyon) accessed from Jenkinsburg, as well as Big Sandy Creek, are rated for experienced paddlers only. These sections include technical whitewater and are extremely remote / inaccessible.
Learn more about these whitewater runs on the American Whitewater website:
Cheat Canyon (Albright to Jenkinsburg)
Cheat Canyon (Jenkinsburg to Cheat Lake)
Big Sandy Creek (Rockville to Jenkinsburg)
In September 2020, WVLT purchased 13.5 acres in Jenkinsburg for permanent public access from its long-time private owners, Dave and Cynthia Hough.
The property is tiny in relation to the extensive wild lands now protected in the area but is a keystone piece of property, for river and trail recreation that is rapidly growing in north-central West Virginia.
Situated at the confluence of Big Sandy Creek and the Cheat River, the property is also an access point to the Allegheny Trail, West Virginia’s longest hiking trail, a 330-mile north-south path with the northern terminus at the Mason-Dixon line at the Pennsylvania-West Virginia border near Bruceton Mills. To the south and east are public lands of the Cheat Canyon Wildlife Management Area, managed by the West Virginia Division of Natural Resources, with trails under development by Friends of the Cheat, a local watershed association.