![header=[Marker Text] body=[At Shippensburg, the Raystown Path forked: one branch led directly west over three steep mts. to Burnt Cabins; the other, taken by General Forbes to avoid heavy grades, went south round Parnells Knob to Fort Loudon, crossing the Tuscarora Mountain at Cowan Gap.
] sign](kora/files/1/10/1-A-7D-139-ExplorePAHistory-a0a3f4-a_450.gif)
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Name:
Forbes Road (Raystown Path) #2
Region:
Hershey/Gettysburg/Dutch Country Region
County:
Cumberland
Marker Location:
US 11, 1 mile NE of Shippensburg
Dedication Date:
January 7, 1952
Behind the Marker
The Raystown Path was blazed by Delaware and Shawnee Indians moving between the Forks of the Ohio (modern Pittsburgh) and the lower Susquehanna Valley (modern Harrisburg). Prior to the Seven Years' War, it was the primary route for Pennsylvania fur traders and their packhorses moving in and out of the Ohio Country. The name of the route is derived from John Ray (also spelled as Rae or Wray), one of the early fur traders in this region.
During the 1758 campaign, General John Forbes faced two choices for moving his army to
Fort Duquesne. He could cut south from Raystown (modern Bedford, Pennsylvania) to Fort Cumberland in Maryland, and continue west from there along Braddock's Road, or he could follow the Raystown Path to the Ohio Country. Forbes opted for the Raystown Path, which was closer to the Forks, but would require considerable effort to render it passable for an army of 6,000 men, artillery, and supplies. [Original Document]
Forbes and his second-in-command, Colonel Henry Bouquet, took six months to complete the task, relying on the labor of their troops and workers recruited from the Pennsylvania population. The slowness of their progress was attributable to the difficulty of the terrain, which included surmounting the Allegheny Mountains and Laurel Ridge, as well as to the time and resources they spent constructing fortifications along the way, including
Fort Bedford and
Fort Ligonier.
There are two similar Forbes Road (Raystown Path) markers. They are
Forbes Road (Raystown Path) #1 in Cumberland County at US 11 just Southwest of Carlisle and
Forbes Road (Raystown Path) #3 in Fulton County at US 522, .2 mile Southwest of Burnt Cabins.
During the 1758 campaign, General John Forbes faced two choices for moving his army to

Forbes and his second-in-command, Colonel Henry Bouquet, took six months to complete the task, relying on the labor of their troops and workers recruited from the Pennsylvania population. The slowness of their progress was attributable to the difficulty of the terrain, which included surmounting the Allegheny Mountains and Laurel Ridge, as well as to the time and resources they spent constructing fortifications along the way, including


There are two similar Forbes Road (Raystown Path) markers. They are

