Madeline Regan Preserve

Trail Information

Trail Map: Click here for the trail map.
Directions: From the intersection of I-84 and CT-74 (Tolland Stage Rd) follow CT-74W for 1.7 miles. The Preserve will be on the left on CT-74.

About the Property

This 29-acre parcel was transferred to us in 2020 by Joseph Regan. His sister Madeline had originally envisioned conservation of this land, and donated a conservation easement to the Trust in 2008. She died before an outright transfer was made, but Joe ultimately fulfilled her legacy with a 2020 bargain sale to the Trust.
 
The most intriguing feature of this property is a well-defined 2000-foot section of the Old Connecticut Path, which runs the length of the property and originates near the sole public access to the property on Route 74. The Connecticut Path is thought to have originally been used as an east-west trade route by the Native Americans that inhabited this area. In the early 1630s, Thomas Hooker and a group of European settlers reportedly took this route as they migrated overland from the Massachusetts Bay Colony to the rich soils of the Connecticut River Valley in the Windsor area. The route of the Connecticut Path is evident as a “sunken road” that winds through northern Connecticut. In this area it follows a route generally parallel and in proximity to Route 74. The yellow-blazed trail on the property follows the approximate route of the Connecticut Path route as defined by the topography.
 
In addition to the Connecticut Path, visitors can enjoy two additional short trails. The “esker trail” climbs steeply off of the route of the Connecticut Path to a higher area of the property dominated by a glacial esker, which is a linear gravel deposit laid down by fast-moving glacial meltwater, and a kettle hole, formed when a large block of glacial ice buried in the gravel melted and left a void. A loop trail is also available off the Connecticut Path for visitors that want to circumnavigate the entire property.
 

Acres: 29 acres
Preserved: 2008
Steward: Sharron LePlante