Legacy Point Park Adds Trails, Expands Programs in First Full Year
Legacy Point Park at 6601 Township Road 326 opens the Outrider Trail and new youth programs, expanding five-plus miles of free hiking on a former landfill northeast of Millersburg.

Legacy Point Park, 6601 Township Road 326 northeast of Millersburg, opened the Outrider Trail this spring and launched a new slate of guided programs, beginning its first full calendar year of public use at the hilltop greenspace the Holmes County Park District developed atop a former county landfill.
The park's trail network now exceeds five miles of primitive hiking and equestrian routes. Contractor Biltz has been advancing a 2.5-mile perimeter trail that will skirt the park's outer edge, designed for hikers and horseback riders and intended to double as emergency access to the property. That route, when finished, will give Legacy Point the kind of sustained terrain loop that draws repeat visits from both fitness hikers and equestrian users who currently lack comparable primitive-surface options in the county.
Two youth programs anchor the 2026 education calendar. Nature Explorers, which meets from 9 to 10:30 a.m., partners participants with Millersburg-area naturalist Carrie Elvey for hands-on walks and guided explorations of the property. Let's Get Outside provides a second structured entry point for families and youth groups. Holmes County Park District Director Jen Halverson named the Elvey partnership as a centerpiece of what the park is building on the education side.
"One of the things we're most excited about is teaming up with Carrie for some outdoor education for younger people," Halverson said.
Guided birding hikes and organized sunset-viewing outings round out the adult program schedule, both taking advantage of the park's elevation above the surrounding township. Legacy Point sits atop one of Holmes County's highest points, producing the kind of wide, open sightlines that make spring migration birding viable and bring day visitors who arrive from the State Route 241 corridor specifically for the views. That foot traffic, modest but growing, translates into stops at gas stations and restaurants in Millersburg proper before or after a visit.
Tuesdays on the Trail, open to all ages from 10 a.m. to noon, and Trailblazing Saturdays, which puts volunteers to work maintaining existing routes and clearing new ones, give residents recurring ways to engage without committing to a formal program registration.
The annual Holmes County Rails-to-Trails Benefit Auction, scheduled for Saturday, June 13, 2026 at Harvest Ridge, 8880 State Route 39 in Millersburg, serves as the year's primary fundraising event for trail operations. Proceeds support maintenance at Legacy Point and along the broader Holmes County Trail network.
Legacy Point is free and open daily from dawn to dusk. The Park District posts its full program calendar, trail maps and volunteer workday schedules on its website. Visitors should plan for primitive trail surfaces and expect seasonal mud and tick hazards common in spring. The ongoing development of the park in deliberate phases, from a closed landfill to a functioning public greenspace with guided programs and equestrian access, has taken more than a decade of planning; this spring's additions confirm the Park District's intention to keep building on what that ground can hold.
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