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Run The Ridge Trail Race

Sat October 12, 2024 Beaver Dam, KY 42320 US Directions

Events

Run The Ridge Trail 5K

$25 8:00AM CDT - 9:00AM CDT Registration ends October 12, 2024 at 8:00am CDT

Run The Ridge Trail 10K

$35 8:00AM CDT - 11:00AM CDT Registration ends October 12, 2024 at 8:00am CDT

Run The Ridge Trail 25K

$50 8:00AM CDT - 1:00PM CDT Registration ends October 12, 2024 at 8:00am CDT

Place

6210 Hwy 62 East
Beaver Dam, KY US 42320

Description

The Run The Ridge 5K, 10K, and 25K Trail Run is a culturally and historically significant event as runners will be traveling some of the same dirt roads and beautiful overlooks that Father of Bluegrass Music, Bill Monroe, and his beloved Uncle Pen did. This will be a fun but challenging event with steep inclines and declines to navigate going up to the top of the Ridge and coming back down. The scenic course winds “high in the hills of ‘ol Kentucky,” as Monroe put it. The race will start and finish at the celebrated Bill Monroe Homeplace and will feature plenty of great bluegrass music and a few surprises along the trail. Register by September 27, 2024, and receive a special race t-shirt.

Registration

5K is $25

10K is $35

25K is $55

(*** There is a four hours and 30 minutes cutoff)

Awards

All finishers will receive a special finishers medal to celebrate their accomplishment.

Awards will also be given to the Top 3 Male & Female Finishers in both the 5K, 10K and, 25K Distances.

Race Contact Info

If you have any questions about this race, click the button below.

Bill Monroe Homestead

Called “the homeplace of bluegrass music,” the Monroe Homeplace was the childhood home of country music legend Bill Monroe, known throughout the world as the “Father of Bluegrass Music.” Bill was five-going-on-six years old when the Homeplace was built in 1917. Born in another house nearby, it was the Homeplace he had in mind when he wrote his classic song “I’m On My Way Back to the Old Home.” It’s believed that the Homeplace was built to celebrate the twenty-fifth anniversary of Bill Monroe’s parents, James Buchanan and Malissa Vandiver Monroe, married in 1892. It appears that another structure once occupied the site and, after it was torn down, the Homeplace was built around its very old, back-to-back sandstone fireplaces.

The Monroe Homeplace, high atop Pigeon Ridge, was the centerpiece of a nearly 800-acre farm, including 40 acres on the adjoining Jerusalem Ridge, an area the Monroes reserved for hunting. The Monroe family, with six sons and two daughters, worked hard, without the benefit of machinery, to make their farm successful. They planted crops of tobacco and corn, raised cattle, hogs, and chickens, mined coal, and cut timber to make railroad ties and telephone poles.

Fun times included visits to the Homeplace by Malissa Monroe’s brother, the renowned fiddler James Pendleton Vandiver, known as “Uncle Pen,” also memorialized in song by Bill. Whenever Pen was playing for a dance nearby, he would eat supper with the Monroes, then fiddle for the children, sitting by one of the fireplaces. Listening carefully and later playing at dances with him, nephew Bill would credit his Uncle Pen with instilling an all-important ability to keep time when playing music.

The Monroe Homeplace was restored in 2001. Inside are cherished family belongings, early 20th century-vintage furnishings, and rare photographs of Bill Monroe and two brothers who also played music professionally, Birch Monroe and Charlie Monroe.

Travelers from around the world regularly visit the Homeplace to learn about Bill Monroe’s early life and family. Just down the road, in Rosine Cemetery, Bill, his mother and father, and all of his brothers and sisters rest in peace together. Just outside Rosine, a new cabin stands on the spot where Uncle Pen and a teenage Bill once lived together after Bill’s father died in 1928.

Bill Monroe was a star of the Grand Ole Opry for over 50 years and recorded for Decca/MCA for over 40 years. He remains the only person to be inducted into three Halls of Fame: Bluegrass, Country, and Rock and Roll. He was presented with the National Medal of Arts by President Bill Clinton in 1995.

The Monroe Homeplace is one and a half miles west of Rosine, Kentucky on Highway 62 East. Make your pilgrimage to the Homeplace and take a guided tour into the life of the Monroe family.

Directions

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