Arizona · USA

Telegraph Pass Trail

1875 Army telegraph route over granite peaks

Expert

Built by the U.S. Army in 1875 to connect Fort Yuma with mining operations in the Gila Mountains, Telegraph Pass cuts through some of the Sonoran Desert’s most unforgiving terrain. The route climbs over a 1,200-foot pass between jagged granite peaks, past abandoned mine shafts and the remains of the original telegraph line that gave the trail its name. Rock cairns still mark the way through boulder fields where wagons once struggled.

This is expert-level technical terrain requiring full armor and recovery gear. Granite boulders, loose scree, and steep grades demand careful line choice and experienced spotting. Summer temperatures exceed 115°F regularly, making this strictly a winter trail. No water sources exist along the route, and cell service is nonexistent. The reward is complete solitude in one of Arizona’s most historically significant and technically demanding corridors.

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Trail Specs

Difficulty
Trail Type
Surface
Features,
Length (miles)8 mi / 12.9 km
DurationFull day
Max elevation (ft)2100 ft
Best seasonNovember-March
Minimum vehicleModified 4WD with armor
Nearest townYuma, Arizona
Land managerBureau of Land Management
Permit requiredNo
Cell serviceNone
Water crossingsNo
Dispersed campingYes
Start coordinates
End coordinates
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Official: Expert

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