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A Walk to Remember on Geneva Lake’s Shore Path

Photo by Clint Farlinger

Wisconsin has no shortage of scenic hiking trails, but one of its most unique isn’t found in the backwoods. For decades, locals and tourists alike have made the Geneva Lake Shore Path one of the state’s most popular foot-powered destinations.

Framed by a spring-fed lake and a jaw-dropping chain of historic estates in southeastern Wisconsin, this 20-plus-mile path has been unofficially dubbed “The People’s Path.” The moniker comes from local ordinances mandating the entire shoreline be open to the foot-going public. The heart of the path stretches through Lake Geneva, but also treads through the communities of Williams Bay, Fontana and Linn.

In late May, I’m out here with about 200 seventh graders from Lake Geneva Middle School. Like anyone with a massive but ignored jewel in their backyard, most of our students have never set foot on the path. Once they do, they realize what they’ve been missing. From beginning to end, the conversations of local seventh graders aren’t that much different from those of the adult tourists walking alongside them.

“Look at that house! It’s huge!”

“Look at that old wooden boat! That’s awesome!”

“What kind of job do you have to have to afford a house like this?”

“Where’s the next bathroom?”

And so it goes, mile after wonderful mile. Like most on the shore path, we tackle just a portion of it and end with a picnic. Starting at the boat launch in Williams Bay and ending in Lake Geneva’s Library Park, our eight-mile stretch is the easiest on the lake. It takes the slowest of us about three hours. Those with a quicker clip do it in about two-and-a-half.

In our midst, there is also an over-achiever: Jennifer Kinney, a seventh grade math teacher. In the summer, she also teaches in a leadership program at the local high school, whose culminating moment is a hike of the entire lake.

“The kids really appreciate how beautiful it is and how they don’t ever get to do all of the lake,” says Kinney. “We’ll maybe get one kid per summer, who has done half the lake. Rarely do you get a kid who has done the entire lake.”

Like the tourists who flock here, Kinney and her charges are drawn to the shore path by its storied past.

“There is so much history here,” she says, “and the kids have mansions they have to research and watch for. When we get to their mansion, we stop and they do their spiel.”

In the event you aren’t lucky enough to walk the lake with these high school history buffs, here’s some shore path highlights:

Lake Geneva’s first citizens were Native Americans, who lived here peaceably until they were forcibly displaced in the mid 1800s. Following the Great Chicago Fire of 1871, affluent families who had been summering at resorts here found a true refuge as the Windy City rebuilt. The Wrigleys, Maytags and Schwinns are just a few of the movers and shakers who built summer homes on these shores, and the Wrigleys still have multiple residences here.

Century-old estates that cause pause include Stone Manor, the largest single- family home built on the lake and visible from Library Park; Glanworth Gardens, also known as The Driehaus Estate, is on the north shore of the lake, between Williams Bay and Lake Geneva, and features grounds designed by the landscape architects who gave us Central Park; and Aloha Lodge, on the southern shore, was once occupied by Tracy Drake of the Drake Hotel and still has his china inside.

No matter which direction you head, though, you’ll have plenty of breathtaking history to take in, and unlike my seventh graders, you don’t need a permission slip. Just show up and start walking.

Shore Path 101

Enjoy the Geneva Lake Shore Path more with these tips:

Geneva Lake Shore Path Routes For Every Fitness


 This article originally appeared in the 2014 spring/summer issue of Experience Wisconsin magazine. The contents of this article were checked for accuracy when it was published; however, it’s possible some of the information has changed. We recommend you call first if you have specific questions for the destinations, attractions or restaurants mentioned in this article. 

No portion of this article or magazine may be reproduced without prior written permission by the publisher.

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