- Source: Walter Trail
- The Blocked Trail
- The Trail of the Lonesome Pine (film 1916)
- The Trail of the Lonesome Pine (film 1936)
- David Stewart
- Hit-The-Trail Holliday
- Walter Matthau
- Walter P. Lewis
- Red River (film 1948)
- Rumpun suku bangsa Austronesia
- Al Capone
- Walter Trail
- The Comeback Trail (2020 film)
- Walter Bean Grand River Trail
- Trail of Tears
- Alexander Stewart, Earl of Buchan
- The Trail of the Lonesome Pine
- Secondhand Lions
- Chisholm Trail
- Broken Trail
- Walter Dale Miller
Walter Trail (died 1401; also spelled Trayl) was a late 14th century Bishop of St. Andrews. He appears as an official in the Bishopric of Glasgow in 1378, as a Magister Artium and a Licentiate in Canon and civil law. In 1380, he has a doctorate in canon and civil law, as well as a Papal chaplain and auditor. In this year, Pope Clement VII (an "anti-Pope") granted him the deanery of the Bishopric of Dunkeld. He became treasurer of the Bishopric of Glasgow in either 1381 or 1382. On 29 November 1385, the Pope provided him to the vacant Bishopric of St. Andrews, vacant because of the capture and death of the previous bishop-elect, Stephen de Pa.
Walter Trail was an active bishop, and ardent defender of the rights of the church within Scotland. Walter constructed the castle at St. Andrews. It was there that he died in 1401.
References
Dowden, John, The Bishops of Scotland, ed. J. Maitland Thomson, (Glasgow, 1912)