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Woodstock and Thornton Gore Railroad

(28 images)
The abandoned Woodstock & Thornton Gore Railroad (1909-1914) in its current state. Operated by the Woodstock Lumber Company, this short-lived logging railroad was in the New Hampshire towns of Woodstock, Thornton Gore, and Livermore. Some of today’s Tripoli Road and the Little East Pond Trail follow the old railroad bed, and the old Tripoli Mill was along it. However, little remains of this railroad today. All photos are available for usage in print publications.
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  • Tripoli Road in Woodstock, New Hampshire USA on a foggy and rainy autumn morning. Parts of this road follow the old railroad bed of the Woodstock & Thornton Gore Railroad (1909-1914).
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  • Entering the White Mountain National Forest sign along Tripoli Road in Thornton, New Hampshire USA during the autumn months.
    NH1611800.jpg
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  • Russell Pond in Woodstock, New Hampshire USA during the spring months. This area was logged during the Woodstock & Thornton Gore Railroad era (1909-1914).
    SC1210102.jpg
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  • Russell Pond in Woodstock, New Hampshire USA during the spring months. This area was logged during the Woodstock & Thornton Gore Railroad era (1909-1914).
    SC1210108.jpg
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  • Gate ahead sign along Tripoli Road in Thornton, New Hampshire USA. Parts of this road follows the old  Woodstock & Thornton Gore Railroad which was a logging railroad in operation from 1909-1914.
    SC103939.jpg
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  • Artifact (part of a sled runner on a logging sled) at an old logging camp along the abandoned Woodstock & Thornton Gore Railroad in the Talford Brook drainage in Thornton, New Hampshire during the autumn months. Operated by the Woodstock Lumber Company, this was a logging railroad in operation from 1909-1914 in the towns of Woodstock, Thornton Gore, and Livermore. The removal of historic artifacts from federal lands without a permit is a violation of federal law.
    NH207242.jpg
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  • Talford Brook in Thornton, New Hampshire during the autumn months. This area was logged during the Woodstock & Thornton Gore Railroad era (1909-1914).
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  • Talford Brook Cascades on Talford Brook during the autumn months in Thornton, New Hampshire.
    SC1216384.jpg
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  • Old beat up looking birch tree at Thornton Gore in Thornton, New Hampshire. This was an old hill farm community that was abandoned during the 19th century. This area was also logged during the Woodstock & Thornton Gore Railroad era (1909 - 1914).
    SC1216880.jpg
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  • The general area of where the Civilian Conservation Corps Camp was located along Tripoli Road in Livermore, New Hampshire during the autumn months. The Civilian Conservation Corps was a public work relief program that operated from 1933 to 1942 in the United States. This is also the general area of a rail-side logging camp along the Woodstock & Thornton Gore Railroad (1909-1914).
    NH1611864.jpg
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  • Remnants (stove pieces) of the abandoned Woodstock & Thornton Gore Railroad in Livermore, New Hampshire during the autumn months. Operated by the Woodstock Lumber Company, this was a logging railroad in operation from 1909-1914 in the towns of Woodstock, Thornton Gore, and Livermore. And this location along the railroad may have been the site of a logging camp. The removal of historic artifacts from federal lands without a permit is a violation of federal law.
    NH207033.jpg
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  • The railroad bed of the abandoned Woodstock & Thornton Gore Railroad in the forest of Livermore, New Hampshire during the autumn months. Operated by the Woodstock Lumber Company, this was a logging railroad in operation from 1909-1914 in the towns of Woodstock, Thornton Gore, and Livermore.
    NH207031.jpg
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  • Remnants of the trestle that crossed Eastman Brook along the abandoned Woodstock & Thornton Gore Railroad in Livermore, New Hampshire during the autumn months. Operated by the Woodstock Lumber Company, this was a logging railroad in operation from 1909-1914 in the towns of Woodstock, Thornton Gore, and Livermore.
    NH207010.jpg
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  • Remnants of the trestle that crossed Eastman Brook along the abandoned Woodstock & Thornton Gore Railroad in Livermore, New Hampshire during the autumn months. Operated by the Woodstock Lumber Company, this was a logging railroad in operation from 1909-1914 in the towns of Woodstock, Thornton Gore, and Livermore.
    NH207020.jpg
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  • The old railroad bed of the abandoned Woodstock & Thornton Gore Railroad in the forest of Livermore, New Hampshire during the autumn months. Operated by the Woodstock Lumber Company, this was a logging railroad in operation from 1909-1914 in the towns of Woodstock, Thornton Gore, and Livermore
    NH207039.jpg
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  • Remnants of the abandoned Tripoli Mill in Livermore, New Hampshire during the autumn months. Owned by Charles B. Henry, son of timber baron J.E. Henry, this mill dredged East Pond for diatomaceous earth (also called Tripoli) during the early 1900s. The old Woodstock & Thornton Gore Railroad (1909-1914, logging railroad) traveled pass this mill.
    NH207055.jpg
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  • Remnants of the abandoned Tripoli Mill in Livermore, New Hampshire during the autumn months. Owned by Charles B. Henry, son of timber baron J.E. Henry, this mill dredged East Pond for diatomaceous earth (also called Tripoli) during the early 1900s. The old Woodstock & Thornton Gore Railroad (1909-1914, logging railroad) traveled pass this mill. Campers have built a fire ring in front of the wall.
    NH207056.jpg
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  • Remnants of Tripoli Mill which is along the old Woodstock & Thornton Gore Railroad in Livermore, New Hampshire USA. This mill dredged East Pond for diatomaceous earth in the early 1900s.
    SC0914854.jpg
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  • Remnants of Tripoli Mill which is along the old Woodstock & Thornton Gore Railroad in Livermore, New Hampshire USA. This mill dredged East Pond for diatomaceous earth in the early 1900s.
    SC0914885.jpg
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  • Remnants of the abandoned Tripoli Mill in Livermore, New Hampshire. This mill was located near the end of the old Woodstock & Thornton Gore Railroad, and it dredged East Pond for diatomaceous earth during the early 1900s.
    SC0915003.jpg
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  • East Pond in Livermore, New Hampshire. Tripoli Mill dredged this pond for diatomaceous earth during the early 1900s. This area was logged during the Woodstock & Thornton Gore Railroad era (1909-1914).
    NH174215.jpg
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  • The Clear Brook crossing along Little East Pond Trail in Livermore, New Hampshire. During the Woodstock & Thornton Gore Railroad era, a timber trestle was built in this location to cross Clear Brook. This was a logging railroad in operation from 1909-1914 (+/-).
    SC0914976.jpg
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  • Remnants of a timber trestle at the Clear Brook crossing along the abandoned Woodstock & Thornton Gore Railroad in Livermore, New Hampshire. Operated by  the Woodstock Lumber Company, this was a logging railroad in operation from 1909-1914 (+/-). The Little East Pond Trail utilizes some of the old railroad bed.
    SC0914954.jpg
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  • Remnants of a timber trestle at the Clear Brook crossing along the abandoned Woodstock & Thornton Gore Railroad in Livermore, New Hampshire. Operated by  the Woodstock Lumber Company, this was a logging railroad in operation from 1909-1914 (+/-). The Little East Pond Trail utilizes some of the old railroad bed.
    SC0914951.jpg
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  • Remnants of a dwelling (logging camp) along the abandoned Woodstock & Thornton Gore Railroad in Livermore, New Hampshire. This was a logging railroad in operation from 1909-1914 (+/-). The removal of historic artifacts from federal lands without a permit is a violation of federal law.
    SC0914913.jpg
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  • Leaf drop along the Little East Pond Trail in Livermore, New Hampshire. This section of the trail follows the old railroad bed of the Woodstock & Thornton Gore Railroad. Operated by the Woodstock Lumber Company, this was a logging railroad in operation from 1909-1914 (+/-).
    SC0914931.jpg
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  • Abandoned railroad track along the Little East Pond Trail in Livermore, New Hampshire. This trail utilizes the old railroad bed of the Woodstock & Thornton Gore Railroad (1909 -1914) bed.
    SC0914922.jpg
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  • Artifacts (horseshoes and peavey) at an old logging camp along the abandoned Woodstock & Thornton Gore Railroad in Livermore, New Hampshire during the autumn months. Operated by the Woodstock Lumber Company, this was a logging railroad in operation from 1909-1914 in the towns of Woodstock, Thornton Gore, and Livermore. The removal of historic artifacts from federal lands without a permit is a violation of federal law.
    NH207205.jpg
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