ScenicNH Photography - White Mountains New Hampshire

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(356 images)
Your search yielded 356 images
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  • 1800s headstone at Old Cemetery on Millen Pond Road in Washington, New Hampshire during the autumn months.
    TNH0811421.jpg
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  • Remnants of a dug well at an abandoned 1800s hill farming community along old South Landaff Road in Landaff, New Hampshire USA.
    NH155026.jpg
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  • Stone Iron Furnace site in Franconia, New Hampshire. Originally built in the early 1800s this is the only blast furnace still standing in New Hampshire. It was used for smelting iron ore.
    SC129864.jpg
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  • Site of the Gideon Ricker Farm at the abandoned Ricker Basin farming community on Ricker Mountain in Waterbury, Vermont. Joseph Ricker established this farming community in the early 1800s, and it was abandoned in the early 1900s. Today the land is part of the Little River State Park section of Mount Mansfield State Forest.
    VT182066.jpg
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  • Stonewalls line an abandoned road near the Gideon Ricker Farm at the abandoned Ricker Basin farming community on Ricker Mountain in Waterbury, Vermont. Joseph Ricker established this farming community in the early 1800s, and it was abandoned in the early 1900s. Today the land is part of the Little River State Park section of Mount Mansfield State Forest.
    VT182090.jpg
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  • An old stone wall along the Cobble Hill Trail in Landaff, New Hampshire during the summer months. This area was part of an 1800s hill farming community
    NH168334.jpg
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  • Remnants of a stone bridge along an abandoned road off the Cobble Hill Trail in Landaff, New Hampshire. This area was part of an 1800s hill farming community.
    NH168284.jpg
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  • Remnants of the Profile House, in the area of where the cottages were located, in Franconia Notch State Park, New Hampshire. The Profile House was an 1800s grand hotel located just south of Echo Lake in the area of the parking lot for the Cannon Mountain Ski Area and Tramway. The hotel existed for 70 years before burning down in 1923. It was even torn down and rebuilt during its existence. This railing is in the area of the "cottages" at the Profile House.
    NH163902.jpg
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  • Stone Iron Furnace site in Franconia, New Hampshire. Originally built in the early 1800s this is the only blast furnace still standing in New Hampshire. It was used for smelting iron ore.
    SC106978.jpg
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  • Old kettle in Franconia Notch State Park in New Hampshire. This kettle is one of few remaining items that was produced by Franconia Iron, and it is thought this kettle was possibly the property of the Flume House. The Flume House was an 1800s hotel located in the Notch.
    SC094278.jpg
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  • Stone Iron Furnace in Franconia, New Hampshire on a foggy day. Originally built in the early 1800s this is the only blast furnace still standing in New Hampshire. It was used for smelting iron ore.
    TNH088336.jpg
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  • Site of the Gideon Ricker Farm at the abandoned Ricker Basin farming community on Ricker Mountain in Waterbury, Vermont. Joseph Ricker established this farming community in the early 1800s, and it was abandoned in the early 1900s. Today the land is part of the Little River State Park section of Mount Mansfield State Forest.
    VT182107.jpg
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  • Diana's Baths in Bartlett, New Hampshire USA during the winter months. Diana's Baths is a series of small cascades located on Lucy Brook. Remnants of the old 1800s “Lucy's Mill” can be found in this area. The Lucy family owned this sawmill, and they abandoned it in the 1940s.
    NH162572.jpg
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  • A cellar hole from the 1800s along the old North and South Road (now Long Pond Road) in Benton, New Hampshire. Based on an 1860 historical map of Grafton County this is believed to have been the homesite of Josiah F. Jeffers.
    NH1512511.jpg
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  • Remnants of an old barbed wire fence along a stone wall in an abandoned 1800s hill farming community along old South Landaff Road in Landaff, New Hampshire USA.
    NH154998.jpg
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  • Remnants of an abandoned 1800s hill farming community along old South Landaff Road in Landaff, New Hampshire.
    NH15183.jpg
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  • Stone Iron Furnace site in Franconia, New Hampshire. Originally built in the early 1800s this is the only blast furnace still standing in New Hampshire. It was used for smelting iron ore.
    SC106955.jpg
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  • Old kettle in Franconia Notch State Park in New Hampshire. This kettle is one of few remaining items that was produced by Franconia Iron, and it is thought this kettle was possibly the property of the Flume House. The Flume House was an 1800s hotel located in the Notch.
    SC094281.jpg
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  • Remnants of the cottages that were at the Profile House in Franconia Notch State Park, New Hampshire. The Profile House was an 1800s grand hotel located just south of Echo Lake in the area of the parking lot for the Cannon Mountain Ski Area and Tramway. The hotel existed for 70 years before burning down in 1923. It was even torn down and rebuilt during its existence.
    NH163825.jpg
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  • A stone lime kiln located off of the Chippewa Trail near Black Mountain in Haverhill, New Hampshire USA during the summer months. This kiln was built in the early 1800s.
    NH139841.jpg
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  • Stone Iron Furnace in Franconia, New Hampshire. Originally built in the early 1800s this is the only blast furnace still standing in New Hampshire.
    NH157298.jpg
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  • Stone Iron Furnace in Franconia, New Hampshire. Originally built in the early 1800s this is the only blast furnace still standing in New Hampshire.
    NH157296.jpg
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  • The James Bryant Place home site cellar hole along Sandwich Notch Road in Sandwich, New Hampshire. The Notch Road is a historic route established in 1801, and during the early 1800s thirty to forty families lived in the Notch. By the first decade of the twentieth century only one resident lived in the Notch.
    SC0912798.jpg
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  • Stone culvert, in the area known as Bowman, along the old railroad bed of the Boston & Maine’s Berlin Branch in Randolph, New Hampshire. Opened in the mid-1800s, and abandoned in the 1990s, the 18 mile long Berlin Branch is now a multi-use trail - the Presidential Recreational Rail Trail.
    NH225070.jpg
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  • The Presidential Recreational Rail Trail, east of the Pinkham B Road (Dolly Copp Road) crossing in Randolph, New Hampshire on a foggy summer morning. This 18 mile long multi use trail utilizes the old railroad bed of the Boston & Maine’s Berlin Branch. Opened in the mid-1800s, the Berlin Branch of the railroad was abandoned in the 1990s.
    NH204348.jpg
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  • Stone culvert, east of the Pinkham B Road (Dolly Copp Road) crossing, along the old railroad bed of the Boston & Maine’s Berlin Branch in Randolph, New Hampshire. Opened in the mid-1800s, and abandoned in the 1990s, the 18 mile long Berlin Branch is now a multi-use trail - the Presidential Recreational Rail Trail.
    NH204360.jpg
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  • The Presidential Recreational Rail Trail, west of the Pinkham B Road (Dolly Copp Road) crossing in Randolph, New Hampshire on a winter day. This 18 mile long multi use trail utilizes the old railroad bed of the Boston & Maine’s Berlin Branch. Opened in the mid-1800s, the Berlin Branch of the railroad was abandoned in the 1990s.
    SC103598.jpg
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  • The general area of where the Whitcherville Dam was located at the abandoned village of Whitcherville on the Wild Ammonoosuc River, along Route 112, in Landaff, New Hampshire USA. Whitcherville, named for the Whitcher family, was a 1800’s village that played a role in the log drives down the Wild Ammonoosuc to the Connecticut River. The main driving dam for the Wildwood (Mount Moosilauke area) river logging operation was located here.
    NH163197.jpg
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  • Row of headstones at Old Cemetery on Millen Pond Road in Washington, New Hampshire USA during the autumn months.
    TNH0811430.jpg
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  • Row of headstones at Old Cemetery on Millen Pond Road in Washington, New Hampshire USA during the autumn months.
    TNH0811425.jpg
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  • Headstone at Old Cemetery on Millen Pond Road in Washington, New Hampshire USA during the autumn months.
    TNH0811420.jpg
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  • Headstone at Old Cemetery on Millen Pond Road in Washington, New Hampshire USA during the autumn months.
    TNH0811419.jpg
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  • Row of headstones at Old Cemetery on Millen Pond Road in Washington, New Hampshire USA during the autumn months.
    TNH0811426.jpg
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  • Headstone at Old Cemetery on Millen Pond Road in Washington, New Hampshire USA during the autumn months.
    TNH0811423.jpg
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  • The general area of where the Whitcherville Dam was along on the Wild Ammonoosuc River, along Route 112, in Landaff, New Hampshire USA. Whitcherville, named for the Whitcher family, was an 1800’s settlement that played a role in the log drives down the Wild Ammonoosuc to the Connecticut River. The main driving dam for the Wildwood (Mount Moosilauke area) river logging operation was located here.
    NH163164.jpg
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  • Site of the abandoned Whitehouse Mills on the Pemigewasset River, along the Pemi Trail, in Franconia Notch of Lincoln, New Hampshire. This was an 1890s mill owned by Frank W. Whitehouse.
    NH173417.jpg
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  • Nathaniel Hawthorne (1804-1864) statue in Salem, Massachusetts, USA during the winter months. Born in Salem, he is best known for The Scarlet Letter and The House of the Seven Gables.
    TMA091917.jpg
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  • Memorial to J.R. Edmands and E.B. Cook and those other pioneer pathmakers along the Link Trail in Randolph, New Hampshire. This memorial is next to Memorial Bridge, which crosses Cold Brook.
    NH145912.jpg
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  • Stone Iron Furnace in Franconia, New Hampshire. This is the only blast furnace still standing in New Hampshire.
    NH157299.jpg
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  • Old railroad spikes and various other artifacts placed on display along the Hancock Branch of the East Branch & Lincoln Railroad (1893-1948) in New Hampshire. The removal of historic artifacts from federal lands without a permit is a violation of federal law. And artifacts should be left in place not put on display like this.
    NH175116.jpg
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  • Abandoned cellar hole along an old dirt road, near Black Brook, in Warren, New Hampshire. Based on an 1860 historical map of Grafton County this was the homestead of S.T. Hayt. This is inside the split stone arch that supported the chimney structure. Consisting of two walls of stones topped with horizontal stones this type of chimney arch was used after the turn of the nineteenth century. And it has been documented that farmers used this area for winter food storage.
    NH168543.jpg
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  • Gilman-Hall Cemetery along Sandwich Notch Road in Sandwich, New Hampshire USA. During the early nineteenth century thirty to forty families were part a hill farm community in the Notch. By 1860 only eight families lived in the Notch and by the turn of the twentieth century only one person, Moses Hall, lived in the Notch year around. Now a private residence the Hall Place is the only house left on the Notch Road.
    NH158885.jpg
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  • Remnants of an old cellar hole along an abandoned road in Benton, New Hampshire. This road traveled in between the old East Road and the old North and South Road (now Long Pond Road). Based on an 1860 historical map of Grafton County this is possibly the site of the David Clough farm.
    NH1513176.jpg
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  • Remnants of an old cellar hole along an abandoned road in Benton, New Hampshire. This road traveled in between the old East Road and the old North and South Road (now Long Pond Road). Based on an 1860 historical map of Grafton County this is possibly the site of the David Clough farm.
    NH1513107.jpg
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  • Stone wall near the abandoned Gilbert P. Wright homestead along an old road in Benton, New Hampshire. This road is located off the North and South Road (now Long Pond Road).
    NH1512838.jpg
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  • An abandoned cellar hole along the old North and South Road (now Long Pond Road) Road in Benton, New Hampshire USA. Based on an 1860 historical map of Grafton County this was the homesite of Enos Wells. The New Hampshire forest it littered with sites like this one that have been forgotten about.
    NH1512605.jpg
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  • The Zeke Dustin Place home site cellar hole along Sandwich Notch Road in Sandwich, New Hampshire. During the early nineteenth century, thirty to forty families lived (hill farm community) in the Notch, and by 1860 the community was just about abandoned.
    NH159969.jpg
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  • The Seldon Avery Place home site cellar hole along Sandwich Notch Road in Sandwich, New Hampshire. During the early nineteenth century, thirty to forty families lived in the Notch. By 1860, only eight families lived in the Notch and by the turn of the twentieth century only one person lived in the Notch year around.
    NH159363.jpg
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  • Colonel Lewis B. Smith site in Sandwich Notch in Sandwich, New Hampshire USA. This abandoned farmstead was occupied by three generations of the Smith family from the 18th century to the late 19th century.
    NH158700.jpg
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  • Graveyard at Thornton Gore in Thornton, New Hampshire. This was an old hill farm community that was abandoned during the 19th century.
    NH158075.jpg
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