ScenicNH Photography - White Mountains New Hampshire

  • My Account
  • Articles by Email
  • Home
  • Images
    • Portfolios
    • Login
    • Lightboxes
    • Cart
    • My Account
  • Search
  • Products
    • Login
    • Cart
    • My Account
  • Writing
  • Projects
  • F.A.Q.
  • About
  • Contact
  • Login
  • Register
  • Lightboxes
  • Cart
  • My Account
left arrow Back to Galleries

Search Results

(16 images)
Your search yielded 16 images
Add to Cart DISPLAY OPTIONS
  • 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
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Logging era artifact at logging Camp 2 of the abandoned Sawyer River Railroad. Operated by the Saunders Family, the Sawyer River Railroad was a ten-mile long logging railroad in the New Hampshire White Mountains town of Livermore. The removal of historical artifacts from federal lands without a permit is a violation of federal law.
    SC0914208.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Part of a stove, a protected artifact, at logging Camp 2 of the abandoned Sawyer River Railroad. Incorporated in 1875, the Sawyer River Railroad was a ten-mile long logging railroad in the New Hampshire White Mountains town of Livermore. These stove pieces are protected artifacts; the removal of historical artifacts from federal lands without a permit is a violation of federal law, and artifacts should be left where they are found.
    SC0914192.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Part of a stove, a protected artifact, at logging Camp 2 of the abandoned Sawyer River Railroad. Incorporated in 1875, the Sawyer River Railroad was a ten-mile long logging railroad in the New Hampshire White Mountains town of Livermore. These stove pieces are protected artifacts; the removal of historical artifacts from federal lands without a permit is a violation of federal law, and artifacts should be left where they are found.
    SC0914189.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • An axe head, a protected artifact, near logging Camp 2 of the abandoned Sawyer River Railroad (1877-1928) in Livermore, New Hampshire. This axe head is a protected artifact, and the removal of historical artifacts from federal lands without a permit is a violation of federal law.
    SC0914598.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Old horseshoes, protected artifacts, hanging in a tree at logging Camp 2 of the abandoned Sawyer River Railroad. Incorporated in 1875, the Sawyer River Railroad was a ten-mile long logging railroad in the New Hampshire White Mountains town of Livermore. The removal of historical artifacts from federal lands without a permit is a violation of federal law.
    SC0914162.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Appalachian Trail (AT) - The Hexacuba Shelter is a six-sided hexagonal shelter on the south side of Mount Cube, just off the Kodak Trail (AT) in Orford, New Hampshire. Located at 1980 feet, it has 2 open sides and a large center post that supports the roof. And the shelter site has a 5 sided privy called "Penta Privy". This shelter is known by two names: Hexacuba and Hexacube shelter.
    SCD074074.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • The Jim Liberty Cabin in the White Mountains of New Hampshire. This cabin is located along the Liberty Trail about a 1/2 mile from the summit of Mount Chocorua. It was built in 1934 and is secured down by two large chains. It is located at the site of the old Peak House. Built in 1891, the Peak House was blown off the mountain in 1915.
    SCD5770-06.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • The Jim Liberty Cabin in the White Mountains of New Hampshire. This cabin is located along the Liberty Trail about a 1/2 mile from the summit of Mount Chocorua. It was built in 1934 and is secured down by two large chains. It is located at the site of the old Peak House. Built in 1891, the Peak House was blown off the mountain in 1915.
    SCD5764-06.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Appalachian Trail (AT) - The Hexacuba Shelter is a six-sided hexagonal shelter on the south side of Mount Cube, just off the Kodak Trail (AT) in Orford, New Hampshire. Located at 1980 feet, it has 2 open sides and a large center post that supports the roof. And the shelter site has a 5 sided privy called "Penta Privy". This shelter is known by two names: Hexacuba and Hexacube shelter.
    SCD074106.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Appalachian Trail (AT) - The Hexacuba Shelter is a six-sided hexagonal shelter on the south side of Mount Cube, just off the Kodak Trail (AT) in Orford, New Hampshire. Located at 1980 feet, it has 2 open sides and a large center post that supports the roof. And the shelter site has a 5 sided privy called "Penta Privy". This shelter is known by two names: Hexacuba and Hexacube shelter.
    SCD074069.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Appalachian Trail (AT) - Trail sign at the junction of the Kodak Trail (AT) and the spur path that leads to the Hexacuba Shelter on the south side of Mount Cube in Orford, New Hampshire. The Hexacuba Shelter is a six-sided hexagonal shelter; it has 2 open sides and a large center post that supports the roof. And the shelter site has a 5 sided privy called "Penta Privy". This photo shows how the signs looked in 2007.
    SND074066.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Appalachian Trail (AT) - The Hexacuba Shelter is a six-sided hexagonal shelter on the south side of Mount Cube, just off the Kodak Trail (AT) in Orford, New Hampshire. Located at 1980 feet, it has 2 open sides and a large center post that supports the roof. And the shelter site has a 5 sided privy called "Penta Privy". This shelter is known by two names: Hexacuba and Hexacube shelter.
    SCD074078.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Appalachian Trail (AT) - The Hexacuba Shelter is a six-sided hexagonal shelter on the south side of Mount Cube, just off the Kodak Trail (AT) in Orford, New Hampshire. Located at 1980 feet, it has 2 open sides and a large center post that supports the roof. And the shelter site has a 5 sided privy called "Penta Privy". This shelter is known by two names: Hexacuba and Hexacube shelter.
    SCD074077.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Rocky Branch Shelter #2 was an Adirondack-style shelter located along the Rocky Branch Trail in the Dry River Wilderness of the New Hampshire White Mountains. This shelter has been dismantled in 2015 and no longer exists.
    SCDW1235-07.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Rocky Branch Shelter #2 was an Adirondack-style shelter located along the Rocky Branch Trail in the Dry River Wilderness of the New Hampshire White Mountains. This shelter has been dismantled and no longer exists.
    SCDW1231-07.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
 
  • Home
  • Images
  • Search
  • Products
  • Writing
  • Blog
  • Projects
  • F.A.Q.
  • About
  • Contact
  • My Account
  • Copyright
  • Return Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy
ScenicNH Photography - White Mountains New Hampshire
603.540.5756
info@scenicnh.com
LinkedIn Twitter Facebook
All images and text are Copyright 1998-2023 ScenicNH Photography LLC / Erin Paul Donovan. All rights reserved.
Images and text located on ScenicNH.com are protected under US and International Copyright Laws; unauthorized
use is considered copyright infringement and is a violation of Federal Copyright Laws.