ScenicNH Photography - White Mountains New Hampshire

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(447 images)
Your search yielded 447 images
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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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  • 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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  • 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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  • 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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  • Stone Iron Furnace in Franconia, New Hampshire. Built with local granite, this is the only blast furnace still standing in New Hampshire.
    NH157295.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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  • 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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  • A stone double arch bridge which spans Beard Brook at the meeting of Beard and Jones Road in Hillsborough, New Hampshire during the autumn months. Known as the Old Carr Bridge, built by Captain Jonathan Carr in 1840.
    NH1415328.jpg
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  • Wrought Iron bridge - This is a pin-connected lenticular truss design used for iron bridges from 1880 - 1890. This bridge spanned the Ham Branch on Delage Farm Road in Franconia from 1889 - 2001. It now is on display at the Stone Iron Furnace site in Franconia, New Hampshire.
    SC129870.jpg
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  • Wrought Iron bridge - This is a pin-connected lenticular truss design used for iron bridges from 1880 - 1890. This bridge spanned the Ham Branch on Delage Farm Road in Franconia from 1889 - 2001. It now is on display at the Stone Iron Furnace site in Franconia, New Hampshire.
    SC129865.jpg
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  • July 2016 - Newly built stone steps along the Mount Tecumseh Trail in Waterville Valley, New Hampshire during the summer months. Trail stewardship groups promote that minimal stonework should be done along trails. And that stonework should look natural and blend in with the surroundings.
    NH167070.jpg
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  • Stone staircase along the Mt Tecumseh Trail in Waterville Valley, New Hampshire in July 2015. Built around 2014 and seen here in July 2015, this appears to be considered completed trail work. However, the left-side looks unfinished.
    NH159236.jpg
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  • Stone culvert at the Black Brook crossing along the old Maine Central Railroad in Carroll, New Hampshire USA.
    SC1220318.jpg
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  • Stone arch bridge in Stoddard, New Hampshire USA during the autumn months
    TNH0811359.jpg
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  • Stone wall at Center Harbor Memorial Park Cemetery in Center Harbor, New Hampshire USA during the autumn months.
    NH1511147.jpg
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  • Stone wall during the autumn months in the White Mountains, New Hampshire USA
    SC0911426.jpg
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  • Stone wall surrounded by autumn foliage in a New Hampshire USA forest during the autumn season.
    FCM6242-04.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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  • 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 a side view of 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.
    NH168610.jpg
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  • Stone gate along Edmands Path in the White Mountains, New Hampshire USA
    MD3396-06.tif
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  • Stone wall covered in leaf drop at Madame Sherri Forest in Chesterfield, New Hampshire during the autumn months.
    NH1415155.jpg
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  • A stone double arch bridge which spans Beard Brook at the junction of Beard Road and Jones Road in Hillsborough, New Hampshire USA. Known as the Old Carr Bridge, it was built by Captain Jonathan Carr in 1840.
    CBM345-06.jpg
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  • A stone double arch bridge which spans Beard Brook at the junction of Beard Road and Jones Road in Hillsborough, New Hampshire USA. Known as the Old Carr Bridge, it was built by Captain Jonathan Carr in 1840.
    CBM391-06.jpg
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  • A stone double arch bridge which spans Beard Brook at the junction of Beard Road and Jones Road in Hillsborough, New Hampshire USA. Known as the Old Carr Bridge, it was built by Captain Jonathan Carr in 1840.
    CBM261-06.jpg
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  • October 2014 - Fairly new stone steps along the Mt Tecumseh Trail in Waterville Valley, New Hampshire. The large hole on the left was created when the steps were built. Water that runs down the trail and hillside can now build up in this hole and undermine the stone steps, which will cause more erosion damage to this section of trail. This is not minimal impact trail work.
    NH1415685.jpg
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  • Stone steps along Kinsman Ridge Trail in Franconia Notch State Park of the White Mountains, New Hampshire USA during the summer months. A herd path has formed on the left hand side from hikers avoiding the stone steps.
    NH1412881.jpg
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  • A stone double arch bridge which spans Beard Brook at the junction of Beard Road and Jones Road in Hillsborough, New Hampshire USA. Known as the Old Carr Bridge, it was built by Captain Jonathan Carr in 1840.
    CBM346-06.jpg
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  • Old stone wall along the abandoned Thornton Gore Road in Thornton, New Hampshire. This was an old hill farm community that was abandoned during the 19th century.
    NH158016.jpg
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  • September 2014 - Stone staircase along Mt Tecumseh Trail in Waterville Valley, New Hampshire during the summer months. A herd path has formed on the left side of the steps from hikers avoiding (not using) the steps. Herd paths are a common problem along trails, and if they are not blocked, they can create more trail erosion issues. When this image was taken, this staircase was only a few years old.
    NH1413131.jpg
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  • Remnants of an old stone culvert along the village road in the abandoned Peeling settlement (Mt. Cilley Settlement) in Woodstock, New Hampshire. Peeling was the original settlement of Woodstock, and this village was abandoned by the 1860s. This stone culvert could have possibly been built during the Peeling era. But It could have also been built sometime in the 1900s when the area was logged.
    SC1220156.jpg
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  • Remnants (stone abutment) of a bridge that once crossed Talford Brook at Thornton Gore in Thornton, New Hampshire. This was an old hill farm community that was abandoned during the 19th century.
    SC1216911.jpg
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  • Old stone wall along the abandoned Thornton Gore Road in Thornton, New Hampshire. This was an old hill farm community that was abandoned during the 19th century.
    SC1216974.jpg
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  • Newly built stone staircase along the Davis Path in the White Mountains, New Hampshire during the summer months. This is an example of stonework that has been built by a professional AMC trail crew.
    SC1213206.jpg
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  • Stone wall at Madame Sherri Forest in Chesterfield, New Hampshire during the autumn months.
    NH1415157.jpg
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  • Presidential Range–Dry River Wilderness - Stone staircase along the Davis Path during the summer months in the White Mountains, New Hampshire.
    SC1213303.jpg
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  • Remnants of an old stone bridge that crossed Eastman Brook along the Thornton Gore Road in Thornton, New Hampshire. This was an old hill farm community that was abandoned during the 19th century.
    SC1216898.jpg
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  • Presidential Range–Dry River Wilderness - Stone staircase along the Davis Path during the summer months in the White Mountains, New Hampshire.
    SC1213301.jpg
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  • Newly built stone staircase along the Davis Path in the White Mountains, New Hampshire during the summer months. This is an example of stonework that has been built by a professional AMC trail crew.
    SC1213211.jpg
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  • Hillside erosion (and the first step is being undermined) next to stone steps along the Mt Tecumseh Trail in Waterville Valley, New Hampshire in July 2015. The impact on the left side is from the building of the stairs. When this image was taken, this staircase was only a year or two old.
    NH159223.jpg
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  • August 2015 - Mt Tecumseh Trail in Waterville Valley, New Hampshire during the month of August. In 2011, the year trail work (stone steps) was done in this section, there was no visible erosion on the left-hand side of the trail. See how this section of trail looked in 2011: http://bit.ly/3760BXz
    NH1510452.jpg
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  • Granite culvert along the abandoned Boston and Maine Railroad’s Mt Washington Branch (between Fabyans and the base of the Cog) in the White Mountains, New Hampshire. The Boston, Concord & Montreal Railroad completed the roughly six and a half mile long extension from Fabyans to the base of the Cog Railway in 1876.
    SC1225885.jpg
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  • October 2012 - New stonework along the Mt Tecumseh Trail in the White Mountains of New Hampshire on a foggy October day. This photos shows a portion of a stone staircase that is about 150 (+/-) feet long. The staircase continues out of view.
    SC1216290.jpg
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  • In 2011, Tropical Storm Irene washed out part of the Mt Tecumseh Trail in New Hampshire, and this is the start of the rerouted section of trail in April 2012. After a trail inspection by Forest Service in June 2012 the stone walls on each side of the trail were removed. A defined path had been established and the walls no longer served any purpose. Removing the stones gives the trail a more natural look and feel. This photo shows the trail before the stones were removed.
    SC128024.jpg
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  • Hiker demonstrating how easy it is to avoid two stone steps along the Mt Tecumseh Trail in the New Hampshire White Mountains on an autumn day in 2020. When building stone steps along a trail, the norm is to place scree (rocks) or brush alongside the steps. The latter is usually done because it looks natural. Placing the scree and / or brush on the side of the steps discourages hikers from going around the steps, and potentially creating more trail erosion issues.
    NH207003_103MR.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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  • Newly built stone staircase along the Davis Path in the White Mountains, New Hampshire during the summer months. This is an example of stonework that has been built by a professional AMC trail crew.
    SC1213232.jpg
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  • Newly built stone staircase along the Davis Path in the White Mountains, New Hampshire during the summer months. This is an example of stonework that has been built by a professional AMC trail crew.
    SC1213223.jpg
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  • Two stone steps covered in leaf drop along the Mt Tecumseh Trail in the New Hampshire White Mountains on an autumn day in 2020. When building stone steps along a trail, the norm is to place scree (rocks) or brush alongside the steps. The latter is usually done because it looks natural. Placing the scree and / or brush on the side of the steps discourages hikers from going around the steps, and potentially creating more trail erosion issues.
    NH207007.jpg
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  • Old stone staircase along the Mt Tecumseh Trail in the White Mountains, New Hampshire.
    NH1318761.jpg
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