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

(17 images)
Your search yielded 17 images
Add to Cart DISPLAY OPTIONS
  • An old Hearth & Home stove along Meadow Brook in Franconia, New Hampshire USA. The removal of historical artifacts from federal lands without a permit is a violation of federal law.
    NH156709.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Artifact (cooking stove) at what is believed to be the abandoned Holland Camp in the Sabbaday Brook drainage of Waterville Valley, New Hampshire. The Holland Camp was a logging camp of the Swift River Railroad, which was in operation from 1906-1916. The Noyes & Goddard stove was produced from 1886-1902 +/-. The removal of historic artifacts from federal lands without a permit is a violation of federal law.
    SC1014573.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Artifact (Smith & Anthony Stove Co. Boston, MASS 1889) 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.
    SC1228674.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Fire ring in the area of Stillwater Junction of the Pemigewasset Wilderness in Lincoln, New Hampshire USA. The rusted stove piece (artifact) in the fire ring could possibly be from the old Stillwater Camp that was in the area. The removal of historical artifacts from federal lands without a permit is a violation of federal law.
    SC106414.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Cooking stove, a protected artifact, at the old Draper Corporation Camp along the Beebe River Railroad (1917-1942) in Sandwich, New Hampshire. This camp was located near the old Carters Mill site. The removal of historical artifacts from federal lands without a permit is a violation of federal law.
    SC0912782.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Artifact (Home Comfort Stove made by Wrought Iron Range Co in St. Louis, Missouri) at logging Camp 18 along the East Branch & Lincoln Railroad in the Pemigewasset Wilderness of New Hampshire. The EB&L was a logging railroad that operated from 1893-1948, and this camp was located along the Upper East Branch of the railroad. The removal of artifacts from federal lands without a permit is a violation of federal law.
    SC096529.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Remnants of a 55 gallon drum wood stove at “Lucy Mill" along Nancy Pond Trail in the White Mountains, New Hampshire.
    SC0912135.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Artifact (stove pieces) at what is believed to be the Hartley’s Camp in the Oliverian Brook valley in Albany, New Hampshire USA. This was a logging camp of the Swift River Railroad (1906-1916). This ironware is considered to be an artifact, and the removal of historic artifacts from federal lands without a permit is a violation of federal law.
    SC0914629.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. The removal of historical artifacts from federal lands without a permit is a violation of federal law.
    SC0914189.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Artifact (stove piece) at logging Camp 4 of the Beebe River Railroad in Sandwich, New Hampshire. The Beebe River line was a logging railroad in operation from 1917-1942. The removal of historical artifacts from federal lands without a permit is a violation of federal law.
    SC0913405.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • 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
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Remnants of a cooking stove made by Magee Furnace Company, Boston, Mass at the abandoned cabin settlement surrounding Elbow Pond in Woodstock, New Hampshire USA.
    SC1219594.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Stove pieces, protected artifacts, at an old dwelling site in the Carrigain Brook drainage in Livermore, New Hampshire. This camp is likely a logging camp of the Sawyer River Railroad (1877-1928). Artifacts, such as these, are protected, and the removal of historical artifacts from federal lands without a permit is a violation of federal law.
    SC098735.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Artifact (stove piece) at logging Camp 9 of the Beebe River Railroad in Waterville Valley, New Hampshire. The Beebe River line was a logging railroad in operation from 1917-1942. The removal of historical artifacts from federal lands without a permit is a violation of federal law.
    SC0913609.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Abandoned logging camp along a tributary of the Wild Ammonoosuc River, on the side of Mt. Blue, in Benton, New Hampshire USA. This is probably a 1900s logging camp of the Fall Mountain Paper Company, which later became the International Paper Company. The removal of historical artifacts from federal lands without a permit is a violation of federal law.
    NH156250.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Poor "Leave No Trace" habits on the the side a Sawyer River Trail in the White Mountains, New Hampshire.
    SC097069.jpg
    add to lightbox add to cart
  • Remnants of an abandoned 1800s hill farming community along old South Landaff Road in Landaff, New Hampshire.
    NH15183.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.