ScenicNH Photography - White Mountains New Hampshire

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(30 images)
Your search yielded 30 images
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  • Abandoned cellar hole at Thornton Gore in Thornton, New Hampshire during the autumn months. Thornton Gore was the site of an old hill farming community that was abandoned during the 19th century. Based on an 1860 historical map of Grafton County this is believed to have been the T. Wyatt homestead.
    NH1612489.jpg
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  • Abandoned cellar hole at Thornton Gore in Thornton, New Hampshire during the autumn months. Thornton Gore was the site of an old hill farming community that was abandoned during the 19th century. Based on an 1860 historical map of Grafton County this is believed to have been the T. Wyatt homestead.
    NH1612465.jpg
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  • Abandoned cellar hole at Thornton Gore in Thornton, New Hampshire during the autumn months. Thornton Gore was the site of an old hill farming community that was abandoned during the 19th century. Based on an 1860 historical map of Grafton County this is believed to have been the T. Wyatt homestead.
    NH1612456.jpg
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  • Old stove, a protected artifact, in the Twin Brook drainage in Albany, New Hampshire at what could be the abandoned T. White Camp of the Swift River Railroad (1906-1916). The removal of historical artifacts from federal lands without a permit is a violation of federal law.
    SC1013372.jpg
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  • Remnants of an old hay rake at Thornton Gore in Thornton, New Hampshire. Thornton Gore was the site of an old hill farming community that was abandoned during the 19th century. Based on an 1860 historical map of Grafton County this is believed to have been the T & D Boynton homestead. The removal of historic artifacts from federal lands without a permit is a violation of federal law.
    NH1612600.jpg
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  • Old foundation in Kinsman Notch of the White Mountains, New Hampshire USA during the spring months.
    NH157054.jpg
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  • Exposed tree roots of a birch tree along a walking path at the Flume Gorge in Franconia Notch State Park, New Hampshire during the winter months.
    NH141523.jpg
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  • Exposed tree roots of a birch tree along a walking path at the Flume Gorge in Franconia Notch State Park, New Hampshire during the winter months.
    NH141522.jpg
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  • Exposed tree roots of a birch tree along a walking path at the Flume Gorge in Franconia Notch State Park, New Hampshire during the winter months.
    NH141518.jpg
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  • Remnants of a Glenwood stove at the abandoned cabin settlement surrounding Elbow Pond in Woodstock, New Hampshire; this area is part of the White Mountains.
    SC1219602.jpg
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  • The Oldest Town Forest in the United States is located in the historical district of Newington, New Hampshire USA. It was established by the town of Newington in 1710.
    TNH085756.jpg
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  • "Don't Mass-Up NH" spray painted on granite blocks along the East Branch of the Pemigewasset River during the spring months in Lincoln, New Hampshire USA.
    NH133835.jpg
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  • What looks to be possibly the top of an old mill building smoke stack in the area of  Sawyer River in Hart’s Location, New Hampshire. Though this resembles a "Diamond" smokestack, I don’t thick it is. Both possibilities could be wrong.
    SC099677.jpg
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  • What looks to be possibly the top of an old mill smoke stack in the area of  Sawyer River in Hart’s Location, New Hampshire. Though this resembles a "Diamond" smokestack, I don’t think it is. Both possibilities could be wrong.
    SC099669.jpg
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  • Cascade Brook in Lincoln, New Hampshire on a summer day. This brook is located along the Basin-Cascades Trail. An 1800s stereoview photograph published by E. & H. T. Anthony & Company refers to this cascade as Walton's Cascade.
    NH196063.jpg
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  • A stretch of the Mt Tecumseh Trail in New Hampshire covered in leaf drop. A herd path is forming in the woods on the right-hand side of the trail from hikers bypassing this section of trail work. If this area isn’t blocked off, over time, a herd path will form and potentially create more erosion issues. And this defeats the purpose of the trail stonework.
    NH178991.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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  • 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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  • Mount Washington from Davis Path in Sargent's Purchase in the New Hampshire White Mountains on a cloudy summer day. Completed in 1845 by Nathaniel T. Davis, Davis Path was the third and longest bridle path built to the summit of Mount Washington. The path was in use until 1853-1854, and then it was neglected and became unusable. In 1910 it was reopened as a footpath.
    SC119107.jpg
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  • Mount Washington from Davis Path in Sargent's Purchase in the New Hampshire White Mountains on a cloudy summer day. Completed in 1845 by Nathaniel T. Davis, Davis Path was the third and longest bridle path built to the summit of Mount Washington. The path was in use until 1853-1854, and then it was neglected and became unusable. In 1910 it was reopened as a footpath.
    SC119186.jpg
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  • Artifact (part of a sled runner on a logging sled) at the Old Johnson Camp in the Pemigewasset Wilderness, New Hampshire. This camp, owned by the Johnson Lumber Company (Gordon Pond Railroad), was located on the side of Mount Liberty in the Liberty Brook drainage of the Pemigewasset Wilderness. The Johnson Lumber Company owned a stand of spruce on the Pemigewasset Wilderness side of Mount Liberty, but they couldn’t reach it from the Gordon Pond Railroad because the terrain was too steep and it was surrounded by land owned by the East Branch & Lincoln Railroad. George Johnson, owner of the Johnson Lumber Company, made a deal with J.E. Henry & Sons to haul the timber out using the East Branch & Lincoln Railroad. The removal of historic artifacts from federal lands without a permit is a violation of federal law.
    SC107265.jpg
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  • A hiker on Davis Path with Mount Washington in the background in Sargent's Purchase in the New Hampshire White Mountains on a cloudy summer day. Completed in 1845 by Nathaniel T. Davis, Davis Path was the third and longest bridle path built to the summit of Mount Washington. The path was in use until 1853-1854, and then it was neglected and became unusable. In 1910 it was reopened as a footpath.
    SC095932.jpg
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  • What looks to be possibly the top of an old mill smoke stack in the area of  Sawyer River in Hart’s Location, New Hampshire. Though this resembles a "Diamond" smokestack, I don’t think it is. Both possibilities could be wrong.
    SC099672.jpg
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  • Trail sign along Davis Path in Sargent's Purchase in the Presidential Range in the New Hampshire White Mountains on a cloudy summer day. Completed in 1845 by Nathaniel T. Davis, Davis Path was the third and longest bridle path built to the summit of Mount Washington. The path was in use until 1853-1854, and then it was neglected and became unusable. In 1910 it was reopened as a footpath.
    SC097669.jpg
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  • Trail sign along Davis Path in Sargent's Purchase in the Presidential Range in the New Hampshire White Mountains on a cloudy summer day. Completed in 1845 by Nathaniel T. Davis, Davis Path was the third and longest bridle path built to the summit of Mount Washington. The path was in use until 1853-1854, and then it was neglected and became unusable. In 1910 it was reopened as a footpath.
    SC097671.jpg
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  • Beaver Brook Cascades on Beaver Brook in Kinsman Notch in the New Hampshire White Mountains during the autumn months. A segment of the scenic Appalachian Tail, the steep and rough Beaver Brook Trail passes by these cascades. Completed in 1937, the roughly 2,190 mile long Appalachian Trail (A.T.) begins in Georgia and ends in Maine.
    NH219474.jpg
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  • Beaver Brook Cascades on Beaver Brook in Kinsman Notch in the New Hampshire White Mountains during the autumn months. The scenic Appalachian Tail passes by these cascades. Completed in 1937, the roughly 2,190 mile long Appalachian Trail (A.T.) begins in Georgia and ends in Maine.
    NH219445.jpg
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  • Cascade Brook in Lincoln, New Hampshire on a summer day. This brook is located along the Basin-Cascades Trail. An 1800s stereoview photograph published by E. & H. T. Anthony & Company refers to this cascade as Walton's Cascade.
    NH196001.jpg
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  • Cascade Brook in Lincoln, New Hampshire on a spring day. This brook is located along the Basin-Cascades Trail. An 1800s stereoview photograph published by E. & H. T. Anthony & Company refers to this cascade as Walton's Cascade.
    NH173177.jpg
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  • Artifact at the Old Johnson Camp in the Pemigewasset Wilderness, New Hampshire. This camp, owned by the Johnson Lumber Company (Gordon Pond Railroad), was located on the side of Mount Liberty in the Liberty Brook drainage of the Pemigewasset Wilderness. The Johnson Lumber Company owned a stand of spruce on the Pemigewasset Wilderness side of Mount Liberty, but they couldn’t reach it from the Gordon Pond Railroad because the terrain was too steep and it was surrounded by land owned by the East Branch & Lincoln Railroad. George Johnson, owner of the Johnson Lumber Company, made a deal with J.E. Henry & Sons to haul the timber out using the East Branch & Lincoln Railroad. The removal of historic artifacts from federal lands without a permit is a violation of federal law.
    SC107267.jpg
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