ScenicNH Photography - White Mountains New Hampshire

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(306 images)
Your search yielded 306 images
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  • During the Lincoln, New Hampshire mill era (originally built by James E. Henry and Sons) in order to generate electric power for the mill, water at the Number 1 and Number 2 dams was diverted through large diameter wooden and steel penstock to turbines at the mill. These round steel hoops held the Number 1 Dam wooden penstock together.
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  • Two hikers climb up a wooden ladder on the Hincks Trail in the White Mountain National Forest of New Hampshire USA.
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  • Side view of the Thoreau Falls Trail bridge in the Pemigewasset Wilderness of New Hampshire. This wooden bridge, at North Fork junction, crosses the East Branch of the Pemigewasset River. Update: the bridge seen in this photograph is no longer standing, and hikers now have to ford this water crossing.
    NH148384.jpg
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  • Flume Covered Bridge in Franconia Notch State Park in Lincoln, New Hampshire during the night. This wooden bridge crosses the Pemigewasset River.
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  • Wooden derrick at the abandoned Redstone Granite quarry in Conway, New Hampshire. This quarry opened in the late eighteen hundreds and closed in the nineteen forties.
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  • Wooden Bridge on Sawyer River Trail during the summer months in the White Mountains, New Hampshire USA. This area was logged during the Sawyer River Railroad logging era.
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  • A decaying wooden trail ladder along the Kedron Flume Trail in Hart's Location of the New Hampshire White Mountains.
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  • Trail Stewardship - Wooden steps along the Appalachian Trail (Beaver Brook Trail) during the summer months in the White Mountains, New Hampshire USA .
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  • Wooden steps along the Willey Range Trail in the White Mountain National Forest of New Hampshire.
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  • Remnants of an abandoned wooden dam on Tecumseh Brook in Waterville Valley, New Hampshire during the autumn month of October.
    NH2110404.jpg
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  • Wooden trail ladder along Boott Spur Trail in the White Mountains, New Hampshire
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  • Albany Covered Bridge in Albany, New Hampshire covered in snow. Located just off the Kancamagus Highway, this scenic wooden bridge crosses the Swift River.
    NH154071.jpg
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  • Wooden ladder along the Pemigewasset River in the general area of Frank W. Whitehouse’s 1890s mill site in Franconia Notch in Lincoln, New Hampshire on a summer day during the month of August.
    NH217879.jpg
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  • Remnants of an old wooden dam on Tecumseh Brook in Waterville Valley, New Hampshire during the autumn season. Mount Tecumseh is named for the Shawnee chief, Tecumseh (c.1768 – October 5, 1813).
    NH2110387.jpg
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  • Remnants of an old wooden dam on Tecumseh Brook in Waterville Valley, New Hampshire during the autumn season. Mount Tecumseh is named for the Shawnee chief, Tecumseh (c.1768 – October 5, 1813).
    NH2110388.jpg
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  • Remnants of an abandoned wooden dam on Tecumseh Brook in Waterville Valley, New Hampshire during the autumn month of October.
    NH2110396.jpg
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  • Thoreau Falls Trail bridge in the Pemigewasset Wilderness of Lincoln, New Hampshire. This wooden bridge, at North Fork junction, crosses the East Branch of the Pemigewasset River. It was damaged during Tropical Storm Irene in 2011, and there is now a one-person weight limit. Update: the bridge seen in this photograph is no longer standing, and hikers now have to ford this water crossing.
    NH148371.jpg
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  • Looking downstream at Thoreau Falls Trail bridge in the Pemigewasset Wilderness of Lincoln, New Hampshire. This wooden bridge, at North Fork junction, crosses the East Branch of the Pemigewasset River. It was damaged during Tropical Storm Irene in 2011, and there is now a one-person weight limit. Update: the bridge seen in this photograph is no longer standing, and hikers now have to ford this water crossing.
    NH148368.jpg
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  • Albany Covered Bridge in Albany, New Hampshire covered in snow. Located just off the Kancamagus Highway, this scenic wooden bridge crosses the Swift River.
    SC112906.jpg
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  • Albany Covered Bridge in Albany, New Hampshire covered in snow. Located just off the Kancamagus Highway, this scenic wooden bridge crosses the Swift River.
    SC112899.jpg
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  • The snow covered trestle No. 16 (Black Brook Trestle) along the old East Branch & Lincoln Railroad (1893-1948) in the Pemigewasset Wilderness of Lincoln, New Hampshire. Built in the early 1900s, trestle No. 16, seen here in January 2011, is the only remaining wooden trestle still standing along the railroad.
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  • Remnants of a wooden bridge along the Attitash Trail in Bartlett, New Hampshire USA.
    SC108336.jpg
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  • Wooden derrick at the abandoned Redstone Granite quarry in Conway, New Hampshire. This quarry opened in the late eighteen hundreds and closed in the nineteen forties.
    SC104292.jpg
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  • Remnants of a wooden bridge along a spur line of the old East Branch & Lincoln Railroad (1893-1948) in the Pemigewasset Wilderness in Lincoln, New Hampshire. This spur line came off of the Carrigain Branch of the EB&L Railroad, and it was used to access the Notch Brook drainage of the Pemigewasset Wilderness. This small bridge crossed Notch Brook.
    SC106587.jpg
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  • Remnants of a wooden bridge along a spur line of the old East Branch & Lincoln Railroad (1893-1948) in the Pemigewasset Wilderness of Lincoln, New Hampshire. This spur line came off of the Carrigain Branch of the EB&L Railroad, and it was used to access the Notch Brook drainage of the Pemigewasset Wilderness. This small bridge crossed Notch Brook.
    SC106598.jpg
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  • Wooden derrick at the abandoned Redstone Granite quarry in Conway, New Hampshire.
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  • Wooden fence near the Hartwell Tavern along the Battle Road at Minute Man National Historical Park in Lincoln, Massachusetts during the winter months. Originally built in 1732-1733, and restored by the National Park Service in the 1980s to its 18th-century appearance, the Hartwell Tavern was standing on April 19, 1775 (battles of Lexington and Concord, which marked the beginning of the American Revolutionary War). And because of this the National Park Service refers to this house as a “witness house”.
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  • Albany Covered Bridge in Albany, New Hampshire. Located just off the Kancamagus Highway, this scenic wooden bridge crosses the Swift River.
    CBM1393-04.jpg
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  • Albany Covered Bridge in Albany, New Hampshire. Located just off the Kancamagus Highway, this scenic wooden bridge crosses the Swift River.
    CBM1384-04.jpg
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  • Wooden trail ladder along Boott Spur Trail in the White Mountains, New Hampshire
    SCMW1853-06.jpg
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  • Remnants of a wooden trestle that crossed Franconia Brook just above Camp 10 along the abandoned East Branch & Lincoln Railroad (1893-1948) in the Pemigewasset Wilderness, New Hampshire. After crossing Franconia Brook, the railroad traveled around the southern end of Owls Head into the Lincoln Brook valley, eventually ending a short distance beyond Liberty Brook at Camp 12. The removal of historic artifacts from federal lands without a permit is a violation of federal law.
    SC107050.jpg
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  • Albany Covered Bridge in Albany, New Hampshire covered in snow. Located just off the Kancamagus Highway, this scenic wooden bridge crosses the Swift River.
    SC111573.jpg
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  • Remnants of a wooden bridge, near Ice Pond, along an old woods road that crossed Birch Island Brook, behind Camp 7, in Lincoln, New Hampshire  of the East Branch & Lincoln Railroad (1893-1948).
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  • Dingleton Covered Bridge in Cornish, New Hampshire USA. This bridge crosses Mill Brook.
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  • Town Park at the junction of Routes 16 and 2 in Gorham, New Hampshire USA.
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  • Town Park at the junction of Routes 16 and 2 in Gorham, New Hampshire USA.
    SC108683.jpg
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  • Town Park at the junction of Routes 16 and 2 in Gorham, New Hampshire USA.
    SC108679.jpg
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  • Hiker crossing foot bridge in the White Mountain of New Hampshire.
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  • The Flume Covered Bridge in Franconia Notch, New Hampshire covered in snow on an autumn morning. This picturesque bridge crosses the Pemigewasset River.
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  • The Fabyan Guard Station during the autumn months. It was built in 1923 by Clifford Graham along the old Jefferson Turnpike (now Old Cherry Mountain Road) in the Carroll, New Hampshire. It's the last remaining guard station in the White Mountain National Forest. The cabin was built using spruce logs from the surrounding area.
    NH1610464.jpg
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  • Flume Covered Bridge in Franconia Notch, New Hampshire. This bridge crosses the Pemigewasset River. Mount Liberty is in the background.
    NH161442.jpg
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  • Flume Covered Bridge in Franconia Notch State Park of Lincoln, New Hampshire USA. This bridge crosses the Pemigewasset River.
    NH161119.jpg
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  • Flume Covered Bridge in Franconia Notch State Park of Lincoln, New Hampshire USA. This bridge crosses the Pemigewasset River.
    NH161118.jpg
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  • Franconia Notch State Park - Flume Covered Bridge in Lincoln, New Hampshire USA covered in snow during the night.
    NH1353513.jpg
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  • Side view of a collapsed timber bridge at the Sokokis Brook crossing along of 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.
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  • Side view of a collapsed timber bridge at the Sokokis Brook crossing along of 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.
    SC1228708.jpg
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  • Side view of a decaying timber bridge 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.
    SC1228765.jpg
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  • Side view of a decaying timber bridge 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.
    SC1228757.jpg
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  • Footbridge along the Thoreau Falls Trail days after Tropical Storm Irene. This bridge crosses the East Branch of the Pemigewasset River in the Pemigewasset Wilderness of New Hampshire. The White Mountain National Forest was officially closed during Tropical Storm Irene. Update: the bridge seen in this photograph is no longer standing, and hikers now have to ford this water crossing.
    SC1112872.jpg
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  • Hemlock Covered Bridge in Fryeburg, Maine. Built in 1857, this covered bridge crosses the Saco River.
    CBMEM1682-04.jpg
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