ScenicNH Photography - White Mountains New Hampshire

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(23 images)
Your search yielded 23 images
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  • A dug well in Pawtuckaway State Park in Nottingham, New Hampshire USA during the spring months.
    M092454.jpg
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  • A dug well in Pawtuckaway State Park in Nottingham, New Hampshire USA during the spring months.
    M089060.jpg
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  • A stoned lined dug well at an abandoned homestead 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 site of the D. Merrill homestead. This well is still about 8 feet deep and holding water.
    NH1612332.jpg
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  • Looking down into a dug well at an abandoned homestead at Thornton Gore in Thornton, New Hampshire during the autumn months. Thornton Gore was the site 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 site of the D. Merrill homestead. This well is still about 8 feet deep and holding water.
    NH1612339.jpg
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  • Dug well at the Samuel Wallace Farmstead along the abandoned North Road in the Sandwich Range Wilderness of New Hampshire. This 400 acre homestead was part of the early nineteenth century hill farm community (thirty to forty families) in Sandwich Notch. By 1860 only eight families lived in the Notch and by the turn of the twentieth century only one person lived in the Notch year around.
    NH159798.jpg
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  • Dug well at the Samuel Wallace Farmstead along the abandoned North Road in the Sandwich Range Wilderness of New Hampshire. This 400 acre homestead was part of the early nineteenth century hill farm community (thirty to forty families) in Sandwich Notch. By 1860 only eight families lived in the Notch and by the turn of the twentieth century only one person lived in the Notch year around.
    NH159789.jpg
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  • Remnants of a dug well at an abandoned 1800s hill farming community along old South Landaff Road in Landaff, New Hampshire USA.
    NH155026.jpg
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  • Old dug well at Colonel Lewis B. Smith site in Sandwich Notch in Sandwich, New Hampshire USA. From the 18th century to the late 19th century, this now abandoned farmstead was occupied by three generations of the Smith family.
    NH158229.jpg
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  • Abandoned well at the site of Merrill’s Mountain House in Warren, New Hampshire during the summer months. In 1834 Nathaniel Merrill built a farmhouse at this site, and in 1860 the Merrill family converted the farmhouse to an inn known as Merrill’s Mountain Home or Merrill’s Mountain House. The inn burned down in 1915.
    NH168094.jpg
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  • Close-up of the bark of a Shagbark Hickory tree  during the winter months in a New England Forest, USA
    MDW072124.tif
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  • Close-up of the bark of a Shagbark Hickory tree  during the winter months in a New England Forest, USA
    MDW072120.tif
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  • An abandoned cellar hole along the old North and South Road (now Long Pond Road) Road in Benton, New Hampshire USA. Based on an 1860 historical map of Grafton County this was the homesite of Enos Wells. The New Hampshire forest it littered with sites like this one that have been forgotten about.
    NH1512605.jpg
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  • An abandoned cellar hole along the old North and South Road (now Long Pond Road) in Benton, New Hampshire USA. Based on an 1860 historical map of Grafton County this was the homesite of George Wells.
    NH1512416.jpg
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  • Eastern White Pine -(Pinus strobus)- during the summer months on the riverbank of the Swift River in Albany, New Hampshire USA.
    SC1110610.jpg
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  • Eastern White Pine -(Pinus strobus)- during the summer months on the riverbank of the Swift River in Albany, New Hampshire USA.
    SC1110604.jpg
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  • Thorvald's Rock is in a stone cage at Tuck Memorial Museum in Hampton, New Hampshire, which is part of New England. It is said this boulder( inside the well) marked the final resting place of Thorvald Ericsson, brother of the famous Viking explorer Leif Ericsson.
    TNH085168.jpg
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  • Remnants of possibly a dug well (could also being septic) at 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.
    SC1220182.jpg
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  • Thorvald's Rock is in a stone cage at Tuck Memorial Museum in Hampton, New Hampshire, which is part of New England. It is said this boulder( inside the well) marked the final resting place of Thorvald Ericsson, brother of the famous Viking explorer Leif Ericsson.
    TNH085183.jpg
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  • Thorvald's Rock is in a stone cage at Tuck Memorial Museum in Hampton, New Hampshire, which is part of New England. It is said this boulder( inside the well) marked the final resting place of Thorvald Ericsson, brother of the famous Viking explorer Leif Ericsson.
    TNH085180.jpg
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  • Thorvald's Rock is in a stone cage at Tuck Memorial Museum in Hampton, New Hampshire, which is part of New England. It is said this boulder( inside the well) marked the final resting place of Thorvald Ericsson, brother of the famous Viking explorer Leif Ericsson.
    TNH085170.jpg
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  • Thorvald's Rock is in a stone cage at Tuck Memorial Museum in Hampton, New Hampshire, which is part of New England. It is said this boulder( inside the well) marked the final resting place of Thorvald Ericsson, brother of the famous Viking explorer Leif Ericsson.
    TNH085167.jpg
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  • Jefferds Tavern in York, Maine during the autumn months. Built in 1750, this tavern was originally located in Wells, Maine. In 1941 it was moved to York, and restored to a colonial tavern.
    TME0812232.jpg
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  • Jefferds Tavern in York, Maine during the autumn months. Built in 1750, this tavern was originally located in Wells, Maine. In 1941 it was moved to York, and restored to a colonial tavern.
    TME0812257.jpg
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