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New Winnipesaukee history book
As you may have noticed in local newspapers, there's a new book about the seaplane base that flourished at the Weirs in the period 1923-1953. Bob Fogg was the aviator starting in 1923, carried air mail around the lake and thousands of passengers. Title is "Bob Fogg and New Hampshire's Golden Age of Aviation," $19.95 on Amazon or at local bookstores. A piece of big lake history that few have ever heard of.
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http://www.winnipesaukee.com/photopo...lywithfogg.jpg
- http://www.winnipesaukee.com/photopo...foggmtwash.jpg . http://www.winnipesaukee.com/photopo...obertsfogg.jpg More on Robert Fogg http://www.lwhs.us/win-bobfogginterview.htm from our friend Boardwalk Bluesboy http://weirsbeach.com/reasons-to-vis...seaplane-base/ http://content.yudu.com/Library/A1p9...Frefid%3D34704 http://www.winnipesaukee.com/forums/...32rdcinqb3.jpg Quote:
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http://www.moultonboroughhistory.org/ |
I checked Barney Noble this afternoon. They are aware that it was published in September but are unable to get it. I checked Amazon the other day. The only "seller" is the publisher in NH. ($19.95 + 3.99 S&H.)
The lady at Barney Noble thinks the book is likely of local or regional interest and therefore might only be availabe "locally"....Maybe Blacks in Wolfeboro...:look: NB |
It's available at the Moultonbourough Historical Society Museum Bookstore.
also available through the winni.com classifieds http://www.winnipesaukee.com/forums/...?do=ad&id=5383 Rice will be giving a presentation about the book at the Laconia Library on November 13. Here's an interesting article that appeared in the Laconia Daily Sun Quote:
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Availablity of Bob Fogg book
The book is available through Amazon, and is shipped by the distributor in Enfield, NH. Don't know why it's posted at B&N and yet not available. It's available at Black's and Country Bookseller in Wolfeboro, also Bayswater in Center Harbor and Innisfree in Meredith, plus Annie's in Laconia, and the Old Country Store in Moultonborough-if sold out they will order it for you. Author works at the Moultonborough Public Library and can get you a copy there. Or ask your local library to buy a copy-all libraries around the lake should have it!
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The photos in the book are underexposed and and printed on a poor quality of paper. If the publisher had used a higher quality glossy paper the results would have been better (at a higher price to the consumer). I am sorry that I purchased my copy from amazon.com.
Carguy Sent from my SCH-I605 using Tapatalk 2 |
I'm sorry that you were disappointed in the book, although you are the first that I have heard that from.
As far as the quality of the images, most are copied from 80-year-old small black and white snapshots, so there is a limit to the print quality that can be achieved. I think I was lucky to find as much as I did to help to preserve this aspect of Winnipesaukee and aviation history. I would love to have put out a glossy coffee-table book with full page images, but I'm just a local author with a story to tell, not National Geographic. To produce a book of that type would have been cost prohibitive, and I'm sure more people will enjoy learning about this story for $19.95 than would pay coffee-table book prices. I looked back to my contact with the publisher, and the book is printed on 60 lb. house white paper, which is typical for the publishing industry. It is bright white and opaque enough for the pictures not to show through from the opposite side of the page. For comparison, typical copy paper is 20 lbs. Hope this clarifies carguy's issues with the book for any other potential readers. I'd be glad to hear what any other readers or purchasers of the book have to say, positive or negative. The Author |
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I particularly found the Sikorsky S-38 amphibian of interest as I believe I have seen one in an aviation museum in Canada back in the late eighties. This particular plane had a Palm Tree emblazoned on the nose and had been used as a commuter somewhere in the tropics. The museum would allow visitors to board the plane and be seated while listening to a short audio describing a typical "island" flight back in the day. :) NB |
Sikorsky S-38B
Here is a video of the last "flying" S-38B....Albeit a Replica. Picture Bob Fogg's S-38B at the Weirs... including.. the boats. :D NB
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n9ERfeD-jCM EDIT: Turn up the sound. :) |
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