Quote:
Originally Posted by Rattlesnake Gal
"...This is an excerpt from Farewell Old Mount Washington by Edward H. Blackstone describing what happened after the launching of the Mt. Washington II,
which was from Lakeport on August 12, 1940...
"...with the entry of the United States into the war there was no alternative for the new steamboat company except to go into bankruptcy...After bankruptcy the steam engines were commandeered for war service...Captain Leander Lavallee died before the war was over, and with him died an era of Lake Winnipesaukee Steamboating.
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Weren't the engines
diesel—then replaced by Uncle Sam after the war?
(And being replaced once again with those taxpayers' million
$—so eager to have bio-diesel?)
And a little factoid:
Canada was fighting the war in Europe
two years before the US entered the war!
Quote:
Originally Posted by BroadHopper
I am told by me Dad there was an air base in or near Sandwich, NH. During the war, flying to this field was one way to get home in the Lakes Region.
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Meanwhile,
me Dad tells me there were no air bases in Sandwich.
A few grassy airstrips were around, though.