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#1 |
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Join Date: May 2009
Posts: 24
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Just found a great link to Gunstock as I remember it, as a kid.
http://teachski.com/brochures/gunstock/gunstock.htm The "closed trail" tht led to the jumps was called "Fletcher's Hale" .... brings back memories! |
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#2 |
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Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: The Lakes, Central NH. and Dallas/Fort Worth TX.
Posts: 3,694
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We are all so very lucky to get to enjoy our many great Mountains here in the Lakes Region... " Noth'in Like it"!!!!
Now, not to date myself over here, I was on a pair of wooden ski's in my former days, late one evening when the left one broke sending me off the beaten path, ( so to speak ) where I got cut up pretty good from the frozen ice layer on top of the snow in the outer perimeters. Did I survive, Absotoothly!! ![]() So, here I am further enjoying the Belknaps on a special afternoon with a view of a snow-sun-bow. http://www.winnipesaukee.com/photopo...9353&ppuser=83 T
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trfour Always Remember, The Best Safety Device In The Boat, or on a PWC Snowmobile etc., Is YOU! Safe sledding tips and much more; http://www.snowmobile.org/snowmobiling-safety.html |
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#3 |
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Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Rock Haven Lake - West Newfield, ME
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Here's a link to our forum friend, Boardwalk Bluesboy's website
http://www.weirsbeach.com/newmedia/12views/view11.html Lots of interesting pics of Mt. Rowe, Gunstock and the Belknap Mountain Recreation area. (even some pics of old bikers at the hill climb!) He also seems to think that Mt. Rowe was pictured on this card.....but....what do I know??? ![]() ![]() Boardwalk Bluesboy seems to indicate that the Mt. Rowe area was incorporated into the Gunstock Ski area at some point; "Gunstock trail map, in 1964, after the first double chair lift to the top of Gunstock had been built. A second double chairlift was added later to run alongside the first. The Rowe Mountain lift and trail complex were still a big part of the overall ski area. In 1986 a major reconstruction project changed the feel of the mountain, quite detrimentally in the opinon of the webmaster. Newer, less challenging trails and shorter lifts were added, while some challenging trails and longer lifts were removed. Notably, the two main double chairlifts to the top of the mountain were both removed and the middle part of the Ramrod trail which had ran underneath the main chairlifts was closed permanently. Much later, a new express quad chairlift to the top of the mountain was added to the left side of the Smith slope."
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#4 |
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Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Welch Island and The Taylor Community
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Right you are Dude. We have hiked up Mt Rowe several times taking the path shown (I think) as the TRY-ME Trail which is now the access route to the cell tower. Also the old Rowe single chair lift line is still open as can be seen on Google Maps satellite views.
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#5 |
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Join Date: May 2008
Location: Laconia
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Historic Highlights" for Gilford Steamer’s 10 June 2004 issue
It’s time to celebrate "Founders Day" It’s mid-June, time for Gilfordites to think about celebrating "Founders Day." "Who exactly were the ‘founders’?" people often ask. There’s no simple answer to that question. If we can rely on legend, one name could be Greene Chase. To learn about this legend, we turn to Adair Mulligan’s words in The Gunstock Parish: A History of Gilford, New Hampshire. Greene Chase and two companions came up from lower Gilmanton to hunt cougar in what later came to be called Gunstock Mountain. They found tracks of a very large cat near the foot of the mountain. Chase, husky and a good woodsman, "...had just broken his snowshoe when the animal appeared suddenly on an overhanging ledge just above his head, whereupon his two companions fled with their dog. As Chase raised his musket to fire, the hammer of the gun broke. He quickly shifted ends of the gun and struck the cat a heavy blow, killing it and breaking the gun stock. As he proceeded to skin the creature, the others returned and offered help, which he rejected. Word got around when people asked Chase where he had killed such a large catamount. Emboldened by his success, Chase soon moved to catamount country and erected a homestead at the top of (what came to be called) Belknap Mountain Road." This legend lends credence to the source of the name for both "Gunstock Mountain" and "Gunstock Brook" as well as for "Gunstock Parish" and, later, "Gunstock Village" and paints a picture of the kind of person who may have gravitated to and settled in the rustic environs of our historic area in the 1700s when the dangers of attack by natives kept many a more cautious folk content to live within the more protected "Lower Parish" of Gilmanton. People attracted to Gunstock Parish’s better soils and water power include Samuel Gilman, John Bennett, Jr., James Ames, John Edgerly, Lowell Sanborn, Thomas Frohock, Samuel Jewett, and Samuel Ladd ——all names of potential Founders, as are the names of people associated with the 1794 era of Meetinghouse Hill —- with the list extending to include Daniel Stevens, Benjamin Jewett, William Sibley, and Elder Martin. Or, to look at the picture more narrowly, perhaps Gilford’s Founders are only those people whose names are associated with the 1812 Incorporation of Gilford as a town -- a climax of an effort that dates back to its origin in 1792 when people living in Gunstock Parish not only did not relish sending tax money to a distant governing body but also found it difficult if not impossible to attend town meetings in Gilmanton when the five- to twenty-mile trip over bad roads could take hours of difficult travel each way. On June 16, 1812, the part of Gilmanton called Gunstock Parish was disannexed and, according to Adair Mulligan’s words in The Gun— stock Parish: A History of Gilford, New Hamspshire, "...the citizens of the nascent town turned ... to the most battle-weary of their brethren, Lieutenant Lemuel Mason, who was actively pushing for the towns s incorporation as representative to the state legislature" to select a name for their new town. Mason proposed to name the town after a decisive battle in the Revolutionary War, the 1781 Revolutionary War battle of Guilford Court House in North Carolina. In the end, an untraceable error gave our town’s name the unique spelling of "Gilford". June 16 is recognized as "Founders Day" in Gilford. Annually Founders Day provides an opportunity for us to look back on and appreciate our town’s history. Founders Day has been celebrated in several ways during recent years. The result of one effort can be found at ges.gilford.k12.nh.us, Gilford Elementary School’s website. Teacher Otis Wirth and his third-grade students created this "Pictorial Walking Tour of Gilford Village", based on A Walking Tour published by the Gilford Historic District Commission in the year 1990, reprinted in 1991. A year ago students in the class of Sixth-Grade Language Arts Teacher Michelle Demers, in conjunction with Co—Seed, created a Quest activity, similar to an historical scavenger hunt, which they shared with third—grade students as a culmination of grade three social studies curriculum that focuses on the history of Gilford. This year Thompson-Ames Historical Society President Joan Nelson and Co-Seed Facilitator Alan McIntyre, of the Prescott Farm Audubon Society, have jointly created a "2004 Founders Day Quest" that will be available for use on Saturday, June 12 and Saturday, June 19. It is designed as a small pamphlet with map and poetic clues to act as a guide for a group of up to four people, including at least one adult, to follow while walking in Gilford’s historic district, starting in the Town Hall parking lot at the location of the Tannery Hill Bridge. The Library’s Saturday hours of 10:00 a.m. until 2:00 p.m. will facilitate one of the "Quest" stops while Thompson-Ames Historical Society will hold a 10:00 a.m. — 4:00 p.m. "Open House" on both Saturdays at the Grange Museum Building, the Union Meetinghouse, and the Benjamin Rowe House to provide access for other "Quest" stops. It is anticipated that this 2004 Quest will take about two hours to complete but the activities can be broken down to be done over a period of more than one day. Although the "2004 Founders Day Quest" is a perfect follow-up to the Grade Three May and June field trips that have been taking place at the three vintage buildings where Gilford’s historical society maintains displays, this activity is also enjoyable and suitable for all school—age youngsters as well as adults. To reserve a copy of the "2004 Founders Day Quest", telephone 527-9009 and leave your name and telephone number. It is hoped that a Quest-type scavenger hunt will become an annual way of celebrating "Founders Day’ in Gilford. This Quest activity and the six-hour Open House opportunities at the three vintage buildings in Gilford’s historic district are free and open to the general public. |
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#6 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: Central NH
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The Gunstock Parish, by Adair Mulligan is my favorite history book on the lake. There is a wealth of information inside. I just wish she wrote books for each town around the lake to make a complete set!
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#7 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: Central NH
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The price for this book on Amazon is crazy and it is not available for Kindle. I picked up my copy while visiting The Belknap Mill. Local bookstores should carry it or you can get it right from The Thompson Ames Historical Society in Gilford for $35.
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#8 | |||||
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Rock Haven Lake - West Newfield, ME
Posts: 5,367
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#9 |
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Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 6,771
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McDude, not to change the subject, but I guess I am for a minute. Have you ever heard of a Camp Bueno in North Sutton, NH? I have about 30 postcards from there but have never heard of it.
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#10 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Rock Haven Lake - West Newfield, ME
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sorry, tis.....me neither. Where the heck is No. Sutton anyway?
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#11 |
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Join Date: Jan 2006
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I don't know?? SW part of the state maybe?
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#12 |
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Join Date: Jan 2006
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North Sutton is an unincorporated community in the town of Sutton in Merrimack County, New Hampshire. It is located at the eastern end of Kezar Lake, adjacent to Wadleigh State Park.
New Hampshire Route 114 passes through the village, leading north to New London and south to Sutton Village, South Sutton, and Bradford. Interstate 89 passes just east of the village, which can be accessed from Exit 10. North Sutton has a separate ZIP code (03260) from other parts of the town of Sutton. |
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#13 | |
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Join Date: Feb 2009
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Sutton has 3 different zip codes that I am aware of. To keep from further derailing this interesting thread, email me through the pm system. |
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#14 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2006
Posts: 6,771
Thanks: 755
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OK. They are 1930. I will pm you though.
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