ScenicNH Photography - White Mountains New Hampshire

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(56 images)
Your search yielded 56 images
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  • An abandoned cellar hole along an old road in Benton, New Hampshire. This road is located off the North and South Road (now Long Pond Road). And based on an 1860 historical map of Grafton County this is believed to have been the homesite of Gilbert P. Wright.
    NH1512798.jpg
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  • A birch tree growing in a cellar hole along the old North and South Road (now Long Pond Road) in Benton, New Hampshire. Based on an 1860 historical map of Grafton County this was possibly the homestead of Orrin Marston.
    NH1511448.jpg
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  • Abandoned cellar hole 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 Mrs H. Pettingill homestead.
    SC1217030.jpg
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  • The Ira Dustin Place home site cellar hole along Sandwich Notch Road in Sandwich, New Hampshire. Sandwich Notch Road is a historic route established in 1801, and during the early 1800’s thirty to forty families lived in the Notch. By the first decade of the twentieth century only one resident, Moses Hall, lived in the Notch.
    SC0912931.jpg
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  • Abandoned cellar hole 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 T. Wyatt homestead.
    NH1612489.jpg
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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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  • The corner of and abandoned cellar hole along the old North and South Road (now Long Pond Road) in Benton, New Hampshire. Based on an 1860 historical map of Grafton County this believed too have been the homestead / farm of John Lathrop.
    NH1512527.jpg
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  • The Seldon Avery Place home site cellar hole along Sandwich Notch Road in Sandwich, New Hampshire. During the early nineteenth century, thirty to forty families lived in the 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.
    NH159363.jpg
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  • Abandoned cellar hole 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 T. Wyatt homestead.
    NH1612456.jpg
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  • Close up of an abandoned cellar hole 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 E. Merrill homestead.
    NH1612264.jpg
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  • Remnants of an abandoned cellar hole 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 P.P. Merrill homestead.
    NH1612226.jpg
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  • Abandoned cellar hole along an old dirt road, near Black Brook, in Warren, New Hampshire. Based on an 1860 historical map of Grafton County this was the homestead of S.T. Hayt. This is inside the split stone arch that supported the chimney structure. Consisting of two walls of stones topped with horizontal stones this type of chimney arch was used after the turn of the nineteenth century. And it has been documented that farmers used this area for winter food storage.
    NH168543.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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  • The Zeke Dustin Place home site cellar hole along Sandwich Notch Road in Sandwich, New Hampshire. During the early nineteenth century, thirty to forty families lived (hill farm community) in the Notch, and by 1860 the community was just about abandoned.
    NH159969.jpg
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  • The Meader Farm home site cellar hole along Sandwich Notch Road in Sandwich, New Hampshire. During the early nineteenth century, thirty to forty families lived in the Notch. And by the turn of the twentieth century only one person remained in the Notch year around.
    NH159536.jpg
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  • Abandoned cellar hole 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 T. Wyatt homestead.
    NH1612465.jpg
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  • Abandoned cellar hole 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 R.B. Tucker homestead.
    NH1612013.jpg
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  • Abandoned cellar hole along an old dirt road, near Black Brook, in Warren, New Hampshire. Based on an 1860 historical map of Grafton County this was the homestead of S.T. Hayt. This is a side view of the split stone arch that supported the chimney structure. Consisting of two walls of stones topped with horizontal stones this type of chimney arch was used after the turn of the nineteenth century. And it has been documented that farmers used this area for winter food storage.
    NH168610.jpg
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  • An abandoned cellar hole along an old road off Tunnel Brook Road in Benton, New Hampshire. This area was once known as Coventry, and based on an 1860 historical map of Grafton County this is believed to have been the Mulliken homestead.
    NH162425.jpg
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  • Remnants of an old cellar hole along an abandoned road in Benton, New Hampshire. This road traveled in between the old East Road and the old North and South Road (now Long Pond Road). Based on an 1860 historical map of Grafton County this is possibly the site of the David Clough farm.
    NH1513176.jpg
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  • Remnants of an old cellar hole along an abandoned road in Benton, New Hampshire. This road traveled in between the old East Road and the old North and South Road (now Long Pond Road). Based on an 1860 historical map of Grafton County this is possibly the site of the David Clough farm.
    NH1513107.jpg
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  • Remnants of a cellar hole along an old road in Benton, New Hampshire. This road is located off the North and South Road (now Long Pond Road). Based on an 1860 map of Grafton County this is believed to be the Bartlett Marston homestead.
    NH1512640.jpg
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  • A cellar hole from the 1800s along the old North and South Road (now Long Pond Road) in Benton, New Hampshire. Based on an 1860 historical map of Grafton County this is believed to have been the homesite of Josiah F. Jeffers.
    NH1512511.jpg
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  • An abandoned cellar hole along the old North and South Road (now Long Pond Road) in Benton, New Hampshire. Based on an 1860 historical map of Grafton County this believed too have been the homestead / farm of John Lathrop.
    NH1512519.jpg
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  • The Atwood Place home site cellar hole along Sandwich Notch Road in Sandwich, New Hampshire. This homestead was part of an early nineteenth century hill farm community (thirty to forty families), in Sandwich Notch. By 1860 most of the these families had left the Notch looking for better farming land.
    NH159682.jpg
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  • The John Hart Place home site cellar hole along Sandwich Notch Road in Sandwich, New Hampshire USA. During the early nineteenth century, thirty to forty families lived (hill farm community) in the Notch. By 1860 only eight families lived in the Notch and by the turn of the twentieth century only one person, Moses Hall, lived in the Notch year around. Now a private residence the Hall Place is the only house left on the Notch Road.
    NH159451.jpg
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  • The Andrew Munsey Place home site cellar hole along Sandwich Notch Road in Sandwich, New Hampshire. During the early nineteenth century a hill farm community occupied the Notch. By the turn of the twentieth century only one person lived in the Notch year around.
    NH159325.jpg
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  • The Gilman Place home site cellar hole along Sandwich Notch Road in Sandwich, New Hampshire. During the early nineteenth century, this homestead was part of a hill farm community (thirty to forty families) that lived in the Notch. By 1860 much of the community was abandoned, and by the turn of the twentieth century only one person lived in the Notch year around.
    NH158957.jpg
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  • The James Bryant Place home site cellar hole along Sandwich Notch Road in Sandwich, New Hampshire. The Notch Road is a historic route established in 1801, and during the early 1800s thirty to forty families lived in the Notch. By the first decade of the twentieth century only one resident lived in the Notch.
    SC0912798.jpg
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  • Remnants of an abandoned farmstead 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 J. Merrill farmstead.
    NH1612159.jpg
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  • Tree growing up through a flat steel tire from a wooden wagon wheel at an abandoned homestead along an old road in Benton, New Hampshire. This road traveled in between the old East Road and the old North and South Road (now Long Pond Road). And based on an 1860 historical map of Grafton County this is believed to be the site of the David Clough farm.
    NH1513130.jpg
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  • Remnants of an old stone foundation along an abandoned road in Benton, New Hampshire. This road traveled in between the old East Road and the old North and South Road (now Long Pond Road). Based on an 1860 historical map of Grafton County this is possibly the site of the David Clough farm.
    NH1513194.jpg
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  • Remnants of 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 E. Merrill homestead.
    NH1612257.jpg
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  • Remnants of an abandoned farmstead 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 J. Merrill farmstead.
    NH1612153.jpg
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  • Panoramic of the Colonel Lewis B. Smith site in Sandwich Notch in Sandwich, New Hampshire USA. This abandoned farmstead was occupied by three generations of the Smith family from the 18th century to the late 19th century. This is believed to be the foundation of the house they lived in. This image consists of six images stitched together.
    NH158751 Panorama.jpg
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  • The site of the Mt. Willard Section House along the old Maine Central Railroad, next to the Willey Brook Trestle, in Crawford Notch State Park of New Hampshire. This section house, built in 1887, housed the section foreman and crew who maintained the track. From 1903-1942, the Hattie Evans family lived at the house. It was destroyed by fire in 1972.
    SC103208.jpg
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  • Remnants of 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 F. Mardin homestead.
    NH1612345.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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  • Remnants of 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 P.P. Merrill homestead.
    NH1612248.jpg
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  • Remnants of an abandoned homestead along Tunnel Brook in Benton, New Hampshire. This area was once known as Coventry, and based on an 1860 historical map of Grafton County this is believed to have been the Jonathan Hunkings homestead. This is also the site of the old Parker House, a small hotel that operated from 1904 to about 1930.
    NH168027.jpg
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  • 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.
    NH168116.jpg
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  • Remnants of the abandoned village of Livermore during the spring months. This was a logging village in the late 19th and early 20th centuries along the Sawyer River Logging Railroad in Livermore, New Hampshire USA. The town and railroad were owned by the Saunders family.
    NH164803.jpg
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  • Abandoned stone work along an old road, near the abandoned homestead of Gilbert P. Wright, in Benton, New Hampshire. This road is located off the North and South Road (now Long Pond Road).
    NH1512777.jpg
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  • Remnants of the Goulding house in the village of Livermore in the New Hampshire White Mountains. This was a logging village in the late 19th and early 20th centuries along the Sawyer River Railroad. The town and railroad were owned by the Saunders family.
    NH1511699.jpg
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  • The dwelling site of St George’s Hall in the abandoned village of Livermore during the autumn months. This was a logging village in the late 19th and early 20th centuries along the Sawyer River Railroad in Livermore, New Hampshire.
    NH1511693.jpg
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  • Remnants of the Goulding house in the village of Livermore in the New Hampshire White Mountains. This was a logging village in the late 19th and early 20th centuries along the Sawyer River Railroad. The town and railroad were owned by the Saunders family.
    NH1511715.jpg
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  • Remnants of the Goulding house in the village of Livermore in the New Hampshire White Mountains. This was a logging village in the late 19th and early 20th centuries along the Sawyer River Railroad. The town and railroad were owned by the Saunders family.
    NH1511706.jpg
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  • Colonel Lewis B. Smith site in Sandwich Notch in Sandwich, New Hampshire USA. This abandoned farmstead was occupied by three generations of the Smith family from the 18th century to the late 19th century.
    NH158768.jpg
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  • Colonel Lewis B. Smith site in Sandwich Notch in Sandwich, New Hampshire USA. This abandoned farmstead was occupied by three generations of the Smith family from the 18th century to the late 19th century.
    NH158287.jpg
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  • Colonel Lewis B. Smith site in Sandwich Notch in Sandwich, New Hampshire USA. This abandoned farmstead was occupied by three generations of the Smith family from the 18th century to the late 19th century.
    NH158294.jpg
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