iwuumtinististtfMttcKjaHttdittwfMtiiitunuteutti z BOUGHT WITH THE INCOME FROM THE SAGE ENDOWMENT FUNt) THE GIFT OF Henrg 139. Sags 1891 k.A..S..SAL^. ^Ivrrr I I.L 1357 0ii\jn £ ruiuiiic was taken. ▼VBICfll LIIIB . ., To renew this book copy the call No. and give to the librarian. e;'£&iaci'* t^. t.i'--. IHIiiHiiii^liiBnifVflT'tlt- fEBl4 19S1IS ^lIl^^-^ngTrFp \> HOME USE RULES. All Books Subject to Recall. Book^ not used for instnictioti oj research ■ are returnable, -within 4 weeks.' Volumes of periodi- cals and of pamphlets are held in the library as much as possible. For special purposes they are given out for a limited time. Borrowers should not use thejr library privileges for thebene- ■^fit of other persons,^ , Books not needed, .during recess periods should be returned to the library, or arrange- ments made for their return during borrow- er's absence, if wanted. Books needed by more than one person are held on the reserve , Jist. y Bo6ks of special value and gift books, when the giver wishes it, are not allowed to circulate. Readers- are asked to report all cases of books marked or muti- lated. Cornell University Library Z1312.W5 B47 Bibjoaraphy of the White Mountains, by olin 3 1924 029 556 192 Do.hot4*face books by marks and writing. Cornell University Library The original of tiiis book is in tine Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924029556192 THOMAS STARR KING. From a painting in possession of Professor C H. Leonard A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS BY ALLEN H. BENT BOSTON PUBLISHED FOR THE APPALACHIAN MOUNTAIN CLUB BY HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY gtbe nitoer^ibe ^re^^ CamStibse, 1911 COPYRIGHT, 1911, BY THE APPALACHIAN MOUNTAIN CLUB CONTENTS The Classics 1 Guide Books 4 Magazine Articles . 11 Articles in Appalachia 32 Incidental References 43 Fiction 67 Poetry 72 Maps 83 Early Engravings 89 Newspapers 94 Index 99 PORTRAITS Thomas Starr King Frontispiece William Oakes Benjamin G. Willet Jacob Bigelow Francis Boott Frank Bolles Samuel Adams Drake Samuel H. Scudder Moses Foster Sweetser Henry M. Burt Benjamin L. Ball William C. Prime Bradford Toreet Joshua H. Huntington John H. Spaulding Charles H. Hitchcock Edward Tuckerman Facing page 10 Facing page 32 Facing page 62 Facing"page 86 INTRODUCTION The White Mountains, covering roughly an area somewhat less than forty niiles square in northern New Hampshire, with but nine mountains over five thousand feet in height and only one peak above six thousand, have had more written about them, probably, than any other mountains, the Alps alone excepted. The highest summit, patriotically named for President Washington during the first years of hid administration, was the first mountain to be climbed in what is now the United States. This was accomplished by Darby Field, in 1642. The record of this first ascent was pre- served by Governor John Winthrop in his joiu-nal, which, however, was not published until nearly a century and a half later. The first mention of the White Mountains in print is in "New England's Rarities discovered in birds, beasts, fishes, serpents and plants of that country," by John Josselyn, Gent., published in London in 1672. Josselyn also refers incidentally to the "high Hills of Ossapy." Five years later the first printer and engraver in Boston, John Foster, made a crude map of New England, on which the name "White Hills" appeared. The names of the individual peaks did not appear in any book nor upon any map until 1784, when Holland's map appeared, bearing the names of Mooselock (Moosilanke), Moat, Royce, Mitten, and Rattlesnake. "Ossipa Mt." had appeared on Jefferys' map in 1774 and "Red Hill" on Pownall's map two years later, but these belong rather to the Lake country. The first pictures seem to have been the two small en- gravings, "The Gap of the White Mountains" and "View from Shelburne," in the upper portion of Phihp Carrigain's map of New Hampshire, published ia 1816. As will be seen from the following pages two hundred and eighty-five books and pamphlets have had something to say vi INTRODUCTION about the White Mountains, and nearly three hundred magazine articles, one third of these in " Appalachia," the journal of the Ap- palachian Mountain Club, founded in 1876, the first year of the Club's existence. Furthermore there will be found recorded some one hundred and fifty poems, fifty newspapers that have at divers times been published in White Moxmtain towns, thirty-six maps, and an imperfect list of early engravings. The poets have been particularly attracted to Mt. Chocorua and the Old Man of the Mountain. Many of the greatest American writers — Longfellow, Whittier, Hawthorne, Parkman and Thoreau — have left their im- pressions in their individual ways, while Thomas Starr King in "The White Hills" produced not only a classic of mountain lore, but what may well be considered a classic of English literature. The earliest of American landscape painters, Thomas Cole and Thomas Doughty, were not slow in finding out the beauties of the White Mountains, and they have had many followers. A cata- logue of paintings in public places might prove interesting, al- though it would be painfully short. The Boston Museum of Fine Arts has none ; the Corcoran Gallery in Washington has but one, John F. Kensett's "Sketch of Mt. Washington"; and the great Metropolitan Museum in New York has only one, Homer D. Martin's "Madison and Adams from Randolph HUl." The Lenox Library in New York does better, with five. One field, newspaper articles, I have neglected entirely, although it contains much valuable matter. In the "New Hampshire States- man and Concord Register" of September 9 and 16, 1826, is per- haps the earliest printed description of Franconia Notch and an ascent of Mt. Lafayette, or "Mt. Fayette" as the writer calls it. A few days earlier nearly all of the New England newspapers pre- sented thrilling accoimts of the terrible Willey house disaster. Starr "King's first mountain articles, signed "T," appeared in the Boston Transcript m the summer of 1853, and the several chap- ters of Juhus H. Ward's volume were written originally for the Boston Sunday Herald. INTRODUCTION vii As for bibliographies, M. F. Sweetser, in his valuable "Hand- book to the White Mountains," first published in 1876, gives an interesting list of authorities consulted in the preparation of his book, and Mr. Ward, in his volume just referred to, itemized the articles that had been published in " Appalachia" up to that time (1890), together with a short list of books on the subject. In the " New England Magazine " for July, 1891, is an interesting illus- trated article on the "Literature of the White Mountains," by William Howe Downes, and in the Second Annual Report of the New Hampshire Forest Commission, 1894, a bibliography of fifty- eight items. Finally, in the Monthly Bulletin of the Providence Public Library for September, 1895, there appeared what the compiler, Mr. George Thomas Hart, modestly calls "Materials suggested as the Nucleus of a Bibliography of the White Moun- tains," in reality a valuable classified list of fifteen quarto pages. A bibliography is not unlike a cairn on a mountain top — a loose, disjointed affair, representing more hard work than beauty, and one never knows when it is completed. Its value consists in its suggestiveness and in serving as a guide for others. Toward the completion of the present work many a wilHng hand has con- tributed a stone, but Miss Mary A. Day of the Gray Herbarium, Mr. J. H. Emerton, and Mr. F. G. Floyd have done much more, and to them I am particularly grateful. If the follower on the same trail finds some loose stones that have been overlooked, it is hoped that he will forego the temptation to throw them, but rather add them as his contribution to the pile already con- structed. A. H. B. Boston, September, 1910. A BIBLIOGKAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS THE CLASSICS The History op the White Mountains peom the First Settle- ment OP Upper Coos and Peqxjaket, by Lucy, Wife of Ethan Allen Crawford, Esq. 24mo, 204 pages. White Hills, 1846. The book wag printed in Portland, where it was reprinted in 1883, with introduction by Henry Wheelock Ripley, and again in 1886, with wood cuts, and poems by Mr. Ripley, Bethra Liedean, and C. E. Swinerton. Scenery op the White Mountains, by William Oakes, with 16 plates from drawings by Isaac Sprague. Folio. Boston, 1848, Two of the lithographs are from paintings by Godfrey N. Frankenstein, who was bom in Germany, 1820, and died in Springfield, O., 1873. The views of Profile Mt. and the Old Man of the Mountain, with description, ap- peared separately in 1847. A portrait of Wm. Oakes, who was bom in Danvers, Mass., 1799, and was drowned between Boston and East Boston, 1848, appears in the New England Magazine, March, 1896, and a sketch of his life in American Jomnal of Science and Arts, 2d series. Vol. 7, January, 1849, reprinted in Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal, Vol. 46, April, 1849. For Frankenstein, see the account of Springfield, in History of Clark County, Ohio, published in Chicago, 1881, and Studies in Literature by Gilderoy W. Griffin, Baltimore, 1870. Historical Relics of the White Mountains, also, a Concise White Mountain Guide, by John H. Spaulding. 16mo, 96 pages. Boston, 1855. The 3d edition, Mt. Washington, 1858, has a list of plants of the alpine regions of the White Mountains, 3 pages, by Professors Clark and Tuckerman of Amherst. Portrait and sketch of the author, bom 1821, died 1893, m the History of Coos County, N. H., Syracuse, 1888; small portrait in Burt's Mount Washington Hand-book. 2 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS Three Days on the White Mountains: being the perilous adven- ture of Dr. B. L. Ball on Mount Washington, during Oct. 25, 26, and 27, 1855, written by himself. 12ino, 72 pages. Boston, 1856. Reprinted in Boston, 1877. Dr. Ball was bom in Northboro, Mass., in 1820, and died in Chiriqui, Panama, in 1859. Incidents in White Mountain History, by [Rev.] Benjamin G. Willey. 12mo, 321 pages. Illustrated. Boston, 1856. New edition with title, History of the White Mountains, with illustrations, revised and edited by Frederick Thompson, New York, 1870. The author, born in Conway, N. H., 1796, died in East Sumner, Me., 1867, was a brother of Samuel Willey, Jr., who with his family was killed in the great slide of 1826. The White Hills; Their Legends, Landscape, and Poetry, by Thomas Starr King, with sixty illustrations, engraved by [John] An- drew, from drawings by [Merrill G.] Wheelock. 12mo, 403 pages. Boston, 1860 (1859). Although written more than fifty years ago, this is stUl the best book about the White Mountains. Several editions. In 1887 it was re-issued by Estes and Lauriat of Boston, with the addition of eleven photogravures. Prof. Edward Tuckerman, bom in Boston in 1817, died in Amherst, Mass. in 1886, con- tributed chapters on the Exploration of the White Hills and Vegetation of the White Mountains. Tuckerman's portrait appears in the New England Magazine, March, 1896, and there is a notice of his life by Asa Gray in Proceedings of the American Academy, Vol. 21, 1886. Starr King was bom in N. Y. City in 1824, died in San Francisco in 1864. His por- trait appears in a volume of his sermons, Christianity and Humanity, with memoir by E. P. Whipple, Boston, 1877, in the American Portrait Gallery, Vol. 1, 1877, in Repre- sentative and Leading Men of the Pacific, in H. S. Ballou's Lite of Hosea Ballon, 2d, DD., Boston, 1896, in Ballou's Pictorial Magazine, Vol. 11, Aug. 9, 1856, in the Out- look, Vol. 58, March 5, 1898, in the New England Magazme, Vol. 22, May, 1900, and in Elbert Hubbard's Little Journeys to the Homes of Eminent Orators, 1903. For memoirs of King see A Tribute to Thomas Starr King, by Richard Frothingham, 247 pages, Boston, 1865, The Character and Genius of Thomas Starr King, by E. P. Whipple, in Unitarian Review, Vol. 9, pp. 537—548, May, 1878, Reminiscences, by E. E. Hale, DD., in Unitarian Review, Vol. 29, April, 1888. See abo Whittier's poem, Thomas Starr King, 17 lines. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS S Mt. Washington in Winter, oe The Experiences of a Scientific Expedition upon the Highest Mountain in New England, 1870-71. 12mo, 363 pages. Boston, 1871. The book was written by Prof. Charles H. Hitchcock and J. H. Huntington, with chap- ters contributed by S. A. Nelson, A. P. Clough, Howard A. Kimball, and Thomas Smith, U. S. A. Prof. Hitchcock was bom in Amherst, Mass. in 1836, and is living (l910) in Honolulu. A sketch of his life, with portrait, will be found in the Popular Science Monthly, Vol. 54, December, 1898. Mr. Huntington was bom in Bozrah, Conn., in 1833, and died in Baker City, Oregon, in 1904. The Heart of the White Mountains, their Legend and Scen- ery, by Samuel Adams Drake, with illustrations by W. Hamilton Gib- son. Quarto, 318 pages. New York, 1881. This volume gives the Indian Legends, Autumn FoUage in the Valley of the Saco, Win- ter Ascent of Mt. Kearsarge, as well as a general description. Part of the description and pictures appeared in Harper's Magazine for June, July, and August, 1881. Portrait of the author, who was born in Boston in 1833 and died in Kennebunkport, Me., in 1905, in the New England Magazine, Vol. 4, August, 1891. The White Mountains: A Guide to Their Interpretation, by Julius H. Ward. 16mo, 258 pages. Map and Illustrations. New York, 1890. Appeared originally in the Boston Sunday Herald, of which Mr. Ward was an edi- torial writer. New edition with four additional chapters, including The Mountain Colors and Snow- shoeing on Osceola, 311 pages. Boston, 1896. Portrait of author, who was bom in Charlton, Mass., 1837, died in Worcester, 1897, in New England Magazine, Vol. 4, August, 1891. At the North of Bbarcamp Water: Chronicles of a Stroller m New England from July to December, by Frank BoUes. 16mo, 297 pages. Boston, 1893. Bird life and plant life, as well as mountain climbmg in summer, autumn, and winter, and a chapter on A Night Alone on Chocorua. Portrait of the author, and sketch of his life by Mabel Hill, m Granite Monthly, Vol. 23, October, 1897. He was bom in Winchester, Mass., in 1856, and died in Cambridge in 1894. 4 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS Footing It in Feanconia, by Bradford Torrey. 16mo, 251 pages. Boston, 1901. Essays on birds, flowers, and saunterings over the roads of Franconia Notch and vicin- ity, mingled with the delightful philosophy of the author. Portrait in The Book Buyer, Vol. 20, March, 1900, and in Houghton Mifflin Co.'s Por- trait Catalogue of PubUcations. The author was bom in Weymouth, Mass. in 1843, and is living (l910) in Santa Barbara, Cal. GUIDE BOOKS The Northern Traveller [by Theodore Dwight]. Second edition. New York, 1826. Engraved frontispiece of the Notch House. Nothing about the White Mts. in the first edition. There were several later editions. The Traveller's Guide through the Middle and Northern States and the Provinces or Canada. 5th edition. Saratoga Springs, 1833. A Trip from Boston to the White Mountains, by B. K. L. 30 pages. Washington, 1836. The North American Tourist, published by A. T. Goodrich. New York, 1839. The White Mountain and Winnepissiogee Lake Guide Book. Price 37 cents. 76 pages. Boston, 1846. A second edition appeared in 1848. Railway Manual, containing Maps of the Entire Route from Boston North. Added a Complete Guide to Lake Winnipiseogee AND THE White Mountains. 48 pages. Boston, 1849. Guide to the White Mountains and Lakes of New Hampshire. 48 pages. Concord, N. H., 1850. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 5 Routes to the White Mountains and Lake Winnipiseogee. 30 pages. Pathfinder Publishing Co., Boston, 1851. Tkipp's White Mountain Guide Book. 108 pages. Boston, 1852. New Yokk and the White Mountains, by William Guild. 80 pages. Illustrated. Boston, 1852. Guide to the Lakes and Mountains or New Hampshire via thb Several Routes connecting with the B. C. & M. R. R. and Con- cord R. R. 45 pages. Concord, N. H., 1852. Guide Book of the Atlantic and St. Lawrence and St. Law- rence AND Atlantic Railroads, including a Full Description of All the Interesting Features of the White Mountains, by S. B. Beckett, with illustrations from original sketches by C. E. Beckett. 180 pages. Portland, 1853. Appletons' Illustrated Hand-Book of American Travel, by T. Addison Richards. New York, 1857. Several later editions. A Complete Guide to the White Mountains and Lake Winni- piseogee. 72 pages. Boston, 1857. Revised and enlarged edition, published as Bradlee's Pocket Guide to the White Moun" tains and Lake Winnipiseogee, 1862. The White Mountain Guide Book [by Samuel C. Eastman]. 152 pages. Illustrated. Concord, N. H., 1858. Many editions ; 15th reached in 1879. Portrait and Sketch of the Author in Granite Monthly, Vol. 38, July, 1906. A Complete and Accurate Guide to and around the White Mountains, by Harvey Boardman. With map. 26 pages. Boston, 1859. 6 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS Stereoscopic Views among the Hills of New Hampshire, photo- graphed by Bierstadt Brothers. New Bedford, Mass., 1862. Illustrated Guide of the Connecticut Valley, containing De- scriptions OF Mount Holtoke, White Mountains, etc., by Henry M. Burt. 235 pages. Springfield, 1866. Revised edition, 1874. Chisholm's Hand-Book of Travel, and Tourists' Guide through Canada and the United States. Illustrated. Montreal, 1866. Guide to the Boston & Maine R. R., the White Mountains and New England, by John S. Eaton. Illustrated. Boston, 1870. Faxon's Illustrated Hand-Book of Summer Travel to the Lakes, Springs and Mountains of New England and New York, by Edward S. Sears. Boston, 1873. Several editions. New England, a Hand Book for Travellers [by M. F. Sweetser]. Boston, 1873. Known as Osgood's and later as Ticknor's New England. Several editions. Field's Hand-Book of Travel over the Eastern and Maine Central Railroad Line to the Shore Watering Places, White Mountains, etc. Illustrated. Boston, 1873. Ketes' Hand-Book of Northern Pleasure Travel : to the White AND FhaNCONIA MOUNTAINS (etc.). 240 pages. Illustrated. Boston, 1874. Later editions, 1876, etc., called Snow's Hand-Book, published in Worcester by Ezra H. Snow. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 7 Appleton's Illustrated Hand Book oe American Summer Re- sorts. New York, 1876. The White Mountains, A Hand Book fob Travellers [by M. F. Sweetser]. Boston, 1876. The most comprehensive guide to the White Mts. that has been pubUshed. Known as Osgood's and later as Ticknor's White Mts. Several editions, 15th reached in 1896. The writer died in Colorado, July 3, 1897. Excursions to the White Mountains with Dr. Aaron Ordway's Parties of '75 and '76, a lecture by Reverend George W. Gile. 39 pages. Illustrated. Lawrence, Mass., 1877. The Switzerland of America, A Complete Guide Book to the Scenery of New Hampshire, by William C. Gage. Manchester, N. H., 1877. Gems of American Scenery: Stereoscope Views among the White Mountains, with descriptive text. New York, 1878. Views in the White Mountains, with descriptions, by M. F. Sweetser. Portland, 1879. Among the White Mountains: Mount Washington and Sur- roundings, by Frank H. Burt. Several editions. Springfield, 1879. Chisholm's White Mountain Guide-Book, by M. F. Sweetser. 137 pages. Illustrated. Portland, 1880. Walking Guide to the Mount Washington Range, by Wm. H. Pickering. 74 pages. Boston, 1882. 8 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS The White and Fkanconia Mountains, by Luther L. Holden. Issued by the Boston and Lowell R. R. 72 pages. Illustrated. Boston, 1884. Down-East Latch-Stkings; ok Sea Shore, Lakes and Mountains, by Ernest IngersoU. 256 pages. Illustrated. Issued by the Boston and Maine R. R. Boston, 1887. The Inteevale, New Hampshiee, by W. S. Nevins. 58 pages. Salem, 1887. The White Mountain Region oe New England, by M. F. Sweetser. 46 pages. Illustrated. Issued by the Boston and Maine R. R. Bos- ton, 1888. The Glen House Book. 118 pages. Illustrated. Cambridge, 1889. Several later editions. Pen and Sunlight Sketches of Sceneex beached by the Grand Trunk Railway and Connections. Illustrated. 1890. Several later editions. The White Mountains of New Hampshire and Coast and Woods OF Maine. 108 pages. Illustrated. Issued by the Maine Central R. R. Portland, 1891. Summer Outings in the Old Granite State via the Merrimac Valley Route. 175 pages. Illustrated. Issued by the Concord and Montreal R. R., 1891. Vistas on the Concord and Montreal. Illustrated. Issued by the Concord and Montreal R. R. 1892. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OP THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 9 The Waterville Vallet, a Histokt, Description and Guidb, by Arthur L. Goodrich. 29 pages. Map. [Salem, Mass.], 1892. Revised edition, 1904. Souvenir op the White Mountains and Vicinity: A Collection OF Photogravures, with Descriptions, by Charles Pollock. Boston, 1892. Baedeker's United States, compiled by J. F. Muirhead. Leipzig, 1893. 2d edition 1899, 3d edition 1904, 4th, 1909. Kjngdon's Dictionary of the White Mountains and other New England Summer Resorts. 74 pages. Boston, 1894. White Mountain Glimpses, by Frederick N. Kneeland. 56 pages. Illustrated. Northampton, Mass., 1896. Hardly a guide book. Fine pictures. Chapters on Geology by C. H. Hitchcock, Vegeta- tion by W. F. Ganong, and the Appalachian Mountain Club by C. E. Fay. Among the Mountains. 46 pages. Illustrated. Issued by the Boston and Maine R. R. Boston, 1897. Guide Book to the Franconia Notch and the Pemigewasset Valley, by Frank O. Carpenter. 136 pages. Illustrated. Boston, 1898. East of the White Hills, compiled by M. E. Eastman. 139 pages. Illustrated. North Conway, 1900. Guide to Wonalancet and the Sandwich Range of New Hamp- shire. 59 pages. Illustrated. The Out-door Club, Wonalancet, N. H., 1901. 10 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS The Tourists' Guide-Book to the State or New Hampshire, by Frank W. Rollins. Illustrated. Concord, 1902. Mt. Washington, A Handbook for Travelers, by Frank H. Burt. 92 pages. Illustrated. Boston, 1904. Several later editions. A Little Path Finder to the Places of Interest near North Woodstock, New Hampshire. North Woodstock Improvement Soc. 1905. Walks, Tramps and Drives around the Piper House fthe Chocorua country]. 30 pages. Pequaket, N. H. 1906. Path Book for Bretton Woods. The Mt. Pleasant Hotel Co. 1906. Through the White Mountains from Portland bt the Sea to THE Saint Lawrence River. 58 pages. Illustrated. Issued by the Maine Central R. R. 1907. Guide to the Paths and Camps in the White Mountains. Part i [northern and eastern portions]. 206 pages. Published by the Dept. of Improvements, Appalachian Mountain Club. Boston, 1907. Intervale, N. H., its Position and Scenery, by the Intervale Improvement Society. 8 pages. Map and Illustrations. [l909.] WILLIAM OAKES. BENJAMIN G. WILLEY. JACOB SIGELOW. FRANCIS BOOTT. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 11 MAGAZINE ARTICLES Review of Belknap's Description of the White Mottntains. The Monthly Review, 76 : 138-139, London, February, 1787. The White Mountains in New Hampshire, by Jeremy Belknap. [Carey's] American Museum, 3 : 128-132, Philadelphia, February, 1788. Reprinted from Transactions of the American PhUosophical Society, 1786. Notice of the Botany of the White Mountains [by B. S. Barton]. Philadelphia Medical and Physical Journal, Vol. 2, first supplement, pp. 57-58, 1806. Some Account of an Excursion to the White Hills of New Hampshire in the Year 1807, by George Shattuk, M. D., of Boston. Philadelphia Medical and Physical Journal, Vol. 3, part 1, pp.26-35, 1808. Some Account of the White Mountains of New Hampshire, by Jacob Bigelow, M. D. New England Journal of Medicine and Surgery, 5 : 321-338, Oc- tober, 1816. Contains a list of plants on the upper part of Mt. Washington, as well as some account of the minerals and animal life. Bigelow's Lawn perpetuates his name, while Boott's Spur preserves the name of his companion, Francis Boott, who was born in Boston in 1792, and died in London in 1863. Dr. Bigelow was born in Sudbury, Mass., in 1787, and died in Boston in 1879. Flohula of the White Mountains of New Hampshire. American Monthly Magazine, 1 : 440-441, New York, October, 1817. Copied from New England Journal of Medicine and Surgery. The Altitude op Moose-Hillock in New Hampshire ascer- tained barometrically, by Alden Partridge, Captain of Engineers. American Monthly Magazine, 2: 51-52, New York, November, 1817. This seems to be the first printed account of an ascent of Moosilauke. 12 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS Sketches of the White Mountains, by B. Collections Historical and Miscellaneous and Monthly Literary Journal, 2 : 97-107, Concord, N. H., April, 1823. First reference lo Mts. Adams, Jefferson, Madison, Monroe, Pleasant, and Franklin. Notice of an Excursion among the White Mountains of New Hampshihe and to the Summit of Mt. Washington in June, 1823, by James Pierce. American Journal of Science and Arts [SiUiman's Journal], 8 : 172- 180, New Haven, Conn., August, 1824. The writer camped near the Lake of the Clouds. A Ramble among the White Mountains. Worcester Magazine and Historical Journal, 1 : 1-7, October, 1825. The Late Storm at the White Mountains, by Rev. Carlos Wilcox, with Reflections suggested by the Late Disaster, from A Sermon recently preached in that Vicinity. The Christian Spectator, 8 : 625-633, New Haven, December, 1826. The Willey House disaster. Notice of an Ascent up Mt. Lafayette [in August, 1826] and op Irised Shadows, by Forrest Shepard. American Journal of Science and Arts, 12 : 172, June, 1827. Legend of the White Mountains, signed C. The Ladies' Magazine, 1 : 133-139, Boston, March, 1828. This is the "Nancy" story of the Notch. Notice of the Profile Mountain in New Hampshire, by Gen. Martin Field. American Journal of Science and Arts, 14 : 64, July, 1828. A strange engraving of the Profile accompanies the article. Miscellaneous Notices of Mountain Scenery and of Slides IN the White and Green Mountains, by Rev. Carlos Wilcox, Theron Baldwin, and the editor [Benjamin Silliman]. American Journal of Science and Arts, 15 : 217-232, January, 1829. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 13 View near Conway, New Hampshire, with Short Description. American Magazine of Useful and Entertaining Knowledge, 1 : 263, Boston, February, 1835. View of the White Mountains with Description, same, p. 271. Mt. Washington, in same, p. 297, March, 1835. A Day at the White Mountains [Crawford Notch], by Nemo. Knickerbocker Magazine, 9 : 473-477, May, 1837. Popular Notices of Mt. Washington and Vicinity, by G. W. Nichols. Account of an Ascent op Mt. Washington in 1837, by Benj. Silliman. Mineralogy and Geology op the White Moun- tains, by Oliver P. Hubbard. All three articles in American Journal of Science and Arts, Vol. 34, April, 1838. The Region of the White Mountains and The Moosehillock. Farmer's Monthly Visitor, 1 : 97-98, 102, Concord, N. H., July 15, 1839. Description of the White Mountains, by the editor, Isaac Hill. Farmer's Monthly Visitor, 1 : 115-120, August 20, 1839. The Willey Family. A Narrative. The World of Music, 1 : 183, Bellows Falls, Vt., January 15, 1841. Notice of Some Rare Plants op New England, by WUliam Oakes. [Hovey's] Magazine of Horticulture, Vol. 7, May, 1841. Old Man of the Mountains, by Louise E. A. Ladies' Repository, 1 : 206, Cincinnati, July, 1841. Excursion to the White Mountains, by Prof. [Wm. C] Larrabee. Ladies' Repository, 1 : 226-227, August, 1841. Tour op the White Hills in July, 1841, by E. W. Southwick. The Classic or College Monthly, 2 : 175-185, Middletown, Conn., October, 1841. 14 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS Descriptions of Several New Plants of New England, by- Edward Tuckerman. Hovey's Magazine of Horticulture, 9 : 142-145, April, 1843. Observations on Some Interesting Plants of New England, by Edward Tuckerman. American Journal of Science and Arts, 45 : 27-49, October, 1843. Refers to the Flume. A Further Enumeration of Some Alpine Plants and the Li- chens OF New^ England, by Edward Tuckerman. Boston Journal of Natural History, 5 : 93-104, January, 1845. The White Mountains, by Hosea Ballon, 2d. Universalist Quarterly Review, 3 : 113-143, April, 1846. On the Geological Age of the White Mountains, by Henry D. and William B. Rogers. American Journal of Science and Arts, 51 : 411-421, May, 1846. Mosses of the White Mountains, by William Oakes. Hovey's Magazine of Horticulture, 13 : 171-174, April, 1847. Notice of Some of the Plants of New England, by William Oakes. Hovey's Magazine of Horticulture, 13 : 217-220, May, 1847. Observations on Some New England Plants, by Edward Tuck- erman. American Journal of Science and Arts, 56 : 224-232, November, 1848. Obituary Notice of William Oakes, by A. Gr. American Journal of Science and Arts, 57 : 138-142, January, 1849. The Condition of Trap Dikes in New Hampshire an Evidence OF Erosion, by Oliver P. Hubbard, M. D. American Journal of Science and Arts, 59 : 158-171, March, 1850. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OP THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 15 Scenery of the Franconia Mountains, by William M'Leod. Illustrated. Harper's, 5 : 4-11, June, 1852. The Mountains of New Hampshire — Agiochook or White Mountains, by the editor, C. E. Potter. Illustrated. Farmer's Monthly Visitor, 12 : 353-360, December, 1852. MoosUauke is spelled the present way for the first time in this article. The Adventures of Capt. Lovewell, by Frederic Kidder. New England Historical and Genealogical Register, 7 : 61-70, Janu- ary, 1853. Reprinted, with additions, in book form, 1865. The White Hills, A Review of Oakes' Scenery of the White Mountains, by Thomas H. Hill. Christian Examiner, 55 : 350-357, Boston, November, 1853. A Day in the Carter Notch [by T. W. Higginson]. Putnam's Monthly, 2 : 672-678, December, 1853. Letter from the White Mountains [Glen House], signed Mot. Dwight's Journal of Music, 5 : 123-124, July 22, 1854. Editorial Correspondence, North Conway, in same, August 5 and 12, 1854. Wood-notes, by Frederic B. Perkins. Putnam's Monthly, 4 : 185-192 and 247-257, August and September, 1854. An amusing account of a tramp from Lake Winnipesaukee to Lake Umbagog. The party was lost on the Presidential Range. White Mountains, New Hampshire. Illustrated. Ballou's Pictorial, 11 : 88-89, August 9, 1856. On page 92 of same is picture and sketch of Thomas Starr King. 16 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS The White Mountains, a Pedestrian Exploration, by L. C. Loomis. National Magazine, 9 : 343-350, New York, October, 1856. The White Hills in October, by Catherine M. Sedgwick. Harper's New Monthly Magazine, 14 : 44-56, December, 1856. A Season at the White Mountains. Illustrated. Putnam's Monthly, 10 : 1-22, July, 1857. Review of Staer King's White Hills [by Rev. Andrew P. Pea- body]. North American Review, 90 : 248-257, January, 1860, Review of Starr King's White Hills [by T. B. Fox]. Christian Examiner, 68 : 366-392, Boston, May, 1860. There is a short notice o£ the book ia the January number. On the Appalachian Mountain System, by Prof. Arnold Guyot. Map. American Journal of Science and Arts, 81 : 181-183, March, 1861. Gives heights of the White Mountains. A Summer in New England, by Porte Crayon [David H. Strother]. Illustrated. Harper's New Monthly Magazine, 23 : 145-163, July, 1861. The White Hills in October, by Catherine M. Sedgwick. Continental Monthly, 2 : 423-441, October, 1862. Remarks on Some Characteristics of the Insect-Fauna of the White Mountains, N. H., by Samuel H. Scudder. Boston Journal of Natural History, 7 : 612-631, November, 1863. Evidences of Existence of Ancient Local Glaciers in White Mountain Valleys, by Alpheus S. Packard. American Journal of Science and Arts, 93 : 42^3, January, 1867. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 17 Notes on the Diversities in Published Estisiates of the Height OF Mt. Washington, by Benjamin Silliman and others. American Journal of Science and Arts, 94 : 377-379, November, 1867. Summer Days among the White Mountains, by George M. Towle. London Society, 16 : 144-149, August, 1869. Mt. Washington in Winter. Nature, 3 : 314-315, London, February 16, 1871. Mount Washington, by Samuel H. Scudder. Nature, 3 : 487, April 20, 1871. Correcting statements about the height. A Legend of Crawford Notch, by Anna C. Swasey. Harper's Monthly, 48 : 116-126, December, 1873. This is an account of Nancy's death. Collecting [Insects] in the White Mountains, by Samuel H. Scudder. Map. Psyche (the organ of the Cambridge Entomological Club) 1 : 7-8 June, 1874. Early Spring Butterflies at the White Mountains, by Sam- uel H. Scudder. Psyche, 1 : 13-14, August, 1874. Continued on page 18, September, 1874. Summer Butterflies at the White Mountains, by H. K. Mor- rison. Psyche, 1 ; 25-26, November, 1874. Continued on pp. 34-35, January, 1875. Notes on White Mountain Noctuid-e, by H. K. Morrison. Psyche, 1 : 41-43, February, 1875. 18 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS On the Insect-Fauna of the White Mountains, by A. R. Grote. Psyche, 1 : 76-77, June, 1875. Continued on pp. 99-100, September, 1875. On the Insect-Fauna of the White Mountains, by H. K. Mor- rison . Psyche, 1 : 85, July, 1875. White Mountain Notes [botanical], by John W. Chickering. Field and Forest, 1 : 37-38, October and November, 1875. Arctic Lepidoptera on Mount Washington, by A. R. Grote. Psyche, 1 : 131, January, 1876. The Mt. Washington butterfly. Summer Birds of the White Mountain Region, by H. D. Minot. American Naturalist, 10 : 75-80, February, 1876. A Colony of Butterflies [on Mount Washington], by A. R. Grote. American Naturalist, 10 : 129-132, March, 1876. Notes on the White Mountain Fauna, by B. Pickman Mann. Psyche, 1 : 183-184, July, 1876. Catalogue of the Alpine and Sub-Alpine Flora of the White Mountains of New Hampshire, by John W. Chickering. Field and Forest, 2 : 98-99, December, 1876. The White Mountains, by William H. Rideing. Illustrated. Harper's New Monthly Magazine, 55 : 321-332, August, 1877. The White Mountains, by Oramel S. Senter. Illustrated. Potter's American Monthly, 9 : 161-175, Philadelphia, September, 1877. Forest Vegetation in New Hampshire. Granite Monthly, 2 : 76-78, October, 1878. From Report upon Forestry for 1877, Department of Agriculture. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 19 CoLEOPTERA OF THE White MOUNTAINS, by F. Gardiner, Jr. Psyche, 2 ; 211-213, February, 1879. Early History of Coos County in New Hampshire, by J. H. Huntington. Granite Monthly, 3 : 25-30, October, 1879. The White Mountains, by John N. McCUntock and Charles R. Corning. Granite Monthly, 3 : 491-512, August, 1880. Cloud Bound. An Artist's Experience in the White Moun- tains, by M. Matthews. Rose-Belford's Canadian Monthly and National Review, 5 : 286-290, Toronto, September, 1880. A Search for the Pleiades, by T. W. Higginson. Atlantic Monthly, 46 : 657-664, November, 1880. The Pleiades are waterfalls on Moosilauke. The Pemigewasset, — A Reminiscence, by L. W. Dodge. Granite Monthly, 4 : 54-60, November, 1880. HoLDERNESS AND THE LivERMORES, by Fred Myron Colby. Granite Monthly, 4 : 175-181, February, 1881. The White Mountains, by Samuel Adams Drake. Illustrated. Harper's New Monthly Magazine, 63 : 1-23, 190-212, 355-376, June, July, August, 1881. Reprinted in his Heart of the White Mountains, 1881. Franconia Iron Mine. Granite Monthly, 4 : 466, August, 1881. A Night on Mt. Washington, by Prof. W. G. Blaikie. Good Words, 22 : 355-360, London, June, 1881. Printed also in Littell's Living Age, Vol. 149, May 28, 1881. 20 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS Eably Pioneers of Bartlett, by E. A. Pbilbrick. Granite Monthly, 5 : 124-125, January, 1882. Notes from Mt. Lafayette, N. H., by William Whitman Bailey. Botanical Gazette, 7 : 108-109, September, 1882. Historical Sketch of Shelbxtrne, by E. H. Philbrick. Granite Monthly, 5 : 394-396, September, 1882. Notes from Franconia [botanical], by William Whitman Bailey. Botanical Gazette, 8 : 157-159, January, 1883. A Lost Town — Bethlehem. Granite Monthly, 7 : 29, October, 1883. A short review of a History of Bethleliem, by Rev. S. Bolles. Bird-gazing in the White Mountains, by Bradford Torrey. Atlantic Monthly, 54: 51-59, July, 1884. Reprinted in his Birds in the Bush. Sylvester Marsh, the Projector of the Mt. Washington Rail- road, by Charles Carleton CoflBn. Portrait. Bay State Monthly, 3 : 65-68, May, 1885. Reprinted in Granite Monthly, May— June, 1885. The White and Franconia Mountains, by Fred Myron Colby. Illustrated. Bay State Monthly, 3 : 76-96, May, 1885. Reprinted in Granite Monthly, May-June, 1885. Winter on Mt. Washington, by Prof. William Morris Davis. Science, 7 : 40-42, January 8, 1886. The White Mountains, by Grant Allen. Longmans' Magazine, 9 : 283-296, January, 1887. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 21 A Mt. Washington Sandwort, by Grant Allen. Popular Science Monthly, 30 : 590-600, March, 1887. Lisbon, N. H., by Samuel Emery. Granite Monthly, 10 : 95-102, March, 1887. Campton, N. H., by Henry Willey. Granite Monthly, 10 : 108, March, 1887. Short note about the first settlement. About the Names op Moosilauke, and of Some Other Places, by William Little. Granite Monthly, 10 : 357-365, November, 1887. American Cinquefoils, by Grant Allen. Popular Science Monthly, 32 : 189-199, December, 1887. The Forests of the White Mountains, by Francis Parkman. Garden and Forest, 1 : 2, February 29, 1888. Notes on the Summer Birds of Holderness, Bethlehem and Franconia, New Hampshire, by Walter Faxon and J. A. Allen. The Auk, 5 : 149-155, April, 1888. White Mountain Willows, by Michael S. Bebb. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club, 15 : 121-125. New York, May, 1888. Continued in 16 : 39-42, and 211-215, February and August, 1889, and in 17 : 149-151, June. 1890. Wasteful Cutting of the White Mountain Forests, editorial by Charles S. Sargent. Garden and Forest, 1 : 493-494, December 12, 1888. Forestry in New England, by Jonathan B. Harrison. Garden and Forest, 2: 92-93, February 20, 1889. See also p. 86, 22 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS Berlin, compiled from Furgusson's History of Coos County. Granite Monthly, 12 : 132-143, May and June, 1889. Tarry at Home Travel, by Edward Everett Hale, D. D. New England Magazine, 1 : 335-338, November, 1889. Notes from New Hampshire, by William Whitman Bailey. Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club, 16 : 329-330. New York, December, 1889. Botany about Franconia. May Moths in Northern New Hampshire, by Annie Trumbull Slosson. Entomological News, 1 : 17-19, February, 1890. The region about Franconia. There are additions in 2 : 2-3, January, 1891 and 3 : 257- 258, December, 1892. Forests and Scenery in New Hampshire, by J. B. Harrison. Garden and Forest, 3 : 81, 433-434, February 12 and September 3, 1890. See also p. 534, Nov. 5. The White Mountains in Winter, by Mary F. Butts. Illustrated. New England Magazine, 1 : 595-609, February, 1890. A Story of the White Mountain Notch, by E. P. King. New England Magazine, 1 : 609-614, February, 1890. The Willey house disaster. Mt. Washington in Winter, by Edward L. Wilson. Illustrated. Scribner's, 9 : 135-155, February, 1891. Reprinted in Scribner's volume on Mountain CUmbing, 1897. Tramping in the White Mountains, by F. A. Bates. Ornithologist and Oologist, 16 : 33-37, Hyde Park, Mass., March, 1891. Observations on birds. Continued on pp. 68-69, May, 1891. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 23 The Literature of the White Mountains, by William Howe Downes. Illustrated. New England Magazine, 4 : 717-730, August, 1891. New Hampshire Scenery, by Charles S. Sargent. Garden and Forest, 4 : 361-362, August 5, 1891. Nesting of Some of the White Mountain Birds, by J. W. Nash. Ornithologist and Oologist, 16 : 135-136, September, 1891. The White Mountain Forests, by Charles S. Sargent. Garden and Forest, 5 : 517-518, November 2, 1892. Alone on Chocorua at Night, by Frank BoUes. Atlantic Monthly, 70 : 758-764, December, 1892. Reprinted in the author's At the North of Bearcamp Water. In a Wintry Wilderness, by Frank BoUes. Atlantic Monthly, 71 : 92-99, January, 1893. Reprinted in the author's At the North of Bearcamp Water. Col. Joseph Whipple and his Dartmouth Plantation, by Levi W. Dodge. Granite Monthly, 15 : 20-31, January, 1893. Dartmouth was the early name of the town of Jefferson. White Mountain Forests in Peril, by Julius H. Ward. Atlantic Monthly, 71 : 247-255, February, 1893. Wasteful Cutting of the White Mountain Forests, by Charles S. Sargent. Garden and Forest, 6 : 62, 109, February 8 and March 8, 1893. White Mountain Forests, by Jonathan B. Harrison. Garden and Forest, 6 : 106, March 1, 1893. 24 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS Chocohua in Literature. Atlantic Monthly, 71 : 846-848, June, 1893. Review of Frank BoUes' At the North of Bearcamp Water. Mount Washington, by Julius H. Ward. Illustrated. New England Magazine, 8 : 547-561, July, 1893. The Preservation of the White Mountain Forests, by George B. James. New England Magazine, 8 : 712-718, August, 1893. The Legend of Wonalancet, by Charles H. Glidden. New England Magazine, 8 : 797-804, August, 1893. Collecting on Mount Washington, by Annie Trumbull Slosson. Entomological News, 4 : 249-252 and 287-292, October and Novem- ber, 1893. See also 5 : 271-274, November, 1894 and 6 : 276-280, November, 1895. Our Forest Interests in Relation to the American Mind, by Jonathan B. Harrison. New England Magazine, 9 : 417-424, December, 1893. List of Insects Taken in Alpine Region of Mount Washington, by Annie Trumbull Slosson. Entomological News, 5 : 1-6, January, 1894. Additional hsts in 6 : 4-7, January, 1895 ; 6 : 316-321, December, 1895 ; 7 : 262-265, November, 1896; 8 : 237-240, December, 1897; 9 : 251-253, December, 1898; 11 : 319-323, January, 1900; 13 : 4-8, January, 1902; 17 : 323-326, November, 1906. These Usts contain nearly 3000 species. A Lost Town : A Sketch of Bethlehem, by George H. Moses. Illustrated. Granite Monthly, 17 : 16-33, July, 1894. Notes on Maps of the White Mountains and Adikondacks. Around the World, 1 : 151-155, August, 1894. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS «5 In the White Mountains with Francis Parkman in 1841, by- Daniel D. Slade. New England Magazine, 11 : 94-99, September, 1894. Alone on Osceola, by William Morse Cole. New England Magazine, 12 : 758-765, August, 1895. Cycling in the White Mountains, by Percy C. Stuart. Outing, 26 : 372-375, August, 1895. A Mountain Vigil (on Mount Baldface), by Arthur P. Stone. Outing, 26 : 448-451, September, 1895. In the Chocorua Country, by Franklin Ware Davis. Illustrated. Granite Monthly, 19 : 177-186, September, 1895. Berlin: A Town of To-day, by Edward C. Niles. Illustrated. Granite Monthly, 20 : 184-204, March, 1896. A Few New Spiders, by Nathan Banks. Canadian Entomologist, 28 : 62-63, March, 1896. Franconia and Mt. Washington spiders found by Mrs. A. T. Slosson. GoRHAM, by George H. Moses. Illustrated. Granite Monthly, 20 : 234, April, 1896. The Town of Conway, by Mrs. Ellen McRoberts Mason. Illus- trated. Granite Monthly, 20 : 347-375, June, 1896. The Warder of the Pass : A Sketch of Franconia, by H. C- Pearson. Illustrated. Granite Monthly, 21 : 148-162, September, 1896. The Town of Woodstock, by Justus Conrad. Illustrated. Granite Monthly, 23 : 11-23, July, 1897. 26 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS Glimpses of Holderness, by Eleanor J. Clark. Granite Monthly, 23 : 279-287, November, 1897. Mount Washington in Winter, by J. M. Cooper. Granite Monthly, 23 : 342-343, December, 1897. Jefferson, by J. M. Cooper. Illustrated. Granite Monthly, 25 : 63-78, August, 1898. Mount Moosilauke's Bird Inhabitants, by Ellen E. Webster. Granite Monthly, 25 : 104-107, August, 1898. Some Old Tales and Traditions of the White Mountains, by T. C. Gibson. Granite Monthly, 26 : 37-42, January, 1899. A Tip-Top Experience on Moosilauke, by Ellen E. Webster. Illustrated. Granite Monthly, 26 : 197-207, April, 1899. Mountain Climbing and Photography, by Chester F. Stiles. Illustrated. Photo Era, 3 : 334-337, June, 1899, The Presidential Range — Photography in the White Moun- tains, by Chester F. Stiles. Illustrated. Photo Era, 3 : 455-460, October, 1899. Among the Sandwich Mountains, by Rev. George L. Mason. Granite Monthly, 27 : 267-273, November, 1899. Mount Washington, by Adelbert Clark. Illustrated. Granite Monthly, 27 : 291-299, November, 1899. The Technical Side of Mountain Photography, by Chester F. Stiles. Illustrated. Photo Era, 3 : 521-524, December, 1899. In Photo Era, Maich, 1900, is a fine double-page picture of Franconia Notch. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 27 May in Fbanconia, by Bradford Torrey. Atlantic Monthly, 85 : 628-639, May, 1900. Reprinted as Spring in his Footing it in Franconia. Mount Washington in Winter, by Chester F. Stiles. Illustrated. Photo Era, 5 : 41-45, August, 1900. A Photographic Vacation. Illustrated. Photo Era, 5 : 81-82, September, 1900. The Old and New Century from Mount Washington, by Chester F. Stiles. Illustrated. Photo Era, 6 : 251-258, February,1901. In Photo Era, March, 1901, is a picture of Franconia Notch entitled At the Mountain Cross Roads. In June, 1901, are pictures of Mt. Washington in Winter and Mt. Chocorua. Another of Mt. Chocorua appears in March, 1902. MoosiLAUKE, by Bradford Torrey. Atlantic Monthly, 87 : 667-677, May, 1901. Reprinted in his Nature's Invitation. A Comparison of the Floras of Mount Washington and Mount Katahdin, by Emile F. Williams. Rhodora, 3 : 160-165, June, 1901. Protection of Chinobas semidea, by Sidney C. Carpenter. Entomological News, 12 : 161-162, June, 1901. The Chinobas semidea is the Mt. Washington butterfly, the oldest inhabitant of the mountain, Mrs. Slosson calls it. See her article in the same volume, pp. 316-317, December, 1901. The Franconia Notch [in October, February, and May], by Paul R. Jenks. Granite Monthly, 31 : 106-112, August, 1901. When the White Mountains are White, by Clifton Johnson. Illustrated by the author. The Outlook, 70 : 519-528, March 1, 1902. 28 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS SoLTAiBE AND ITS AtTTHOH [George F. Willey], by G. A. Cheney. Illustrated. Granite Monthly, 34 : 79-87, February, 1903. General Grant's Love of Horses and his Stage-Coach Ride IN THE White Mountains, by Alice Bartlett Stevens. Illustrated. Granite Monthly, 34 : 95-113, February, 1903. Whittieb, the Poet of the White Hills, by Eugene R. Musgrove. Illustrated. Granite Monthly, 35 : 3-8, July, 1903. Recollections of a Visit to the White Mountains — Henry M. Burt, his Services to the White Mountain Region, by Norman H. Libby. Granite Monthly, 36 : 288-290, May, 1904. New Hampshire State Roads, and A Mountain Drive, by the editor. Granite Monthly, 36 : 293-296, May, 1904. New roads to Jefferson Notch, Twin Mt., Profile House, etc. Conditions of Roads in the White Mountains, by the editor. Granite Monthly, 36 : 342, June, 1904. Record of an automobile tour. State Highway Work in the White Mountains, by John W. Storrs. Illustrated. Granite Monthly, 37 : 95-100, October-December, 1904. Results op Hill-climbing Contest at Mount Washington. Illustrated. Scientific American, 93: 87, July 29, 1905. Ants from the Summit of Mount Washington, by William M. Wheeler. Pj9yche, 12 : 111-114, December, 1905. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 29 A Leading Man in a Leading State Interest, by H. H. Metcalf . Illustrated. Granite Monthly, 38 : 67-76, March, 1906. About Col. C. H. GreetJeaf of the Profile House and his interest in forest preservation. White Mountain Legends, by J. S. English. Illustrated. New England Magazine, 35 : 97-112, September, 1906. The Name Keaesarge, by John S. Barrows. Granite Monthly, 38 : 506-509, October, 1906. Save the Forests in the Appalachian and White Mountains. Illustrated. Forestry and Irrigation, 13 : 296-305, June, 1907. The Proposed National Forest in the White Mountains, by Hon. F. W. Rollins. Illustrated. Government, 1 : 21-24, Boston, June, 1907. Why the Appalachian Reserves are Essential. Illustrated. Forestry and Irrigation, 13 : 367-375, July, 1907. Results op Lumbering in the White Mountains. Forestry and Irrigation, 13 : 449-450, September, 1907. Fires in the White Mountains. Forestry and Irrigation, 13 : 508, October, 1907. The Winter-Vacation Habit. Illustrated. Boston and Maine Messenger, Vol. 8, November 1, 1907. Pictures from a Picture Land, by J. Warren Thyng. Illustrated. Granite State Magazine, Vol. 4, December, 1907. The Pemigewasset Valley. Text of the Appalachian- White Mountain Bill. Forestry and Irrigation, 14: 25-27, January, 1908. 30 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS Is New England's Wealth in Dangek? Our Vanishing Forests, by Philip W. Ayers. Illustrated. New England Magazine, 38 : 35-48, March, 1908. Is New England's Wealth in Danger? Our Water-Powers, by Philip W. Ayers. Illustrated. New England Magazine, 38 : 145-160, April, 1908. The Opening of the North, by Clarlbel M. Weeks. Granite State Magazine, 5 : 120-123, April-June, 1908. Is New England's Wealih in Danger ? What the States are doing, by Philip W. Ayers. Illustrated. New England Magazine, 38 : 291-308, May, 1908. Our New England Alps as a National Health Resort, by Thomas F. Anderson. Illustrated. New England Magazine, 38 : 313-327, May, 1908. Is New England's Wealth in Danger? Our National Resources IN THE White Mountains, by Philip W. Ayers. Illustrated. New England Magazine, 38 : 435-449, June, 1908. Report on the Hepatic^ of the Franconia Mountains, by Annie Lorenz. The Bryologist, 11 : 112-114, Brooklyn, N. Y., November, 1908. Beautiful New England, Six Pictures from Photographs around North Conwat, by Mr. and Mrs. T. E. M. White. New England Magazine, Vol. 40, May, 1909. There are two pictures of Chocorua in Vol. 41, October, 1909. The Fight for the Appalachian Forests, by Edwin A. Start. Conservation, 15 : 251-261, May, 1909. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 31 The Wood-Btjtchees, by Ernest Russell. Collier's, 43 : 19-20, May 8, 1909. Lumbering in the Zealand Notch and the East Branch of the Pemigewasset. The Forest Conference in the White Mountains, by Philip W. Ayers. Conservation, 15 : 608-609, October, 1909. The Battle for the Weeks Bill, with Four White Mountain Illustrations. American Forestry, Vol. 16, March, 1910. Chocorua, by Frances H. Goodall. Illustrated. Granite Monthly, 42 : 271-275, September, 1910. 32 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS ARTICLES IN APPALACHIA Appalachia, the journal of the Appalachian Mountain Club, was established im- mediately after the founding of the Society, in January, 1876. The first number appeared in June of that year. The form and character of the magazine were deter- mined by its editor, Samuel 11. Scudder, the Club's first vice-president. Since 1878 the editorship has been conducted by Charles E. Fay. See also reports of Councillors, particularly Improvements, and, in the first six volumes, Exploration, and beginning with Vol. 8 reports of Trustees of Real Estate. Since Novem- ber, 1907, a Bulletin of the A. M. C. has been issued ten months in the year. NoMENCLATUBE OF THE White MOUNTAINS. Report of a Committee [M. F. Sweetser, E. C. Pickering and J. H. Huntington]. 1 : 7-11, June, 1876. A Day on Tripteamid, by Charles E. Fay. 1 : 14-25, June, 1876. New Map of the White Mountains, by J. B. Henck, Jr. 1 : 26-29, June, 1876. The East Branch of the Pemigewasset, by Warren Upham. 1 : 29-35, June, 1876. The Annual Address of the President, by E. C. Pickering. 1 : 63- 70, March, 1877. An account of the formation of the A. M. C. and its first year's work. Geology of the White Mountains [with Map], by C. H. Hitch- cock. 1 : 70-76, March, 1877. Carter Dome and Vicinity, an Exploration, by William G. Nowell. 1 : 76-86, March, 1877. Distant Points Visible from Mt. Washington, by W. H. Picker- ing. 1 : 86-89, March, 1877. MDSES FOSTER SWEETSER. SAMUEL ADAMS DRAKE, SAMUEL H SCUDDER. FRANK BOLLES. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 33 CoNCEBNiNG THE Name OF Black MOUNTAIN, by Charles E. Fay. 1 : 90-93, March, 1877. A Descent through King's Ravine, by J. Rayner Edmands. 1 : 93-96, March, 1877. The Flowering Plants op the White Mountains, by J. H. Hunt- ington. 1 : 100-106, March, 1877. Black Mountain, by Charles E. Fay, Mt. Willet and Mt. Tremont, by J. B. Henck, Jr., Mts. Webster, Jackson, Crawford, Resolution and Giant's Stairs, by W. H. Pickering, Mt. Liberty, by E. C. Pickering, in Report of Councillor of Exploration. 1: 119- 125, March, 1877. A Climb through Tuckerman's Ravine, by Miss M. F. Whitman. 1 : 131-137, June, 1877. Concerning the True Name of the Northern Kearsarge, by a Committee [Charles E. Fay, William G. No well, John Worcester]. 1 : 152-165, June, 1877. The Mt. Adams Paths, by William G. Nowell. 1 : 174-180, June, 1877. Glacial Markings among the White Mountains, by C. H. Hitch- cock. 1 : 243-246, February, 1878. An Ascent of Scab Ridge, by F. W. Clarke and Gaetano Lanza. 1 : 247-252, February, 1878. Unnamed Mountains between Mt. Hancock and Scar Ridge, by Warren Upham. 1 : 252-258, February, 1878. The Moat Path, by John Worcester. 1 : 267-268, February, 1878. The White Mountains from Monadnock, by J. Rayner Edmands. 9-271, February, 1878. 34 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS The Benton Range and Mt. Moosila.xjke, by Henry G. Spaulding. 2 : 28-34, June, 1879. Profiles from Monadnock, Adams, and Owl's Head, by J. Rayner Edmands. 2 : 59-60, June, 1879. Mt. Carrigain, by Charles E. Fay. 2: 108-117, July, 1880. A Three Days' Tramp on the Mt. Washington Range, by W. H. Pickering. 2 : 117-121, July, 1880. Baldcap Mountain, by Mrs. L. D. and Miss Marian M. Pychowska. 2 : 121-127, July, 1880. Barometric Observations, by F. W. Clarke. 2: 127-134, July, 1880. Distant Points Visible from Mt. Washington, by W. H. Picker- ing. 2 : 147-152, July, 1880. The Baldface-Eastman Range, by J. Rayner Edmands, Hancock- Cahrigain Range, by Webster Wells, Exploration near West Camp- ton, by Miss Marian Pychowska, Mt. Kinsman, by Gaetano Lanza, in Report of Councillor of Exploration. 2: 163-170, July, 1880. Paths to Black Mountain and Mt. Tecumseh, by Webster Wells, and Work on Lowe's Path, by S. H. Scudder, in Report of Councillor of Improvements. 2: 174-177, July, 1880. Table of the Less-Visited Peaks of the White Mountains, in Report of the Councillor of Exploration, W. H. Pickering. 2: 181-183, July, 1880. There is another table on pp. 281-282, May, 1881. Barometric Measurements of Heights, in address of the Presi- dent, Charles R. Cross. 2 : 228-239, May, 1881. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 35 Mounts Silvek Spring and Tremont, by J. Rayner Edmands, Loon Pond Mountain, by Mrs. Lucia D. Pychowska, Gorge on Mount Lincoln, by Charles E. Fay, Mount Ingalls, by Miss Marian M. Pychowska, The Boulder Southeast of Boott's Spur, by W. S. FenoUosa, in Report of Councillor of Exploration. 2 : 282-289, May, 1881. The Showiest Butterfly of Glen Ellis, by Samuel H. Scudder. 2 : 331-336, December, 1881. The March of Captain Samuel Willard [in 1725], by Charles E. Fay. 2 : 336-344, December, 1881. Carter Dome, Huntington's Ravine, and the Montalban Ridge, by W. H. Pickering. 2 : 345-351, December, 1881. The Winter Excursion to the White Mountains, by John Ritchie, Jr. 3 : 40-47, June, 1882. The club's first snow-shoe outing to the White Mountains. The Slide on Tripykamid, by Charles Cutter. 3 : 47-49, June, 1882. A Contour Map of the Mount Washington Range, by W. H. Pickering. 3 : 54-57, June, 1882. Mountains between Saco and Swift Rivers, by J. Rayner Ed- mands. 3 : 57-59, June, 1882. Table op Less Visited Peaks of the White Mountains, The Great Gulf, and Mounts Passaconaway and Whitefacb, by W. H. Pickering, in his report as Councillor of Exploration. 3 : 69-73, June, 1882. The same report contains an account of Bear Mountain by J. Rayner Edmands and King's Ravine by Charles E. Fay. The Twin Mountain Range, by A. E. Scott. 3 : 107-121, April, 1883. 36 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS Notes on the Plants Found in the Fbanconia Valley and on Mounts Lafayette and Kinsman, July and August, 1882, by W. W. Bailey, in Report of Councillor of Natural History. 3: 169-175, April, 1883. Wild Eiver Valley and East Branch of the Pemigewasset, by Randall Spaulding, in Report of Councillor of Exploration. 3 : 180-182, April, 1883. New Paths to Mounts Adams and Madison, by Miss M. M. Pychowska, Ammonoosuc Lake, by C. B. Raymond, Huntington's Ravine, by Randall Spaulding, in Report of Councillor of Improve- ments. 3 : 186-190, April, 1883. The Presidential Range from Jefferson Highlands, by J. Rayner Edmands. 3 : 203-207, December, 1883. Randolph, by Mrs. L. D. Pychowska. 3 : 216-222, December, 1883. Botanical notes at Randolph by same writer on pp. 168-169 and 254. Notes on the Cryptogamic Flora of the White Mountains, by W. G. Farlow. 3 : 232-251, December, 1883. Mount Hale, Shelburne Moriah, Mount Pliny, Mount Cari- bou, Mount Garfield, by E. B. Cook, Evans Notch, Royce and Baldface, and Mount Wildcat, by Miss M. M. Pychowska, A Visit to the Imp Face, by Miss S. M. Barstow, A Walk over Mounts Deception, Dartmouth, and Mitten, by George A. Sargent, Mount Nancy and Mounts Langdon and Parker, by Albert Matthews, The Giant's Stairs, by R. B. Lawrence, A Trip over Osceola, the Twin Mountain Range, and Mount Garfield, by W. L. Hooper, in Report of the Councillor of Exploration. 3 : 257- 288, December, 1883. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 37 The Twin Mountain Path, by A. E. Scott, and New Paths in the Vicinity of Randolph, by E. B. Cook, in Report of the Councillor of Improvements. 3 : 290-292, December, 1883. A Reconnoissance on the Cahtee Range, by Miss Edith W. Cook. 3 : 299-314, April, 1884. A Climb on Mount Adams in Winter, by Samuel H. Scudder. Illustrated. 3 : 314-323, April, 1884. Optical Illusions among the Mountains, by Charles E. Fay. 3 : 323-344, April, 1884. On the Principal Coefficients in the Barometric Formula OP Laplace, as applied to the White Mountain Region, by John Tatlock, Jr. 3 : 350-361, April, 1884. Mounts Blue and Cushman, by Eugene B. Cook. 4 : 34-40, De- cember, 1884. Mount Huntington, by Alford A. Butler. 4 : 40-44, December. 1884. The Record of a Day's Walk, by Eugene B. Cook. 4 : 54-57, December, 1884. This walk, from RandoI*)li over the Presidential Range and back by road, covered nearly 43 miles in about 20 hom-s. Crescent Mountain, by Mrs. L. D. Pychowska, Mount Water- NOMEE and the Blue Ridge, by Miss M. Isabella Stone, The Ice Gulch, by William H. Peek, in Report of the Councillor of Explora- tion. 4 : 73-81, December, 1884. Path to Georgianna Falls, by M. Isabella Stone, in Report of Councillor of Improvements. 4 : 84-86, December, 1884. 38 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS A Winter Exctjrsion to Tuckeeman's Ravine, by Samuel H. Scudder. 4 : 124-130, July, 1885. Humphrey's Ledge and its View, by John Worcester. Illustrated. 4 : 130-132, July, 1885. The Tripyeamid Slides of 1885, by Alford A. Butler. 4 : 177-190, March, 1886. A Day on Flume Mountain and a Night in the Wilderness, by J. Rayner Edmands. 4 : 194-199, March, 1886. Accurate Mountain Heights, by E. C. Pickering. 4 : 215-219, March, 1886. An Exploration of the Pilot Range, by WUliam H. Peek. 4 : 219- 225, March, 1886. Notes on the Slide at Jefferson, by M. V. B. Knox, in Report of Councillor of Natural History. 4: 254-256, March, 1886. Round Mountain and An Excursion over Mounts Nancy, An- derson and Lowell, by E. B. Cook, Notes on the Region East of Wild River and South of the Androscoggin, by A. L. Goodrich, Mount Garfield, by Gaetano Lanza, in Report of Councillor of Ex- ploration. 4 : 257-267, March, 1886. The Caeter-Moriah Path, by William G. Nowell, in Report of Councillor of Improvements. 4 : 269-273, March, 1886. Heights of the White Mountains, by E. C. Pickering. 4 : 305-322, December, 1886. Was Chocorua the Original Pigwacket Hill ? by Charles E. Fay. 4 : 322-327, December, 1886. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 39 Odometer Measukements in the White Mountains, by Francis Blake. 4 : 351-352, December, 1886. The Excursions of Our First Decade, by George C. Mann. 4 : 353-362, December, 1886. The White Mountains as a Home for Butterflies, by Samuel H. Scudder. 5 : 13-22, December, 1887. An Exploration op the Pilot Range, by W. H. Peek. 5 : 30-38, December, 1887. List of Paths Opened bt the Club, in Report of Councillor of Improvements. 5 : 80-81, December, 1887. A Day and Night on the Benton Range, by Frank O. Carpenter. 5 : 128-133, June, 1888. The Benton Range, by Frank O. Carpenter, and Mount Carr, by W. M. Beaman, in Report of Councillor of Exploration. 5 : 151- 155, June, 1888. Two IN the Alpine Pastures [Mt. Adams], by Miss M. M. Pychow- ska. 5 : 184-194, December, 1888. Mountains near New Zealand Notch, by E. B. Cook. 5 : 194-200, December, 1888. On Snow-Shoes at Jackson, by John Ritchie, Jr. 5 : 208-215, December, 1888. An Exploration in the Pilot Range, by William H. Peek. 5 : 215- 222, December, 1888. Huntington's Ravine, by George C. Mann, in Report of the Coun- cillor of Exploration. 5: 242-243, December, 1888. 40 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS Glaciation of Mountains in New England and New York, by Warren Upham. 5 : 291-312, May, 1889. Dedicatory Visit to the Madison-Spring Hut [and Ascent of Mount Adams in Winter], by R. B. Lawrence. 5 : 312-319, May, 1889. The Madison Boulder, by W. O. Crosby. Illustrated. 6 : 61-70, May, 1890. Giant Stairs, by H. P. Nichols, in Report of Councillor of Explora- tion. 6 : 94, May, 1889. Mt. Passaconawat, by Charles E. Fay. 6 : 302-818, January, 1892. The Waterville Valley, with Map, by Arthur L. Goodrich. 6 : 318-322, January, 1892. An Excursion from Mount Whiteface to Greeley's by the Tripyramid Ridge and back tia Black Mountain, by Charles E. Fay, and An Ascent of Black Snout, by Charles E. Fay, in Re- port of Councillor of Exploration. 6 : 342-347, January, 1892. The Brook Path to Chocobua, by John C. Adams. 7 : 8-13, February, 1893. Up Tripyramid on Snow-Shoes, by Isaac Y. Chubbuck. Illustrated. 7 : 14-18, February, 1893. The Path from the Glen House to Mount Madison, by Francis Blake, in Report of Councillor of Improvements. 7 : 87, February, 1893. Distances on the Raymond Path, by Curtis B. Raymond. 7 : 164, December, 1893. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 41 Tramping and Camping on the Great Range, by Zilpha D. Smith. 7 : 323-328, June, 1895. The Alpine Okthoptera of North America, by Samuel H. Scud- der. Illustrated. 8 : 299-319, March, 1898. A Winter Trip to the Top of Mounts Washington and Ad- ams, by Richard E. Dodge. 8 : 367-369, March, 1898. Lost River, by Frank O. Carpenter. 9 : 37-44, May, 1899. Notes on the New England Upland about the White Moun- tains, by Philip Emerson. 9 : 52-58, May, 1899. Our Quarter-Centenary [by Charles E. Fay]. 9: 221-237, April, 1901. Over the Twin Mountain and Carter Ranges, by Harry W. Tyler. Illustrated. 9 : 302-309, April, 1901. The Recent Fatalities on Mount Washington. Report of the Committee of Investigation. 9 : 323-334, April, 1901. An account of the storm in which William B. Cm-tis and Allan Ormsbee lost their lives. Winter Climbing on Mount Washington and the Presidential Range, by H. C. Parker. Illustrated. 10 : 19-28, May, 1902. The New Refuge on Mount Washington. Report of the Build- ing Committee. 10 : 52-57, May, 1902. The New Swift River Trail, by J. S. Pray. 10 : 173-179, May, 1903. The Club's Reservations, by Allen Chamberlain. Illustrated. 10 : 303-314, April, 1904. 42 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS A Winter Ascent [of Mt. Washington] through the Great GtTLF, by G. N. Whipple. Illustrated. 11 : 7-13, June, 1905. A Day's Trip over the Presidential Range, by H. C. Parker. 11: 13-17, June, 1905. The longest walk, 43 miles, in a single day in the White Mountains. The Register Cylinders of the Club, by Raymond M. Dow Adams. 11 : 40-47, June, 1905. Pilot Dome in Winter, by Raymond M. Dow Adams. 11 : 132- 134, May, 1906. The Proposed Eastern Forest Reserves, by Gifford Pinchot. 11 : 134-143, May, 1906. With Professor Gutot on Mounts Washington and Careigain in 1857, by S. H. Grant. Portrait. 11 : 229-239, June, 1907. The Most Distant Point yet Identified from Mount Washing- ton, by W. H. Pickering. 11 : 249-250, June, 1907. Darby Field, by Warren W. Hart. 11 : 360-366, June, 1908. Three Meteorological Expeditions to Mount Washington, by S. P. Fergusson. Illustrated. 12 : 146-153, July, 1910. J. Rayner Edmands (an obituary notice by the Editor). 12 : 158- 162, July, 1910. Great Gulf Camp and Paths, by Warren W. Hart, in his Report as Councillor of Improvements. 12: 198-200, July, 1910. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS INCIDENTAL REFERENCES New- England's Rarities Discovered: in Birds, Beasts, Fishes, Serpents and Plants of that Country, by John Josselyn, Gent. London, 1672. The first mention in print of the WTiite Mountains. Reprinted, with introduction by Edward Tuckerman, Boston, 1865. An Accoitnt of Two Voyages to New England [made during THE Years 1638, 1663], by John Josselyn, Gent. London, 1674. Reprinted in the Collections of Mass. Historical Soc, Third Series, Vol. 3, 1833, and Boston, 1865. A Summary, Historical and Political, of the First Planting, Progressive Improvements, and Present State of the British Settlements in North- America, by William Douglass, M. D. 2 vols. Vol. 1, Boston, 1749. Slight references to ranging parties in 1708 and 17i85. A Concise Account of North America, containing a Descrip- tion OF the Several British Colonies on that Continent, by Major Robert Rogers. London, 1765. Short account on page 47. Topographical Description of Such Parts of North America AS ARE Contained in the [annexed] Map of the Middle British Colonies in North America, by T. Pownall, M. P. London, 1776. Transactions of the American Philosophical Society, Vol. 2, pp. 42-49. Philadelphia, 1786. Contains Belknap's description of the White Mountains read Oct. 15, 1784. Reprinted with additions in his History of New Hampshire, Vol. 3, and in The American Museum for February, 1788. 44 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS A Journal of the Teansactions and Occueeences in the Set- tlement OF Massachusetts and Othee New England Colonies, FEOM THE YEABS 1630 TO 1644, Written by John Winthrop, Esq., First Governor of Massachusetts. Hartford, 1790. The first printed account of the first ascent of Mt. Washington by Darby Field in 1642. All other accounts are based upon this. The Journal has been reprinted with additions. 2 vols. Boston, 1826, Boston, 1853, and New York, 1908. The Histoet of New-Hampshiee, by Jeremy Belknap, A. M. 3 vols. Vol. 1, Philadelphia, 1784; Vol. 2, Boston, 1791; Vol. 3, Boston, 1792. Reprinted Dover, N.H., 1812, and Boston, 1813. Slight references in Vols. 1 and 2, map in Vol. 2, and long account in Vol. 3, in which the name of Mt. Washington first appears. The Ameeican Univeesal Geogeapht, by Jedidiah Morse. Vol. 1. Boston, 1793. Quotes Belknap's account of the mountains. An Histoeical, Geogeaphical and Philosophical View of the Ameeican United States, by W. Winterbotham, in four vols. Vol. 2, London, 1795. Quotes Belknap's Account. The Ameeican Gazetteee, by Jedidiah Morse, D. D. Boston, 1797. A Compendious Histoet of New England, Designed foe Schools and Peivate Families, by Jedidiah Morse, D. D., and Rev. Ehjah Parish, A. M. Charlestown, 1804. Public Laws of New Hampshiee, June Session, 1807. Concord, 1807. Littleton turnpike to White Moimtain Notch. The Wonders of Cbeation, by D. R. Preston. Vol. 1, Boston, 1807. Copies Belknap's Account. See pp. 16—27. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 45 Public Laws of New Hampshire, June Session. Concord, 1809. The Pemigewasset Middle Branch Turnpike, i. e. the road through Franconia Notch. Travels through the Northern Parts of the United States in 1807 and 1808, by Edward Augustus Kendall. Vol. 3, New York, 1809. See pp. 172-191. Travels in the United States op America, by John Mellish. Vol. 1. Philadelphia, 1812. A General History of New England from the Discovery to MDCLXXX, by the Rev. William Hubbard. Collections of the Mass. Historical Soc, Second Series, Vols. 5 and 6. Boston, 1815. Copies Winthrop's Journal. Second edition 1848. Memoirs of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Vol. 3, part 2. Boston, 1815. Contains an estimate of the height of the White Mountains by Nathaniel Bowditch. See pp. 326-329. Collections of the Massachusetts Historical Society, Second Series, 2 : 266. Boston, 1814. Contains Indian Names of White Hills and Piscataqua River, by Rev. Timothy Alden. A Gazetteer of the State of New Hampshire, by Eliphalet Mer- rill and the late Phinehas Merrill. Exeter, 1817. Travels; in New-England and New- York, by Timothy Dwight, late President of Yale College, in four vols. Vol. 2. New-Haven, 1821. An interesting account of his journeys in 1797 and 1803. Reprinted in London, 1823. A Booe: for New-Hampshire Children in Familiar Letters FROM A Father. Exeter, 1823. Second edition, Exeter, 1826. 46 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS A Gazetteer of the State of New-Hampshibe, by John Farmer and Jacob B. Moore. Illustrated. Concord, 1823. The first book that has anything to say about the Profile, Franconia Notch and Carter's Mountain, also the first book with White Mountain engravings. Florula Bostoniensis. a Collection of Plants of Boston and ITS Vicinity, by Jacob Bigelow, M. D. 2d edition. Boston, 1824. The 2d edition, as well as later editions, contains several references to White Mountain plants. The Black Book or a Continuation of Travels in the United States, by Mrs. Anne Royall. Vol. 2. Washington, 1828. See pp. 378-387. Sketches of Scenery and Manners in the United States, by the author of The Northern Traveller [Theodore Dwight]. Illustrated. New York, 1829. A Catechism of the History of New Hampshire, by John Farmer. Concord, 1829. Contains an account of the Willey house disaster and a small wood-cut. Reprinted in the New Hampshire Manual for the General Court, 1909. The Token. Boston, 1830. Contains Chocorua's Curse, by Mrs. Lydia Maria Child, with engraving. Reprinted in The Coronal, Boston, 1832, and in The Ladies' Cabinet Album, New York, 1832, and subsequent years. The History and Topography of the United States of America, by John Howard Hinton. 2 vols. Illustrated. London, 1831. New edition, Boston, 1834. Contains a short account of the White Mountains m Vol. 2 and three engravings, two in Vol. 1. Laws of the State of New-Hampshire Passed June Session, 1831. Concord, 1831. Resolve in regard to the Notch road. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 47 Biography and History of the Indians of North America from ITS First Discovery, by Samuel G. Drake. Boston, 1832. Several later editions. Collections of the New-Hampshire Historical Society. Vol. 3. Concord, 1832. Contains an Accoimt of the Storm and Avalanches in 1826, by Jacob B. Moore, who was in the mountains during the storm, and Reflections on the Destruction of the Willey Family, by Thomas C. Upham. A Subaltern's Furlough, by E. T. Coke. Vol. 2. New York, 1833. The author visited the Crawford and Franconia notches, Willey Slide, and Mt. Washington. See pp. 145-155. Encyclopedia Americana, edited by Francis Lieber. Vol. 13. Philadelphia, 1833. A New Gazetteer of the United States of America, by Wil- liam Darby and Theodeore Dwight, Jr. Hartford, 1833. Things as They are: or Notes of a Traveller through Some OF THE Middle and Northern States. Anon. Illustrated. New York, 1834. Sketches of the History of New Hampshire, by John M. Whiton. Concord, 1834. Narrative of a Tour in North America, by Henry Tudor. Vol. 1, London, 1834. On pp. 412-418 is an account of the WiUey Shde. The Rambler in North America, by Charles J. Latrobe. Vol. 1, New York, 1835. 48 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS The Token. Boston, 1836. Contains A PUgrimage to the White Mountains by Four of Us, as remembered by Grenville Mellen, pp. 190-217. Peter Pauley's Book of the United States, Geographical, Po- litical, AND Historical. Illustrated. Boston, 1837. Retrospect of Western Travel, by Harriet Martineau. Vol. 2, London and N. Y., 1838. See pp. 108-117. The New England Gazetteer, by John Hayward. Boston, 1838. American Scenery; or Land, Lake and River Illustrations of Transatlantic Nature, from drawings by W. H. Bartlett. The literary department by N. P. WUlis. 2 vols., London, 1838-39. A Book of the United States, edited by GrenvHle Mellen. New York, 1839. Fom- pages in chapter one and two small wood-cuts. A Pictorial Geography of the World, by S. G. Goodrich. Vol. 1. Illustrated. Boston, 1840. The Boston Book, edited by George S. Hillard. Boston, 1841. Contains on pp. 207-271 The Notch in the White Mountains, by J. T. Buckingham. Historical Sketches of the Discovery, Settlement, and Pro- gress OF Events in the Coos Country and Vicinity, principally included between the Years 1754-1785, by Rev. Grant Powers, A. M., C. H. S. HaverhiU, N. H., 1841. Reprinted, Haverhill, N. H., 1880. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 49 Annual, Report on the Geology op New Hampshire, by Charles T. Jackson, State Geologist. Concord, 1841. Portrait, biography and list of writings of the author in the American Geologist, Vol. 20, pp. 69-110. The New Hampshire Book, being Specimens of the Literature OF the Granite State, edited by Charles J. Fox and Samuel Osgood. Nashua, 1842. Contains on pp. 72 to 77 The Mountains of New Hampshire, by Isaac Hill. There are also three White Mountain poems, besides a poem, Lafayette's Return, by Philip Carrigain, History of New Hampshire, by George Barstow. Concord, 1842. Reprinted, Boston, 1853. The Eastern and Western States of America, by James S. Buckingham. 3 vols. Vol. 3, London, 1842. See pp. 205-216. Sketches of New England, or Memories of the Country, by John Carver [Nathaniel S. Dodge]. New York, 1842. Chapters on Ossipee Falls, The Notch and Mt. Washington. A Gallop among American Scenery, by Augustus E. Silliman. New York, 1843. White Mts., pp. 160-168. Reports of the First, Second and Third Meetings of the As- sociation of the American Geologists and Naturalists. Boston, 1843. Contains a Description of the Tin Veins of Jackson, by C. T. Jackson. 50 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS Final Report on the Geology and Mineralogy of the State OF New Hampshire, by Charles T. Jackson, M. D. Illustrated. Published by order of the Legislature, Concord, 1844. The Avalanche of the White Hills, August 28th, 1826. 18 pages. Boston, Jones' Power Press Office, 1846. This was the slide that destroyed the Willey family. Summer Tours, or Notes of a Traveler through Some of the Middle and Northern States, by Theodore Dwight. New York, 1847. Life of Jeremy Belknap, D. D. with Selections from His Cor- respondence AND Other Writings. Collected and arranged by his grand-daughter. New York, 1847. See pages 102-104. A Collection from the Newspaper Writings of Nathanieii Peabody Rogers. Concord, 1847. See pages 157-193 and 329-331. Republished as A Collection from the Miscellaneous Writings, Boston and Manchester, N. H., 1849. An account of the author appears in Whit- tier's Old Portraits and Modern Sketches, 1850, and in Granite Monthly, Vol. 4, pp. 281- 285, April, 1881. Adventures of an Angler in Canada, Nova Scotia and the United States, by Charles Lanman. Illustrated. London, 1848. Picture of Franconia Notch. See pages 134-147. A Second Visit to the United States of North America, by Sir Charles Lyell, F. R. S. Two vols. Vol. 1, New York and London, 1849. Botany as well as geology interested him. See pp. 58-73 and 86-87. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 51 A Week on the Concord and Meerimack Rivers, by Henry D. Thoreau. Boston, 1849. Three passing references: two in the Sunday and the third in the Thursday chapter. A Gazetteer of New Hampshire, by John Hayward. Illustrated. Boston, 1849. Old Portraits and Modern Sketches, by John G. Whittier. Boston, 1850. In his sketch of Nathaniel P. Rogers he quotes Rogers' glowing account of the view from Holdemess Mt. or North Hill [Mt. Prospect]. Gems for You from New Hampshire Authors, by F. A. Moore. Manchester, 1850. Contains The White Mts., by E. Jane Gate. Also two poems. Laws of The State of New Hampshire Passed November Session, 1852. Concord, 1853. Winnipisseogee and White Mountain Turnpike Corporation. The Course of Empire, Voyage of Life, and Other Pictures of Thomas Cole, N. A. with selections from His Letters and Miscellaneous Writings, by Louis L. Noble. New York, 1853. Gives an account of Cole's ascent of Chocorua in 1828 and his trip through the Craw- ford and Franconia notches. He was one of the first artists to visit the White Mts. The Homes of the New World ; Impressions of America, by Fredrika Bremer, translated by Mary Howitt. Vol. 2. London, 1853. Reprinted in New York, 1854. See pp. 581-588. A Pictorial Description of the United States, by Robert Sears. New York, 1854. 52 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS New Hampshire as It is : An Historical Sketch, A Gazetteer, A General View, by Edwin A. Charlton. Illustrated. Claremont, N. H., 1855. Letters from the United States, Cuba and Canada, by Hon. Amelia M. Murray. Vol. 1. New York and London, 1856. North America : Its Agriculture and Climate, by Robert Rus- sell. Edinburgh, 1857. A History and Description of New England, by A. J. Coolidge and J. B. Mansfield. Illustrated. Boston, 1859. Wayside Glimpses North and South, by Lillian Foster. New York, 1860. Contains an account of Franconia Notch. Comogony or Thoughts on Philosophy, by John Merrill. 32 pages. East Canaan, N. H., 1860. Merrill was the eccentric philosopher of The Pool. Eyes and Ears, by Henry Ward Beecher. Boston, 1862. Contains, on pp. 79-84, A Time at the White Mts., reprinted from The Independent, August, 1856. At Home and Abroad: A Sketch Book of Life, Scenery and Men, by Bayard Taylor. Second Series, New York, 1862. Frontispiece : HeadwaU of Adams Ravine [King's Ravine]. See pp. 341-366. North America, by Anthony Trollope. New York, 1862. Gives an account of the autumnal coloring, etc. See pp. 35-37. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 53 Alpine and Arctic Plants, by Sir John William Dawson. 25 pages, Montreal, 1862. The New American Cyclopedia, edited by George Ripley and Charles A. Dana. Vol. 16. New York, 1863. The Expeditions of Captain John Lovewell, by Frederic Kid- der. Boston, 1865. Reprinted in part from New England Historical and Genealogical Register, January, 1853. Letters to Various Persons, by Henry D. Thoreau. Boston, 1865. See New Riverside Edition, pp. 375-376, 385-391 (Tuckerman's Ravine Trip), 430. More in later editions. Life Sketches and Experiences, by Abigail Mussey. Cambridge, 1865. A Tribute to Thomas Starr King, by Richard Frothingham. Boston, 1865. Contains two mountain letters of King's written in 1849. A Record of the Perambulations of the Pemigewasset Peb- ambulators, by their Scribe. Illustrated. Boston, 1866. Proceedings of Boston Society of Natural History. Vol. 10, 1866. Contains on pp. 211-222 notes on some odonata from the White Mountains, by Samuel H. Scudder. Additions m 11 : 298-300, 1868. Mathieu Ropars : Et Cetera, by an Ex-Editor [William Young]. New York, 1868. Contains The New Hampshire Alps, pp. 163-171. 54 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS The Early History of Campton, New Hampshire, by Rev. Isaac Willey. 56 pages, Concord, 1868. Proceedings of the American Association for the Advance- ment OF Science. Sixteenth Meeting, August, 1867. Cambridge, 1868. Contains Tracks of Ancient Glaciers in the White Mountains, by George L. Vose, and The Insect Fauna of the Summit of Mt. Washington, by A. S. Packard, Jr. The Merrimack River ; Its Source and Its Tributaries, by J. W. Maeder. Map. Boston, 1869. The History of Warren; A Mountain Hamlet, Located in the White Hills of New Hampshire, by William Little. Illustrated. Manchester, N. H., 1870. Second Annual Report upon the Geology and Mineralogy of THE State of New Hampshire, by C. H. Hitchcock, Ph. D., State Geologist. Manchester, 1870. Contains an account of a winter occupation of Moosilauke and an examination of Mt. Carrigain. Report [3d] of the Geological Survey of the State of New Hampshire, by C. H. Hitchcock, Ph. D., State Geologist. Nashua, 1871. Entirely about the White Mountains, including barometrical register on Mt. Washing- ton in winter of 1870-71. Proceedings of the American Association for the Advance- ment OF Science. Nineteenth Meeting, August, 1870. Cambridge, 1871. Contams a paper on The Former Existence of Local Glaciers in the White Mountains, by Louis Agassiz. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 55 PiCTTJBESQUE AMERICA, edited by W. C. Bryant. Vol. 1. Illustrated. New York, 1872. Contains The White Movintains by Susan N. Carter. Report [4tli] of the Geological Survey of the State of New Hampshire, by C. H. Hitchcock, Ph. D., State Geologist. Nashua, 1872. Documents and Records relating to the Province of New Hampshire. Vol. 6, edited by Nathaniel Bouton. Manchester, 1872. Contains The Journal of Walter Bryant, who siu-veyed Maine-New Hampshire line in 1741. Proceedings of Boston Societt of Natural History. Vol. 14, 1872. Contains on pp. 356-385 A Catalogue of the Birds of Coos Co., N. H. and Oxford Co. Me., by C. J. Maynard. Proceedings of the American Association for the Advance- ment OF Science, 21st meeting. Cambridge, 1873. Contains on pp. 135 to ,151 Recent Geological Discoveries among the White Moimtains, by C. H. Hitchcock. I GO A-FisHiNG, by William C. Prime. New York, 1873. Sketches among the Frauconia Mountains. Thoreau the Poet-Naturalist, by William EUery Channing. Boston, 1873. Thoreau's experience in Tuckerman's Ravine is given on pp. 38-39. See p. 44, new edi- tion, edited by F. B. Sanborn. Boston, 1902. Under the Trees, by Samuel Irenseus Prime. New York, 1874. Contains a chapter. With the Old Man of the Mountains. 56 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS The Statistics and Gazetteer of New Hampshire, by Alonzo J. Fogg. Illustrated. Concord, 1874. Adventures of a Deaf-Mtjte in the White Mountains, by William B. Swett. 48 pages. Boston, 1874. The Geology of New Hampshire, by C. H. Hitchcock, State Geologist, and J. H. Huntington, Principal Assistant. Illustrated. Vol. 1, Concord, 1874. Contains History of Explorations among the White Mts., by Warren Upham, The Dis- tribution of Insects in N. H., by S. H. Scudder, The Distribution of Plants in N. H., by Wm. F. Flint, and Scenery of Coos Co., by J. H. Huntington. Vol. 2, Concord, 1877, con- tains Geology of the White Mountain District. Vol. 3, 1878, has but Uttle about the mountains. History of New Hampshire, by Edwin D. Sanborn. Manchester, 1875. Proceedings of Boston Society of Natural History. Vol. 16, 1874. Contains on pp. 265-276 Catalogue of Coleoptera of Mt. Washington, by E. P. Austin, with descriptions of new species by J. L. Le Conte. Documents and Records Relating to Towns in New Hamp- shire, Vol. 9, edited by Nathaniel Bouton. Concord, 1875. Proceedings of the American Association for the Advance- ment OF Science for 1875, 24th meeting. Part 2. Salem, 1876. Contains Existence of Glacial Action upon the Summit of Mt. Washington, by C. H. Hitchcock. See pp. 92-96. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 57 Belknap Papers. Parts 1 and 2. Collections of the Massachusetts Historical Society. Fifth Series, Vols. 2 and 3. Boston, 1877. Diary of Rev. Jeremy Belknap's tour of the White Mountains, in July, 1784, in Part 1, and in Part 2 his letters of the same date and a rough plan, from which his map was made. Christianity and Humanity, a series of sermons by Thomas Starr King, edited with a Memoir, by Edwin P. Whipple. Portrait. Boston, 1877. Atlas of the State of New Hampshire, the topography under the direction of H. F. Walling, the descriptive matter by C. H. Hitch- cock. 1877. Facts about the Carroll County Keabsarge Mountain of New Hampshire, read before the Appalachian Mountain Club, by G. V. Fox. 17 pages. 1877. Reminiscences of an Old Teacher, by George B. Emerson. Boston, 1878. An account of his visit to Mt. Washington in 1820. See pp. 35-50. America Illustrated, edited by J. David Williams. New York, 1880. Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society, Vol. 17. Boston, 1880. Memoir of Dr. Jacob Bigelow, by George E. Ellis. See p. 415. A Sketch of the Destruction of the Willey Family by the White Mountain Slide on the Night of August 28, 1826, related by Edward Melcher, the only survivor of the party who discovered and 58 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS removed tlie bodies of the unfortunate family from the ruins, on the 31st day of August, 1826. 25 pages. Lancaster, N. H., 1880. A Memorial Catalogue of Paintings of Sanfoed R. Gifford. Metropolitan Museum of Art. New York, 1881. Sixteen White Mountain paintings are catalogued. AwAT Down East, ok My Unexpected Vacation, by Frank H. Taylor. Illustrated. Philadelphia (1881). An Illustrated Essay on the NocTuiDiE of North America, with a Colony of Butterflies, by Augustus R. Grote. London, 1882. The colony of butterflies is on Mt. Washington. Early History of Bethlehem, New Hampshire, by Simeon BoUes. Woodsville, N. H., 1883. A Book of New England Legends and Folk Lobe, by Samuel Adams Drake. Boston, 1884. Contains The Great Carbuncle, The Silver Image of St. Francis, The Story of Nancy's Brook and Chocorua's Curse. Documents and Records Relating to Towns in New Hampshire. Vol. 13, edited by Isaac W. Hammond. Concord, 1884. Summer, from the Journal of Henry David Thoreau, edited by H. G. O. Blake. Boston, 1884. See pp. 283-313, giving an account of his camps in Tuckerman's Ravine and on Mt. Lafayette. More in Journal, edited by Bradford Torrey, 14 vols, Boston, 1906. See Vol. 1. p. 91, Vol. 9, p. 259, Vol. 11, pp. 3-62. , A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 59 A DicTioNABT OF Altitures IN THE United States, Compiled by Henry Gannett. U. S. Geological Survey. Washington, 1884. Fourth edition, 1906. Bulletin No. 274. BiBDS IN THE Bush, by Bradford Torrey. Boston, 1885. The chapter. In the White Mountains, gives an account of Mt. Willard and the Craw- ford bridle path in June. Report of the Forestry Commission of New Hampshire. Concord, 1885. Appleton's Annual Encyclopedia, Vol. 9, p. 538. New York, 1885. The Making of New England, by Samuel Adams Drake. New York, 1886. Popular account of Darby Field. Gazetteer of Grafton County, New Hampshire, compiled by Hamilton Child. Syracuse, N. Y., 1886. Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Vol. 21. Boston, 1886. Memoir of Edward Tuckerman by Asa Gray. Prose Pastorals, by Herbert M. Sylvester. Boston, 1887. Fishing on the Peabody River, Nineteen Mile Brook, and on the West Branch. Collections of the Maine Historical Society. Vol. 9. Portland, 1887. Contains The White Hills of New Hampshire, by Edward H. Elwell. 60 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS History of Coos County, New H/iiPSHiEE. Map and Illustra- tions. Syracuse, N. Y., 1888. History of New Hampshire, by John N. McClintock. Illustrated. Boston, 1888. Life, Journals and Correspondence op Rev. Manasseh Cut- ler, LL. D., by William P. and Julia P. Cutler. 2 vols. Cincinnati, 1888. Cutler was the botanist of the Belknap party in 1781. He went again in ISOl. History of Carroll County, New Hampshire, edited by Georgia Drew Merrill. Boston, 1889. A Rambler's Lease, by Bradford Torrey. Boston, 1889. A Mountain-side Ramble is about Mt. Lafayette and the Franconia region. The Butterflies op the Eastern United States and Canada with Special Reference to New England, by Samuel H. Scudder. Vol. 1. Cambridge, 1889. Contains on pp. 127-148 The White Mountains as a Home for Butterflies. Miscellaneous Provincial and State Papers op the State of New Hampshire, 1725 to 1800, Vol. 18, edited by Isaac W. Hammond. Manchester, 1890. Contains petitions and reports relating to early roads. Historic Storms of New England, by Sidney Perley. Salem, 1891. Contains an account of the Willey House disaster. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 61 Belknap Papers. Part 3. Massachusetts Historical Society Col- lections, Sixth Series, Vol. 4. Boston, 1891. Letters from John Wentworth, John Eliot, and Manasseh Cutler. Land of the Lingering Snow, by Frank BoUes. Boston, 1891. Chocorua in May. The Foot-Path Way, by Bradford Torrey. Boston, 1892. June in Franconia. First Annual Report of the Society for Protection of New Hampshire Forests. Illustrated. Concord, 1892. Proceedings of the Boston Society of Natural History. Vol. 25. Boston, 1892. See pp. 387-391. Notes on collections of cryptogams from the higher mountains of New England, by William G. Farlow. A Half-Century of Conflict, by Francis Parkman. Vol. 1. Boston, 1892. Accoimt of Lovewell's Fight. Prose Idyls, by John Albee. Boston, 1892. The Divided House is about Chocorua. The Earth and Its Inhabitants : North America, by Elisee Reclus. Vol. 3. New York, 1893. 62 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS America's Wonderland, as delineated bt Pen and Camera, by J. W. Bud. Boston, 1893. Second Annual Report of the New Hampshire Forest Com- mission. Concord, 1894. Contains a bibKography of 58 items, and several addresses. From Blomidon to Smoky and Other Papers, by Frank BoUes. Boston, 1894. Contains The Humming Birds of Chocorua and other papers about the birds of that neighborhood. State of New Hampshire, Town Charters, edited by Albert S. Batchellor. State Papers, Vols. 24 and 25. Concord, 1894 and 1895. The White Mountain Region, by Joseph B. Walker. Concord, 1895. Reprinted from Second Annual Report of the N. H. Forest Commission. Among the Northern Hills, by William C. Prime. New York, 1895. Fishing in Lonesome Lake and Franconia Notch. Proceedings of Boston Society of Natural History. Vol. 26, 1895. Contains on pp. 177-196 Collection of Small Mammals from the New Hampshire Mountains, by Gerrit S. Miller, Jr. State of New Hampshire. Township Grants, edited by Albert S. Batchellor. State Papers, Vols. 27 and 28. Concord, 1896. HENRY Wl. BURT. BENJAMIN L, BALL If -'^ BRADFORD TORREY. WILLIAM C. PRIME, A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 63 HosEA Ballou, 2d, D. D., First President of Tufts College ; His Origin, Life and Letters, by Hosea Starr Ballou. Illustrated. Boston, 1896. Dr. Ballou was a friend of Thomas Starr King, whose portrait appears, as well as a picture of the Notch House in 1844. See pp. 226 -233. Mountain Climbing. [Scribner's] Out of Door Library. Illustrated. New York, 1897. Mt. Washington in Winter, by Edward L. Wilson, appeared originally in Scribner's Magazine, February, 1891. Memorials of William Cranch Bond and of His Son George P. Bond, by Edward S, Holden. San Francisco, 1897. George P. Bond made the first map of the White Mountains. Third Report of the New Hampshire Forestry Commission. Concord, 1897. Contains Map of Presidential Range from U. S. Geological Survey. Autobiographical Reminiscences of Henry Ward Beecher, edited by T. J. EUingwood. New York (1898). Contains A Day of Exaltation, The Ant Hill of Human Life, both about Mt. Washing- ton, and A Ride in the Upper Air. Fisherman's Luck and Some Other Uncertain Things, by Henry van Dyke. Illustrated. New York, 1899. The chapter Who owns the Mountains ? refers to the Franconia Mts. The Boa Constrictor of the White Mountains, or The Worst Trust in the World. An Account of the New Hampshire Lum- ber Company, by Rev. John E. Johnson. North Woodstock, N. H., 1900. 6i A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS Sixty Years' Memories of Art and Artists, by Benjamin Champ- ney. Illustrated. Woburn, Mass., 1900. A great portion of the author's life from 1850 until his death in 1907 was spent in North Conway. See pp. 102-109, 152-161, and 165-169. America: Picturesque and Descriptive, by Joel Cook. 3 vols. Vol. 3. Illustrated. Philadelphia, 1900. Mountain Playmates, by Helen R. Albee. Boston, 1900. The Chocorua country. A Life op Francis Parkman, by Charles H. Farnham. Boston, 1900. On pp. 64-56 is a thrilling account of a climb up the Willey slide in 1841, from the his- torian's diary. A Matter of Business, the Excuse of the Business Man when off at Play, written, illustrated and published by George H. Graves. 26 pages. Boston, 1903. A facetious account of a walking trip over the Northern Peaks, via Madison Spring hut, and down through Tuckerman's Ravine. Proceedings of Manchester (New Hampshire) Institute of Arts and Sciences. Vol. 4. 1903. Contains List of Birds of New Hampshire, by Glover M. Allen. Nature's Invitation, by Bradford Torrey. Boston, 1904. A May Visit to MoosUauke, A Week on Mt. Washington, In the Mt. Lafayette Forest, etc. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 65 Our Mountain Garden, by Mrs. Theodore Thomas [Rose Fay]. Illustrated. New York, 1904. The mountain garden is in Bethlehem, N. H. New Hampshire: An Epitome of Popular Government, by Frank B. Sanborn. American Commonwealths Series. Boston, 1904. Forest Conditions of Northern New Hampshire, by Alfred K. Chittenden, M. F. U. S. Dept. of Agriculture, Bureau of Forestry. Bulletin No. 55. Maps and Illustrations. Washington, 1905. Some Things about Coventry-Benton, New Hampshire, by William F. Whitcher. Illustrated. Woodsville, N. H., 1905. Fourteen Thousand Miles, a Carriage and Two Women, by Frances S. Howe. Privately printed. [Leominster, Mass.], 1906. Tarry at Home Travels, by Edward Everett Hale. Illustrated. New York, 1906. Appeared originally in The Outlook, June 24, 1905. In Dr. Hale's Poems and Fancies, 1901, is a passing reference to Waterville and also to a Mt. Carrigain camping trip. See also Among the Clouds, September 6, 1902, and The Christian Register, August 20, 1908. Mr. Goggles, by H. Collins Brown. Illustrated. New York, 1907. An automobile tour in New England. The American Scene, by Henry James. New York, 1907. The novehst's impressions of Jackson and the Chocorua country are given in the chap- ter on New England: An Autumn Impression. 66 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS Heads of Families in New Hampshieb at the Fiest Census OF THE United States in 1790. United States Government, Washington, 1907. Gives the names of the early White Mountaiu settlers and has a reproduction of the map of New Hampshire, engraved by B. Tanner for Reid's American Atlas, New York, 1796. Commercial Importance of the White Mountain Forests, by Philip W. Ayres. Circular 168, Forest Service, United States Depart- ment of Agriculture. 32 pages. Washington, 1909. Midsummer in Whittier's Country, A Little Study of Sand- wich Center, by Ethel Armes [of Birmingham, Ala.]. Sewanee, Tennessee, 1910. The White Mountain Forest Reserve. Speech of Hon. A. J. Peters of Massachusetts in the Hoiise of Representatives, June 16, 1910. Washington, 1910. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 67 FICTION A Bridal in the Early Settlements. Published anonymously on pp. 133-155, with engraving of the Notch, in The Token, Boston, 1828. Reprinted as Legend of the Notch, with the name of the author, Sarah J. Hale, in The Garland, New York, 1830, and in later editions. The Ambitious Guest, by Nathaniel Hawthorne. New England Magazine, 8 : 425-431, June, 1835. Reprinted in his Twice-Told Tales, Vol. 2, Boston, 1812, and in his Tales of the White HUls, Boston, 1877. The Notch in the White Mountains, by Nathaniel Hawthorne. New England Magazine, 9 : 321-323, November, 1835. Reprinted with the next item, with the heading. Sketches from Memory, in Mosses from an Old Manse, New York, 1846. OuB Evening Party among the Mountains, by Nathaniel Haw- thorne. New England Magazine, 9 : 323-326, November, 1835. Reprinted with the preceding story. The Great Carbuncle, A Mystery of the White Mountains, by Nathaniel Hawthorne. The Token, pp. 156-175, Boston, 1837. Reprinted in the author's Twice-Told Tales, Vol. 1, Boston, 1837. There is a passing ref- erence to the White Mountains in The Prophetic Picture, in Twice-Told Tales. The Scalp-Hunter, A Semi-Historical Sketch, by Francis Park- man. Knickerbocker or N. Y. Monthly Magazme, 25 : 297-303, April, 1845. 68 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS The Great Stone Face, by Nathaniel Hawthorne. The National Era, Washington, January 24, 1850. Reprinted in The Snow Image and Other Twice-Told Tales, London, 1851, Boston, 1852, and in Tales of the White Hills, Boston, 1877. The story was written in 1848. Feanconia Stoeies, by Jacob Abbott. 10 vols. New York, 1850-1853. These are children's stories. The titles are Beechnut, Malleville, Mary Bell, Mary Erskine, Rodolphus, Ellen Linn, Agnes, Caroline, Stuyvesant, and Wallace. Wimbleton: ob the Heemit of the Cedars, by Effie Afton. Eventide, a series of Tales and Poems, Boston, 1854. The scene of chapters 32-36 is laid in the White Mountains. Laconia: oe Legends of the White Mountains and Meret Meeting Bat, by an Old Mountaineer [Isaac W. Scribner]. Boston, 1856. Second edition bears the title Rozella of Laconia, or Legends of the White Mountains, Boston, 1857. Wild Nell the White Mountain Giel, by Mrs. H. J. Moore. Illustrated. New York, 1860. Elmwood: oe Helen and Emma. Boston, 1862. The scene of chapter 46 is in the White Mountains. A Summer in Leslie Goldthwaite's Life, by Mrs. Adeline D. T. Whitney. Boston, 1866. A Winter's Night in a Wintry Place [Franconia Notch]. Lippincott's Magazine, 2 : 187-193, August, 1868. The Profile House, by Percy Curtiss [Mrs. William N. Cox]. Boston, 1872. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 69 Bark Cabin on Keaesargb, by Rev. Edward A. Rand. Boston, 1880. This and the other stories by Mr. Rand are for children. The Tent in the Notch, by Rev. Edward A. Rand. Boston, 1881. All Aboard for the Lakes and Mountains, by Rev. Edward A. Rand. Boston, 1883. Chocorua in the Mountains, An Historical Drama, by Robert B. Caverly. Boston, 1885. Their Pilgrimage, by Charles Dudley Warner. Harper's Magazine, 1886. Reprinted in book form. New York, 1887. There are three passing references to the White Mountains in Warner's On Horse- back, pp. 50, 55, 94, Boston, 1888. Fishin' Jimmy, by Annie Trumbull Slosson. Illustrated. Edinburgh, 1888, and New York, 1889. Reprinted in the author's Seven Dreamers. Aunt Randt, Deacon Pheby's Selfish Natur, and Fishin' Jimmy, in Seven Dreamers, by Annie Trumbull Slosson. New York, 1891. Marchenstrauss aus DEM Weissen Gebirge, by C. A. Koehler. 62 pages. Illustrated. Boston, 1891. The titles of the six stories that make up the volume are, Das Marchen vom Weissen Gebirge, Das Marchen vom rothen Berge, Das Idyll vom Squam See, Das Marchen vom Willey Haus, Das Steingesicht, Das Marchen vom Chocorua. The Heresy of Mehetabel Clark, by Annie Trumbull Slosson. New York, 1892. 70 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS Cheisttjs Judex: Legend of the White Mountains, by Ed- ward Roth, with introduction by William C. Prime. 108 pages. Illus- trated. Boston, 1892. A story of the Old Man of the Mountain. First published in Philadelphia, 1864. Through the Wilds, A Record of Sport and Adventure in the Forests of New Hampshire and Maine, by Captain Charles A. J. Farrar. Illustrated. Boston, 1892. That Old Man and His Dream, by Charles G. Chase. 24 pages. Illustrated. Boston, 1892. The Dream of My Youth, by Rev. Edward P. Tenney. Boston, 1901. White Christopher, by Annie Trtmibull Slosson. New York, 1901. The Hero of the Hills, by George Waldo Browne. Boston, 1901. Soltaiee: a Romance of the Willet Slide and the White Mountains, by George F. Willey. Illustrated. Manchester, N. H., 1902. Biographical sketch of the author, by G. A. Cheney, with portrait and illustrations, in Granite Monthly, 34 : 79-87, February, 1903. An Indian Legend of the White Mountains, by George Waldo Browne. New England Magazine, 36 : 56-58, January, 1904. A Simple Pentecost, in Simples from the Master's Garden, by Annie Trumbull Slosson. Sunday School Times Co., Philadelphia, 1907. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 71 T. Thorndyke, Attorney- at-Law: The Romance of a Young Lawyer, by Herbert I. Goss. Boston, 1907. The scene is laid in Berlin, N. H., 1885-1905. A Local Colorist, by Annie Trumbull Slosson. Harper's Monthly, 120 : 84-94, December, 1909. 72 A BIBLIOGKAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS POETRY The Village, a long poem written in and of Fryeburg, by Enoch Lincoln, and published in Portland, in 1816, although referring to the mountains in a general way, is hardly a White Mountain poem, nor is Longfellow's Jeckoyva (35 lines), first pubhshed in the United States Literary Gazette, Vol. 2, p. 348, August 1, 1825. If the letter u is sub- stituted for the letter v, the name Jeckoyva becomes in pronunciation very nearly Chocorua, and it is the Chocorua legend that inspired the poem. Mount Washington (36 lines), by Grenville Mellen. United States Literary Gazette, 3 : 68, Boston, October 15, 1825. Reprinted in Specimens of American Poetry, edited by Samuel Kettell, Vol. 3, Boston, 1829, in The American Common-Place Book of Poetry, Boston, 1831, in The Gift, Con- cord, N. H., 1835, and in other collections. Sunrise from Mount Washington (57 lines), by Rufus Dawes. United States Literary Gazette, 3 : 270, January 1, 1826. Reprinted in Specimens of American Poetry, edited by Samuel Kettell, Vol. 3, Boston, 1829, in The Valley of the Nashaway and Other Poems, by Rufus Dawes, Boston, 1830, and in other collections. View in the Notch of the White Mountains, New Hampshire, BT Pratt (74 lines). Poetical Illustrations of the Athenseum Gallery of Paintings. Boston, 1827. This Uttle collection of poems, published anonymously, was written by William George Crosby, afterwards Governor of Maine. The painting that inspired the poem, evi- dently the WiUey House, was by Henry Cheeves Pratt. An engraving of it may be found in The Token for 1828 and The Garland for 1830 and subsequent years. The White Mountains after the Descent of the Avalanche IN 1826 (66 lines), by L. H. S. [Mrs. Sigourney]. The Ladies' Magazine, 1 : 340. Boston, August, 1828. Lines Written among the White Mountains (63 lines). New England Magazine, 1 : 512, December, 1831. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 73 Destruction of the Willet Family (192 lines). Author, name and date of publication not found. Reprinted in the Boston Transcript, Notes and Queries, September 24, 1910. The White Hills of New Hampshire (27 lines), by William B. Tappan. Poems. Philadelphia, 1834. Another poem. The White Mountains (20 lines) is printed in The New Hampshbe Book, Nashua, 1842, and in Gems for You from New Hampshire Authors, Manchester, 1850. The Silver Cascade in the White Mountains (68 lines). The Token, Boston, 1835. Chocohua (142 lines), by R. S. S. Andros. Chocorua and Other Sketches, Fall River, 1838. The Fbanconia Mountain Notch (153 lines), by H. [Harry Hib- bard].-1 Democratic Review, Vol. 5, New York, April, 1839. Reprinted in The New Hampshire Book, Nashua, 1842, and in part, as The Old Man of the Mountain, in Gathered Sketches from the Early History of New Hampshire and Vermont, edited by Francis Chase, Claremont, New Hampshire, 1856. The White Hills (four sonnets), by William Plumer, Jr. Youth or Scenes from the Past and Other Poems. Boston, 1841. One of the sonnets is reprinted in Poets of New Hampshire, 1883, and in A Summer in New Hampshire, 1904. Chocorua's Curse (40 lines), by Charles J. Fox. The New Hampshire Book, Nashua, 1842. The Avalanche op the White Mountains. August 28 , 1826 (63 lines), by M. in a pamphlet with the same title. Boston, 1846. The Willey shde. 74 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS The Bridal of Pennacook, by J. G. Whittier. The Democratic Review, 16 : 537, June, 1845. Printed in part in The Democratic Review, September, 1844. Reprinted in Wliittier's Poems, Boston, 1849. All of his poems that follow are reprinted in his complete works. The Lakeside (40 lines), by J. G. Whittier. Songs of Labor and Other Poems, Boston, 1850. The Hill-Top (80 lines), by J. G. Whittier. Songs of Labor and Other Poems, Boston, 1850. The Man in the Moon (63 lines), by James T. Fields. Festival of the Sons of New Hampshire, Boston, 1850. Old Man of the Mountain (28 lines), by Mrs. Mary M. Glover [Mrs. Mary Baker Eddy]. Gems for You from New Hampshire Authors, compiled by F. A. Moore. Manchester, N. H., 1850. The Willey House (160 lines), by T. W. Parsons. Putnam's Monthly Magazine, 6 : 350, October, 1855. Reprinted in Starr King's The White HlUs, in the author's The Willey House and Son- nets, Cambridge, 1875, and in his collected Poems, Boston, 1893. Summer by the Lake-Side (107 lines), by J. G. Whittier. The Panorama and Other Poems, Boston, 1856. Mary Garvin (first 8 lines), by J. G. Whittier. The Panorama and Other Poems, Boston, 1856. The River Saco (40 lines), by Rev. James G. Lyons. Christian Songs and Other Poems, Philadelphia, 1861. Reprinted in Poems of Places, edited by Longfellow. Mountain Pictures: Franconia from the Pemigewasset (35 lines), by J. G. Whittier. In War Times and Other Poems, Boston, 1864. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 75 Among the Hills (344 lines not including the prelude), by J. G. Whittier. Among the Hills and Other Poems, Boston, 1869. In its earlier form. The Wife: an Idyl of Bearcamp Water, printed in A.tlantic Monthly, 21 : 1-6, January, 1868. My Mountain (72 lines). At Winnepesaukee (66 lines), and The Old School-House (56 lines), by Lucy Larcom. Poems, Boston, 1869. A Legend of the White Hills (280 lines), by Mrs. V. G.Rahney. Boston, 1872. In a later edition of her Poems, Boston, 1896, this is called Chocorua's Curse. The Bride of Burton (162 lines), by Robert B. Caverly. Heroism of Hannah Dustin, Boston, 1874. A Chocorua Poem. Chocorua (sonnet) and Clouds on Whiteface (sonnet), by Lucy Larcom. An Idyl of Work, Boston, 1875. AH of part viii, as well as most of part ix, relates to the White Mountains, and there are other passing references. Bald-Cap Revisited (170 lines), by Rev. John W. Chadwick. A Book of Poems, Boston, 1876. Reprinted in Poems of Places, edited by H. W. Longfellow. Song op the Willet Family (44 lines), by Joseph W. Turner. Orange Blossoms : Poems, East Boston, 1877. The Summit (18 lines), by Rev. Charles G. Ames. Hillside and Seaside in Poetry, edited by Lucy Larcom, Boston, 1877. Reprinted as Mountain-Top in The Two Voices, poems selected by Rev. John W. Chadwick, Troy, N. Y., 1886. The poem was written in 1862, after chmbing Mt. Washington. 76 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS Sunset on the Bearcamp (84 lines), by J. G. Whittier. The Vision of Echard and Other Poems, Boston, 1878. Mount Agassiz (sonnet), by Charlotte Fiske Bates. Poems of Places, edited by Longfellow, Boston, 1879. Reprinted in her Risk and Other Poems, Boston, 1879. Lake of the Clouds (60 lines), by Henry Henderson. Poems of Places, Boston, 1879. The Old Man of the Mountain (112 lines), by John T. Trow- bridge. Poems of Places, Boston, 1879. Reprinted in his A Home Idyl and Other Poems, Boston, 1881. In a Cloud Rift (50 lines), by Lucy Larcom. Wild Roses of Cape Ann, Boston, 1881. Asleep on the Summit (12 lines), by Lucy Larcom. Wild Roses of Cape Ann, Boston, 1881. Written on Mt. Washington, August, 1877. The White-Throated Sparrow: on hearing His Song in the White Mountains (22 lines), by James T. Fields. Ballads and Other Verses, Boston, 1881. The Voyage of the Jettie (126 lines), by J. G. Whittier. The King's Missive and Other Poems, Boston, 1881. Our Mountain Land — New Hampshire (36 lines), by George E. Emery. Granite Monthly, 6 : 4, October, 1882. Mad River (60 lines), by H. W. Longfellow. In the Harbor, Ultima Thule, Part II, Boston, 1882. Reprinted in his Complete Poetical Works. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 77 Mount Lafayette (47 lines), by Fannie H. Runnels. Granite Monthly, 6 : 126, January, 1883. A Summer Pilgrimage (96 lines), and Storm on Lake Asquam (24 lines), by J. G. Whittier. The Bay of Seven Islands and Other Poems, Boston, 1883. The Pemigewasset (36 lines), by Edward D. Boylston. The Poets of New Hampshire, compiled by Bela Chapin, Claremont, N. H., 1883. RuMNEY Hills (24 lines), and Mount Washington (56 lines), by Josiah M. Fletcher. The Poets of New Hampshire, 1883. The Old Man of the Mountain (68 lines), by Caroline A. Spauld- ing. The Poets of New Hampshire, 1883. Chocorua (343 lines), by David H. Hill. The Poets of New Hampshire, 1883. The Old Man of the Mountain (28 lines), by Fred C. Pillsbury. The Poets of New Hampshire, 1883. Mount Washington (24 lines), by Rev. Charles Burroughs. The Poets of New Hampshire, 1883. Written on the summit, July 9, 1845. Mount Washington (sonnet) and Jackson Falls (sonnet), by Melville M. Bigelow. Rhymes of a Barrister, Boston, 1884. Chocorua Veiled (35 lines) and Slow up the Slope of Ossipee (48 lines), by Julia Noyes Stickney. Poems on Lake Winnipesaukee, Haverhill, Mass., 1884. 78 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS Mount Moriah from Bethel (54 lines). The Summit-Flower; Greenland Sandwort (24 lines), Looking Down (24 lines), by Lucy Larcom. Poetical Works, Boston, 1885. The Wood Giant (68 lines), by J. G. Wliittier. St. Gregory's Guest and Recent Poems, Boston, 1886. To Humphrey's Ledge (24 lines). The Fate of Harry W. Hunter Lost on Mount Washington (60 lines). Mount Webster (24 lines). To Artist's Falls (16 lines). North Conway (20 lines), by Henry W. Ripley. Lucy Crawford's History of the White Mountains, with introduc- tion by Henry W. Ripley, Portland, 1886. The Monster Bear (36 lines), by Bethra Liedean. In preceding vol., Portland, 1886. Frankenstein Cliff (60 lines), and The Crawfords of the White Mountains (107 lines), by C. E. Swinerton. In preceding vol., Portland, 1886. Glen Ellis Fall (8 lines). The Cascade (32 lines), and The Great Stone Face (24 lines), by Samuel Longfellow. A Few Verses of Many Years, Cambridge, 1887. Keabsarge, a Mountain Picture (44 lines), by David Hill, and Sunrise at Jackson, New Hampshire (44 lines), by Edward H. Elwell. The Poets of Maine, compiled by George B. Griffith, Portland, 1888. Song of the Old Man of the Mountain (24 lines). Proclama- tion BY THE Old Man of the Mountain (60 lines), Profile Lake (90 lines). Echo Lake (138 lines). The Flume Ride (64 lines), The Trouts' Petition (144 lines). Lonesome Lake (48 lines), Sunday at Lonesome Lake (12 lines). The Season's Close at Lonesome Lake A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 79 (12 lines), Autumn at Lonesome Lake (60 lines), Sunday at the Profile House (24 lines). The Old Bent Tree on the Road to THE Flume (20 lines), by Nelson Merrill. Profile Poems, 91 pages, New York, 1889. Merrimack River at Its Source (sonnet), by Edna Dean Proc- tor. Poems, Boston, 1890. In her New Hampshire there is a passing reference to the Great Stone Face, and abo in The Mountain Maid, both printed in the same volume. Deed of Mount Chocorua (78 lines). The Green Bag, 5 : 9, January, 1893. Reprinted in New England Magazine, 8 : 750, August, 1893. Diana's Baths (sonnet), by Edward W. Barnard. Illustrated. New England Magazine, 11 : 33, September, 1894. Chocorua's Tenants, by Frank Bolles. 68 pages. Illustrated. Boston, 1895. Fourteen poems about the birds of Mt. Chocorua and vicinity. Two Pictures (24 lines), by H. H. Hanson. Granite Monthly, 19 : 207, September, 1895. The pictures are of Chocorua in sunshine and in storm. Mount Chocorua (sonnet), by Edwin O. Grover. Granite Monthly, 19 : 186, September, 1895. Mount Willard in September (12 lines), by Emilie Reade. Granite Monthly, 19 : 320, October, 1895. Among the Hills (9 lines), by George B. Griffith. Granite Monthly, 20 : 375, June, 1896. Franconia's Profile (22 lines), by George B. Griffith. Granite Monthly, 21 : 163, September, 1896. 80 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS Ideals (sonnet), by Adelaide G. Bennett. Granite Monthly, 21 : 163, September, 1896. About the Profile. The Pines at Intervale (sonnet), by Frank R. Batchelder. Il- lustrated. New England Magazine, 17 : 165, October, 1897. The Bieth of the White Mountains (65 lines), by Elizabeth B. Dyer. Granite Monthly, 26 : 207, April, 1899. The Cathedral Woods (24 lines), by Alice D'Alcho. Illus- trated. New England Magazine, 21: 426, December, 1899. White Horse Cliff (sonnet), by Frederick J. Allen. Illustrated. Granite Monthly, 28 : 83, February, 1900. MoosiLATJK (sonnet). Keep the Forests (60 lines), Easteb in the White Hills (52 lines), by Edna Dean Proctor. The Mountain Maid and Other Poems of New Hampshire. Boston, 1900. There is a passing reference to the White Mta. in Kearsarge and in The HiUs are Home, in the same volume. The Hermit of the Saco, by D. M. Smyth. 149 pages. Illus- trated. Cambridge, 1901. Chocorua's Call (24 lines), by L. D. Bolles. Granite Monthly, 34 : 454, June, 1903. Sunset on Mount Washington (30 lines), by George Waldo Browne. A Summer in New Hampshire, compiled by Mary M. Currier. Con- cord, N. H., 1904. Reprinted in Granite State Magazine, Vol. 2, July, 1906. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 81 Whiteface (sonnet), by Stephen H. Thayer. A Summer in New Hampshire, 1904. Chocoexja (sonnet), by Caroline E. Whiton-Stone. A Summer in New Hampshire, 1904. The Mountains of North Conway (16 Unes), by Arthur Lock, A Summer in New Hampshire, 1904. To THE Stone Face (sonnet), by John W. Condon. A Summer in New Hampshire, 1904. New Hampshire's Mountain Forests (32 Hnes), by Samuel Webber. A Summer in New Hampshire, 1904. From the Piazza, Mount Washington from Mount Pleasant House (sonnet), by Edward A. Jenks. A Summer in New Hampshire, 1904. The Forests of the White Hills (60 lines), by Edna Dean Proctor. Songs of America and Other Poems, Boston, 1905. At Sugar Hill (sonnet), by Alice C. Hall. New England Magazine, 32 : 11, March, 1905. New Hampshire's Hills (24 lines), by George B. Griffith. Granite State Magazine, 1 : 64, February, 1906. About the Sandwich Range. The Old Man of the Mountain (48 lines), by Moody Currier. Granite State Magazine, 1 : 191, May, 1906. Apostrophe to the Old Man of the Mountain (sonnet), by EUzabeth E. Dorr. Illustrated. Granite Monthly, 39 : 374, November, 1907. 82 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS In the New Hampshire Hills (40 lines), by Seldon L. Whitcomb. Granite State Magazine, 4 : 203, November, 1907. The White Mountains (30 lines), by T. L. Hoover. Forestry and Irrigation, 14 : 27, January, 1908. Old Man of the Mountain (10 lines), by Jerome W. Howe. Granite Monthly, 40 : 182, April-May, 1908. Spring in the White Mountains (34 lines), by John Albee. Granite Monthly, 40 : 186, April-May, 1908. Chocorua on a July Night (13 lines), by Caroline E. Whiton- Stone. Granite State Magazine, Vol. 5, April- June, 1908. North Conway in the Crystal Hills (40 lines), The Intervale (20 lines). The Saco (20 lines). Mount Washington (57 Hnes), Moat Mountain (16 lines). White Horse Ledge (sonnet). The Cathedral (16 lines), Echo Lake (sonnet), Diana's Baths (sonnet), Thompson's Fau^s (16 lines). The Enchanted Woods (sonnet). Art- ist's Falls (16 lines), Thompson's Grove (sonnet). Artist's Falls Brook (16 lines), Mount Kearsarge (sonnet). From Mount Sue- prise (20 lines), The Wizard Birch (sonnet). The Cathedral Pines (sonnet). The Crystal Hills (29 lines), by Frederick J. Allen. In Crystal Hills. Illustrated. Boston, 1908. Kearsarge (16 lines), by Townsend Allen. Granite Monthly, 41 : 114, March, 1909. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 83 MAPS Mountains where the White Mts. are located appear on many early maps (see Os- good's or Ticknor's Handbook of the White Mts. by M. F. Sweetser), but no specific name is given to them on any map until 1677, when the map of New England, engraved by John Foster, the first printer and engraver in Boston, appeared in Rev. WiUiam Hubbard's Narrative of the Troubles with the Indians in New England. The name Wine Hills on the first impression was clearly a misprint and the map was re-cut the same year and the name White Hills substituted. The London edition of the book the same year had the corrected map. The volume is extremely rare. The Wine Hills map has been reprinted in recent years. Notes on the map by Charles Deane and Dr. Samuel A. Green appear in the Pro- ceedings of the Mass. Historical Soc, Second Series, Vol. 4, 1889. The White Hills are named on Thomas Jefferys' Map of the Northern Part of New Eng- land, first published in 1755 in London; on Blanchard and Langdon's Map of New Hamp- shire, engraved by Thomas Jefferys in 1761 ; and on A New and Correct Map of New Eng- land, New York, and Canada, by J. Gibson, in The American Gazetteer, Vol. 2, London, 1762. An edition of the Jefferys map in 1774 named in addition Ossipa Mt. and Pigwak- ket Hills. A Map of the Middle British Colonies in North America by T. Pownall, M. P., London, 1776, gives the name of Red Hill. A TopoGEAPHiCAL Map OF THE State OF New HAMPSHIRE, Sur- veyed under the direction of Samuel Holland, printed by William Faden. London, 1784. Presidential Range called The White Hills. Only peaks named are Moat, Royce, Moose- lock, and Millen Hill (Mitten Mt.). In the Lake country are Red Hill and Ossipee Mts., given on earUer maps. Rattlesnake Mt. and Mt. Major. A New Map of New Hampshire, by Jeremy Belknap, in his History of New Hampshire, Vol. 2. Boston, 1791. The Presidential Range is called White Mountain. Li addition to the summits named on Holland's map are Kyarsarge, Chocorua, Doublehead, Sloop, Crotch (now Thorn). East (now Wildcat), and Pondicherry (now Cherry). This is the first map on which The Notch appears by name. Map of the State of New Hampshire, by Samuel Lewis, in Carey's General Atlas. Philadelphia, 1794. Follows Belknap and gives nothing new. 84 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS Map of the State of New Hampshire, engraved by B. Tanner, in The American Atlas, published by John Reid. New York, 1796. Names of eight summits given, but nothing new. Reproduced for the U. S. Govern- ment in the reprint of the First Census, 1907. Map of New Hampshire and Vermont, by J. Dennison, in third edition of American Universal Geography, by Jedidiah Morse. Bos- ton, 1796. Map follows Belknap and gives nothing new in White Mt. region. Map of New Hampshire, by Philip Carrigain. Concord, N. H., 1816. Presidential Range called The White Mts., Lafayette called Great Haystack Mt., Moosilauke called Moosehillock, Kearsarge called Pigwacket, Chocorua called Corway- Peak Mt., and Thorn by its present name. In addition to the preceding, and Doublehead, Royse, Pondicherry, Red Hill, and Ossipee Mt. named on earlier maps, the following appear by name for the first time : Moriah, Eastman, Sable, Black (in Jackson), Bla^k (in Randolph), PUny, WiUards (in Kilkenny), Picket Mt. (in Bethlehem), Kinsmans, Black (south of Kinsmans), Blue Mt. (south of Black), Carr's Mt., Cushman's Mt., Landaff Mt., Owl's Head Mt., Stinson's Mt., Crotched Mt. (in Campton), North Mt. (in Campton), Sandwich Mts., Whiteface Mt., Squam Mt. In the comers are pictures of The Gap of the White Mts. and the View from Shelbume. These are the first engrav- ings of White Mt. scenes. Map of the White Mountains, drawn by Franklin Leavitt, guide. Boston, 1852. While this is the first map of the White Mts., it is more of a curiosity than a real map. The names of Mounts Imp, Carter, Hayes, Willard, WUley, and Crawford appear for the first time on any map. Profile Mt. is called Mt. Lafayette. In 1859 a revised edition ap- peared with illustrations. There were pictiures of two hotels on the first edition. Map of the Mountain and Lake Regions of New Hamp- shire WITH Rail-Road Routes, by M. Conant, Engineer of the Cocheco R. R. (the railroad from Dover to Alton Bay). 1852. Cannon Mt. is called Old Man's Mt. A Map of the White Mountains of New Hampshire [by George P. Bond]. 1853. The names of the individual peaks of the Presidential Range appear for the first time on any map, as well as the names Cannon Mt., Twin Mts., Carrigain, Tremont, and Giant's Stairs. On the reverse are five Uthographs from drawings by Ben Champney. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 85 Map of the White Mountains, by Harvey Boardman. Published separately and in his Guide to the White Mts. Boston, 1858. The map has pictures. New edition, revised by H. S. Fifield, published in 1871. Map of the White Mountains, with Arnold Guyot's On the Appalachian Mt. System. American Journal of Science and Arts, March, 1860. It was taken from Bond's map. Engraved in Germany and published in Petermann's MittheUmigen, Gotha, 1860. Topographical Map of Grafton County, New Hampshire, from actual surveys by H. F. Walling. Published by Smith, Mason & Co. New York, 1860. A large map giving, in addition to natural features, the location of houses. It also has wood-cuts of The Old Man of the Moimtain, The Flume, Profile House, Flume House, Pemigewasset House, etc. Topographical Map of Coos County, New Hampshire, from actual surveys under the direction of H. F. Walling. Published by Smith, Mason & Co. New York, 1861. A large map giving location of houses. Illustrated with cuts of the Summit of Mount Washington, Crawford House, Alpine House, Waumbek House, etc. Topographical Map of Carroll County, New Hampshire, from actual surveys under the direction of H. F. Walling. Published by Smith and Peavey. New York, 1861. A large map giving the location of houses. Illustrated with wood-cuts of the Falls House in Jackson and other hotels. Map of the White Mountains, by Charles H. V. Cavis. East- man's Guide Book, third edition. Concord, N. H., 1863. Relief Map of the White Mountains, published by George K. Snow and Bradlee. Boston, 1872. A raised map. 86 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS Mount Washington and Other Summits of the White Moun- tain Range from the Observatory and Western Promenade, Portland (a Panorama), by Abner Lowell. Portland, 1874. New Map of the White Mountains, by J. B. Henck, Jr. Ap- palachia, Vol. 1, June, 1876. Geological Map of the White Mountains, by C. H. Hitch- cock. Appalachia, Vol. 1, March, 1877. Map of the White Mountains, by C. H. Hitchcock. Walling's Atlas of the State of New Hampshire. New York, 1877. Appeared also in Appalachia, Vol. 1, June, 1877. Map of New Hampshire. Atlas accompanying the Report on the Geology of New Hampshire, by C. H. Hitchcock, State Geologist. New York, 1878. A large contour map issued in sections. Tlie atlajs also includes a colored geological map in sections, a map of the Ammonoosuc mining district, reduced facsimiles of Hol- land's and Carrigain's maps of New Hampshire, and panoramic views from Mt. Wash- ington, Mt. Tremont, etc. New Relief Map of the White Mountains, by Joseph Sched- ler. New York, 1879. This is a raised map. The cover says published in Jersey City Heights, N. J. Contour Map of Mount Washington Range, by W. H. Pick- ering. Appalachia, Vol. 3, June, 1882. Map of the Mount Washington Range, by W. H. Pickering. Appalachia, Vol. 3, April, 1883. Map of the White Mountains. Down-East Latch Strings, B. & M. R. R., 1887. Map of Alpine Districts of the Great Range, White Moun- tains. Appalachia, Vol. 5, December, 1887. JOSHUA H. HUNTINGTON JOHN H. SPAULDING CHARLES H. HITCHCOCK. EDWARD TUCKERMAN. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 87 Map of the White Motjntains, by the Appalachian Mountain Club. Sweetser's White Mountain Handbook, 1887. Guide Map for North Conway and Jackson, New Hampshire, drawn and published by William T. Oliver. Lynn, Mass., 1889. Map of the White Mountains. J. H. Ward's White Mountains, 1890. The Waterville Valley, by A. L. Goodrich. Appalachia, Vol. 6, January, 1892. Issued also with his little guide book to the Waterville Valley the same year. Town and County Atlas of the State of New Hampshire (maps of individual towns). Published by D. H. Hurd & Co. Boston, 1892. Map of White Mountains. Published by George H. Walker. Boston, 1893. Map of Mount Washington and Vicinity (four sheets, Mt. Washington, Crawford Notch, North Conway, Gorham), by the U. S. Geological Survey. Washington, 1894. Surveyed 1891 to 1893. Reprinted in one sheet for Third Report of N. H. Forestry Commission, 1897. Map of the Northern Slopes of Madison, Adams and Jeffer- son (blue print), by Louis F. Cutter, for the Appalachian Mountain Club. Boston, 1898. Whitefield (including Parts of Bethlehem and Carroll). U. S. Geological Survey. Washington, 1900. Pocket Map of the White Mountains, Robert E. Blakeslee, 1902. 88 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS Topographic Map of the White Mountains and Central New Hampshire, by National Publishing Co. (now The Scarborough Co.)- Boston, 1903. Pocket Contour Map of Bretton Woods and Vicinity, by Robert E. Blakeslee. 1903. Maps of Northern New Hampshire. Bureau of Forestry Bul- letin No. 55, one showing principal drainage basins, the other forest density and land classification. Washington, 1905. Contour Map of the Southern Peaks (of the Presidential Range) and Vicinity (blue print), by Robert E. Blakeslee, for the Appalachian Mountain Club Guide to the Paths and Camps in the White Mts. Part I. Boston, 1907. The Region about Intervale (North Conway), in Intervale, New Hampshire, Its Position and Scenery, by the Intervale Improve- ment Society, 1909. Map of the Great Gulf, White Mountains, New Hampshire, by Louis F. Cutter. Appalachian Mountain Club, 1910. Scale 1 : 200,000. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 89 EARLY ENGRAVINGS The Gap of the White Mountains and View of the White Mountains from Shelburne. Philip Carrigain's Map of New Hamp- shire. Concord, 1816. View of the White Mountains from Shelburne, drawn by J. Kidder, engraved by Abel Bowen; Notch of the Mountains, a wood cut; Comparative View of the Heights of Mountains in New Hampshire. A Gazetteer of the State of N. H., by John Farmer and Jacob B. Moore. IGmo. Concord, N. H., 1823. Notch House, engraved by O. H. Throop, in The Northern Travel- ler. 24mo. Second Edition. New York, 1826. The Willey House. The Profile, by N. and S. S. Jocelyn. Octavo. American Journal of Science and Arts, 14 : 64, New Haven, July, 1828. View of the White Mountains after the Late Slide, by V. Balch, after a painting by H. C. Pratt. 16mo. The Token. Boston, 1828. This is presumably an engraving of the painting that inspired W. G. Crosby's WiUey House poem in 1827 (g. v.). Appears also in The Garland for 1830 and subse- quent years. Avalanches in the White Mountains, Notch in the White Mountains, and Winnipiseogee Lake from Red Mountain. Sketches of Scenery and Mainners in the United States, by the author of the Northern Traveller. New York, 1829. View of the Notch, small wood cut. A Catechism of the History of New Hampshire, by John Farmer. Concord, 1829. 90 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS Chocorua's Ctjese, by George W. Hatch, from a painting by Thomas Cole. 16mo. The Token, Boston, 1830. In The Ladies Cabinet Album, New York, 1832 and subsequent years. White Mountains, A View near Conway, View from Mount Washington, three quarto engravings, by Fenner, Sears & Co., from paintings by Thomas Cole. The History and Topography of the United States of America, by John H. Hinton. 2 vols. London, 1831. There were later American editions of this work. Notch of the White Hills from the North, and One of the White Hills stripped of Forest and Soil by the Storm of 1826. Things as They Are: or Notes of a Traveller through Some of the Mid- dle and Northern States. New York, 1834. View near Conway, and View op the White Mountains. Ameri- can Magazine, Vol. 1. Boston, February, 1835. Mount Washington. American Magazine, Vol. 1, March, 1835. The Silver Cascade, by George B.Ellis, from a drawing by Thomas Doughty. 16mo. The Token. Boston, 1835. The Notch, small wood cut. Peter Parley's Book of the United States, Geographical, Political and Historical. Boston, 1837. The Willey House, View prom Mount Washington, Mount Washington (from near Crawford House), The Notch House, Mount Jefferson from Mount Washington, The Silver Cascade in the Notch, Pulpit Rock, seven quarto engravings, by W.H. Bart- lett. American Scenery, 2 vols. London, 1838-39. The Willey House. Farmer's Monthly Visitor, Vol. 1, p. 119. Concord, N. H., Aug. 20, 1839. White Mountains, two small wood cuts on one page. A Book of the United States, edited by Grenville Mellen. New York, 1839. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 91 View of Mount Washington, Neak View of the White Moun- tains, Entrance to White Mountains, three small wood cuts. A Pictorial Geography of the World, by S. G. Goodrich. Vol. 1. Boston, 1840. White Mountain Notch, Flume in Fhanconia, Slide at the WiLLEY House, Profile Mountain, four quarto lithographs, from drawings by J. D. Whitney. Final Report on the Geology and Mine- ralogy of the State of New Hampshire, by Charles T. Jackson, M. D. Concord, 1844. Views of the Profile Mountain and The Old Man of the Mountain, with description by William Oakes. Boston, 1847. These two folio lithographs also appeared in the volume that follows. Scenery op the White Mountains, by William Oakes, with 16 plates from drawings by Isaac Sprague and Godfrey N. Franken- stein. Boston, 1848. The plates, folio lithographs, are: The White Mts, from the Giant's Grave, Mt. Craw- ford with the Mt, Crawford House, The Notch with the Willey House, The Lower Cas- cade at the Notch, The Gate of the Notch, The Falls of the Amonoosuck, The Granite Cliffs of the Falls, the Pranconia Notch with the Lafayette House, Profile Mt., The Pro- file Rock, The Basin, The Flume, Nancy's Bridge, Mt. Crawford from the Notch and The Notch from Mt. Crawford (these two, on one page, by Frankenstein), The White Mts. from Bethlehem and Mt. Washington from Mt. Pleasant (two on one page), Mt. Wash- ington over Tuckerman's Ravine (by Frankenstein). Fhanconia Notch, small wood cut. Adventures of an Angler in Canada, Nova Scotia and the United States, by Charles Lanman. London, 1848, The Notch op the White Mountains (showing house). 12mo woodcut. AGazetteerof New Hampshire, by John Hay ward. Boston, 1849. The White Mountains from Pumpkin Hill, small wood cut. New York and the White Mountains, a guide book, by WiUiam Guild. Boston, 1852. 92 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS Franconia Notch, Profile Mountain, The Old Man of the Mountain, Eagle Cliff, Eastern Front of Profile Mountain, The Basin, The Flume, View on the Pemigewasset, eight wood cuts. Harper's Monthly, 5 : 4-11, June, 1852. Old Man of the Mountain, octavo Hthograph. Farmer's Month- ly Visitor. Vol. 12. Manchester, N. H., December, 1852. Mounts Moriah, Adams and Jefferson from Gilead, Wild River Bridge, Mounts Washington, Jefferson and Adams from Gilead, The Imp and Carter from the Station House, Mounts Madison, Adams and Jefferson from Randolph Hill, Berlin Falls, The White Mountains from Berlin Falls, Mount Moriah from Lary's, Mounts Jefferson and Adams from Thompson's Mill, Glen House, Mount Washington from Peabody Valley, Crystal Cascade, Glen Ellis Fall, The Imp, The Willey House, The White Mountain Notch, 16 wood cuts, from original sketches by C. E. Beckett. 12mo. Guide Book of the Atlantic and St. Lawrence and St. Lawrence and Atlantic Railroads. Portland, 1852. Mount Washington from North Conway, Echo Lake in Fran- conia Notch, Mounts Jefferson and Adams from the Glen House, Crystal Falls and Glen Ellis Falls, five lithographs, from sketches by Ben Champney. George P. Bond's Map of the White Mountains. 1853. Franconia Notch and the Notch House. Wood cuts. A Pic- torial Description of the United States, by Robert Sears. New York, 1854. Top of Mount Washington. 16mo wood cut. Historical Relics of the Wfhite Mountains, by John H. Spaulding. Boston, 1855. Mount Washington from North Conway. Wood cut. New Hampshire as It Is, by Edwin A. Charlton. Claremont (N. H.), 1855. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 93 The five lithographs on Bond's map (see above), together with a wood cut of the Notch (Willey SHde). Incidents in White Mountain History, by Benjamin G. Willey. Boston, 1856. Carriage Road Mount Washington, Summit House, Mounts Washington, Jefferson and Adams, Crystal Falls, Berlin Falls, White Mountains from Randolph Hill, Alpine House Gorham, seven wood cuts. Ballou's Pictorial, 11 : 88-89, August 9, 1856. The Old Man of the Mountain and Mount Washington from North Conway. 12mo wood cuts. Gathered Sketches from the Early History of New Hampshire and Vermont, by Francis Chase. Clare- mont (N. H.), 1856. View from the Station at Conway, Berlin Falls, Mount Wash- INGON, Summit House. Wood cuts. Putnam's Monthly, Vol. 10, July, 1857. Notch of the White Mountains (showing Willey House), Old Man of the Mountain, Tip Top and Summit Houses, Glen House, Crawford House, Profile House, Flume House, and other hotels. Boardman's Map of the White Mountains. Boston, 1858. Imp and Carter from Gorham, The Imp, Berlin Falls, Glen Ellis Cataract, Crystal Cascade, same wood-cuts that appeared in Guide Book of Atlantic and St. Lawrence and St. Lawrence and At- lantic Railroads, together with wood cuts of Old Man of the Moun- tain and The Flume. Eastman's White Mountain Guide Book. 1858. Conway and the White Mountains (full-page octavo). Old Man of the Mountain (small). The Flume, Notch of the White Moun- tains soon after the Slide, Silver Cascade, Crystal Falls, Glen Ellis, Top of Mount Washington. A History and Description of New England, by Coolidge and Mdnsfield. Vol. 1. Boston, 1859. 94 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS NEWSPAPERS The Gbafton Journal. Plymouth, 1825-1826. The White Moitntain ^gis. Lancaster, 1838-1839. The Coos County Democrat. Lancaster, 1838-1859. Charles F. Browne — "Artemus Ward" — began his career as an apprentice on this paper. The White Mountain Bugle. Plymouth, 1844-1845. The editor had previously published The White Mountain Torrent in Concord. The Ammonoosuc Reporter. Littleton, 1852-1855. The Coos Republican. Lancaster, 1854-1884. Name changed to Lancaster Republican in 1881. The White Mountain Banner. Littleton, 1855-1859. A continuation of the Ammonoosuc Reporter. The People's Journal. Littleton, 1855-1864. The Cobs Herald. Lancaster. Winter of 1856. An amateur paper. The Littleton Gazette. 1865-1867. Name changed to White Mt. Republic, which see. The Lisbon Reporter. 1866-1869. The White Mountain Republic. Littleton, 1867-present. ConsoUdated with the Littleton Journal and still published (1910) as The White Moun- tain RepubUc-Joumal. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 95 The Independent Gazette. Lancaster, 1872-preseiit. Name changed to Lancaster Gazette, January I, 1879. The Geafton ComsrTT Journal. Plymouth, 1874-1886. The Littleton Argus. 1875-1878. Called the Ammonoosuc Argus, 1877-1878. The Whiteeield Blade. 1876. Pubhshed for a few months only. The Lisbon Globe. 1876-1878. The Mountaineer. Gorham, April, 1877-preseiit. Among the Clouds. Summit of Mt. Washington, July, 1878- September, 1907. Two editions daily during the summer season. A special magazine number July, 1908, giving an account of the fire that destroyed its home. Pubhcation resumed at the foot of the mountain July, 1910. Published by Hem:y M. Burt until his death in 1899, after which date it was continued by his son Frank H. Burt. The only newspaper ever pub- lished regularly on a mountain top. The White Mountain Echo and Tourists' Register. Bethle- hem, 1878-present. Published in summer only. The Grafton County Democrat. Plymouth, 1878-1886. The White Mountain Record. North Conway, November, 1879- January, 1881. The Idler. North Conway, June 22-September 7, 1880. The Coos Advertiser. Whitefield, 1880. An amateur paper printed for about a year. 96 A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS The Republican Star. Plymouth, 1880-1886. The Littleton Journal. 1881-preseiit. Consolidated with the White Mountain Republic and since known as the White Moun- tain Repubhc-Joumal. The Messenger. Gorham, 1881. An amateur paper published for a short time only. The Lisbon Index. 1882-1885. Printed in Bradford, Vt. The White Mountain News. North Conway, 1882(?)-1884(?). The Exchange. Plymouth, 1883-1886. The Sandwich Reporter. 1883-preseDt. For several years it has been controlled and printed by The White Mountain Reporter, North Conway. Coos County Democrat. Lancaster, 1884-present. The Northern Herald. Lisbon, 1885(?)- (?). The Plymouth Record. 1887-present. The Berlin Independent. 1888-1908. The White Mountain News. Whitefield, 1889-1896. The Littleton Courier. 1889-present. The Tourist. Lancaster, 1891. Summers only. The Warren Summit News. 1892-present. Moved to Warren in 1900 and named changed to The Warren News. A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE WHITE MOUNTAINS 97 The White Mountain Reporter. North Conway, 1893-present. Name changed to The Reporter, June 1, 1909. The White Mountain Times. Whitefield, 1896-present. Name changed to The Whitefield Times, 1904. Since 1907 pubhshed by The Lancaster Gazette. The White Mountain Clarion. Sugar Hill and Franconia, 1896- 1897. Pubhshed at Lebanon, summers only. White Mountain Life. Littleton, 1897-1899. Summers only. The Berlin Reporter. Octob.er, 1897-present. Lisbon News-Letter. 1901(?)-1902(?). The Waumbek Penny Daily. Jefferson, 1901 and 1902. Summers only. The Bugle. Bretton Woods, 1902-1908. Summers only. The Waumbek Magazine (weekly). Jefferson, 1903 and 1904. The Lisbon Courier. 1903(?)-present. Pubhshed by the Littleton Courier. The Jefferson Times. 1907-present. Published by The Lancaster Gazette. The Bartlett Times. 1907-present. Pubhshed by The Lancaster Gazette. The Bartlett Times, Jefferson Times, and White- field Times all have the same reading matter. INDEX A, Louise E., 13. Abbott, Jacob, 68. Adams, John C, 40. Adams, Mt., 12, 33, 34, 36, 39, 87; in win- ter, 37, 40, 41 ; engravings, 92, 93. Adams, R. M. D., 42. Adams Ravine. See King's Ravine. Adventures of a Deaf-Mute, 56. Apton, Effib, 68. Agassiz, Louis, 54. Agassiz, Mount (poem), 76. Albee, Helen R., 64. Albee, John, 61, 82. Alden, Timothy, 45. All Aboard for the Lakes and Mts., 69. Allen, Febderick J., 80, 82. Allen, Glover M., 64. Allen, Grant, 20, 21. Allen, J. A., 21. Allen, Townsend, 82. Alone on Chocorua at Night, 23. Alone on Osceola, 25. Alpine Lisects, 24, 41. See also Insects. Alpine Plants, 14, 18, 53. See also Botany. Altitudes, 11, 17, 38, 45, 59, 89. Ambitious Guest, The, 67. American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 2, 45, 59. American Ass'n for Advancement of Sci- ence, 54, 55, 56. American Atlas, 84. American Forestry (magazine), 31. American Gazetteer, 44, 83. American Geologist, 49. American Journal of Science and Arts, 1,12, 13, 14, 16, 17, 85, 89. American Monthly Magazine, 11, 13, 18, 90. American Museum, 11. American Naturalist, 18. American Philosophical Society, 11, 43. American Scene, The, 65. American Scenery, 48, 90. American Universal Geography, 84. Ames, Charles G., 75. Ammonoosuc Argus, 95. Ammonoosuc Lake, 36. Ammonoosuc Mining District, 86. Ammonoosuc Reporter, 94. Among the Clouds, 65, 95. Among the Hills (poem), 75, 79. Among the Northern Hills, 62. Anderson, Mt., 38. Anderson, Thomas F., 30. Andrew, John, 2. Andros, R. S. S., 73. Annual Life (Fauna), 18, 62. Annuals. See Boston Book, Coronal, Gar- land, Ladies' Cabinet Album, Token. Ants on Mt. Washington, 28. Apostrophe to the Old Man of the Moun- tain (poem), 81. Appalachia, 32^2, 86, 87. Appalachian Mt. Club, 9, 10, 32, 41, 57, 87, 88. Appalachian Mt. System, 16, 29, 30, 85. Appalachian White Mt. Bill, 29. Appletons' Annual Encyclopaedia, 59. Appletons' hand-book, 5, 7. Armes, Ethel, 66. Around the World (magazine), 24. Artists, vi, 19, 51, 58, 64, 89-92. 100 INDEX Artist's Falls, To (poem), 78, 82. Asleep on the Summit (poem), 76. At Sugar Hill (poem), 81. At the North of Beareamp Water, 3, 24. At Wiunepesaukee (poem), 75. Atlantic and St. Lawrence R. R., 5. Atlantic Monthly, 19, 20, 23, 24, 27, 75. Auk (magazine), 21. Aunt Randy, 69. Austin, E. P., 56. Automobiles in the mountains, 28, 65. Autumn at Lonesome Lake (poem), 79. Autumn Colors, 3, 52, 65. See also Theo- dore Dwight's Travels and Starr King's White Hills. Avalanche of the White Mts., The (poem), 73. Avalanches. See Shdes and Willey Slide. Atehs, Philip W., 30, 31, 66. B, Sketches of the White Mts. by, 12. B. K.L., 4. Baedeker's United States, 9. Ballet, Wm. Whitman, 20, 22, 36. Balch, v., 89. Baldcap Mt., 34. Bald-cap Revisited (poem), 75. Baldface, Mt., 25, 34, 36. Baldwin, Theron, 12. Ball, Benj., L., 2. Ballotj, Hosea 2d, 2, 14, 63. BaUou's Pictorial Magazine, 2, 15. Banks, Nathan, 25. Bark Cabin on Kearsarge, 69. Barnahd, Edward W., 79. Barometric Observations, 34, 37. Baerows, John S., 29. Babstow, George, 49. Barstow, Miss S. M., 36. Bartlett, 20. Bartlett Times, 97. Bartlett, W. H., 48, 90. Barton, B. S., 11. Basin, The, 91, 92. Batchelder, Frank R., 80. Batchellob, Albert S., 62. Bates, Charlotte Fiske, 76. Bates, F. A., 22. Bay State Monthly, 20. Beaman, W. M., 39. Bear Mt., 35. Beareamp Water, 3, 75, 76. Bebb, Michael S., 21. Beckett, C. E., 5, 92. Beckett, S. B., 5. Beecher, Henry Ward, 52, 63. Belknap, Jeremy, 11, 43, 44, 50, 57, 61, 83. Belknap Papers, 57, 61. Bennett, Adelaide G., 80. Benton, History of, 65. Benton Range, 34, 39. Berhn, 22, 25, 71. Berhn Falls, 92, 93. BerUn Independent, 96. Berlin Reporter, 97. Bethlehem, 20, 21, 24, 58, 65, 84, 87, 91. Bibliographies, vii, 62. BlEBSTADT BbOS., 6. Bigelow, Jacob, 11, 46, 57. BiGBLOw, Melville M., 77. Birds, 3, 4, 18, 20-23, 26, 55, 59, 62, 64, 76, 79. See also Bradford Torrey, Frank Bolles, Paul R. Jenks. Bu'ds m the Bush, 20, 59. Birth of the White Mts., The (poem), 80. Black Book, 46. Black Mt., 33, 34, 40, 84. Black Snout, 40. Blaekie, W. G., 19. Blake, Fbancis, 39, 40. Blakeslee, Robert E., 87, 88. Blanchard and Langdon's Map, 83. Blue, Mt., 37, 84. Blue Ridge, 37. Boa Constrictor of the White Mts., 63. BoABDMAN, Habvet, 5, 85, 93. INDEX BoLLEs, Frank, 3, 23, 24, 61, 62, 79. BoLLEs, L. D., 80. BoLLEs, Rev. Simeon, 20, 58. Bond, George P., 63, 84, 85, 92. Book for N. H. Children, 45. Book of the United States, 48, 90. BooTT, Francis, H. Boott's Spur, 11, 35. Boston and Lowell R. R., 8. Boston and Maine Messenger, 29. Boston and Maine R. R., 6, 8, 9. Boston Book, The, 48. Boston, Concord and Montreal R. R., 5. Boston Journal of Natural History, 14, 16. Boston Society of Natural History Pro- ceedings, 53, 55, 56, 61, 62. Boston Sunday Herald, 3. Boston Transcript, vi, 73. Botanical Gazette, 20. Botany, 2, 3, 4, 9, 11, 13, 14, 18, 20, 33, 36, 46, 50, 53, 56, 61, 78. Boulder, Glen (S. E. of Boott's Spur), 35. BouTON, Nathaniel, 55, 56. BowDiTCH, Nathaniel, 45. BowEN, Abel, 89. BoTLSTON, Edward D., 77. Bradlee's Guide book, 6. Bremer, I^edrika, 51. Bretton Woods, 10, 88, 97. Bridal of Pennacook (poem), 74. Bridal of the Early Settlements, 67. Bride of Burton, The (poem), 75. Brown, H. Collins, 65. Browne, Charles F. (Artemus Ward), 94. Browne, Geo. Waldo, 70, 80. Bryant, Walter, 55. Bryant, W. C, 55. Bryologist, 30. BtrcKiNGEAM, Jambs S., 49. Buckingham, Joseph T., 48. BuEL, J. W., 62. Bugle, The, 97. 101 Bulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club, 21, 22. Burroughs, Charles, 77. Burt, Frank H., 7, 10, 95. Burt, Henry M., 6, 28, 95. Butler, Aleord A., 37, 38. Butterflies, 17, 18, 27, 35, 39, 58, 60. Butts, Mary F., 22. C, Legend of the White Mts. by, 12. Camps (Camping), 10, 41, 42. Campton, 21, 34, 54, 84. Canadian Entomologist, 25. Canadian Monthly, 19. Camion Mt., 84. Carbuncle, The Great, 58, 67. Carey's Atlas, 83. Caribou, Mt., 36. Carpenter, Frank O., 9, 39, 41. Carpenter, Sidney C, 27. Carr, Mt., 39, 84. Carrigain, Mt., 34, 42, 54, 65, 84. Carrigain, Philip, 49, 84, 86, 89. Carroll County, 60, 85. Carter Dome, 32, 35. Carter Mt., 46, 84, 92. Carter Notch, 15. Carter Range, 37, 38, 41. Carter, Susan N., 55. Carver, John, 49. Cascade, The (poem), 78. Cascades, 19, 78, 90-93. Cate, E. Jane, 51. Cathedral Woods, The (poem), 80, 82. Caverly, Robert B., 69, 75. Cavis, Charles H. V., 85. Census of 1790, 66. Chadwick, John W., 75. Chamberlain, Allen, 41. Champnby, Benjamin, 64, 84, 92. Channing, William Ellert, 55. Chapin, Bela, 77. Charlton, Edwin A., 52, 92. 102 INDEX Chase, Chables G., 70. Chase, Francis, 73, 93. Cheney, G. A., 28, 70. Cherry Mt., 83. Chickering, John W., 18. Child, Lydia Maria, 46. Chinobas Semidea, 27. Chisholm's Guide-book, 6, 7. Chittenden, Alfred K., 65. Chocorua, Legend of, 46, SB, 69, 72, 73. Chocorua, Mt., 3, 10, 23, 24, 25, 27, 30, 31, 38, 40, 46, 51, 58, 61, 62, 64, 65, 69, 83, 84. Chocorua on a July Night (poem), 82. Chocorua Poems, 72, 73, 75, 77, 79, 80, 81, 82. Chocorua 's Call (poem), 80. Chocorua's Curse, 46, 58, 73, 75, 90. Chocorua's Tenants, 79. Christian Examiner, 15, 16. Christian Register, 65. Christian Spectator, 12. Christus Judex, 70. Chubbuck, Isaac Y., 40. Cinquefoils, 21. Clabk, Adelbert, 26. Clark, Eleanor J., 26. Clarke, P. W., 33, 34. Classic or College Monthly, 13. Cloud Bound, 19. Clouds on Whiteface (poem), 75. Clough, a. F., 3. Coffin, Charles Cableton, 20. Coke, E. T., 47. Colby, Fred M., 19, 20. Cole, Thomas, 51, 90. Cole, William Morse, 25. Coleoptera, 19, 56. See also Insects. Collections Historical and Miscellaneous, 12. CONANT, M., 84. Concord and Montreal R. R., 8. Condon, John W., 81. Connecticut Valley Guide, 6. Conrad, Justus, 25. Conservation (magazine), 30, 31. Continental Monthly, 16. Conway, 13, 25, 90, 93. See also North Con- way. Cook, Edith W., 37. Cook, Eugene B., 36, 37, 38, 39. Cook, Joel, 64. CooLiDGE, A. J., 52, 93. Cooper, J. M., 26. Coos Advertiser, 95. Coos County, 1, 19, 22, 48, 56, 60; birds, 55; map, 85. Coos County Democrat, 94, 96. Coos Herald, 94. Coos Republican, 94. Corning, Charles R., 19. Coronal, The, 46. Coventry, History of, 65. Cox, Mrs. William N., 68. Crawford Bridle Path, 59. Crawford, Ethan Allen, 1. Crawford House, 85, 93. Crawford, Lucy, 1. Crawford, Mt., 33, 84, 91. Crawford Notch. See Notch, White Mt. Crawfords of the White Mts., The (poem), 78. Crescent Mt., 37. Crosby, Wm. Geo., 72, 89. Crosby, W. O., 40. Cross, Charles R., 34. Crotch Mt., 83, 84. Cryptogamic Flora, 36, 61. Crystal Cascade, 92, 93. Crystal Hills, The (poem), 82. Currier, Moody, 81. Curtis, William B., 41. CuRTiss, Percy, 68. Cushman, Mt., 37, 84. Cutler, Manasseh, 60, 61. Cutter, Charles, 35. INDEX CtTTXEB, Louis F., 87, 88. Cycling, 25. 103 D'Alcho, Auce, 80. Darby, Wiluam, 47. Dartmouth, Mt., 36. Davis, Frastkmn Wake, 25. Davis, William Mokris, 20. Dawes, Rufus, 72. Dawson, John Wm.. S3. Day's Walk, Record of a, 37, 42. Deacon Pheby's Selfish Natur, 69. Deaf-mute in the Mts., 56. Deani!, Charles, 83. Deception, Mt., 36. Deed of Mt. Chocorua (poem), 79. Democratic Review, 73, 74. Dennison, J., 84. Destruction of the Willey Family (poem), 73. Diana's Baths (poem), 79, 82. Distant Points visible from Mt. Washing- ton, 32, 34, 42. Dodge, Levi W., 19, 23. Dodge, Nathaniel S., 49. Dodge, Richard E., 41. DoRB, Elizabeth E., 81. Doublehead, 83, 84. Doughty, Thomas, 90. Douglass, William, 43. Down-East Latch Strings, 8, 86. DowNES, WnjJAM Howe, 23. Drake, Samuel Adams, 3, 19, 58, 59. Drake, Samuel G., 47. Dream of My Youth, The, 70. Driving, 28, 65. DwiGHT, Theodore, 4, 46, 47, 60. Dwight, Timothy, 45. Dwight's Journal of Music, 16. Dyer, Elizabeth B., 80. Eagle CliS, 92. East Branch of the Pemigewosset, 31, 82, 36. East Mt., 83. East of the White HiUs, 9. Easter in the White Hills (poem), 80. Eastern R. R., 6. Eastman, M. E., 9. Eastman, Mount, 34, 84. Eastman, Samuel C, 5, 93. Eastman's Guide Book, 5, 85, 93. Eaton, John S., 6. Echo Lake, 78, 82, 92. Eddy, Mary Baker, 74. Edmands, J. Ratneb, 33-36, 38, 42. Ellis, George B., 90. Elmwood: or Helen and Emma, 68. Elwell, Edward H., 69, 78. Emerson, George B., 57. Emerson, Philip, 41. Emery, George E., 76. Emery, Samuel, 21. Enchanted Woods, The (poem), 82. Encyclopaedias, 47, 53, 59. English, J. S., 29. Engravings, 89-94. Entomological News, 22, 24, 27. Evans Notch, 36. Eventide, 68. Exchange, The, 96. Ex-Editor, 53. Exploration (see also History), 2, 31, 56. Faden, William, 83. Falls House, 85. Falls of the Ammonoosuck, 91. Faelow, Wm. G., 36, 61. Farmer, John, 46, 89. Farmer's Monthly Visitor, 13, 15, 90, 92. Fabeab, Charles A. J., 70. Fatahties on Mt. Washington, 41, 78. Fate of Harry W. Hunter (poem), 78. Fauna, 18. See also Animal Life. Faxon, Walteb, 21. Faxon's Handbook, 6. 104 INDEX Fat, Chables E., 9, 32, 33, 34, 36, 37, 38, 40, 41, 42. Penollosa, W. S., 35. JkBQUssoN, S. p., 42. Field and Forest, 18. Fnaj), Dakbt, 42, 44, 69. Field, Mabtin, 12. Field's Hand-book, 6. Fields, James T., 74, 76. FniELD, H. S., 85. Fires, 29. Fisherman's Luck, 63. Fishin' Jimmy, 69. Fishing in the mountains, 50, 55, 59, 62, 69, 78. Fletcher, Josiah M., 77. Flint, William F., 56. Flora, 27. See also Botany. Florula Bostoniensis, 46. Florula of the White Mts., 11. See also Botany. Flowers. See Botany. Flume, 14, 85, 91, 92, 93. Flume House, 85, 93. Flume Mt., 38. Flume Ride, The (poem), 78, 79. Fogg, Alonzo J., 56. Footing it in Pranconia, 4. Foot-Path Way, The, 61. Forestry and Irrigation (magazine), 29, 82. Forestiy Commission of N. H., 59, 62, 63, 87. Forests, 18, 21-24, 29-31, 42, 59, 61, 62, 63, 65, 66, 81, 88. Forests of the White Hills, The (poem), 81. FosTEE, John, 83. Foster, Lillian, 52. Fox, Charles J., 49, 73. Fox, GusTAVUs v., 57. Fox, T. B., 16. Pranconia, 4, 21, 22, 25, 27, 36, 60, 61, 68. See also Mrs. A. T. Slosson. Pranconia from the Pemigewaaset (poem), 74. Franconia Iron Mine, 19. Pranconia Notch and Moimtains, vi, 4, 6, 8, 9, 16, 20, 21, 22, 25, 26, 27, 30, 36, 45, 46, 47, 60, 51, 62, BS, 60, 61. 62, 63, 68; engravings, 91, 92. Pranconia Poems, 73, 74, 79. Pranconia Stories, 68. Pranconia's Profile (poem), 79. Frankenstein Cliff (poem), 78. Frankenstein, Godfret N., 1, 91. From Mount Surprise (poem), 82. From the Piazza (poem), 81. Prothingham, Richard, 2, 63. Gage, William C, 7. Gannett, Henkt, 69. Ganong, W. p., 9. Gap of the White Mts., 84, 89. See also Notch. Garden and Forest, 21, 22, 23. Garden, Our Mountain, 65. Gabdineh, p., 19. Garfield, Mt., 36, 38. Garland, The, 67, 72, 89. Gathered Sketches of N. H. and Vt., 73, 93. Gazetteers, 44-48, 51, 52, 66, 69, 89. Gems of American Scenery, 7. Gems for You from N. H. Authors, 51, 73, 74. Geographies, 44, 48. Geological Survey of the U. S., 69, 63, 87. Geology, 9, 13, 14, 32, 49, 60, 64, SB, 56, 86. Georgianna Falls, 37. Giant's Stairs, 33, 36, 40, 84. Gibson, J., 83. Gibson, T. C, 26. Gibson, W. Hamilton, 3. GlFFORD, Santord R., 68. Gift, The, 72. GiLE, Geobge W., 7. Glacial markings, 16, 33, 40, 64, 56. See also Geology. Glen Ellis, 35, 78, 92, 93. INDEX Glen House, 8, 15, 92, 93. GuDDEN, Chables H., 24. Gloveb, Makt M., 74. Good Words, 19. GooDALL, Prances H., 31. Goodrich, Akthtoei L., 9, 38, 40, 87. Goodrich, A. T., 4. Goodrich, S. G., 48, 91. Gorham, 25, 87. Goss, Herbert I., 71. Government (magazine), 29. Gb., a., 14. Grafton County, 59, 85. Grafton County Democrat, 95. Grafton Coimty Journal, 94, 95. Grand Trunk Ry., 8. Granite Monthly, 3, 5, 18-29, 31, 50, 70, 76, 77, 79-82. Granite State Magazine, 29, 30, 80-82. Grant, Gen. U. S., 28. Grant, S. H., 42. Graves, George H., 64. Gray, Asa, 2, 59. Great Carbunde, The, 59, 67. Great Gulf, 35, 42, 88. Great Haystack Mt., 84. Great Stone Face, The, 68, 78, 79. See also Profile. Green Bag, The (magazine), 79. Green, Samdel A., 83. GREENIiEAE, C. H., 29. Gritpith, George B., 78, 79, 81. Grote, Augustus R., 18, 58. Ghovbb, Edwin O., 79. Guide Books, 4-10. Guild, William, 5, 91. GuTOT, Arnold, 16, 42, 85. 105 H., Poem by, 73. Hale, Edward Everett, 2, 22, 65. Hale, Sarah J., 67. Hale, Mt., 36. Hall, Alice C, 81. Hammond, Isaac W., 58, 60. Hancock, Mt., 33, 34. Hanson, H. H., 79. Harper's Magazine, 3, 15-19, 69, 71, 92. Harrison, Jonathan B., 21-24. Hart, George Thomas, vii. Hart, Warren W., 42. Hatch, George W., 90. Hawthorne, Nathaniel, 67. Hayes, Mt., 84. Haystack Mt., 84. Hatward, John, 48, 51, 91. Heart of the White Mts. (Drake), 3. Heights of the mountains, 11, 17, 38, 45, 59, 89. Henck, J. B., Jr., 32, 33, 86. Henderson, Henet, 76. Hepaticss, 30. Heresy of Mehetabel Clark, 69. Hermit of the Saco, The (poem), 80. Hero of the HiUs, The, 70. HiBBAED, Harry, 73. HiGGINSON, T. W., 15, 19. Hill, David H., 77, 78. Hill, Isaac, 13, 49. Hill, Mabel, 3. Hill, Thomas H., 15. Hill-top, The (poem), 74. Hills are Home, The (poem), 80. Hinton, John H., 46, 90. Historical Relics of the White Mts. (Spauld- mg), 1. History of New Hampshire, 44, 46, 47, 49, 56, 60, 65. History of the White Mts., 1, 2. See also Coos, Carroll, and Grafton Counties. Hitchcock, Charles H., 3, 9, 32, 33, 54, 55, 56, 57, 86. Holden, Luther L., 8. Holdemess, 19, 21, 26, 51. Holland, Samuel (map), 83, 86. Hooper, W. L., 36. Hoover, T. L., 82. 106 INDEX Hovey's Magazine of Horticulture, 18, U. Howe, Frances S., 65. Howe, Jerome W., 82. Hubbard, Elbert, 2. Htjbbabd, Oliver P., 13, 14. HuBBAM), William, 45, 83. Humming Birds of Chocorua, 62. Humphrey's Ledge, 38, 78. Hunter, Harbt W., 78. Huntington, J. H., 3, 19, 32, 33, 56. Huntington, Mt., 37. Huntington's Ravine, 35, 36, 39. Hurd, D. H. and Co. (Atlas), 86. I Go A-Fishing, 55. Ice Gulch, 37. Ideals (poem), 80. Idler, The, 95. Idyl of Work, An, 75. Imp, 36, 84, 92, 93. In a Cloud Ritt (poem), 76. In a Wintry WUdemess, 23. In Crystal Hills (poem), 82. In the New Hampshire Hills (poem), 82. Incidents in White Mt. History, 2. Independent, The, 62. Independent Gazette, The, 95. Indian Legends, 3, 47, 70. Indian Names of White Mts., 46. Ingalls, Mt., 35. Ingersoll, Ernest, 8. Insects, 16, 17, 18, 24, 28, 53, 64, 66. Intervale, 8, 10, 80, 82, 88. Jackson, 39, 49, 65, 78, 85, 87. Jackson, Charles T., 49, 50, 91. Jackson Falls (poem), 77. Jackson, Mt., 33. James, George B., 24. James, Henbt, 65. Jeckoyva (poem), 72. Jefferson, 23, 26, 36. Jefferson, Mt., 12, 87; engravings, 90, 92, 93. Jefferson Notch, 28. Jefferson Slide, 38. Jefferson Times, 97. Jefpeeys, Thomas, 83. Jenks, Edward A., 81. Jenks, Paul R., 27. Joceltn, N. and S. S., 89. Johnson, Clifton, 27. Johnson, John E., 63. JoBSELTN, John, 43. June in the mountains, 69, 61. Kearsarge, Mt., 3, 29, 33, 67, 83, 84; poems, 78, 80, 82. Keep the Forests (poem), 80. Kendall, Edwabd A., 46. Keyes' Hand-book, 6. Kidder, Frederic, 15, 53. Kidder, J., 89. Kimball, Howard A., 3. King, E. P., 22. King, Thomas Starr, vi, 2, 16, 16, 63, 57, 63, 74. King's Ravine, 33, 35, 62. Kingdon's Dictionary, 9. Kinsman, Mt., 34, 36, 84. Kneeland, Frederick N., 9. Knickerbocker Magazine, 13, 67. Knox, M. V. B., 38. KOEHLEH, C. A., 69. Ktaadn (Katahdin), Mt., 27. L. H. S., 72. Laconia or Legends of the White Mts., 68. Ladies' Cabinet Album, 46, 90. Ladies' Magazine, 12, 72. Ladies' Repository, 13. Lafayette, Mt., vi, 12, 20, 36, 68, 60, 64; poems, 77, 84. Lake of the Clouds, 12, 76. Lakeside, The (poem), 74. INDEX 107 Lancaster newspapers, 94-97. Land of the Lingering Snow, 61. Landaff Mt., 84. Langdon, Mt., 36. Lanman, Chables, 50, 91. Lanza, Gaetano, 33, 34, 38. Labcom, LrcT, 75, 76, 78. Larkabee, WniiAM C, 13. Latrobe, Cbables J., 47. Lawrence, R. B., 36, 40. Leavitt, Franklin, «4. Le Conte, J. L., 56. Legend of the White Hills, A (poem), 76. Legends of the White Mts., 12, 17, 24, 29. 58, 67, 68, 70. 75. Lepidoptera, 18. See also Butterflies. Lewis, Saitoel, 83. LiBBT, Norman H., 28. Liberty, Mt., 33. Lichens, 14. See also Botany. LiEBEB, Francsb, 47. LlEDEAN, BeTHBA, 1, 78. LmcotN, Enoch, 72. Lincoln, Mount, 35. Lines Written Among the White Mts., 72. Lipprncott's Magazine, 68. Lisbon, 21. Lisbon Newspapers, 94-97. Literatiu^ of the White Mts., 23. Littell's Living Age, 19. LiTTliB, WniiAM, 21, 54. Littleton, 44. Littleton newspapers, 94-97. Local Colorist, A, 71. Lock, Arthur, 81. London Society, 17. Lonesome Lake, 62, 78. See also Julius H. Ward's book. Longest walk in a day, 42. Longfellow, H. W., 72, 76. Longfellow, Samuel, 78. Longmans' Magazine, 20. Looking Down (poem), 78. Loomis, L. C, 16. Loon Pond Mt., 35. LoBENZ, Annie, 30. Lost River, 41. LovEWELL, Capt. John, IS, S3, 61. Lowe's Path, 34. See also Mt. Adams. Lowell, Abner, 86. Lowell, Mt., 38. Lumbering, 29, 63. See also Forests. Ltbll, Charles, 50. Lyons, James G., 74. M., 73. McClintock, John N., 19, 60. McLeod, William, 15. Mad River (poem), 76. Madison Boxilder, 40. Madison, Mt., 12, 36, 40, 87, 92. Madison Spring Hut, 40, 64. Magazine Articles, 11-42. Magazine of Horticulture, 13, 14. Maine Central R. R., 6, 8, 10. Maine Historical Society, 69. Major, Mt., 83. Man in the Moon, The (poem), 74. Manchester Institute of Arts and Sciences, Proceedings, 64. Mann, B. Pickman, 18. Mann, George C, 39. Mansiteld, J. B., 52. Maps, 24, 32, 36, 83-88. March of Capt. Samuel Willard, 35. Marchenstrauss aus dem Weissen Gebirge, 69. Marsh, Sylvester, 20. Mabtineau, Habriet, 48. Mary Garvin (poem), 74. Mason, Ellen M., 25. Mason, Gbobqe L., 26. Mass. Historical Society Collections, 43, 46, 67. 61. 83. Mathieu Ropars, 63. AIatthewb, Albebt, 36. 108 INDEX Matthews, M., 19. May, Chocorua in, 61. May in Franconia, 27. May Visit to Moosilauke, 64. Matnakd, C. J., 65. Meader, J. W., 54. Mblcher, Edward, 57. Meixen, Geenville, 48, 72, 90. Mellish, John, 45 . Merrill, Eliphalet, 45. Merrill, Georgia D., 60. Merrill, John, 62. Merrill, Nelson, 79. Merrill, Phinehas, 46. Merrimack River, 61, 64; poem, 79. Messenger, The, 96. Mbtcalf, H. H., 29. Meteorology on Mt. Washington, 42. MiUen HiU, 83. Miller, Gerhit S., 62. Mineralogy, 13, 54. MmoT, H. D., 18. Mitten Mt., 36, 83. Moat Mt., 33, 82, 83. Monadnock, White Mts. from, 33, 34. Monster Bear, The (poem), 78. Montalban Ridge, 35. Monthly Review, The, 11. MooRE, F. A., 51. MooRE, Mrs. H. J., 68. MooRE, Jacob B., 46, 47, 89. Moosilauke, Mt., 11, 13, 15, 19, 21, 26, 27, 34, 54, 64, 83, 84; poem, 80. Moriah, Mt., 36, 38, 84; poem, 78; engrav- ing, 92. Morrison, H. K., 17, 18. Morse, Jbdidiah, 44, 84. Moses, George H., 24, 25. Mosses, 14. See also Botany. Mot, 15. Moths, 22. See also Insects. Mount Washington (poem), 72, 77, 82. See Washington, Mount. Mount Washington Railroad, 20. Mountain Maid, The (poem), 79, 80. Mountain Pictures (poem), 74. Mountain Playmates, 64. Mountain Vigil, A, 25. Mountaineer, The, 95. Mountain-side Ramble, A, 60. Mountain-top (poem), 75. muibhead, j. f., 9. Murray, Amelia M., 52. MusGROVE, Eugene R., 28. Musset, Abigail, 53. My Mountaiu (poem), 75. Nancy, 12, 17, 58. Nancy, Mt., 36, 38. Nancy's Bridge, 91. Nash, J. W., 23. National Era, 68. National Magazine, 16. National Pubhshing Co. Map, 88. Nature (magazine), 17. Nature's Invitation, 64. Nelson, S. A., 3. Nemo, 13. Nevins, W. S., 8. New England Historical and Genealogical Register, 15, 53. New England Journal of Medicine and Surgery, 11. New England Magazine, 1, 2, 3, 22-25, 28, 30, 67, 70, 72, 79, 80. New England Upland about the White Mts., 41. New-England's Rarities Discovered, 43. New Hampshire Book, 49, 73. New Hampshire Historical Society, 47. New Hampshire Histories, 44, 46, 47, 49, 56, 60, 65. New Hampshire Laws, 44, 45, 46, 51. New Hampshire Lumber Co., 63. New Hampshire Manual of General Court, 46. INDEX New Hampshire Records, 55, 56, 58, 60, 62. New Hampshire's Hills (poem), 81. New Hampshire's Mountain Forests (poem), 81. Newspapers, vi, 94-97. Nichols, G. W., 13. Nichols, H. P., 40. Night, 3, 19, 23, 38, 39. See also Alone on Osceola and A Mountain Vigil. Niles, Edwaed C, 25. Nineteen MUe Brook, 59. Noble, Louis L., 51. Noctuidse, 17, 58. See also Insects. Nomenclature, 32. North American Review, 16. North Conway, 15, 30, 64, 78, 81, 82, 87, 88, 92, 93, 95, 96, 97. See abo Conway. North Woodstock, 10, 63. Northern Herald, 96. Northern Peaks. See Presidential Range and Mts. Adams, Jefferson, and Madison. Northern Traveller, The, 4, 46, 89. Notch House, 4, 63, 89, 90. Notch, White Mt., 13, 17, 22, 44, 46, 47, 48, 49, 51, 67, 69, 83, 87; engravings, 89-93. NowELL, William G., 32, 33, 38. Oakes, William, 1, 13, 14, 15, 91. October, White Hills m, 16. Odometer Measurements, 39. Odonata from the White Mts., 53. See also Insects. Old and New Century from Mt. Washing- ton, 27. Old Bent Tree, The (poem), 79. Old Man of the Mountain, 1, 13, 46, 55, 68, 69, 70, 84; poems, 73, 74, 76, 77, 78, 79, 80, 81, 82; engravings, 85, 89, 91, 92, 93. Old Mountaineeb, An, 68. Old School-House, The (poem), 75. Olivee, William T., 87. On Horseback, 69. 109 One of the White HUls stripped of Forest and Soil, 90. Optical Illusions among the Mts., 37. Ordway, Aaron, 7. Ohmsbee, Allan, 41. Ornithologist and Oologist, 22, 23. Orthoptera, Alpine, 41. See also Insects. Osceola, Mt., 3, 25, 36. Osgood's Hand-book, 6, 7, 83. Ossipee Falls, 49. Ossipee Mountain, 77, 83, 84. Our Evening Party Among the Mts., 67. Our Mountain Garden, 65. Our Mountain Land (poem), 76. Outing, 25. Outlook, 2, 27, 65. Owl's Head, 34, 84. See also Benton Range, Packabd, Alpheus S., 16, 54. Painters, vi, 19, 51, 58, 64, 89-92. Panoramic Profiles, 34, 86. Parish, Eluah, 44. Paekeb, H. C, 41, 42. Parker, Mt., 36. Parkman, Francis, 21, 25, 61, 64, 67. Parley, Peter, 48, 90. Parsons, T. W., 74. Partridge, Alden, 11. Passaconaway, Mt., 35, 40. See also Wona- lancet Guide and Sandwich Range. Paths, A. M. C, 10, 33, 34, 36, 37. 38, 39. 40, 42. Peabody, Andrew P., 16. Peabody River, 59. Pearson, H. C, 25. Peek, William H., 37, 38, 39. Pemigewasset House, 85. Pemigewasset VaUey, 9, 19, 29, 53, 77, 92. See also East Branch. People's Journal, 94. Perambulations of the Pemigewasset Peram- bulators. 53. 110 INDEX Peekins, Pbedbbic B., 15. Peblet, Sidney, 60. Peteb Paelet, 48, 90. Petermann's Mittheilungen, 85. Petebs, a. J., 66. Philadelphia Medical and Physical Jour- nal, 11. Philbeick, E. a., 20. Photo Era, 26, 27. Photography, Mountain, 26, 27, 30. PicKEEiNa, Edwaed C, 32, 33, 38. PiCKEEiNG. William H., 7, 32-35, 42, 86. Pictorial Geography of the World, 48, 91. Picturesque America, 65. PiEECE, James, 12. Pigwacket Hills, 38, 83, 84. PiLLSBtTET, Feed C, 77. Pilot Dome in Winter, 42. Pilot Range, 38, 39. PiNCHOT, GiFFOED, 42. Pines at Intervale, The (poem), 80. Piper House, 10. Plant Ufe. See Botany. Pleiades (waterfalls), 19. Pliny, Mt., 36, 84. Plumes, William, Je., 73. Plymouth newspapers, 94, 95, 96. Poems of Places, 74, 75, 76. Poetical Illustrations of the Athenseimi Gallery, 72. Poets of New Hampshire, The, 73, 77. Pollock, Chaeles, 9. Pondicherry Mt., 83, 84. Pool, The, 52. Popular Science Monthly, 3, 21. Poete Cbaton, 16. POTTEE, C. E., 15. Potter's American Monthly, 18. PowBES, Grant, 48. Pownall, Thomas, 43, 83. Pbatt, Henet C., 72, 89. Peat, J. S., 41. Presidential Range, 15, 26, 36, 37, 41, 42, 64, 83, 84, 88. Peeston, D. R., 44. Peime, Samuel Ieen^eus, 65. Peime, WiLLLua C, 55, 62, 70. Proclamation by the Old Man of the Moim- tain, 78. Peootor, Edna Dean, 79, 80, 81. Profile, 1, 13, 46, 55, 68, 69, 70, 85, 89, 91, 92, 93. Profile House, 28, 29, 68, 79, 85, 93. Profile Lake (poem), 78. Profile Mt., 1, 12, 84. Profile Poems, 73, 74, 76, 77, 78, 79, 80, 81, 82. Prophetic Picture, The, 67. Prospect, Mt., 51. Providence PubUc Library Bulletin, vii. Psyche, 17-19, 28. Pulpit Rock, 90. Pumpkin HiU, 91. Putnam's Monthly, 15, 16, 74, 93. Ptchowska, Mes. L. D., 34-37. Ptchowska, Maeian M., 34-36, 39. Quarter-Centenary of the A. M. C, 41. Raised maps, 85, 86. Ramble among the White Mts., A., 12. Rambler's Lease, A, 60. Rand, Edwaed A., 69. Randolph, 36, 37, 92, 93. Rannet, Mes. V. G., 75. Rattlesnake Mt., 83. Ravines. See Great Gulf, Huntington's, King's, and Tuckermau's. Raymond, Cuetis B., 36, 40. Raymond Path, 40. Reade, Emilie, 79. Reclus, Elisbe, 61. Red Hill, 69, 83, 84, 89. Refuge hut on Mt. Washington, 41. Register Cylinders of the A. M. C, 42. ESTDEX Eeid's American Atlas, 66, 84. Relief Map, 85, 86. Republican Star, 96. Resolution, Mt., 33. Rhodora (magazine), 27. Richards, T. Addison, 5. RiDEiNQ, William H., 18. Ripley, Henbt W., 1, 78. Ritchie, John, Jb., 35, 39. Roads, 28, 44, 51, 60. Rogers, Henbt D., 14. Rogers, Nathaniel P., 50, 61. Rogers, Robert, 43. Rogers, William B., 14. Rollins, Frank W., 10, 29. Rose-Beltord's Canadian Monthly, 19. Roth, Edward, 70. Round Mt., 38. RoTALL, Anne, 46. Royce, Mt., 36, 83, 84. Rozella of Laconia, 68. Rumney Hills (poem), 77. RuTraELS, Fannie H., 77. Russell, Ernest, 31. Russell, Robert, 52. Sable Mt., 84. Saco River, 74, 82. Sanborn, Edwin D., 56. Sanborn, Frank B., 55, 65. Sandwich, 66. Sandwich Dome, 33. See Black Mt. Sandwich Range (Mts.), 9, 26, 81, 84. Sandwich Reporter, 96. Sandwort, A Mt. Washington, 21. Sargent, Charles S., 21, 22, 23. Sargent, George A., 36. Scalp-Hunter, The, 67. Scar Ridge, 33. Scarborough Co. Map, 88. Scenery of the White Mts. (Oakes), 1. ScHEDLBB, Joseph, 86. Science (magazine), 20. Ill Scott, A. E., 37. ScRiBNEB, Isaac W., 68. Scribner's Magazine, 22. ScuDDBR, Samuel H., 16, 17, 32, 34, 35, 37, 38, 39, 41, 53, 56, 60. Sears, Edward S., 6. Sears, Robert, 51, 92. Season at the White Mts., A, 16. Sedgwick, Catherine M., 16. Senter, Obamel S., 18. Seven Dreamers, 69. Shattuck, George, 11. Shelbume, 20, 84, 89. Shelbmne Moriah, 36. Shepard, Forrest, 12. SiGouRNET, Mrs., L. H., 72. SiLUMAN, Augustus E., 49. SiLLiMAN, Benjamin, 12, 13, 17. Silliman's Journal. See American Journal of Science and Arts. Silver Cascade, 73, 90, 93. Silver Spring, Mt., 35. Simple Pentecost, A, 70. Sketches from Memory, 67. Sketches of Scenery and Manners, 46, 89. Sladb, Daniel D., 25. Slides, 35, 38. See also Willey Slide. Sloop Mt., 83. Slosson, Annie Trumbull, 22, 24, 25, 27, 69, 70, 71. Slow up the Slope of Ossipee (poem), 77. Smith, Thomas, 3. Smith, Zilpha D., 41. Smyth, D. M., 80. Snow, George K., 85. Snow's Hand-book, 6. Snow-shoeing, 3, 39, 40. See also Winter. Society for Protectioil of N. H. Forests, 61. Soltaire, 28, 70. Song of the Old Man of the Mountain (poem), 78. Song of the Willey Family (poem), 75. SOUTHWICK, E. W., 13. 112 INDEX Spattlding, Caeoline a., 77. Spatjlding, Henbt G., 34. Spaulding, John H., 1, 92. Spauldinq, Randall, 36. Spiders, 25. See also Insects. Sfragub, Isaac, 1. Spring in the White Mountains, 27, 61, 64; poem, 82. Squam Lake, 69. See also Whittier's Poems. Squam Mt., 84. Start, Edwin A., 30. Stereoscopic views, 6, 7. Stevens, Alice B., 28. Sticknet, Jdlia Notes, 77. Stiles, Chester F., 26, 27. Stinson Mt., 84. Stone, Arthur P., 25. Stone, Caroline E. Whiton, 81, 82. Stone, M. Isabella, 37. Storm on Lake Asquam (poem), 77. Storks, John W., 28. Strother, David H., 16. Stuart, Percy C, 25. Sugar Hill, At (poem), 81. Summer by the Lakeside (poem), 74. Summer in Leshe Goldthwaite's Life, A, 68. Summer in New Hampshire, A (poem), 73, 80, 81. Summer Pilgrimage, A (poem), 77. Summit, The (poem), 75. Summit-flower, The (poem), 78. Summit House, Mt. Washington, 93. Sunday at the Profile House (poem), 79. Sunrise at Jackson (poem), 78. Sunrise from Mt. Washington (poem), 72. Sunset on the Bearcamp (poem), 76. Sunset on Mount Washington (poem), 80. SwASET, Anna C, 17. SwEETSER, M. F., 6, 7, 8, 32, 83, 87. SwETT, William B., 56. Swift River, 35. Swift River TraU, 41. swinbrton, c. e., 1, 78. Sylvester, Herbert M., 59. T. Thomdyke, Attomey-at-Law, 71. Tales of the White Hills, 67, 68. Tanner, B., 66, 84. Tappan, William B., 73. Tarry at Home Travel, 22, 65. Tatlook, John, Jr., 37. Taylor, Batakd, 52. Taylor, Frank H., 58. Tecumseh, Mt., 34. Tenney, Edward P., 70. Tent m the Notch, 69. That Old Man and His Dream, 70. Thayer, Stephen H., 81. Their Pilgrimage, 69. Things as They Are, 47, 90. Thomas, Mrs. Theodore (Rose Fay), 65. Thompson, Frederick, 2. Thompson's Falls (poem), 82. Thoreau, Henry D., 51, 53, 55, 58. Thorn Mt., 83, 84. Three Days on the White Mts., 2. Three Days' Tramp on the Mt. Washington Range, 34. Throop, O. H., 89. Through the WUds, 70. Thyng, J. Waeren, 29. Ticknor's Handbook, 6, 7, 83. Tip-top Experience on Moosilauke, 26. Tip Top House, Mt. Washington, 93. To the Stone Face (poem), 81. Token, The, 46, 48, 67, 72, 73, 89, 90. Torrey Botanical Club, Bulletin of, 21, 22. ToRREY, Bradford, 4, 20, 27, 58, 59, 60, 61, 64. Tourist, The, 96. TowLE, George M., 17. Tramping and Camping on the Great Range, 41. Tramping in the White Mts., 22. Tremont, Mt., 33, 35, 84, 86. INDEX Tripp's White Mountain Guide Book, 5. Tripyramid, 32, 35, 38, 40. Tkollope, Anthony, 62. Trouts' Petition, The (poem), 78. Trowbridge, John T., 76. Tdckbrman, Edward, 1, 2, 14, 43, 59. Tuckerman's Ravine, 33, 53, 55, 58, 64; i winter, 38; engraving, 91. Tudor, Henry, 47. Turner, Joseph W., 75. Twice-Told Tales, 67, 68. Twin Mt. Range, 35, 36, 37, 41, 84. Two in the Alpine Pastures, 39. Two Pictures (poem), 79. Tyler, Harry W., 41. lis United States Literary Gazette, 72. Universalist Quarterly Review, 14. TJpHAM, Thomas C, 47. Upham, Warren, 32, 33, 40, 56. Van Dyke, Henry, 63. Vegetation, 2, 9. See also Botany. View in the Notch (poem), 72. Views in the White Mts., 7, 13. Village, The (poem), 72. VosB, George L., 54. Voyage of the Jettie, The (poem), 76. Walker, George H., 86. Walker, Joseph B., 62. Walking Guide to the Mt. Washington Range, 7. Walling, H. F., 57, 85. Walling's Atlas, 86. Wakd, Julius H., 3, 23, 24, 87. Warner, Charles Dudley, 69. Warren, 54. Warren News, 96. Washington, Mt., 2, 3, 7, 10-13, 17-22, 24, 26, 27, 28, 32, 34, 41, 42, 44, 47, 49, 54, 56, 57, 58, 63, 64, 86; poems, 72, 75, 76, 77, 80, 81, 82; engravings, 85, 90-93. Washington, Mt., in Winter, 3, 17, 20, 22, 26, 27, 41, 42, 54, 63. Waterfalls, 19, 78, 90-93. Watemomee, Mt., 37. Watervale, 9, 40, 65, 87. Waumbek House, 85. Waumbek Magazine, 97. Waumbek Penny Daily, 97. Webber, Samuel, 81. Webster, Ellen E., 26. Webster, Mt., 33, 78. Weeks, Clabibel M., 30. Wells, Webster, 34. Wheeler, William M., 28. Wheelock, Merrill G., 2. Whipple, E. P., 2, 57. Whipple, G. N., 42. Whipple, Col. Joseph, 23. Whitohbr, William P., 65. Whitcomb, Seldon L., 82. White Christopher, 70. White Hills, The (Starr King), 2, 74. White Hills of New Hampshire (poem), 73. White Horse Chff (poem), 80, 82. White Mt. iEgis, 94. White Mt. Banner, 94. White Mt. Bugle, 94. White Mt. Clarion, 97. White Mt. Echo, 95. White Mt. Life, 97. White Mt. News, 96. White Mt. Record, 95. White Mt. Reporter, 96, 97. White Mt. Repubhc, 94. White Mt. Times, 97. White Mt. Torrent, 94. White Mountains, The (poem), 73. White Mts. after the Descent of the Ava- lanche m 1826 (poem), 72. White, T. E. M., 30. White-throated Sparrow, The (poem), 76. See also Chocorua's Tenants, by Frank Bolles. 114 INDEX Whiteface, Mt., 35, 40, 84; poem, 81. Whitefield map, 87. Whitefield newspapers, 95, 96, 97. Whitman, Miss M. F., 33. Whitney, Mrs. A. D. T., 68. Whitnet,'J. D., 91. Whiton, John M., 47. Whiton-Stone, Caboline E., 81, 82. Whittiee, John G., 2, 28, 60, 51. 66, 74- 78. Wife, The (poem), 75. Wilcox, Caelos, 12. WUd Nell the White Mt. Girl, 68. Wild River Valley, 36, 38. Wildcat, Mt., 36, 83. Willard, Mt., 59; poem, 79. WiLLAKD, Samuel, 35. WiUard's Mt., 84. WiLLET, Benjamin G., 2, 93. WiUey FamUy, 2, 12, 13. WiLLET, Geoege F., 28, 70. WiLLEY, HeNEY, 21. Willey House, 12, 72, 89-93; poems, 72, 73, 74,75. See also Willey Family and Willey SUde. Willey, Isaac, 64. Willey, Mount, 33, 84. Willey, Samuel, Je., See Willey Fam- iiy. WiUey SKde, 2, 12, 13, 22, 46, 47, 50, 57, 60, 64, 69, 70, 72, 73, 74, 75, 89, 91, 93. Williams, Emile F., 27. Williams, J. David, 57. Willis, N. P., 48. Willows, White Mt., 21. Wilson, Edwaed t., 22, 63. Wimbleton, 68. Wine Hills, 83. Wiimepesaukee (Winnipiseogee) Lake, 4, 5, 15, 75, 77, 89. Winter, 3, 17, 20, 22, 23, 26, 27, 29, 35, 38, 40, 41, 42, 64, 63, 68. Winter's Night in a Wintry Place, A, 68. Winteebotham, W., 44. Winthkop, John, 44. Wizard Birch, The (poem), 82. Wonalancet, 9, 24. Wood-Butchers, The, 31. Wood Giant. The (poem), 78. Wood-notes, 16. Woodstock, 25. WoECESTEE, John, 33, 38. Worcester Magazine, 12. World of Music, The (Magazine). 13. Young. William, 53. Zealand Notch, 31, 39. iuit)(»rtMnHii?tt)i«t>i imMtfiwiAftMHAnucmniiMj