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Brodie was a ski resort in New Ashford, Massachusetts, in the Taconic Mountains in the far northwestern part of the state. It opened in 1964 and thrived for a time by using then-cutting-edge innovations like top-to-bottom snowmaking and lighted night skiing. Founder Jim Kelly gave the resort an Irish theme: its nickname was "Kelly's Irish Alps ...
A 2006 view of the ski resort on Brodie Mountain in Massachusetts, which closed in 2002. New England Lost Ski Areas Project (NELSAP) is an organization that concerns the history of downhill skiing areas, mostly in the northeastern United States. Started as a website in 1998, it has also organized hikes, research projects, and lectures in recent ...
Brodie Mountain, 2,621 feet (799 m), is a prominent 5.5-mile (8.9 km) long ridgeline in the Taconic Mountains of western Massachusetts, known for the former Brodie Mountain ski area, which closed in 2002.
Pages in category "Defunct ski areas and resorts in Massachusetts" The following 8 pages are in this category, out of 8 total. ... Brodie (ski area) M. Mount Greylock;
Kimberley Jochl, vice president of Sugar Mountain Ski Resort in Sugar Mountain, pointed to the first two inches of snow that fell last week as a positive sign. The resort aims for an early ...
Chacaltaya ski resort once enticed wealthy travelers, but in 2009, the mountain's glacier completely melted, leaving behind a ghost town.
The Melrose Resort, which was developed in the 1980s, has been abandoned on Daufuskie Island for over a decade after the private owners ran into financial problems. Today, there are about 400 ...
Of the 503 ski areas, 390 are "public U.S. ski areas that run chairlifts" and "113 either run only surface lifts, or are not open to the general public", says to Storm Skiing. [5] Of the 390 public, chairlift areas, 233 or 60% have joined one or more United States–based, international multi-mountain ski pass , according to Storm Skiing.