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The Old Lodge (1938–2016), the former main building of the Moosilauke Ravine Lodge complex. Moosilauke Ravine Lodge is a cabin complex at the base of Mount Moosilauke in the White Mountains of New Hampshire. Owned and operated by Dartmouth College, the Lodge is open to the public from May through November.
Mount Moosilauke is a 4,802-foot-high (1,464 m) mountain at the southwestern end of the White Mountains in the town of Benton, New Hampshire, United States. It is the tenth highest and most southwesterly of the 4,000 foot summits in the White Mountains.
The East Branch of the Baker River is a 3.1-mile-long (5.0 km) [1] river in western New Hampshire in the United States. It is a tributary of the Baker River, part of the Pemigewasset River and Merrimack River watersheds. The river rises on the southernmost slopes of Mount Moosilauke in the town of Woodstock.
Mount Moosilauke Mount Cabot: Coös Kilkenny: 4,170 feet (1,270 m) East Peak Mount Osceola: Grafton Livermore: 4,156 feet (1,267 m) Middle Peak Mount Tripyramid: Grafton Waterville Valley: 4,140 feet (1,260 m) West Peak Mount Osceola: Grafton Livermore: 4,114 feet (1,254 m) Mount Osceola Cannon Mountain: Grafton Franconia: 4,100 feet (1,200 m)
The Ossipee Mountains are a small mountain range in the New England state of New Hampshire, United States. The remains of an ancient volcanic ring dike, [1] they lie north of Lake Winnipesaukee, east of Squam Lake, and south of the Sandwich Range, the southernmost of the White Mountains. 2,990 ft (910 m) Mount Shaw is their highest point.
The river flows southeast from Kinsman Notch to Jackman Brook, where the two streams form Moosilauke Brook, which continues northeast through the granite gorge of Agassiz Basin and joins the Pemigewasset River in the village of North Woodstock. New Hampshire Route 112 follows the Lost River from Kinsman Notch to Moosilauke Brook.
Warren is a town in Grafton County, New Hampshire, United States. The population was 825 at the 2020 census, [2] down from 904 at the 2010 census. [3] Warren includes the village of Glencliff. The Appalachian Trail crosses the town in the west. It is the smallest by population of the six towns named Warren in New England (one in each state).
Rollins State Park is a public recreation area on the southern slope of Mount Kearsarge in Warner, New Hampshire. The state park is at the entrance to an auto road that ascends to within 0.5 miles (0.8 km) of the summit. Picnic facilities are available, and hiking trails leave from the high point of the auto road to the summit.