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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.
USGS Mount Moosilauke Kinsman Notch (elev. 1,870 feet (570 m) [ 1 ] ) is a mountain pass located in the White Mountains of New Hampshire , United States . [ 2 ] [ 3 ] It is the westernmost of the major notches through the White Mountains (the others being Franconia Notch , Crawford Notch , and Pinkham Notch ).
Dartmouth maintained and operated a building on the summit of Moosilauke called the Summit Camp from 1920-1942, until the building burned down due to a lightning strike. Later, the Ravine Camp was built in 1933 to access skiing on the mountain. This building burned down in 1935 and was replaced by the first Ravine Lodge. [4]
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 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 lake is located in the towns of Piermont and Warren. Water from Lake Tarleton flows via Eastman Brook west to the Connecticut River. Kingswood Camp for Boys is located on the lake. The Appalachian Trail runs nearby on Mount Mist, then continues north to Mount Moosilauke, with both mountains overlooking the lake.
The Lost River begins on the eastern slopes of Mount Moosilauke below the peak of Mount Jim and above Kinsman Notch, one of the major passes through the White Mountains. As it flows through the notch, it passes through Lost River Gorge , an area where enormous boulders falling off the flanking walls of the notch at the close of the last Ice Age ...
The river traverses the towns of Warren, Wentworth, and Rumney. It is part of the Merrimack River watershed . The Baker River's name recalls Lt. Thomas Baker (1682–1753), whose company of 34 scouts from Northampton, Massachusetts , passed down the river's valley in 1712 and destroyed a Pemigewasset Indian village.