Long Trail Photographs
The Long Trail Collection includes over 900 images of the oldest long-distance hiking trail in the United States: Vermont’s Long Trail. The collection is mainly comprised of black-and-white and hand-colored lantern slides derived from photographs taken between 1912 and 1937. It documents the Green Mountain Club’s building of original trails and shelters and illustrates the enthusiasm for the Long Trail project (and hiking in general) at the turn of the century. These images chronicle the views and landscapes seen by early hikers of the Long Trail and provide an historical record of people associated with the Green Mountain Club’s formative years.
The images in this collection were captured by Green Mountain Club members Theron S. Dean and Herbert Wheaton Congdon, both of whom were early contributors to the trail’s development. Congdon surveyed and mapped a large portion of the early trail including a fifty mile stretch from Middlebury Gap to Bolton. Congdon, along with Leroy Little and Clarence Cowles, is also credited with the first winter ascent of Mount Mansfield on February 21, 1920. Dean is perhaps the most prolific documenter of the Long Trail’s development. Dean traveled throughout Vermont presenting slideshows and giving talks about the Long Trail, often to hundreds of people. A number of the original lantern slides in this collection were used by Congdon and Dean in their Long Trail presentations. Dean in particular meticulously cultivated his lantern slide collection and displayed these slides during his many talks.
The original slides can be viewed in the Dean and Congdon collections at the University of Vermont Silver Special Collections Library. More information about the Long Trail can be obtained from the Green Mountain Club. The slides were scanned by the University's Landscape Change Program with the generous support of the National Science Foundation. The digitized photographs also appear in the Landscape Change image database at: http://www.uvm.edu/landscape/
Showing 411 - 420 of 918 Records
Governor Clement Camp, 5 miles South of Rutland
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- Description: The gentlemen in the photo are: Major Jenks (left) and either Bob Aiken or Puffer (right). The photo was a gift of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Field. The negative was done by Puffer, the slide by Eldred, and the coloring by Mrs. Perry.
- Parent Collections: Long Trail Photographs
Elihu B. Taft Lodge from trail to the chin of Mount Mansfield
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- Date Created: 1920-08-12 00:00:00
- Parent Collections: Long Trail Photographs
Morse's Pond and skidway - old road from new road to Smugglers' Notch
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- Date Created: 1920-08-02 00:00:00
- Description: This photo depicts a logging operation near Smugglers' Notch.
- Parent Collections: Long Trail Photographs
Webster Monument on the Arlington-Wardsboro Road
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- Date Created: 1921-08
- Parent Collections: Long Trail Photographs
Long Trail sign on mountain top
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- Date Created: 1917
- Description: The sign in this image reads "Long Trail".
- Parent Collections: Long Trail Photographs
Ernest and Alarie Lesage at their tent in Nebraska Notch
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- Date Created: 1917-08-22 00:00:00
- Description: The original title includes the note: "Tent ruined by hail storm."
- Parent Collections: Long Trail Photographs
Tripod on Mount Hunger
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- Date Created: 1921-10-02 00:00:00
- Description: One of the men in this image may be named "Lord."
- Parent Collections: Long Trail Photographs
Smugglers' Notch from Jeffersonville - elevation 2161 feet
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- Date Created: 1937
- Parent Collections: Long Trail Photographs