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Showing 5111 - 5120 of +10000 Records

Jay Peak from Little Jay
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    • Date Created: 1933
    • Parent Collections: Long Trail Photographs


    Potvins Fork on the Halfway House Trail to Mansfield
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      • Date Created: 1920-08
      • Parent Collections: Long Trail Photographs


      Ladder Ravine on Burnt Rock Mountain
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        • Parent Collections: Long Trail Photographs


        Carmel Camp - note hedgehog chews!
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          • Date Created: 1922-08
          • Parent Collections: Long Trail Photographs


          Brush trail near Noyes Pond
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            • Date Created: 1921-08-07 00:00:00
            • Description: The two people in this photo are unidentified.
            • Parent Collections: Long Trail Photographs


            New Trail on Couching Lion (Camel's Hump)
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              • Date Created: 1919-09
              • Description: Pictured is Professor William Seymour Monroe and two unidentified men. "Couching Lion" is the previous name for Camel's Hump.
              • Parent Collections: Long Trail Photographs


              Elihu B. Taft Lodge from the rear
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                • Date Created: 1920-08
                • Parent Collections: Long Trail Photographs


                Trail between Forest City and Montclair Glen
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                  • Date Created: 1919-09
                  • Parent Collections: Long Trail Photographs


                  On the forehead of Mount Mansfield
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                    • Date Created: 1919
                    • Parent Collections: Long Trail Photographs


                    Reindeer
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                      • Description: The Str. Reindeer, built at St. Albans in 1882 (181' x 27' x 9'), was the largest to navigate Otter Creek. This picture shows her at Vergennes in her trimmer and more youthful days, before the life of an Excursion boat made her sag in the middle. In the gay Nineties, it was a common sigh to see her staggering up and down the lake, her decks weighed down with crowds who often flocked to one side or the other giving her a careening look, her guards on one side almost at the water's edge and the paddlewheel on the opposite side fanning the air. She would then stop until the crew could restore equilibrium among passengers and boat. She sank at her dock in Burlington in 1902 from causes not known.
                      • Parent Collections: Photographs of Vergennes (Vt.)