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Selected Bibliography

  • Laura Waterman and Guy Waterman
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Forest and Crag
This chapter is in the book Forest and Crag
© 2019, SUNY Press

© 2019, SUNY Press

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents vii
  3. Figures and Tables ix
  4. Illustrations xiii
  5. Foreword xv
  6. Foreword xix
  7. Preface to the Thirtieth Anniversary Edition xxiii
  8. Preface to the E-book Edition xxix
  9. Preface to the Second Edition xxxv
  10. Preface to the First Edition xxxix
  11. Acknowledgments to the Thirtieth Anniversary Edition xlv
  12. Acknowledgments to the First Edition xlvii
  13. Abbreviations li
  14. Introduction: The mountains liii
  15. PART ONE Mountains as "daunting terrible": Before 1830
  16. Chapter 1 Darby Field on Mount Washington 1
  17. Chapter 2 Ira Allen on Mount Mansfield 15
  18. Chapter 3 The Belknap-Cutler expedition to Mount Washington 21
  19. Chapter 4 Alden Partridge: The first regionwide hiker 29
  20. Chapter 5 The Crawfords of Crawford Notch 37
  21. Chapter 6 The Monument Line surveyors on Katahdin 49
  22. Chapter 7 Janus on the heights during the 1820s 57
  23. Part Two. Mountains as sublime: 1830-1870
  24. Chapter 8 The first mountain tourists 69
  25. Chapter 9 Katahdin: A test for the adventurous 93
  26. Chapter 10 The Adirondacks at last 101
  27. Chapter 11 The mountain guides 111
  28. Chapter 12 The Austin sisters and their legacy 119
  29. Chapter 13 The elder Hitchcock and Arnold Guyot 125
  30. Chapter 14 Wintering over on Moosilauke and Washington 131
  31. Part Three. Mountains as places to walk: 1870-1910
  32. Chapter 15 The pleasures of pedestrianism 145
  33. Chapter 16 Adirondack Murray's Fools 161
  34. Chapter 17 The younger Hitchcock and Verplanck Colvin 167
  35. Chapter 18 The first hiking clubs 183
  36. Chapter 19 The first mountain guidebooks 195
  37. Chapter 20 The first trail systems 199
  38. Chapter 21 Three Adirondack trail centers 209
  39. Chapter 22 Randolph 223
  40. Chapter 23 Other trail systems 233
  41. Chapter 24 Trails that failed 243
  42. Chapter 25 Backcountry camping in the eighties and nineties 255
  43. Chapter 26 Pychowskas ascendant 261
  44. Chapter 27 Death in the mountains 273
  45. Chapter 28 Trail policy issues 279
  46. Chapter 29 J. Rayner Edmands and Warren Hart: A study in contrast 287
  47. Chapter 30 The last explorers 297
  48. Chapter 31 The conservation movement 307
  49. Chapter 32 The first mountain snowshoers 315
  50. Chapter 33 Winter pioneering on Mount Marcy 325
  51. Chapter 34 The first mountain skiers 331
  52. PART FOUR Mountains as escape from. urban society: 1910-1950
  53. Chapter 35 The Long Trail 343
  54. Chapter 36 Unification of the White Mountain trails 375
  55. Chapter 37 The Adirondacks become one hiking center 391
  56. Chapter 38 Baxter State Park 401
  57. Chapter 39 Metropolitan trails 409
  58. Chapter 40 Connecticut's blue-blazed trail system 431
  59. Chapter 41 The proliferation of hiking clubs 443
  60. Chapter 42 Backcountry camping in the twenties and thirties 457
  61. Chapter 43 Trail maintenance comes of age 465
  62. Chapter 44 Regionwide consciousness 475
  63. Chapter 45 The Appalachian Trail 485
  64. Chapter 46 Super hiking 511
  65. Chapter 47 The Bemis Crew 525
  66. Chapter 48 Katahdin in winter 531
  67. Chapter 49 Snowshoes versus skis: The great debate 537
  68. Chapter 50 Depression, hurricanes, and war 547
  69. PART FIVE Mountains as places for recreation: Since 1950
  70. Chapter 51 The backpacking boom 557
  71. Chapter 52 Environmental ethics and backcountry management 575
  72. Chapter 53 Backcountry camping in the seventies and eighties 589
  73. Chapter 54 The clubs cope with change 595
  74. Chapter 55 Northeastern trail systems mature 603
  75. Chapter 56 New paths for trail maintenance 611
  76. Chapter 57 Points of controversy 627
  77. Chapter 58 Peakbaggers and end-to-enders 639
  78. Chapter 59 The "school" of winter mountaineering 651
  79. Chapter 60 The winter recreation boom 661
  80. Epilogue 671
  81. Appendix: Mountains over 4,000 feet in the Northeastern United States, their elevations, and first known ascents 673
  82. Glossary 679
  83. Reference notes 687
  84. Selected Bibliography 859
  85. Index 863
  86. About the Authors 885
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