Mount Passaconaway
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Mount Passaconaway | |
---|---|
Elevation | 4,019 feet (1,225 meters) |
Location | Grafton County, New Hampshire, USA |
Range | Sandwich Range, White Mountains |
Prominence | 803 feet (245 meters)[1] |
Coordinates | |
Topo map | USGS Mount Tripyramid |
Easiest route | Hike |
Mount Passaconaway is a mountain in the Sandwich Range Wilderness of the White Mountain National Forest near the eastern edge of Waterville Valley. It is named after Passaconaway, a 16th century chieftain of a nearby tribe of native Americans, whose name was also attached to a small village in Albany, where the northern trailhead is now located.
It is ranked 42d in elevation on the list of 48 White Mountains four-thousand footers. On the original 1931 list of 4000-footers, it was ranked 26th, with an elevation of 4,116 feet, although the 1931 topographic map shows it as 4,060 feet. The 1987 USGS topographic map indicates it is 4,043, while the elevation recorded in the USGS Geographic Names Information System is 4,019 ft.
The thickly wooded, unmarked summit may be approached from trailheads to the north (on the Kancamagus Highway) or from Wonalancet to the south. Old maps show a "Passaconaway Lodge" or "shelter" on the southeast aspect of the mountain, and the 4,000-footer guidebook mentions that it was built in 1891. It was rebuilt several times, evolving into the WODC's Camp Rich. After its collapse in 2000 it was removed, consistent with Wilderness regulations.[2]
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- Smith, Stephen; Dickerman, Mike (2001). The 4,000 Footers of the White Mountains. Littleton: Bondcliff Books. ISBN 1-931271-01-1.
- USGS Topographic map, Chocorua Quadrangle, 1931, northeast segment, viewed at UNH historic map collection
- USGS GNIS
- ^ Mount Passaconaway. Retrieved on January 18, 2007.
- ^ Shelters. Retrieved on January 18, 2007.