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In the News
2002
12/14/2002
LRCT meets Castle in the Clouds payment deadline
11/4/2002 LRCT completes Wiggin project
on Red Hill
10/10/2002 Local volunteers pitch in
to improve Red Hill
7/12/2002 Sandwich Art Show Inspired
by Nature
5/20/2002 LRCT delves into the Ossipees
News Articles 2006
News Articles 2005
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Articles 2004
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IN THE NEWS
LRCT Delves into the Ossipees
In January of this year, the Trust purchased the land on the west
slope of the Ossipee Mountains known as Castle Springs. It
includes 5000 acres of forests and scenic splendors, an historic
mansion, function facilities and recreational trails. And it
offers layers of interesting history waiting to be rediscovered.
Researchers at the Lakes Region Conservation Trust face a task
akin to that of an archaeologist who must dig down through layer
upon layer of civilization, searching for the first signs of life.
Peal back one layer to the fifties when the Robie family purchased
Lucknow, the former Thomas Plant estate, and opened it as the
Castle In The Clouds tourist attraction. Down another layer, in
the 30s, you can see the declining estate of eccentric millionaire
Tom Plant who lived with his wife and a handful of servants in
bankrupt splendor, unable, in the depression, to sell his
property. Back a layer you see the same man, bent on building his
private empire, and intent on buying up and tearing down most of
what had come before, whether it was simple settlers homes or
elaborate Victorian buildings. Down another layer, in the 1890s,
we find evidence of the Ossipee Mountain Park era when Boston
industrialist BF Shaw built his picturesque summer home and
exclusive inn, Weelanka Hall, on the open field that would become
Tom Plant's private golf course. On a promontory, Shaw constructed
the Crow's Nest, where Lucknow would later sit, and along Shannon
Brook, with its spectacular waterfalls, he built woodland trails
and 12 rustic bridges, abandoned long ago. Ossipee Mountain Park
was famous in its day and attracted literary figures such as
Robert Frost, John Greenleaf Whittier, and Lucy Larcom. Below this
layer, when Weelanka's lawns were farmer's fields, we find traces
of a small community of 18th century settlers who marched their
way to the end of Moultonboro's Mountain Road and built their
homes in that intervale, so well supplied with water, forests, and
sun. The last of those settlers didn't leave until forced out by
Tom Plant in the early 1900s and their descendents still live in
the community. John Oliver, one of the Trust's Advisors and a
descendent of the Lees the last family to leave, remembers walking
there with his grandmother, who pointed out the old cellar holes
and abandoned trails and bridges. "I was just a kid,"
Oliver says of those walks. "I wish now I'd paid more
attention to what she told me." Researchers can perhaps go
below that layer, to find Native American hunting grounds. They
already have found a wilderness with old growth forests and the
inhabitants those forests support. Below it all, of course, are
the fascinating tectonic, volcanic, and glacial foundations of
this distinctive mountain range. The Trust is beginning to gather
evidence and artifacts from all of these layers. It has hired
biologist Rick van de Poll, of Center Sandwich to conduct
scientific studies on the property, to find evidence of the
volcanic origins of the mountain formation, and the pockets of old
growth forest that support a distinct wild community as well as to
conduct a complete bioinventory of the property. The Trust is also
researching the old trails and roads built by the early settlers,
and by B.F. Shaw and Thomas Plant. Many are abandoned, but still
traceable in the forests and along the brooks. One of the many
Trust volunteers is mapping the old trails as he finds them on the
ground and in documentation. The Trust has also just received
reminiscence from the Robie days, and it is collecting articles
and visual material from the early settlers era, and the two
estates of B.F. Shaw and Thomas Plant. Anyone who has material
relating to Ossipee Mountain Park, its predecessors and
successors, that they would like to donate, or information they
can offer about any of Ossipee's layers, should write to the Lakes
Region Conservation Trust at PO Box 377, Center Harbor NH 03226. And
check out www.lrct.org to follow the progress of this ambitious
project..
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