Manual The Maine Woods
It was visited by Professor J. Bailey of West Point in ; by Dr.
Itineraries/Trail Map
Charles T. Jackson, the State Geologist, in ; and by two young men from Boston in All these have given accounts of their expeditions.
- Dragons Claw (Modesty Blaise, Book 9).
- One Reply to “The Maine Woods”!
- Protecting the Legacy of Maine's Forests and Woodlands.
- On Thoreau’s Trail in the Maine Woods, a review by Ron Hoag | The Thoreau Society.
- The Maine Woods?
Since I was there, two or three other parties have made the excursion, and told their stories. Besides these, very few, even among backwoodsmen and hunters, have ever climbed it, and it will be a long time before the tide of fashionable travel sets that way. The mountainous region of the State of Maine stretches from near the White Mountains, northeasterly one hundred and sixty miles, to the head of the Aroostook River, and is about sixty miles wide.
The wild or unsettled portion is far more extensive.
So that some hours only of travel in this direction will carry the curious to the verge of a primitive forest, more interesting, perhaps, on all accounts, than they would reach by going a thousand miles westward. Bailey of West Point in ; by Dr. Charles T.
- History Wars and Reconciliation in Japan and Korea: The Roles of Historians, Artists and Activists!
- Strike a Chord of Silence!
- The Leashes of Dogwood Hollow!
- Navigation menu.
- In this Book!
- Audio Preview.
- Build your own 2D Game Engine and Create Great Web Games?
Jackson, the State Geologist, in ; and by two young men from Boston in All these have given accounts of their expeditions. Since I was there, two or three other parties have made the excursion, and told their stories.

Besides these, very few, even among backwoodsmen and hunters, have ever climbed it, and it will be a long time before the tide of fashionable travel sets that way. The mountainous region of the State of Maine stretches from near the White Mountains, northeasterly one hundred and sixty miles, to the head of the Aroostook River, and is about sixty miles wide.
The Maine Woods Rambler
The wild or unsettled portion is far more extensive. So that some hours only of travel in this direction will carry the curious to the verge of a primitive forest, more interesting, perhaps, on all accounts, than they would reach by going a thousand miles westward. The next forenoon, Tuesday, September 1st, I started with my companion in a buggy from Bangor for "up river," expecting to be overtaken the next day night at Mattawamkeag Point, some sixty miles off, by two more Bangoreans, who had decided to join us in a trip to the mountain.