To Katahdin: The 1876 Adventures of Four Young Men and a Boat

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Description

In 1876, the similar year that saw the birth of Percival Proctor Baxter, who would make it his lifes work to save lots of Katahdin for the people of Maine, three young brothers, George T., James W., and Joseph Sewall, all of Old Town, and their friend and distant cousin, Edwin Ned Hunt, set off on a North Woods adventure. With a light boat, a tent, two blankets apiece, a rifle, pistol, fishing apparatus, fifty pounds of flour, twenty pounds of salt pork, and a sufficent quantity of sugar, tea, cornmeal, molasses, salt, pepper, beans, and cheese, they traveled by train to the railhead at Abbot Village, by wagon to Moosehead Lake, after which started to row and paddle and sail and portage their way towards Katahdin, across lakes, down streams, through rapids, and over the carrys.

George Sewalls full of life account is illustrated with pencil sketches that capture both humorous moments and the wonderful thing about the wilderness. Even as their route saw some signs of logging, the area they traveled was once in large part untouched. From the top of Katahdin, down for three thousand feet beside us fell away the land, after which forest-covered plains extended league on league…at the west, south, and north, half a dozen clearings were all that took away from the forest wildness of the landscape.

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