Excerpts
from The Concord & Montreal
Railroad System Booklet, c. 1893
At The Weirs
The Concord & Montreal Railroad system
is made up by a union of the Concord Railroad with the
original Boston, Concord & Montreal Railroad and White
Mountains Railroad. This system exists entirely within
the State of New Hampshire, and its various parts are
among the oldest railroad foundations of the country.
The main line of the Concord Railroad is laid between
the cities of Nashua and Concord, including the manufacturing
centres, Manchester and Hooksett, in its course, and following
closely the direction of the Merrimac River for its route.
For branches it has the Nashua, Acton & Boston Railroad,
connecting Nashua with Acton, in Massachusetts (the only
instance of any line of the system-extending outside the
borders of New Hampshire); the Suncook Valley Railroad,
connecting Hooksett with the rural centre of Barnstead
by a line through a beautiful section of farms and fells;
the Concord & Portsmouth Railroad, leaving the main
line at Manchester and running direct to Portsmouth, on
the seacoast, forty-one miles away; and the Manchester
& North Weare Railroad, connecting Manchester and
North Weare by a spur line delightful in situation and
full of interest for summer tourists.
1893 Annual Pass for Concord &
Montreal Rail Road
North of Concord the lines are of the old
Boston, Concord & Montreal Railroad, known as the
White Mountains Division of the Concord & Montreal
system. The main line of this division is from Concord
northward through Tilton, Laconia, Weirs, Plymouth, Woodsville,
Littleton, and a host of towns and villages interspersed,
to Wing Road, from which point the Trunk Line may be said
to be divided, one section continuing northward to Groveton
Junction, on the Grand Trunk Railway, and the other running
directly eastward to Fabyan’s, almost under the
very shadow of Mount Washington. The branches of the White
Mountains Division are: - a short spur from Tilton to
Belmont near Gilmanton, which will probably be extended
to the Iast named point; a line connecting Lake Village
(Laconia) with Alton Bay, traversing the entire length
of the southern shore of Lake Winnipesaukee; the Pemigewasset
Valley Railroad, leaving the main line at Plymouth and
running through a semi-mountainous country to North Woodstock,
and connecting directly with the Franconia section; the
Profile & Franconia Notch Railroad, leading from Bethlehem
Junction to Maplewood, Bethlehem, and the Profile House;
and the Whitefleld & Jefferson Railroad, connecting,
the two points indicated in this title by a line running
eastward about half-way between the two spurs of the main
line, as above set forth. The Concord & Montreal also
runs a short line from Fabyan’s across the valley
to the base of Mount Washington connecting directly with
the famous Mount Washington Railroad.
Aptly and with abundant foundation in truthfulness, the
State of New Hampshire was long ago entitled the “Switzerland
of America.” Possessing the rugged and picturesque
mountain and lake features which have made that diminutive
European country so famous, the Granite State offers these
in a far grander and more diversified presentation and
with a charm and fascination of detail which even the
Alpine region cannot boast. Besides, New Hampshire affords
that which Switzerland does not: the most beautiful and
attractive rivers and streams in existence, watering lovely
vales and supporting and enriching farming and rural districts,
such as would be sought for in vain in any other country
under the sun. In keeping, too, with the extent and variety
which form the distinguishing traits of the New England
commonwealths, the Granite State has a seacoast, diminutive
and curtailed it is true, but offering beaches, and ports,
and harbors, and shore-scenery that would have made a
name centuries ago for any Old-World section. ln this
State the angler finds his paradise, in the region where
brooks and streams take their rise in mountain heights,
and rush in swift and joyous currents to the level of
outspread ponds or lake, or, joining the course of stately
rivers, flow onward to a union with Old Ocean. The mountain-climber
and explorer finds infinite variety and scope for his
exertions, in the massive and tumbled and picturesque
upheavals and depressions, the peaks and gorges and ravines
of the Central sections. The pleasure-seeker and tourist
flit like the bee from sweet to sweet, now whipping the
stream for trout, exploring myriad localities on mountain-side,
lake-shore and island for new experiences and revelations
of beauty or interest, or basking the deliciously tempered
sunshine and atmosphere of vale and glen and upland, never
fearing monotony or anticipating satiety. The tired, worn,
perhaps health-broken toiler, exhausted and oppressed
with months of ceaseless labor, finds balm and recreative
influence such as he has never even dreamed of until he
visits here, among the farms and hillsides and nooks and
corners of this goodly heritage. ln short, no order or
condition of humanity but finds somewhere, and probably
in numberless localities in this old Granite State, scenes
and haunts for summer time inviting and rewarding all
who need or may care for their beneficences.
Into all this region of delights and attractions the Concord
& Montreal system penetrates, ministering to every
interest, responding to every demand for transportation
of person or property, opening up every section and district
and department to visitation or occupancy. Its lines afford
passing glances, introductions, as it were, to every form
and manifestation and situation of beauty or attractiveness
known in the region. The wondrously fair Merrimac Valley
; the monuments ofmanufactory enterprise; countless abodes
of wealth and ease and institutions of community progress;
lovely intervales and glens strewn with homesteads and
farming-establishments; takes with charming successions
of scenery of shore and island and surface; grand old
woods coming down from hill or mountain sides to meet
the waters flowing in streams or glistening in sunlight;
elevations growing Into hills, hills swelling into mountains,
mountains topping and overtopping each other, and bristling
with crags and ledges and rugged formations; beautiful
vistas extending in every direction among these until
the eye droops and thought wearies in following their
suggestions; great wilderness existing today wild and
unreclaimed as when fresh from the hand of the Creator
-these are but fragmentary specimen of the natural characteristics
of the country in which this system is planted, and to
which it constantly ministers.
The Merrimac Valley
Time was when in the whole New England region every natural
feature and locality, every river, lake, mountain, headland,
or notable site, had its Indian name, bestowed by the
ancient and original owners of and dwellers in the land
and descriptive of some quality, feature, or historic
association therewith connected. As the white settlers
overrun the country and established their homesteads and
communities at various points, these Indian names often
fairly graced the institutions of their founding, and
became familiar in the ears of their progeny and to the
added multitudes who became joined to the interests of
their founding. But the spirit of change, which has worked
so mightily in all the development of this great section,
in due time caused the substitutions of more modern nomenclature
for these Indian appellations-more's the pity, - until
it has come to pass that modern ears are greeted but seldom
by the soft, expressive titles with which the red man
used at once to name and describe the locality or thing
of which he spoke.
Perhaps, however, no one of the New England States has
preserved in greater number and purity the Indian names
than has New Hampshire, the State preeminently of mountains,
lakes, and rivers, such as the Indian knew and loved,
and in the neighborhood of which he chose to dwell; and
among these names none has been preserved with greater
acceptance to the generations that have occupied in modern
times, or the myriad hosta of travellers and tourists
that have wandered over the earth during later decades,
than that of the bounding, sparkling, joyous river, formed
by the union of the Winnipesaukee and Pemigewasset, streams
that rush downward from the bases of the White Mountains
and join their forces as they hurry toward the sea.
Being at the confluence of two beautiful rivers, the Merrimac
and the Nashua, the water views and facilities for summer
sports and pastimes afforded by such natural provision
are in excess. Nashua is really one of the youngest of
the Granite State communities, having been first settled
considerably within the present century, and attaining
its growth in comparatively recent times. Until long after
the Revolutionary War its site formed a portion of the
old town of Dunstable, and the whole section was included
in the ravages of King Philip’s bloody campaigns.
After leaving Nashua, the route northward, following the
course of the Merrimac through the valley, is attractive
beyond measure. Towns and villages are not found in frequent
succession, although favorable sites, almost sure to prove
of rare beauty and utility, have been occupied for community
purposes; but upon either bank of the river, planted upon
some gently sloping hillside, or nestling among groves
or in winsome valley nooks, larger or smaller individual
estates are profusely scattered, representing retired
wealth, elaborate farming industry, or the summer establishments
of citizens of widely separated centres. Often these estates,
with their finish of ornamentation and cultivation, lend
peculiar attractions to situations for which nature has
done her best, and animate scenes that have been fair
to look upon ever since the dawning of creation. But the
river itself forms the great centre of attraction in all
this section. Its swift moving current has worn a deep
bed in the valley in the course of centuries so that its
banks on either side appear in miniature cliffs, only
a few feet raised above the surface of the water to be
sure, but constantly suggesting that overlooking of the
water from the land always so pleasing where the river
or lake or ocean enter into the scenery. Usually, the
grounds on either side of the river slope gently backwards
and upwards from its banks, sometimes rising in slight
undulations for long distances before finally reaching
the extreme level, and again abruptly mounting skyward
in successions of low, wooded hills, in this part of the
State hardly suggestive of the mountain heights that so
completely occupy a little farther away. Although in its
general course the river is unusually straight, its shores
are sinuous enough, winding and circling about miniature
points and headland, often covered with the loveliest
groves; or, occasionally, the waters broaden out into
lakelets, apparently to accommodate groups or individuals
of fairest islands, that seem to be floating quietly on
the surface of the stream under the sunlight. The points
and headlands half inclose, or give formation to, little
bays and harbors, that greatly diversify the views, and
enhance their attractiveness in all directions. Now and
then, the river rushes over broad and descending ledges
of bared rock, as at Hooksett and old Amoskeag, when the
most picturesque and sightly river-falls imaginable are
developed.
Amid all these scenes and situations the valley roads
are laid ; and near these beneficent highways are the
celebrated New Hampshire farms the centres of sojourn
for myriad visitors to these parts in summer time, who
value their accommodation,their home-life and their wondrous
recreative influences as they can never esteem the ministrations
of hotels great and small, or the caravansaries of cosmopolitan
features to be found on every hand in the seashore, lake,
and mountain localities.
Dividing these rural sections into departments, as it
were, the centres of manufacturing industries are set
along this valley. Midway between Nashua and Concord appears
the thriving city of Manchester a municipal establishment
that has even more of country than of city features, and
whose surroundings are of the loveliest natural scenery
affording ministrations and satisfaction to summer-seekers
such as few localities can boast. Although Manchester
is the most populous city in New Hampshire, it has scarcely
more than 40,000 inhabitants, and its municipal belongings
are compacted within comparatively narrow limits. Here
the Merrimac anciently cut its way through a sort of gorge,
in the midst of an elevated plain (which plain is now
occupied by the city establishment), plunges grandly over
the ledges in it’s hurried course, forming the notable
Amoskeag Falls, a picturesque a spectacle of tumbling
water as one can find in many miles of travel. The Indians
knew all about this section, one may be very sure.
The summer-traveller, or sojourner, will be likely to
value the Manchester neighborhood chiefly for the opportunities
here afforded for the blending of city and country pleasures.
In all New Hampshire there is no larger grouping of fine
estates and residences around a common centre than is
the case in the suburbs and vicinity of this city. Here
the outlooks, and the highways for driving, are superb.
The land is more elevated, more tumbled about in lofty
hills, than is usual in Merrimac situations, and among
these elevations the river winds with a beauty constantly
varying and superlatively commanding. The Falls, with
the rapids above and the rushing, dashing waters below
them, are grand to look upon, especially when the river
is even moderately full. Four miles east of the city lies
the beautiful lake Massabesic, a sheet of water so wondrously
irregular in outline, that although it is only four miles
across its widest part it has still thirty-one miles of
shore in its circumference. With picturesque islands in
every part, beaches of whitest, the finest wood-growths
coming down to meet its shimmering waters, and sentinel
hills on every side affording the most glorious outlooks
over the surrounding scenery, no wonder that this lake
forms a notable point of visitation, and that its Fairy
Grotto and sulphurous Devil’s Den are attractions
remembered by thousands who have investigated their mysteries.
In all this section the hotel and the farmhouse vie with
each other as centres of home-life for the summer-sojourner
and present countless attractions, irresistible by those,
who may tarry among them during the warm months.
A few miles above Manchester, on the river, is Hooksett,
whose manufacturing establishment, so far as it goes,
is similar to that of Manchester, only Hooksett is a New
England village, while Manchester is a full-fledged city.
All along its course the Merrimac is crossed at intervals
by bridges of wood or iron ; and a turn of the river at
this point requires a crossing to enter Hooksett by a
bridge 550 feet long. The site of this village forms part
of the reservation anciently given by Massachusetts to
Passaconaway; the great sachems Of the Penacooks. Passaconaway
and Wonalancet his son, were converted to Christianity
by the venerated Eliot; and even King Philip, with all
his eloquence could not seduce these converts from their
new-found faith, when he afterwards persuaded the Penacooks
to become part of his anti-English confederation.
The scenery about Hooksett is rugged and primitive, numerous
elevations on all sides rising often abruptly, while on
the west side, across the river, a ragged, jagged, lofty
pile of crags, known as Pinacles Mount, rises sharply
to semi-mountanious height, and overlooks vast sections
of the State in every direction. At the base of this singular
formation a correspondingly deep lake, wild and picturesque
enough to look upon, and having no visible outlet, finds
place. Near the village, as the river passes, it tumbles
again, in a sixteen feet fall, over a bottom of rocks
and ledges, supplying another wondrously attractive feature
of water view for the tourist or sojourner.
The characteristics of the Merrimac Valley, as above set
forth, continue as the course is held northward, until
Concord, the capital city of the State, is reached. Here
and there, from valley points, widely extended outlooks
are afforded; and again and again, old Kearsarge, rising
loftily like an advanced guard of the mountain ranges,
suggests the change in scenic forms that is about to take
place a little further on. For, soon after leaving Concord,
as the route trends northward, the Merrimac and the lovely
valley will be lost sight of, and the lake and mountain
region of New Hampshire be somewhat abruptly entered upon.
Concord is a city of about 15,000 inhabitants, and distant
from Boston 75 miles. Geographically, it occupies the
centre of the State, reckoning from east to west, being
about equi-distant from the ocean and the Connecticut
River. Historically, its associations are full of interest.
In 1725, its site was in possession of and occupied by
the Penacook Indians. In 1733, this site was granted by
Massachusetts to white settlers, who displaced the Indians.
A few years later it became a part of New Hampshire; and
in the early part of the present century it became the
capital of the State.
But with Concord, as indeed with all the New Hampshire
localities treating here, we have not so much to do now
historically as with natural features, situations, and
characteristics as surnmering-places. From any standpoint,
indeed, the capital city of the old Granite State is wondrously
at tractive; but from that last above named it has no
superior.
There is little need, indeed, in pursuing the purposes
of this volume, setting forth how, from the earliest days,
Concord has been one of the most important and most illustrious
of New England centres; how that the famed and quaintly
energetic Count Rumford, many decades ago, made temporary
home here, and left his name and the impress of his genius
and energy upon many institutions and features of the
place; or how that, looking still farther into the past,
the original possessors of the country round about held
pow-wows and “councils” upon its territory,
as in a place revered even by their rude sensibilities
for its matchless natural beauties and its appealing associations
through harboring a thriving and pushing business community,
the qualities of this neighborhood that attract and hold
the stranger or the novice in his enjoyment are of finer
fibre and flavor than those having reference to, or connection
with, material interests alone. Of these qualities the
name “Concord” is exactly descriptive and
interpretive; and the true Concord is found in the fitting
into each other of all the natural, acquired and artificial
elements of the situation. In short, here is precisely
such a locality as in older countries would receive the
title of “The Vale of Peace.”
In the immediate neighborhood of Concord there are no
lofty mountains no wild ravines or ragged wildernesses;
no outspread lakes, with rock-strewn it and heavily wooded
shores; not even a tumbling waterfall in the river to
attract by any other manifestations of natural eccentricities.
The scenery of this locality is rather of the peaceful
pastoral order, and its attractions are of nature in perfect
rest, and of softest, and most soothing influences on
every hand. The situation is of vast meadow tracts, stretching
away from the river banks, and from the clustering hills
on which the city stands, on almost every side these meadow
lands undulating gently in every portion, and dotted with
groves and hamlets, and the institutions and establishments
of humanity as incidental to a thriving, intelligent,
and progressive population.
Upon these meadows and intervales are some of the finest
farms in the State, or, indeed in the country ; and various
most beautiful localities have been utilized for special
foundations, as, for instance, the State Asylum for the
Insane, St. Paul’s School, and the like. From the
breezy hills upon which the city stands, the outlook across
the intervale lands extends for miles in every direction;
and the boundary of the view, or the horizon, is marked
by a fringe of low, wooded hills, an admirable framing
for a picture that can hardly be temperately described.
The finest roads cross and mark these lowlands in every
direction, affording delightful drives outward to the
hill-country on the boundary, and to innumerable attractive
spots and locations within the sections. The clustering
elevations about the city command complete views of all
; and from the top of one of them, when the air is perfectly
clear and the weather fine, outlooks into every county
in the State may be obtained, including marvellous revelations
of mountain peaks, such as distinguish the scenery of
but few portions of the earth’s surface. In the
midst of all the river flows, a quiet, vvinsome, fascinating
element of beauty in the landscape, satisfying its every
appearance, and animating the natural features as the
coursing of the life-blood does the face of a healthful
man.
Now, here is indeed a very “ Eden of the North “
for summer visitors and sojourners; and around about this
city there are attractions of sanitary qualities, rural
situations, beautiful scenery, and temporary homes for
summer, such as the denizens of any community establishment,
near or remote from this locality, who feel a change of
place desirable in the summer time, might rejoice to find.
Need it be said that Concord and its neighborhood are
busy places at this season of the year, and that all these
charming and recreative influences are most thoroughly
utilized? The residences of the city population, and the
farmhouses and dwellings of the outlying districts, become
the headquarters every year of joyous, animated, happy
people, thoroughly intent upon enjoying, and profiting
by the natural provision here so lavishly bestowed, and
enlivening the situations with merry-making and good-fellowship,
of themselves the most excellent of recreative influences.
A few miles further northward, or to within the limits
of the town of Tilton, the Concord & Montreal Railroad
occupies the course of the Valley of the Merrimac, and
then, entering upon the lake section, leaves the “river
of the swift current” for other and far different
scenes. To all this valley and its dependencies this railway
system is a beneficent minister, bringing thousands upon
thousands of pilgrims, tourists, and visitors face to
face with its attractions and beauties yearly, and making
it possible that no inviting spot, no locality especially
favored by nature, no desirable situation, shall be too
remote from, or out of reach of, any class of summer seekers.