There are pictures online - much better than any that I'm about to show you - which document these scattered remains, and I'd gone up the previous summer in search of them. I biked from a parking area on Elbow Pond Road until reaching the water, and although I enjoyed a couple of hours roaming through the woods, as for finding any remnants? I returned home that afternoon with my tail between my legs.
If there was one single thing I wanted to find on this trip, it was this truck. Half buried in the ground and with some crazy homemade winch mounted to the front, its picture is what had originally put Elbow Pond on my map of places to explore.
We also found the second vehicle on my hit list, this smiling relic.
Although located in somewhat of a remote location, we did come across a few other people that afternoon: some ice fishermen, a few cross country skiers, and by a stroke of luck that made me want to play the lottery that night, an elderly gentleman who once actually lived here and was happy to stop and chat. He recalled cottages existing as far back as his memory took him, which was the 1930's, and he himself owned one up until the 60's. He was quick to point out that he only owned the cottage, not the land, as was the case with all of them. The land was owned by a logging company who, in an indication of how the world used to be a very different place, freely let people build their cottages and live along the pond.
Does Elbow Pond still have a resident?
This arrangement worked fine for everyone until the 1970's, at which point the land became more valuable to the White Mountain National Forest than it was to the logging company. The government purchased the property, and if there's one thing they were not about to tolerate it was a bunch of squatters living freely on their land. Cottage owners were given just 30 days to leave Elbow Pond, and according to the story this gentleman told us, many did not go peacefully. The more irate among them burned their cottages to the ground, and anything deemed to much trouble to carry was simply left. Many of those belongings remain today, with stoves being the most plentiful of all. I think we stopped counting them when we got into the double digits.
We marveled at the thought of so many cottages being set ablaze, and spoken like a man who had the good fortune of selling his own cottage just prior to it becoming worthless, the gentleman finished his story by saying that yeah, people were mad as heck at the time, but in the end it was a great thing because look at what a beautiful place we all have to enjoy now.
Tina getting shorter
Links:
https://www.scenicnh.com/blog/2015/09/abandoned-elbow-pond-community/
Place Names of the White Mountains - By Robert Hixson Julyan, Mary Julyan
I went here today and only found the one truck with the winch. Didn't find the second truck or any stoves or fridges. I walked all over the area west of the pond and stayed north of the swamp and stream. Where's the second truck in relation to the first? Is it south of the stream/swamp?
ReplyDelete