40 research outputs found
Lengthy description of winter travels by the author from Portland to Rangeley to
Lengthy description of winter travels by the author from Portland to Rangeley to get away
Detailed article describing the author\u27s vacation in the Rangeley Lakes-area hou
Detailed article describing the author\u27s vacation in the Rangeley Lakes-area house where Louise Dickinson Rich wrote the Maine classic We Took to The Woods. Published in 1942, the book became an instant bestseller. Rich\u27s legendary Winter House and other fabled digs at Forest Lodge are now the property of a registered Maine Guide who uses them to house his guests
Farrar\u27s New Map of the Rangeley Lakes Region and the Headwaters of the Connecticut, Magalloway, Androscoggin, Sandy and Dead Rivers 1884
Showing all railroad, state and steamboat routes, county and wood roads, hotels, camps and post offices / drawn expressly for Farrar\u27s Richardson & Rangeley Lakes. Relief shown by hachures and spot heightshttps://digitalmaine.com/maps/1024/thumbnail.jp
Brief article reporting that Richard A. Spencer of Portland and Edward J. Kfoury
Brief article reporting that Richard A. Spencer of Portland and Edward J. Kfoury of Oquossoc have been named to receive the Alexander Calder Conservation Award, which recognizes individuals who protect wildlife habitat in the United States. The two men, co-founders of the Rangeley Lakes Heritage Trust, helped create a 10,000-acre forest reserve, protecting 21 miles of lake frontage, two ponds and a mountain
Cover Story piece on author Louise Dickinson Rich, and about her Winter House
Cover Story piece on author Louise Dickinson Rich, and about her Winter House and Forest Lodge, where she wrote her first books. The structures are located along Rapid River, two miles from the nearest neighbors at Middle Dam at the end of Lower Richardson Lake in the Rangeley Lakes region of Maine. Rich\u27s Maine woods trilogy captured the imagination of readers during the difficult World War II years. Rich wrote about a world apart that gave people comfort. Forest Lodge is now the home of Aldro French and Joan Magrauth, both registered Maine guides, who operate Rapid River Fly Fishing. The Winter House is part of Lakewood Camps, which is owned by Stan and Sue Milton and Janne Provencher. With a related article about Rich\u27s literary legacy
Alien Registration- Seeley, Joseph J. (Rangeley, Franklin County)
https://digitalmaine.com/alien_docs/19674/thumbnail.jp
Alien Registration- Ivers, Henry J. (Rangeley, Franklin County)
https://digitalmaine.com/alien_docs/19585/thumbnail.jp
Alien Registration- Eastwood, Carl J. (Rangeley, Franklin County)
https://digitalmaine.com/alien_docs/19637/thumbnail.jp
Alien Registration- Mathieson, Hugh J. (Rangeley, Franklin County)
https://digitalmaine.com/alien_docs/19666/thumbnail.jp
Chlorite-bearing polymetamorphic metapelites in the Rangely area, Maine: evidence for equilibrium assemblages
Reviews textural and chemical aspects of chlorite in garnet-to-sillimanite-grade metapelites of the southwest Rangeley Quadrangle in Maine. Because of polymetamorphism, the textural aspects of the chlorite could lead to interpreting it as a nonequilibrium phase. However, systematic patterns of chlorite chemical composition relative to metamorphic grade, mineral assemblages, and sulfidation reactions indicate that it is in chemical equilibrium with the other minerals present. It is concluded that for petrogenetic consideration of metapelites that have been subjected to polymetamorphism, chemical evidence is the best guide for assessing approach to equilibrium by chlorite. -Author
