Andrew
Active member
There is a little 2378' mountain in Bethlehem, NH that is prominent in the town's history, as well as a notable and popular scenic mountain destination during the grand hotel/mountain carriage road period in White Mountain history, and remained as a popular tourist attraction into the early 1970's. At one time an expansive ski resort complex with a tram to the village was planned but never followed through (sound familiar?). Some history https://bethlehemheritagenh.org/mount-agassiz/
It has been a privately owned residence recently and a nice walk up to a view open to the public. These are the Presby brothers of Franconia, related in some way to the Cog Presby, and very active in providing some developments that benefit the local community as well as running some essential local businesses. The news story says buying the mountain was an opportunity the brothers just couldn't pass up, and they plan in the meantime to continue allowing recreational access on the property as they consider what to do with it.
Here is a link to the Caledonia Record https://www.caledonianrecord.com/
I subscribe to this site, so did not use a direct link to the story as I'm not sure if my link would be affected by my subscription, as this site does let you read 2 or 3 stories without paying.
It has been a privately owned residence recently and a nice walk up to a view open to the public. These are the Presby brothers of Franconia, related in some way to the Cog Presby, and very active in providing some developments that benefit the local community as well as running some essential local businesses. The news story says buying the mountain was an opportunity the brothers just couldn't pass up, and they plan in the meantime to continue allowing recreational access on the property as they consider what to do with it.
Here is a link to the Caledonia Record https://www.caledonianrecord.com/
I subscribe to this site, so did not use a direct link to the story as I'm not sure if my link would be affected by my subscription, as this site does let you read 2 or 3 stories without paying.