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The Summit of Mt. Washington

History
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  The first known ascent of the 6288' mountain Agiocochook (later named Mount Washington) was made in 1642 by Darby Field. In the years to follow, few had dared to brave the climb. It wasn't until 210 years later in 1852 that the first summit house was built, one year before the construction of Tip Top House which stands today. Shortly thereafter, the Carriage Road and Cog Railway were completed on opposite sides of the mountain. Both were unprecedented feats of engineering marvel, and made New England's highest peak readily accessible to visitors of all ages. The mountain's popularity increased, and many structures were built on the summit, which soon became known as the 'City Among the Clouds'.

As the years rolled by, buildings went up and came down. In fact, all of them save Tip Top House burned to the ground in a great fire on June 18, 1908.
[SUMMIT MAP]
  
Even then, it was only 11 days till that building was again functional! In 1932, four men pioneered the Mount Washington Observatory, which has since kept a daily record of the summit's ever-changing weather. On April 12, 1934, the scientists recorded a wind gust of 231 MPH, the highest wind speed ever observed on the surface of the earth.

The map here shows today's summit features, the most prominent of which is the Sherman Adams Summit Building to the north and east of the 6288' summit, which is depicted by the orange triangle. Southwest of the summit rock is Tip Top House, and just south of the bottom of its wooden entry staircase you'll find the Mount Washington Observatory's rain gauge. Nearby is the end of the 3-mile long Cog Railway trestle and the Auto Road Stage Office, chained down to the ground! The Yankee Building, WMTW-TV buildings, power house, and transmitting towers adorn the southwest end of the summit complex. Also, three large parking areas have been paved for those who drive up the Auto Road.

A trip to Mount Washington is an unforgettable experience. Whether you take the train or the Auto Road up, whether you hike up in the summer or in the winter, whether it's 60 degrees out or 20 below, whether visibility's 100 miles or 100 feet, or whether it's a clear day or there's raging blizzard, the summit of New England's highest peak will seem a different place with every visit. It's no wonder they receive tens of thousands of visitors per year!  

The first summit house (shown here) was built in 1852
[THE FIRST SUMMIT HOUSE]
  
by J.S. Hall and L.M. Rosebrook, at a cost of $7000. Standing rigidly against the fiercest winds, the 64-foot-long stone house was anchored by four heavy chains over its roof. The house was located just northwest of the summit rock.

1853 is the year when two of Mt. Washington's still-present attractions were started: Tip Top House and the Carriage Road. In June of that year, the New Hampshire State Legislature chartered the Mount Washington Carriage Road Company
 
[TIP TOP HOUSE]
 
to plan and build the road to the summit, and a month later construction was begun on Tip Top House right next to the geographical summit of Mt. Washington. The stone hotel, seen in the 1850s engraving at right, was built for $7000 by Samuel F. Spaulding & Co. Anchored to the mountain by a cement and iron foundation, the 24' x 84' one-story building had a nearly flat roof and small, square windows lining the sides.

On September 1 in nearby Gorham, the Mount Washington Carriage Road Company first convened, presided by David O. Macomber. Their original plans states, "The road is to be sixteen feet wide, macadamized, and have a protection-wall, three feet high in dangerous places. A route has been thoroughly surveyed and located, with no greater rise than that of one foot to eight, to the top of Mount Washington, from Thompson's Glen House."

In 1854, Timothy Estus of Jefferson, NH built a 40' high platform atop the summit rock, which he called an 'observatory'.
[THE SUMMIT IN 1854]
  
It can be seen in the engraving on the left, depicting the summit in 1854. [Click on it for a larger version.] Estus' $600 structure was anchored by four vertical posts in the corners connected by cross-bracing, and a moving platform in the middle which could be raised and lowered with ropes and pulleys. For 50¢ apiece, tourists could be elevated to this highest point on the summit. The 'observatory' was more or less unsuccessful, and was abandoned the following year and torn down the next.

In 1855, work had begun on the Carriage Road,
 
[HALF-COMPLETED CARRIAGE ROAD]
 
which climbed up toward what is now called Chandler Ridge. However, in the autumn of 1856, the Company went bankrupt (due to extremely high costs) and the new road reached no further than the newly-constructed halfway house (seen at right), about four miles up from the Glen House.

The Cog Railway also has its roots in the 1850s. A man by the name of Sylvester Marsh and a friend had climbed to the summit of Mt. Washington in August of 1857.
[PLAN FOR A COG RAILWAY]
  
They had encountered a fierce storm and didn't complete the harrowing trek until after darkness fell. While bunking out at Tip Top House, Marsh envisioned a plan to ascend Mount Washington via steam trains. With the Carriage Road Company in bankruptcy, he quickly tailored his ideas and soon had a working, conceptual model of a steam engine pushing a passenger car up a central cog rail, as seen in the drawing here. He experimented with several prototypes the next winter, and in 1858, Sylvester Marsh presented a working model engine to the New Hampshire State Legislature. The engine climbed successfully up the piece of inclined track, but the demonstration wasn't convincing enough. It would take Marsh a few more years to convince the public that a mountain-climbing train could be a reality.

By the end of the 1850s, enough funding allowed work to resume on the Carriage Road,
 
[MT. WASHINGTON CARRIAGE ROAD]
 
with high hopes of completing the monumental job, "thus completing a carriage-route that for novelty, and unparalleled wonder-exciting location, will not in the western world have an equal." (J.H. Spaulding, Historical Relics of the White Mountains, 1858.) Progress physically resumed in 1859 under the reorganized Mount Washington Summit Road Company, and soon a path was laid closer and closer to the summit. The photo at right is looking northeast down the 6-mile grade, where clouds dot the landscape far below the road's edge.

By the end of the 1850s, the top of New England's highest peak was finally beginning its new life as a tourist attraction. Soon the Carriage Road and Cog Railway would be complete, new buildings would go up and come down, and more people would be able to experience the weather, grand views, and sheer thrill of ascending Mount Washington.

 

The Great Fire: June 19, 1908

These are just a few of the photos taken of the summit one day after a mammoth fire consumed every building and structure on the summit less Tip Top House, which was virtually untouched. Dry weather and a warm wind spread the flames rapidly, turning New England's City Among the Clouds into a pile of smoldering debris. All that remained was blackened scraps of broken wood, exposed chimneys, and the heat-twisted cog tracks.

[AFTERMATH OF THE GREAT FIRE OF 1908]

[AFTERMATH OF THE GREAT FIRE OF 1908]

[AFTERMATH OF THE GREAT FIRE OF 1908]

 

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