Monday, December 26, 2022

EP 81 Corbin Park: The Sordid and Racist History of Austin Corbin and the largest, most exclusive, "millionaire hunting reserve" East of the Mississippi River.

A Conversation with Vermont writer August Longpre

 

Corbin Park
The Sordid and Racist History of Austin Corbin and the largest, most exclusive, "millionaire hunting reserve" east of the Mississippi River. 

Nestled in the Upper Valley of New Hampshire, and cutting across five different towns; nearly hidden from the average person, is a parcel of land larger than 60% of NH towns. The price of entry is a good ol' boy connection and a very fat wallet - filled with millions, or even billions, of dollars. Officially it’s now called the Blue Mountain Forest Association, but nearly everyone who knows about it calls it Corbin Park. 

Surrounded by 26 miles of impervious fence, walling off 26,000 acres and two mountain peaks, Corbin Park seems mysterious, though harmless enough. But it is built upon a foundation of grift, pain, suffering that includes state-sponsored and institutional slavery, and, quite probably, a role in the near-extermination of the American Bison as a tool of genocide against the Cheyenne, the Sioux, the Crow and other plains Indian nations.

The main architect of this place was a man named Austin Corbin, who amassed a vast fortune through political connections, insider trading,  usury, and fraud and then, ironically, curried favor with the public as the "Savior of the American Bison" and New Hampshire boy yearning to return to his beloved home state.

You may have heard the stories of this "self-made" millionaire, further embellished with notions of saving the American Bison and his purchase of more than 200 parcels of land in Croydon, Cornish, Grantham, Plainfield and Newport.

In fairness, it appears that much of the land purchased to create Corbin Park was based on sales between willing sellers and Corbin and his employees, unlike the millions of dollars of Long Island real estate that he and his cronies cheated the people of the Montauk tribe out of during the same time period.

In his well-researched study of Austin Corbin and Corbin Park, local author August Longpre lays out the sordid history of Austin Corbin's founding of a national anti-semitic association, his use of prison labor, his collusion with his cousin, then Secretary of the US Treasury, Salmon P. Chase to secure the very first national bank franchise, and his fleecing of the Montauk tribe to build a seaport.

Corbin was tight with many of the Railroad Moguls of his time, many of whom colluded with elements of the US government to exterminate the buffalo as a way of bringing the Plains Indians, especially the Sioux and the Cheyenne, to their knees. Just how deep his own investments in the system that brought buffalo hunters to the American West to wipe out more than 100 million American Bison we may never know, but it is exceedingly likely that he at least knew of the plan.

How ironic it would be if evidence were to be found placing him among those who planned this act of genocide-inspired extinction more than 100 years before the National Buffalo Foundation would name him to its Hall of Fame in 1990.

If anyone can dig up the still-hidden facts about Austin Corbin, I suspect it is August Longpre. I only hope he doesn't stop until he has filled in all the questionable spaces.


Here's my conversation with August Longpre.

Listen
















CORBIN PARK HISTORY - Private Hunting Reserve Bigger Than Most NH Towns (Free Article)

August Longpre <augustlongpre@gmail.com>

August  ("Long pree")

Local author August Longpre provides a comprehensive history of Corbin

Park, the secretive private hunting reserve that is larger than most New

Hampshire towns, stocked with "exotic" animals, and reserved for

millionaires only.


Monday, December 12, 2022

EP 80 Kim Varney Chandler - Covered Bridges of NH4

 



EP 80 Kim Varney Chandler - Covered Bridges of NH


Several years of research by author Kim Varney Chandler went into the process of developing this extraordinary compendium of the Covered Bridges of New Hampshire, on top of the thousands of hours devoted to these bridges by the many communities, builders and individuals.


It seems that this all began as a project that evolved from the nexus of Kim's love for covered bridges and the advent of the Covid Pandemic. It only made sense to Kim that photographing and then writing about covered bridges was a safe way to be productive during the pandemic.  That is all to our benefit because she has produced, with the help of the talented folks at Peter E. Randall publishing, a book for the ages. 50 or 100 years from now I can imagine a lover of covered bridges with Kim Varney Chandler's book in hand exploring the covered bridges of New Hampshire. 



Listen here:



Purchase Covered Bridges of New Hampshire



Contact Kim by email: 

We are officially launching an effort to reclaim the Abenaki name of the Baker River

 

Flames Along the Asquamchumaukee


 We are officially launching an effort to reclaim the Abenaki name of the Baker River in central NH. Join the Mailing list to receive updates on how you can help!

Sign up here:

http://eepurl.com/ifTAu9

#RestoreAsquamchumaukee, #ReclaimAsquamchumaukee #RenewAsquamchumaukee







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Maple Moon Mindscape - Open Edition



A Door of Many Colors - Open Edition

   



Monday, November 28, 2022

E79 NH Icon and Paddling Pioneer Charlie Walbridge Honored for 50 years of Paddling and Conservation Leadership


"The freedom to take calculated risks, in business, love, or whitewater, is one of the most cherished prerogatives of a free people. I don't try to discourage knowledgeable people from willingly assuming risks; but I do work to educate inexperienced paddlers so they don't get into trouble inadvertently."

~ Charles Walbridge



Listen here link:

https://feeds.podetize.com/t2OWLmgUO.mp3


 When Charlie Walbridge is characterized as a pioneer in the field of wild water paddling and boating safety he reacts with characteristic modesty. Telling you the names of other greats of the era and their accomplishment rather than crowing about his own.  

After all . . .  just what is a pioneer? 

The rivers that would eventually form the basis for the northeastern transportation network were pioneered by the Iroquois and Abenaki people - and their Algonquin ancestors prior to them. Their bark and dugout canoes formed the basis of the voyageur boats later introduced and paddled by French Traders and capable of carrying hundreds of pounds of furs. These boats, too, were pioneering forms of transport.

In the late 1960s the principle form of boats to travel the rivers of the northeast were open canoes, now employed mostly for recreational purposes. First made of wood and canvas and later aluminum, a hardy group of paddlers had already begun pioneering the development of K1 (Kayak) and C1 deck-covered boats, soon to be followed by twin cockpit hulls employed for slalom and wildwater racing. 

What seems to have defined a pioneer under any of these circumstances was the willingness to use one's own labor to craft the next iteration of boat and the next level of adventure more than anything else. So, under those circumstances, it is fitting that Charlie Walbridge and the other daring and adventurous souls of the sixties and 70s paddling generations should be lionized for the role that they played in bringing on the era's of creek boats, playboats, slalom, and wild water paddling.

In less than 2 generations they have advanced the sport of paddling from a race against the wind, with feathers flowing to riding the curl of massive standing waves in a terrain park designed to challenge even the hardiest of paddlers.  

Yet even at their "Tekkiest" there is still a deep reverence for our native brothers and sisters who plyed these waters and revered the soul of grandmother earth.

So it was that few were surprised when this year, Charlie Walbridge, an icon of River Safety and a nationally and internationally renowned symbol of adventure and conservation, with deep ties to New Hampshire, was inducted into the International Whitewater Hall of Fame and the Southern Appalachian Paddlesports Hall of Fame.

Wayne King, host of the New Hampshire Secrets, Legends & Lore Podcast caught up recently with Walbridge to celebrate his more than 50 years of adventure and activism within the paddling community.



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International Whitewater Hall of Fame Interview with Legendary Whitewater Safety Leader Charlie Walbridge

The paddling experience of Charlie Walbridge spans more than five decades, and over that time he has been one of whitewater sport’s greatest innovators in safety and rescue technique. Charlie is an inductee in to both the International Whitewater Hall of Fame and the Southern Appalachian Paddlesports Hall of Fame. In this interview, Marc Hunt and Charlie discuss his history and the evolution of safety within the sport.

 

"Charlie Walbridge's work has saved countless lives and kept rivers open and accessible to those who wished to assume personal responsibility and risk. His work, while focused predominantly in the U.S., is imitated and known worldwide."

International Whitewater Hall of Fame nomination 2005

Tuesday, November 1, 2022

Ep 78 Patricia Dunfey-Hoyt - The Journey from Teacher to Children's Literature Author PD Hoyt




 

Patricia Dunfey-Hoyt - The Journey from Teacher to Children's Literature Author PD Hoyt 

PD Hoyt is the pen name of New Hampshire children's author Patricia Dunfey-Hoyt, adopted as she navigated the complicated process of moving from classroom teacher to writer of children's literature. We take a broad look at her life and the process by which she has brought her ideas to life since retiring from teaching. PD Hoyt is readying her third book, "The Alphabet Comes Marching In" for release on the heels of her books "The Bakery Shop" and "The Mother's Day Gift".

PD Hoyt will be speaking and signing books Saturday November 5, 2022 at New Berrys on the Common a new artists consignment shop (and soon to be restaurant) in Plymouth. 

Once again Alex Ray and the Common Man family has captured the magic of our past in a great new establishment, you are invited to "Get in here!" and browse work by some of the region's most talented artists and crafters. Hoyt's books will continue to be available here after the signing of course.

Listen here:
https://feeds.podetize.com/kxdDSohuW.mp3

Dragonfly Publishing