LAKE WINNIPESAUKEE


'Lake Winnipesaukee' is the largest lake in New Hampshire. It is approximately 21 miles (34 km) long (northwest-southeast) and from one to nine miles (1.6 to 15 km) wide (northeast-southwest), covering 69 square miles (180 km²) (71 square miles when Paugus Bay is included),[1] with a maximum depth of 212 feet (64.6 meters).
The lake contains at least 253 islands, half of which are less than a quarter-acre in size (list of islands) and is indented by several peninsulas, yielding a total shoreline of some 288 miles. The driving distance around the lake is 63 miles. It is 504 feet (153 m) above sea level. Winnipesaukee is the third-largest lake in New England after Lake Champlain and Moosehead Lake.

Contents
History
Cities and towns
Lakes region
Steamship Mount Washington and its successor
Ice-Out Contest
In popular culture and the arts
References
External links

History


The Weirs, about 1920

Lake Winnipesaukee has been a tourist destination for more than a century, especially for residents escaping the summer heat of Boston and New York City. The Native American name Winnipesaukee means either "smile of the Great Spirit" or "beautiful water in a high place".[2] At the outlet of the Winnipesaukee River, the Winnipesaukee Indians, a subtribe of the Pennacook, lived and fished at a village called Acquadocton. The site is today called The Weirs, named for the weirs colonists discovered when first exploring the region.
Winnipesaukee is a glacial lake and an unusual one at that, since the last glaciation actually reversed the flow of its waters. Draining the central portion of New Hampshire, it once flowed southeast, leaving via what is now Alton Bay toward the Atlantic Ocean. When glacial debris blocked this path, flow was redirected westward through Paugus Bay into the Winnipesaukee River. The latter flows west from the lake and joins the Pemigewasset River in Franklin to form the Merrimack River, which flows south to Massachusetts and into the Atlantic.
Center Harbor witnessed the first intercollegiate sporting event in the United States, as Harvard defeated Yale by two lengths in the first Harvard-Yale Regatta on August 3, 1852.[3] The outcome was repeated 100 years later when the schools celebrated the centennial of the race by again competing on Lake Winnipesaukee.
More recently, Lake Winnepesaukee has become a significant tourist attraction in New Hampshire; French President Nicolas Sarkozy took his first vacation in office in August 2007 at Wolfeboro on the lake.
Lake Winnipesaukee was also where the eponymous Lake Winnipesaukee mystery stone was found.

Cities and towns


Sunset from Long Island

The communities that surround the lake, clockwise from the southernmost town, are:

Alton, the largest town in physical area in the lakes region.

Gilford, home to Gunstock Mountain Resort, noted for its skiing, hiking, camping and festivals.

Laconia, the main commercial city on the lake (surrounding Paugus Bay). Included in Laconia is Weirs Beach, the largest public bathing area on Winnipesaukee.

Meredith, whose harbor lies on the northwestern reach of the lake.

Center Harbor, a small town in Belknap County famous for its children's museum.

Moultonborough, famous for its Castle in the Clouds, an estate atop a small mountain.

Tuftonboro, which contains Melvin Village.

Wolfeboro, which bills itself as the "oldest summer resort in America."

Lakes region


Along with the rest of New Hampshire's Lakes Region, which also encompasses Lake Winnisquam, Squam Lake and Newfound Lake, Winnipesaukee has been a vacation community for at least a century, particularly drawing people from the Boston region. The area is home to numerous summer theater troupes and offers a variety of land and water recreational activities. There are numerous hiking trails in and around the surrounding mountains, which include the Ossipee Mountains to the east, the Belknap Range to the west, and Red Hill to the north.

Steamship Mount Washington and its successor


''The Mount Washington Under Full Speed Ahead'', 2006, painted by Peter Buck

The paddlesteamer ''Mount Washington'', named after the highest of New Hampshire's White Mountains, was launched in spring 1871 to carry mail, goods, and passengers on Lake Winnipesaukee, under the flag of the Boston and Maine Railroad. With a hull length of 178 feet and a beam of 49 feet she appeared as a typical representative of the North American sidewheelers around the second half of the century and was the largest steamer on the lake at that time. The huge paddle wheels were driven by a single-cylinder steam engine of 450 HP at approximately 26 RPM. The power was transferred from the vertical single cylinder to the wheel shaft by the walking beam, high above the upper deck, oscillating in the frequency of the paddle wheels. Known as "The Mount", her kitchen and restaurant service became famous.
On December 23, 1939, a nearby railroad station caught fire from an overheated stove. The fire soon spread to the ship, tied at the dock, and destroyed it. Efforts to cut the Mount loose were to no avail as it was a time of extremely low water and the hull was stuck fast in the mud of the lake bottom. Soon after, a local company was formed to build a new ship. Since Europe was already at war, obtaining steel was impossible. Instead, they purchased an old sidewheel vessel on Lake Champlain: the Chateaugay, a 203-foot, iron-hulled sidewheeler that was being used as a club house for the Burlington yacht club. It was cut into sections and transported to Lake Winnipesaukee on rail cars. A new twin-screw vessel was designed for the hull being welded back together at Lakeport. Powered by two steam engines taken from another ocean-going yacht, the new MS ''Mount Washington'' made her maiden voyage on August 15, 1940.
Two years after her launch, the new Mount's engines were removed for use in a navy vessel during World War II. After the war, the ''Mount Washington'' returned to the water. The ship was a success in the post-war tourist boom.[4]
In 1982, the Mount was cut open and extended with an additional 20-foot hull section to add larger lounge and food service facilities. Still popular, it makes one or two round trips on the lake per day during the summer season, as well as numerous dinner dance cruises in the evenings.

Ice-Out Contest


Lake Winnipesaukee is known for its annual Ice-Out Contest, in which people try to guess the earliest date that the ''Mount Washington'' can safely leave her port in Center Harbor and motor to four other ports (Weirs Beach, Alton Bay, Wolfeboro, and Meredith). Since records began in 1851, ice-out has happened as early as March 29 and as late as May 12, although 90 percent of the time it is declared during April.

In popular culture and the arts



★ The 1981 movie ''On Golden Pond'' was mainly filmed on Squam Lake, just northwest of Winnipesaukee, with a few scenes shot on Winnipesaukee itself.

★ In 1982, the American composer Alan Hovhaness (1911–2000), who spent much of his childhood in New Hampshire, composed ''Lake Winnipesaukee'', Op. 363, a sextet for flute, oboe, cello, two percussion, and piano.

★ The 1991 movie comedy ''What About Bob?'' was set at Lake Winnipesaukee (although the actual filming was done at Smith Mountain Lake in Virginia).

★ The 2006 comedy ''Click'' has a flashback depicting Adam Sandler as a kid playing on a beach on Lake Winnipesaukee.

★ In a Three Stooges short "No Census, No Feeling," the Stooges are census takers, and Curly answers a query about his birthplace with "Lake Winnipesaukee." When Moe asks him to spell it, he switches course, and says "Make that Lake Erie. I've got an uncle there."

★ On July 5, 2003, Governor Mitt Romney of Massachusetts, along with his sons, came to the aid of a family whose boat had sunk into the waters of Lake Winnipesaukee. Using jet skis to reach the family, Romney ferried them back and forth to the shore while his sons waited with the others in the water.[5]

★ In 2007, an American Express commercial about The Members Project, a community service project supported by American Express, mentioned keeping Lake Winnipesaukee clean as one of the projects [1].

References


1. New Hampshire GRANIT database
2.
3.
4. Paul H. Blaisdell: Three Centuries on Winnipesaukee, published 1975 by the New Hampshire Publishing Company, Somersworth, N.H.
5. Romney, Sons Rescue Boaters

The New Hampshire State Almanac

External links



BearCam - Webcams from the Bear Island Conservation Association

LakeWinnipesaukee.net

Winnipesaukee.com

Paintings of Lake Winnipesaukee

LWHS.us Lake Winnipesaukee Historical Society

LRCT.org Lakes Region Conservation Trust

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