PRESIDENTIAL RANGE

:''For the range of the same name in the Green Mountains of Vermont, see Presidential Range (Green Mountains).''
The 'Presidential Range' of mountains is located in the White Mountains of the state of New Hampshire, almost entirely in Coos County. The most notable summits of the range are named for prominent Americans, either public figures of the 18th and 19th centuries or Presidents.

Contents
Notable Summits
Other Summits in the Range
Watersheds

Notable Summits


Northern Presidential Range in winter (summits labeled)

View of the Presidential Range from Mount Lafayette, July 2004.

These summits include, in sequence from southwest to northeast:

Mt. Webster — after Daniel Webster

Mt. Jackson
★ — after Charles Thomas Jackson (19th c. geologist)

Mt. Pierce
★ — after Franklin Pierce (formerly Mt. Clinton — after DeWitt Clinton)

Mt. Eisenhower
★ — after Dwight Eisenhower

Mt. Franklin — after Benjamin Franklin

Mt. Monroe
★ — after James Monroe

Mt. Washington
★ — after George Washington (A general at time of naming, and only later a president)

Mt. Clay — after Henry Clay (State changed name to Mt. Reagan after Ronald Reagan, US Government still recognizes Clay name)

Mt. Jefferson
★ — after Thomas Jefferson

Mt. Sam Adams — after Samuel Adams

Mt. Adams
★ — after John Adams

Mt. Quincy Adams — after John Quincy Adams

Mt. Madison
★ — after James Madison
Mt. Adams has, besides its main summit, four subsidiary peaks that are also commonly recognized by name; two, Sam Adams and John Quincy Adams, are listed above. The third and fourth are:

★ Adams 4 ("Mt. Abigail Adams" has been proposed)

★ Adams 5
The summits marked with an asterisk (
★ ) are included on the peak-bagging list of 4,000-foot and higher mountains in New Hampshire; the others are excluded, in some cases because of lesser height and in others because of more technical criteria.

Other Summits in the Range


The Appalachian Trail in the southern Presidential Range

Aside from the notable summits, the geological Presidential Range contains a number of additional named peaks. Several of these peaks, drained on their west faces by the Dry River, are less accessible than the main and most visited ridge of the range and are therefore likely to be neglected, or mentioned as an afterthought, in discussing the range as whole.
Subsidiary peaks of Mount Washington:

★ Ball Crag (6,106 ft)

★ Nelson Crag (5,620 ft)

Boott Spur (5,500 ft)
North from Mount Washington:

★ Mt. Bowman (3,449 ft) (spur of Mount Jefferson)
South from Mount Washington:

★ Engine Hill (3,100 ft)

★ Maple Mountain (2,601 ft)

★ Iron Mountain (2,726 ft)

★ Montalban Ridge:


Mt. Isolation (4,004 ft)



Mt. Davis (3,819 ft)


★ Stairs Mountain (3,463 ft)


★ Mt. Resolution (3,415 ft)

★ Bemis Ridge:


★ Mt. Crawford (3,119 ft)


★ Mt. Hope (2,505 ft)

★ Mt. Parker (3,004 ft)

★ Mt. Langdon (2,390 ft)

★ Mt. Pickering (1,945 ft) (family name of first president of Appalachian Mountain Club)

★ Mt. Stanton (1,716 ft)
The summits marked with an asterisk (
★ ) are included on the peak-bagging list of 4,000-foot and higher mountains in New Hampshire; the others are excluded, in some cases because of lesser height and in others because of more technical criteria.

Watersheds


The Presidentials separate drainage via the Saco and Androscoggin Rivers into the Atlantic Ocean on the coast of Maine, from drainage into the Israel and Ammonoosuc Rivers, thence into the Connecticut River, and thence into Long Island Sound.

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