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Journey
in Time
In
this age of thruways, bullet trains and jet planes, its
hard for many of us to imagine the early days of travel in
the Adirondacks. There were no roads north of Old Forge,
and titans
of the American industrial revolution laid railroad tracks
to carry them from Utica to the Old Forge lakefront dock.

Buggies waiting for train
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Steamer dock
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The
journey further north to the great camps, hunting retreats,
cottages and
summer resorts required a series of steamboats, carriages,
more rails, and more steamers.

Old Clearwater |
In
"The Heydays of the Adirondacks, Maitland DeSormos
father-in-law, Fred Hodges, detailed in his notebooks
how the Clearwater was the first leg of the excursion
to Blue Mountain Lake.
By 8:30 in the morning on
those red letter days, the people would have gathered
on the docks along the Lake. The Clearwater would pick
them up and take them as far as Eagle Bay. There they
would board the train for the ten-mile trip to Raquette
Lake, where other steamers waited for them. Then came
the trip across Raquette Lake, up the Marion River and
its hairpin curves to the Carry. Here they would climb
into the old Brooklyn open trolley cars and be drawn
by
the dinky locomotive the half-mile distance to the foot
of Utowana Lake.
At
that point the Tuscarora, the Clearwaters twin,
would take them through the lake and past the
swinging bridge at the entrance to Blue Mountain Lake.
Then
came the unforgettable and all too-short trip across
the
that lake to the steamboat landing.
The return trip started
at 5:00 p.m. Then over the same course in reverse and
back to Cohasset [Point] (on Fourth Lake) by 9:30 or 10:00 p.m.
Now
that same five-hour journey into the heart of the Central Adirondacks can be
accomplished
in just under an hours drive.
Today,
theres still plenty of nature to enjoy in the Central
Adirondacks, hunting, fishing, canoeing, hiking, mountain
biking, whitewater
rafting...and you can get there in half the time. But you
can still enjoy portions of the journey those intrepid visitors undertook.
Though
the tracks no longer reach the Old Forge lakefront, you can still hop aboard
the Adirondack Scenic
Railroad in Utica and ride the rails through the Adirondack
foothills to the Thendara station. Or climb aboard in Thendara for an intimate
woodland experience venturing into some of the most pristine and
remote areas in the Adirondacks. Be sure to check the schedule
or the Loomis Gang or Bonnie & Clydes Crew might
surprise you.
Diesel and gasoline engines may have replaced
steam, but Old Forge Lake Cruises is keeping the historic
waterway journeys alive in the Central Adirondacks. Modeled after its namesake,
the Clearwater follows the old steamer boat route through the
first four lakes of the Fulton Chain.

Pickle Boat
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Mailboat
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Many old
timers have
fond memories of the old pickle boat that
came to the docks along the Fulton Chain stocked with all
the necessities
of camp life. Replaced now by conveniently located groceries
stores, one old time tradition continues today the
Mailboat, now named the President Harrison, in honor of our
23rd president
and
the man who initiated the route, is still delivering mail
to the camps along the shores of the Fulton Chain. It is
one
of the longest-running
mailboat routes in the country.
So
take a journey back in time
to a bygone era and experience first
hand
the history
and character
that built this region.
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Forge Lake Cruises 315-369-6473 www.oldforgecruises.com
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