THE CATSKILLS

THE CATSKILLS

by T. Morris Longstreth, foreword by Edward J. Renehan Jr.


In the spring of 1917, T. Morris Longstreth set off on a journey of discovery through the Catskill Mountains. Longstreth's ramble was an intimate journey, a four-hundred-mile hike for "fun and fish and freedom" filled with chance encounters and colorful characters, a "walkabout" through the natural wonders of the high peaks and rugged cloves, providing rare, early-1900s impressions of the villages along the way: places like Woodstock, Windham, Hunter, Stamford, Grand Gorge, Roxbury, Palenville, and Phoenicia. The dairy farms and boardinghouses where Longstreth spent his nights listening to local lore and legend are gone, as is the Catskill Mountain House from whose boardwalk Longstreth caught "Natty Bumpo's view" of "all creation." But thanks to the Catskill Park's protective "blue line," the world-famous scenic beauty that inspired the Hudson River School painters remains today just as Longstreth found it, still displaying "its own peculiar charm-a something not found elsewhere." "The book you hold in your hand is a unique and delectable thing - an engaging guide to that rugged, history-rich place defined by the essential blue line." ---- Edward J. Renehan Jr., author of John Burroughs: An American Naturalist

ISBN: 1-883789-36-2
5 x 8, 336 pages, 33 photographs, map, index
$16.95 paper

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