Books
The Adirondacks, by Donald Williams, Images of America Book Set
- Item Number
- 93
- Estimated Value
- 44 USD
- Sold
- 28 USD to Lakkakara
- Number of Bids
- 1 - Bid History
Item Description
Two book set of The Adirondacks, 1830-1930 and 1931-1990, by Donald Williams. The Adirondacks boast a rich history. These images illustrate the people, the events, and the everyday scenes that make up the Adirondacks story.
The Adirondacks: 1830-1930, tells how the region was first "discovered," explored, and preserved as the six-million-acre Adirondack Park, the largest park in the contiguous United States, a patchwork of public and private lands governed by one of the largest regional zoning plans in the country. With more than two hundred stunning photographs and fascinating tales of the region, it traces the development of the hamlets, the great camps, the guides, and the furniture and tanning businesses.
The Adirondacks: 1931-1990 celebrates the years in which the six-million-acre preserve truly became a people's park. With some two hundred rare images, the book includes views of the Winter Olympics held at Lake Placid in 1932, attended by thousands from the world over. It applauds the American boys working in the CCC camps in the Adirondacks during the Great Depression. It follows the steamboats as they ply Lake George and the Fulton Chain and other lakes, as well as the railroads as they bring in more and more visitors. It traces the rise and fall of the grand hotels and their successors: the cabins, motels, cottages, second homes, and campsites of the motoring public. It highlights the music, the architecture, the animals, the crafts-the more recent history of the Adirondack culture.
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