The Connecticut River: A Photographic Journey into the Heart of New England
By Al Braden
()
About this ebook
The photographs in The Connecticut River follow this major waterway for 410 miles, from its origin near the Canadian border to its wide mouth on Long Island Sound, giving us a vivid portrait of a living artery of the New England landscape. Author and photographer Al Braden opens the book with an essay introducing important aspects of the river, and then presents 136 full-page color photos, ranging from close-ups to dramatic aerials, to reveal the river as few people are privileged to experience it. Readers will see and learn about the landscape, history, development, conservation, geologic formations, wildlife, flora, and, of course, the moods of the water, sky, and riverbank. Informative captions provide a wealth of information about the images, from pristine misted mornings to rich valley farmlands and modern hydroelectric turbines. Together, the images and text provide a poignant look at the river and document its centrality to the development of the unique character of New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, and Connecticut. Includes select bibliography and list of resources.
Al Braden
Al Braden is a photographer whose work has been published in many magazines including National Geographic Kids, Yankee, and Woman's Day. He lives in Austin, Texas.
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Book preview
The Connecticut River - Al Braden
The Connecticut River
Garnet Books
Early Connecticut Silver, 1700–1840
by Peter Bohan and Philip Hammerslough
Introduction and Notes by Erin Eisenbarth
The Connecticut River
A Photographic Journey through the Heart of New England
by Al Braden
Stories in Stone
How Geology Influenced Connecticut History and Culture
by Jelle Zeilinga de Boer
The Old Leather Man
Historical Accounts of a Connecticut and New York Legend
by Daniel DeLuca
Dr. Mel’s Connecticut Climate Book
by Dr. Mel Goldstein
Westover School
Giving Girls a Place of Their Own
by Laurie Lisle
Henry Austin
In Every Variety of Architectural Style
by James F. O’Gorman
Making Freedom
The Extraordinary Life of Venture Smith
by Chandler B. Saint and George Krimsky
Welcome to Wesleyan
Campus Buildings
by Leslie Starr
Published by
Wesleyan University Press, Middletown, CT 06459
www.wesleyan.edu/wespress
Text and photos © 2009 by Al Braden
Afterword © Chelsea Reiff Gwyther
All rights reserved
Printed in China
5 4 3 2 1
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Braden, Al.
The Connecticut River : a photographic journey through
the heart of New England / Al Braden ; afterword by
Chelsea Reiff Gwyther.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN 978-0-8195-6895-3 (cloth : alk. paper)
1. Connecticut River Valley—Pictorial works.
2. Connecticut River—Pictorial
works. I. Title.
F12.C7B73 2009
974’.0440222—dc22
2009018241
This book has been printed on paper certified by the Forest Stewardship Council.
Contents
Introduction: Cannon Fire and All That Stuff
Connecticut River Watershed Map
The Photographic Journey
Afterword: This Place Is Worth Defending
Selected Resource Organizations
Locations of the Images
Selected Bibliography
Introduction Cannon Fire and All That Stuff
A bright summer day.
I was cruising down the Connecticut River toward Charlestown, New Hampshire, in my sixteen-foot bow rider. I passed farm fields, sandy banks and a few small islands; almost no sign of civilization.
I was just enjoying the day’s quiet isolation. A beautiful day with few boats or canoes on the water. How exquisite to be out enjoying this day.
The river is underused,
I thought.
I almost stopped the boat. Underused! #$*&#&&*#!! Who are YOU to think such a thing? Would you be happier with an extra hundred boats per mile?
Well, no, it’s just fine like this, thank you.
And so with that bit of back-and-forth, I began to think more about our relationship with the Connecticut River. How do we relate to this beautiful river? How have we used it? How was it in the past? How has it sustained us? How has it contributed to our history? Have we abused it? What are we doing to conserve it?
Rounding the bend at the Charlestown Bridge, I heard cannon fire, interrupted by rifle volleys. I slowed my boat down to hear what was going on. Cannon fire was unexpected on this summer river trip.
Though I had set out with boat and camera to capture the beauty and landscape of the Connecticut River, history and humanity were never far away. Approaching by water, it was hard to see over the banks to the reconstructed Fort at No. 4, with its surrounding fields, where the battle reenactment was taking place. This fort at Charlestown, New Hampshire, got its name from having been built to defend the fourth of twenty-six plantations
established by the Massachusetts General Court in 1735 for colonization of the upper Connecticut River Valley.
I nudged the boat onto a sandy shore, tied on to a branch and carefully climbed up the bank, wanting to see the battle, not become a part of it.
Throughout the Connecticut Valley, we are always just a step away from history. One step from something that happened way back in the 1700s that affects our communities today.
Watching the battle reenactment, I thought how far away from Deerfield’s fort I was, by foot or canoe. While an easy hour away on Interstate 91 today, in 1744, the distance would have been a difficult forty-five miles through wilderness. The river was then the surest route. Even then, you might have struggled against a heavy current, or risked being stranded in low water. At that time, the river was not the tame, interconnected series of reservoirs behind cement dams that we know today. It was wild and rocky. For those traveling by boat, the treacherous Bellows Falls and Turners Falls would have to be portaged.
The French troops in the reenactment would have had an even more difficult journey, traversing rugged Vermont after canoeing down the shores of Lake Champlain from Quebec.
Back then, there was no noise pollution, light pollution, acid rain, parking lot runoff or radioactive rods stored by the river’s shore. If you were out in the woods, you were out there on your own. Self-reliance was the norm. Night was dark, food was scarce. You had to know what was edible in the forest and how to find it.
I set out to explore this river, its past . . . present . . . and future. I wanted to understand it . . . photograph it . . . and do what I could to help comprehend our important role in protecting it.
After ten years’ traveling, boating, hiking, cruising and flying, I