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Lake Winnipesaukee

Lake Winnipesaukee (/ˌwɪnɪpəˈsɔːki/) is the largest lake in the U.S. state of New Hampshire, located in the Lakes Region at the foothills of the White Mountains. It is approximately 21 miles (34 km) long (northwest-southeast) and from 1 to 9 miles (1.6 to 14.5 km) wide (northeast-southwest), covering 69 square miles (179 km2)—71 square miles (184 km2) when Paugus Bay is included[2]—with a maximum depth of 180 feet (55 m).[3] The center area of the lake is called The Broads.[4]: 31 

Lake Winnipesaukee
Lake Winnipesaukee from the summit of Mt. Major
LocationBelknap County and Carroll County, New Hampshire
Coordinates43°36′N 71°20′W / 43.600°N 71.333°W / 43.600; -71.333
Primary inflowsGunstock River; Merrymeeting River; Melvin River; Red Hill River; Lake Waukewan canal
Primary outflowsWinnipesaukee River
Basin countriesUnited States
Max. length20.8 mi (33.5 km)
Max. width9.0 mi (14.5 km)
Surface area71 sq mi (180 km2)
Max. depth180 ft (55 m)
Shore length1288 mi (463 km)
Surface elevation504 ft (154 m)
Islands258[1]
Settlementssee article
1 Shore length is not a well-defined measure.

The lake contains at least 264 islands,[1] half of which are less than 0.25 acres (0.10 ha) in size, and is indented by several peninsulas, yielding a total shoreline of approximately 288 miles (463 km). The driving distance around the lake is 63 miles (101 km). It is 504 feet (154 m) above sea level. Winnipesaukee is the third-largest lake in New England after Lake Champlain and Moosehead Lake.

Outflow is regulated by the Lakeport Dam[5] in Lakeport, New Hampshire, on the Winnipesaukee River.

History edit

 
The Weirs, c. 1920
 
Lake Winnipesaukee, by William Trost Richards

The Abenaki name Winnipesaukee (often spelled Winnipiseogee in earlier centuries[6]: 27 [7]) means either "smile of the Great Spirit" or "beautiful water in a high place".[6]: 19  At the outlet of the lake, the Winnipesaukee people, a subtribe of the Pennacook, lived and fished at a village called Acquadocton. Today, the site is called The Weirs, named for the weirs that were noted by the colonists when first exploring the region.

Lake Winnipesaukee has been a popular tourist destination for more than a century, particularly among residents of Boston and New York City.

Winnipesaukee is a glacial lake but an unusual one, since the last glaciation actually reversed the flow of its waters. Draining the central portion of New Hampshire, it once flowed southeast, leaving via what is now Alton Bay toward the Atlantic Ocean. When glacial debris blocked this path, flow was redirected westward through Paugus Bay into the Winnipesaukee River. The latter flows west from the lake and joins the Pemigewasset River in Franklin to form the Merrimack River, which flows south to Massachusetts and into the Atlantic.

Center Harbor witnessed the first intercollegiate sporting event in the United States, as Harvard defeated Yale by two lengths in the first Harvard–Yale Regatta on August 3, 1852.[8] The outcome was repeated 100 years later when the schools celebrated the centennial of the race by again competing on Lake Winnipesaukee (Harvard winning by 2.7 seconds).[9]

Cities and towns edit

The communities that surround the lake, clockwise from the southernmost town, are:

Divisions edit

The lake consists of a wide, relatively open central region known as the Broads, surrounded by several large bays, as well as many smaller inlets.

The daytime speed limit for boats on the entire lake is 45 miles per hour (72 km/h).[10]

The main sections of the lake are:

The Broads edit

The Broads are a wide portion of Lake Winnipesaukee largely in Belknap County and extending slightly into Carroll County.[11] It is a large island-free zone occupying the center of the lake.[4]: 31 

Running along the main axis of the lake, the northwestern tip of the Broads is at the town of Center Harbor, while the southeastern end lies between the towns of Alton and Wolfeboro.

Meredith Bay edit

Meredith Bay lies at the western edge of Winnipesaukee. At the northern tip of Meredith Bay is the main village of the town of Meredith. Paugus Bay branches off to the south of Meredith Bay at Weirs Beach, near to where Meredith Bay joins the main body of the lake. Meredith Bay is separated from the Broads by a relatively narrow strait bordered by Governors Island to the south and Stonedam Island to the north. The northeastern shore of Meredith Bay is a long peninsula known as Meredith Neck.

Paugus Bay edit

Formerly a hydrologically distinct lake, Paugus Bay became joined to Winnipesaukee when the dam at Lakeport was constructed, raising the surface of Paugus Bay to be contiguous with Winnipesaukee. Paugus Bay joins the main lake in Meredith Bay, running south from a narrow channel connecting it to Meredith Bay. At the northern end of Paugus Bay, where it joins the main lake, is Weirs Beach, the largest and most visited public beach on the lake. At the other end is the village of Lakeport. Both Weirs Beach and Lakeport are villages within the city of Laconia. The eastern shore of the bay is closely followed by U.S. Route 3, and has numerous motels, hotels, inns, and bungalow complexes. The western shore is much less developed.

Alton Bay edit

Alton Bay is a narrow bay which runs due south from the southern corner of the main lake. It lies entirely within the town of Alton. The village of Alton Bay lies at the extreme southern tip.

Wolfeboro Bay edit

Wolfeboro Bay is a relatively small wide bay lying in the town of Wolfeboro, creating a small northerly bulge in the shoreline to the eastern edge of Winnipesaukee. A series of smaller lakes and streams connects Wolfeboro Bay to Lake Wentworth.

Winter Harbor edit

Winter Harbor is a Y-shaped bay with two branches, separated from the Broads by Wolfeboro Neck and Tuftonboro Neck. Winter Harbor is surrounded by many quiet resort communities in the towns of Wolfeboro and Tuftonboro. It also has panoramic views of the Belknap Mountains and looks out toward Rattlesnake Island.

Moultonborough Bay edit

The longest bay on Winnipesaukee is Moultonborough Bay. It is connected to the Broads by some narrow straits running between a cluster of islands including Long Island (the largest island in the lake), Cow Island, Little Bear Island, Sandy Island, and dozens of smaller islands and islets. The 7-mile-long (11 km) Moultonborough Neck separates the length of the bay from the main axis of the lake, and the Suissevale development in the town of Moultonborough is at the northern tip of the bay. Melvin Village, the main lakeside village of the town of Tuftonboro lies along the northeastern shore of the bay, closer to where it joins the Broads.

Islands edit

 
Ice-covered Lake Winnipesaukee, February 2010, looking north toward the Sandwich Range

There are at least 258 natural islands on Lake Winnipesaukee that are at least 3 feet (0.9 m) above lake level and contain vegetation, about 130 of which are over .25 acres (0.10 ha) in size.[1] 26 of these are 25 acres (10 ha) or larger:

  • Long Island—1,186 acres (480 ha)
  • Bear Island—780 acres (320 ha)
  • Cow Island—522 acres (211 ha)
  • Governors Island—504 acres (204 ha)
  • Rattlesnake Island—368 acres (149 ha)
  • Welch Island—187 acres (76 ha)
  • Little Bear Island—143 acres (58 ha)
  • Stonedam Island—141 acres (57 ha)
  • Timber Island—136 acres (55 ha)
  • Sleepers Island—113 acres (46 ha)
  • Mark Island—102 acres (41 ha)
  • Black Island—90 acres (36 ha)
  • Barndoor Island—88 acres (36 ha)
  • Black Cat Island—75 acres (30 ha)
  • Pine Island—74 acres (30 ha)
  • Whortleberry Island—69 acres (28 ha)
  • Sandy Island—67 acres (27 ha)
  • Jolly Island—50 acres (20 ha)
  • Three Mile Island—47 acres (19 ha)
  • Round Island—43 acres (17 ha)
  • Lockes Island—42 acres (17 ha)
  • Diamond Island—37 acres (15 ha)
  • Dow Island—32 acres (13 ha)
  • Big Beaver Island—30 acres (12 ha)
  • Camp Island—28 acres (11 ha)
  • Mink Island—26 acres (11 ha)
  • Birch Island—25 acres (10 ha)

Six islands are connected to the mainland by bridges (Black Cat, Governors, Long, Oak, Christmas (or Plummers) in Paugus Bay, and Worcester),[12] and another eight (Bear, Birch, Cow, East Bear, Jolly, Loon, Three Mile, and Sandy) are served by the U.S. mail boat M/V Sophie C.

 
Panoramic view of Lake Winnipesaukee looking north from the summit of Mount Major. The entrance to Alton Bay lies at the right edge of the picture. The large island near the center-left is Rattlesnake Island, while the three islands in front of it (l-r) are Sleeper's Island, Cub Island, and Treasure Island. The island to the left of Rattlesnake Island is Diamond Island. Wolfeboro Bay is visible at the far side of the lake near the center-right of the image.

Lakes Region edit

Along with the rest of New Hampshire's Lakes Region, which also encompasses Lake Winnisquam, Lake Wentworth, Squam Lake, Newfound Lake, and numerous other smaller lakes and ponds, Winnipesaukee has been a vacation community for at least a century, particularly drawing people from the Boston region. The area is home to numerous summer theater troupes and offers a variety of land and water recreational activities. There are numerous hiking trails in and around the surrounding mountains, which include the Ossipee Mountains to the east, the Belknap Range to the west, and Red Hill to the north.

Ships edit

Steamship Mount Washington and her successor edit

 
The Mount Washington Under Full Speed Ahead, 2006, painted by Peter Buck

The paddlesteamer MS Mount Washington, named after the highest of New Hampshire's White Mountains, was launched in spring 1872 to carry mail, goods, and passengers on Lake Winnipesaukee, under the flag of the Boston and Maine Railroad. With a hull length of 178 feet (54 m) and a beam of 49 feet (15 m) she appeared as a typical representative of the North American sidewheelers around the second half of the century and was the largest steamer on the lake at that time. The huge paddle wheels were driven by a single-cylinder steam engine of 450 hp (340 kW) at approximately 26 rpm. The power was transferred from the vertical single cylinder to the wheel shaft by the walking beam, high above the upper deck, oscillating in the frequency of the paddle wheels. Known as "The Mount", her kitchen and restaurant service became famous.

On December 23, 1939, a nearby railroad station caught fire from an overheated stove. The fire soon spread to the ship, tied at the dock, and destroyed it. Efforts to cut Mount Washington loose were to no avail as it was a time of extremely low water and the hull was stuck fast in the mud of the lake bottom. Soon after, a local company was formed to build a new ship. Since Europe was already at war, and the US was stocking steel in a pre-war munitions build-up obtaining steel was impossible. Instead, they purchased an old sidewheel vessel on Lake Champlain: the Chateaugay, a 203-foot (62 m), iron-hulled sidewheeler that was being used as a club house for the Burlington yacht club. It was cut into sections by Boston General Ship & Engine Works and transported to Lake Winnipesaukee on rail cars. A new twin-screw vessel was designed for the hull being welded back together at Lakeport.[13] Powered by two steam engines taken from another ocean-going yacht, the new MS Mount Washington made her maiden voyage on August 15, 1940.

Two years after her launch, the new Mount Washington's engines and boilers were removed for use in a navy vessel during World War II. After the war, Mount Washington returned to the water. The ship was a success in the post-war tourist boom.[14]

In 1982, Mount Washington was cut open and extended with an additional 20-foot (6.1 m) hull section to add larger lounge and food service facilities.[13] Still popular, she makes one or two round trips on the lake per day during the summer season, as well as numerous dinner dance cruises in the evenings.

Mailboat M/V Sophie C. edit

 
The Sophie C. and the Uncle Sam II, as they appeared on a 1945 postcard

The M/V Sophie C. is the oldest, and one of only two currently operating, floating United States Postal Service post offices.[15][16] Floating post office service was started on Lake Winnipesaukee in 1892, and currently delivers mail daily to eight of the lake's islands between June and September. The Sophie C. was built by Boston General Ship & Engine Works in 1945 to temporarily replace the Mount Washington, whose engines and boilers had been commandeered by the Navy during World War II,[13] and she took over the mail route from the Uncle Sam II in 1969.[17]

As a floating post office, Sophie C. delivers mail Monday-Saturday, sells postage, and collects and postmarks outgoing mail. Sophie C. also operates as a sightseeing boat, carrying up to 125 people on her two cruises a day as she delivers mail, and sells ice cream and snacks to residents of the islands she serves.[18] In 2018 and 2019, the M/V Doris E. replaced the Sophie C. as mail boat while the latter was undergoing repairs.[19][20]

Others edit

The steamship Dover, 150 feet (46 m) in length, captained by Winborn Sanborn, operated by the Cocheco Railroad, traveled the lake in the 1850s. The Dover was lengthened to 162 feet (49 m) and renamed the Chocorua and sank in the late 1860s. It was refloated, but by the 1870s the new Mount Washington had replaced it.[21]

Seaplane base edit

The Alton Bay Seaplane Base is a state-owned, public-use seaplane base in Alton Bay, the southeast arm of the lake. In the winter it is the only FAA-approved ice runway in the contiguous United States, conditions permitting.[22]

Weather and climate edit

Average summertime on or next to the water brings days around 80 °F (26 °C), with overnight lows around 65 °F (18 °C). Less than one-half mile (800 m) away from the water, days can be warmer and nights cooler by several degrees. Summer's most extreme temperatures away from the water may be as high as 100 °F (38 °C) and as low as 50 °F (10 °C). A typical winter day brings a maximum of 28 °F (−2 °C) with overnight minimum around 15 °F (−9 °C). Typical wintertime extremes are 50 °F (10 °C) and −20 °F (−30 °C) but even greater extremes have been recorded nearby.

The water temperature typically reaches the upper 70s F (around 25 °C) in late July and cools into the 60s (around 18 °C) in September. Several days of hot, humid weather at the height of summer can bring the water temperature well above 80 °F (26 °C). It normally freezes during the last week of December. Ice thickness during a typical winter can be in excess of 18 inches (460 mm) in many parts of the lake.

Ice-In and Ice-Out edit

Lake Winnipesaukee is known for its annual Ice-Out Contest, in which people try to guess the earliest date that the Mount Washington can safely leave her port in Center Harbor and motor to four other ports (Weirs Beach, Alton Bay, Wolfeboro, and Meredith). Since records began in 1851, ice-out has happened as early as March 17, in 2024 and as late as May 12, although 90 percent of the time it is declared during April. This official ruling is made by David Emerson of Emerson Aviation.[23]

In popular culture edit

 
View on Lake Winnipiseogee (1828) by American painter Thomas Cole
  • Thornton Wilder's 1938 Pulitzer Prize–winning play, Our Town, refers to Lake Winnipesaukee at the beginning of Act III.
  • In a Three Stooges 1940 short "No Census, No Feeling", the Stooges are census takers, and Curly answers a query about his birthplace with "Lake Winnipesaukee". When Moe asks him to spell it, he switches course, and says "Make it Lake Erie – I've got an uncle there."[24]
  • Some boating scenes from the 1981 Academy Award-winning film On Golden Pond were shot on the lake, though the main scenes were on nearby Squam Lake.
  • In 1982, composer Alan Hovhaness, who spent much of his childhood in New Hampshire, composed Lake Winnipesaukee, Op. 363, a sextet for flute, oboe, cello, two percussion, and piano.
  • The 1991 comedy movie What About Bob? was set at Lake Winnipesaukee, although the actual filming was done at Smith Mountain Lake in Virginia.
  • The 2006 comedy Click has a flashback depicting Adam Sandler as a kid playing on a beach on Lake Winnipesaukee.
  • In the debut of Adam Sandler's "Thanksgiving Song", on Saturday Night Live (November 21, 1992), the long-time New Hampshire resident sings, "I used to go to camp at Lake Winnipesaukee".[25]
  • On The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, host Jimmy Fallon and frequent guest Justin Timberlake have filmed a series of sketches set at a fictional "Camp Winnipesaukee".[26]
  • In Nemesis Games, the fifth book in The Expanse novel series, Rattlesnake Island is the site of a private spaceship launchpad for the wealthy. It was then featured in the fifth season of the TV series of the same name in the ninth episode, titled "Winnipesaukee".
  • In Spymaster, part of Brad Thor's Scot Harvath series of books, the character Reed Carlton is cared for in a house on Governors Island on Lake Winnipesaukee.
  • Irish acoustic folk rock band Hermitage Green wrote a song about the lake, entitled "Lake Winnipesaukee".
  • Mentioned as the destination of a fishing trip Archie wanted to take in Season 8 Episode 6 of All in the Family, “Unequal Partners.”

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Bizer's list of islands of Lake Winnipesaukee
  2. ^ New Hampshire GRANIT database
  3. ^ "Lake Winnipesaukee bathymetry" (PDF). New Hampshire Fish and Game Department. State of New Hampshire.
  4. ^ a b Heald, Bruce D. (1 May 1998). Boats and Ports of Lake Winnipesaukee. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4396-2199-8.
  5. ^ "Lakeport Dam (LKPN3)". NH Dept. of Environmental Services. Retrieved May 20, 2016.
  6. ^ a b Heald, Bruce (2001). Lake Winnipesaukee. Charleston, South Carolina: Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 9780738523552.
  7. ^ Wilkin, Elizabeth Crawford (1949). Winnipesaukee Whoppers: Fabulous Legends of the Lake Once Called Winnipiseogee. Melvin Village, New Hampshire: Pine Point Press.
  8. ^ McKenna, Robert (2003), The Dictionary of Nautical Literacy, McGraw-Hill Professional Reference, p. 157, ISBN 0-07-141950-0
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-04-29.
  10. ^ Richardson, Tom (March 31, 2011). "Bill Raises Winnipesaukee 'Broads' Speed Limit". New England Boating. Retrieved 22 November 2014.
  11. ^ U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Lake Winnipesaukee
  12. ^ "Lake Winnipesaukee Fun Facts in New Hampshire". Lake-Winnipesaukee-Travel-Guide. Retrieved June 23, 2014.
  13. ^ a b c Amsden, Roger (27 May 2017). "Byron Hedblom's extraordinary life". The Laconia Daily Sun. Retrieved 14 August 2018.
  14. ^ Paul H. Blaisdell: Three Centuries on Winnipesaukee (1975). New Hampshire Publishing Company, Somersworth, N.H.
  15. ^ Carbone, Ray (19 July 2019). "Winnipesaukee's Mail Boat Is Part Floating Post Office, Part Time Machine". New Hampshire Public Radio. Retrieved 11 November 2019.
  16. ^ Ramer, Holly (12 September 2011). "Anne Nix makes N.H.'s floating postal office run". Seacost Online. GateHouse Media. Retrieved 11 November 2019.
  17. ^ Masin-Moyer, Lucas (3 August 2017). "Mail boat on Winnipesaukee brings island residents together". Concord Monitor. Retrieved 14 August 2018.
  18. ^ "U/S Mail Boat, Sophie C. on Lake Winnipesaukee, NH". Cruise Mount Washington. Retrieved June 23, 2014.
  19. ^ Morash, Jim (31 July 2018). "Nearing the Halfway Point". Mount Washington Cruises. Retrieved 14 August 2018.
  20. ^ "Mailboat Cruises". Mount Washington Cruises. Retrieved 2019-08-08.
  21. ^ Caldwell-Hopper, Kathi (Summer 2020). "Steadfast Steamers of Days Gone By". Boating on the Lakes: 42–45.
  22. ^ "Pilots Take Advantage of Runway on Frozen Lake Winnipesaukee". CBS Boston. February 28, 2015. Retrieved 2015-03-01.
  23. ^ "Winter lasted just 37 days on Lake Winnipesaukee". Concord Monitor's Granite Geek. March 18, 2024. Retrieved March 19, 2024.
  24. ^ Three Stooges "No Census, No Feeling"
  25. ^ "Pop culture in and around the Lakes Region". Bizer.com. Retrieved June 23, 2014.
  26. ^ Schnurr, Samantha (27 October 2016). "Justin Timberlake and Jimmy Fallon Return to Camp Winnipesaukee to Wreak Musical Havoc". E-Online. E! Entertainment Television. Retrieved 3 November 2016.
  • The New Hampshire State Almanac

External links edit

  • LakeWinnipesaukee.info
  • LakeWinnipesaukee.net
  • Winnipesaukee.com
  • Lake level graphs, NH Dept. of Environmental Services
  • Lake Winnipesaukee Historical Society
  • Lakes Region Conservation Trust
  • at Whitemountainart.com
  • "Lake Winnipesauke {{sic}} Steamer" watercolor (1893) by D.J. Kennedy; Historical Society of Pennsylvania

Webcams edit

  • Alton Bay – WinnipesaukeeCam
  • Bear Island Conservation Association – BearCam
  • Black Cat Island – Lake Winnipesaukee WeatherCam
  • Rattlesnake Island
  • Weirs Beach – WeirsCAM
  • Weirs Channel
  • Wolfeboro Bay – WolfeboroCam

lake, winnipesaukee, amusement, park, rossville, georgia, lake, winnepesaukah, ɔː, largest, lake, state, hampshire, located, lakes, region, foothills, white, mountains, approximately, miles, long, northwest, southeast, from, miles, wide, northeast, southwest, . For the amusement park in Rossville Georgia see Lake Winnepesaukah Lake Winnipesaukee ˌ w ɪ n ɪ p e ˈ s ɔː k i is the largest lake in the U S state of New Hampshire located in the Lakes Region at the foothills of the White Mountains It is approximately 21 miles 34 km long northwest southeast and from 1 to 9 miles 1 6 to 14 5 km wide northeast southwest covering 69 square miles 179 km2 71 square miles 184 km2 when Paugus Bay is included 2 with a maximum depth of 180 feet 55 m 3 The center area of the lake is called The Broads 4 31 Lake WinnipesaukeeLake Winnipesaukee from the summit of Mt MajorShow map of New HampshireShow map of the United StatesLocationBelknap County and Carroll County New HampshireCoordinates43 36 N 71 20 W 43 600 N 71 333 W 43 600 71 333Primary inflowsGunstock River Merrymeeting River Melvin River Red Hill River Lake Waukewan canalPrimary outflowsWinnipesaukee RiverBasin countriesUnited StatesMax length20 8 mi 33 5 km Max width9 0 mi 14 5 km Surface area71 sq mi 180 km2 Max depth180 ft 55 m Shore length1288 mi 463 km Surface elevation504 ft 154 m Islands258 1 Settlementssee article1 Shore length is not a well defined measure The lake contains at least 264 islands 1 half of which are less than 0 25 acres 0 10 ha in size and is indented by several peninsulas yielding a total shoreline of approximately 288 miles 463 km The driving distance around the lake is 63 miles 101 km It is 504 feet 154 m above sea level Winnipesaukee is the third largest lake in New England after Lake Champlain and Moosehead Lake Outflow is regulated by the Lakeport Dam 5 in Lakeport New Hampshire on the Winnipesaukee River Contents 1 History 2 Cities and towns 3 Divisions 3 1 The Broads 3 2 Meredith Bay 3 3 Paugus Bay 3 4 Alton Bay 3 5 Wolfeboro Bay 3 6 Winter Harbor 3 7 Moultonborough Bay 4 Islands 5 Lakes Region 6 Ships 6 1 Steamship Mount Washington and her successor 6 2 Mailboat M V Sophie C 6 3 Others 7 Seaplane base 8 Weather and climate 9 Ice In and Ice Out 10 In popular culture 11 See also 12 References 13 External links 13 1 WebcamsHistory edit nbsp The Weirs c 1920 nbsp Lake Winnipesaukee by William Trost Richards The Abenaki name Winnipesaukee often spelled Winnipiseogee in earlier centuries 6 27 7 means either smile of the Great Spirit or beautiful water in a high place 6 19 At the outlet of the lake the Winnipesaukee people a subtribe of the Pennacook lived and fished at a village called Acquadocton Today the site is called The Weirs named for the weirs that were noted by the colonists when first exploring the region Lake Winnipesaukee has been a popular tourist destination for more than a century particularly among residents of Boston and New York City Winnipesaukee is a glacial lake but an unusual one since the last glaciation actually reversed the flow of its waters Draining the central portion of New Hampshire it once flowed southeast leaving via what is now Alton Bay toward the Atlantic Ocean When glacial debris blocked this path flow was redirected westward through Paugus Bay into the Winnipesaukee River The latter flows west from the lake and joins the Pemigewasset River in Franklin to form the Merrimack River which flows south to Massachusetts and into the Atlantic Center Harbor witnessed the first intercollegiate sporting event in the United States as Harvard defeated Yale by two lengths in the first Harvard Yale Regatta on August 3 1852 8 The outcome was repeated 100 years later when the schools celebrated the centennial of the race by again competing on Lake Winnipesaukee Harvard winning by 2 7 seconds 9 Cities and towns editThe communities that surround the lake clockwise from the southernmost town are Alton the largest town by area in the Lakes Region Gilford home to Gunstock Mountain Resort and Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion at Meadowbrook a popular New Hampshire concert venue Laconia the main commercial city on the lake Included in Laconia is Weirs Beach the largest public beach on Winnipesaukee Every year Laconia is home to Bike Week attracting tens of thousands of motorcyclists to the area Meredith a tourist haven on the northwestern reach of the lake Center Harbor a small town in Belknap County which serves as the winter home for the MS Mount Washington Moultonborough with its Castle in the Clouds an estate atop a small mountain Tuftonboro which contains the communities of Melvin Village and Mirror Lake Wolfeboro which bills itself as the Oldest Summer Resort in America Divisions editThe lake consists of a wide relatively open central region known as the Broads surrounded by several large bays as well as many smaller inlets The daytime speed limit for boats on the entire lake is 45 miles per hour 72 km h 10 The main sections of the lake are The Broads edit The Broads are a wide portion of Lake Winnipesaukee largely in Belknap County and extending slightly into Carroll County 11 It is a large island free zone occupying the center of the lake 4 31 Running along the main axis of the lake the northwestern tip of the Broads is at the town of Center Harbor while the southeastern end lies between the towns of Alton and Wolfeboro Meredith Bay edit Meredith Bay lies at the western edge of Winnipesaukee At the northern tip of Meredith Bay is the main village of the town of Meredith Paugus Bay branches off to the south of Meredith Bay at Weirs Beach near to where Meredith Bay joins the main body of the lake Meredith Bay is separated from the Broads by a relatively narrow strait bordered by Governors Island to the south and Stonedam Island to the north The northeastern shore of Meredith Bay is a long peninsula known as Meredith Neck Paugus Bay edit Main article Paugus Bay Formerly a hydrologically distinct lake Paugus Bay became joined to Winnipesaukee when the dam at Lakeport was constructed raising the surface of Paugus Bay to be contiguous with Winnipesaukee Paugus Bay joins the main lake in Meredith Bay running south from a narrow channel connecting it to Meredith Bay At the northern end of Paugus Bay where it joins the main lake is Weirs Beach the largest and most visited public beach on the lake At the other end is the village of Lakeport Both Weirs Beach and Lakeport are villages within the city of Laconia The eastern shore of the bay is closely followed by U S Route 3 and has numerous motels hotels inns and bungalow complexes The western shore is much less developed Alton Bay edit Alton Bay is a narrow bay which runs due south from the southern corner of the main lake It lies entirely within the town of Alton The village of Alton Bay lies at the extreme southern tip Wolfeboro Bay edit Wolfeboro Bay is a relatively small wide bay lying in the town of Wolfeboro creating a small northerly bulge in the shoreline to the eastern edge of Winnipesaukee A series of smaller lakes and streams connects Wolfeboro Bay to Lake Wentworth Winter Harbor edit Winter Harbor is a Y shaped bay with two branches separated from the Broads by Wolfeboro Neck and Tuftonboro Neck Winter Harbor is surrounded by many quiet resort communities in the towns of Wolfeboro and Tuftonboro It also has panoramic views of the Belknap Mountains and looks out toward Rattlesnake Island Moultonborough Bay edit The longest bay on Winnipesaukee is Moultonborough Bay It is connected to the Broads by some narrow straits running between a cluster of islands including Long Island the largest island in the lake Cow Island Little Bear Island Sandy Island and dozens of smaller islands and islets The 7 mile long 11 km Moultonborough Neck separates the length of the bay from the main axis of the lake and the Suissevale development in the town of Moultonborough is at the northern tip of the bay Melvin Village the main lakeside village of the town of Tuftonboro lies along the northeastern shore of the bay closer to where it joins the Broads Islands edit nbsp Ice covered Lake Winnipesaukee February 2010 looking north toward the Sandwich Range There are at least 258 natural islands on Lake Winnipesaukee that are at least 3 feet 0 9 m above lake level and contain vegetation about 130 of which are over 25 acres 0 10 ha in size 1 26 of these are 25 acres 10 ha or larger Long Island 1 186 acres 480 ha Bear Island 780 acres 320 ha Cow Island 522 acres 211 ha Governors Island 504 acres 204 ha Rattlesnake Island 368 acres 149 ha Welch Island 187 acres 76 ha Little Bear Island 143 acres 58 ha Stonedam Island 141 acres 57 ha Timber Island 136 acres 55 ha Sleepers Island 113 acres 46 ha Mark Island 102 acres 41 ha Black Island 90 acres 36 ha Barndoor Island 88 acres 36 ha Black Cat Island 75 acres 30 ha Pine Island 74 acres 30 ha Whortleberry Island 69 acres 28 ha Sandy Island 67 acres 27 ha Jolly Island 50 acres 20 ha Three Mile Island 47 acres 19 ha Round Island 43 acres 17 ha Lockes Island 42 acres 17 ha Diamond Island 37 acres 15 ha Dow Island 32 acres 13 ha Big Beaver Island 30 acres 12 ha Camp Island 28 acres 11 ha Mink Island 26 acres 11 ha Birch Island 25 acres 10 ha Six islands are connected to the mainland by bridges Black Cat Governors Long Oak Christmas or Plummers in Paugus Bay and Worcester 12 and another eight Bear Birch Cow East Bear Jolly Loon Three Mile and Sandy are served by the U S mail boat M V Sophie C nbsp Panoramic view of Lake Winnipesaukee looking north from the summit of Mount Major The entrance to Alton Bay lies at the right edge of the picture The large island near the center left is Rattlesnake Island while the three islands in front of it l r are Sleeper s Island Cub Island and Treasure Island The island to the left of Rattlesnake Island is Diamond Island Wolfeboro Bay is visible at the far side of the lake near the center right of the image Lakes Region editAlong with the rest of New Hampshire s Lakes Region which also encompasses Lake Winnisquam Lake Wentworth Squam Lake Newfound Lake and numerous other smaller lakes and ponds Winnipesaukee has been a vacation community for at least a century particularly drawing people from the Boston region The area is home to numerous summer theater troupes and offers a variety of land and water recreational activities There are numerous hiking trails in and around the surrounding mountains which include the Ossipee Mountains to the east the Belknap Range to the west and Red Hill to the north Ships editSteamship Mount Washington and her successor edit nbsp The Mount Washington Under Full Speed Ahead 2006 painted by Peter Buck The paddlesteamer MS Mount Washington named after the highest of New Hampshire s White Mountains was launched in spring 1872 to carry mail goods and passengers on Lake Winnipesaukee under the flag of the Boston and Maine Railroad With a hull length of 178 feet 54 m and a beam of 49 feet 15 m she appeared as a typical representative of the North American sidewheelers around the second half of the century and was the largest steamer on the lake at that time The huge paddle wheels were driven by a single cylinder steam engine of 450 hp 340 kW at approximately 26 rpm The power was transferred from the vertical single cylinder to the wheel shaft by the walking beam high above the upper deck oscillating in the frequency of the paddle wheels Known as The Mount her kitchen and restaurant service became famous On December 23 1939 a nearby railroad station caught fire from an overheated stove The fire soon spread to the ship tied at the dock and destroyed it Efforts to cut Mount Washington loose were to no avail as it was a time of extremely low water and the hull was stuck fast in the mud of the lake bottom Soon after a local company was formed to build a new ship Since Europe was already at war and the US was stocking steel in a pre war munitions build up obtaining steel was impossible Instead they purchased an old sidewheel vessel on Lake Champlain the Chateaugay a 203 foot 62 m iron hulled sidewheeler that was being used as a club house for the Burlington yacht club It was cut into sections by Boston General Ship amp Engine Works and transported to Lake Winnipesaukee on rail cars A new twin screw vessel was designed for the hull being welded back together at Lakeport 13 Powered by two steam engines taken from another ocean going yacht the new MS Mount Washington made her maiden voyage on August 15 1940 Two years after her launch the new Mount Washington s engines and boilers were removed for use in a navy vessel during World War II After the war Mount Washington returned to the water The ship was a success in the post war tourist boom 14 In 1982 Mount Washington was cut open and extended with an additional 20 foot 6 1 m hull section to add larger lounge and food service facilities 13 Still popular she makes one or two round trips on the lake per day during the summer season as well as numerous dinner dance cruises in the evenings Mailboat M V Sophie C edit nbsp The Sophie C and the Uncle Sam II as they appeared on a 1945 postcard The M V Sophie C is the oldest and one of only two currently operating floating United States Postal Service post offices 15 16 Floating post office service was started on Lake Winnipesaukee in 1892 and currently delivers mail daily to eight of the lake s islands between June and September The Sophie C was built by Boston General Ship amp Engine Works in 1945 to temporarily replace the Mount Washington whose engines and boilers had been commandeered by the Navy during World War II 13 and she took over the mail route from the Uncle Sam II in 1969 17 As a floating post office Sophie C delivers mail Monday Saturday sells postage and collects and postmarks outgoing mail Sophie C also operates as a sightseeing boat carrying up to 125 people on her two cruises a day as she delivers mail and sells ice cream and snacks to residents of the islands she serves 18 In 2018 and 2019 the M V Doris E replaced the Sophie C as mail boat while the latter was undergoing repairs 19 20 Others edit The steamship Dover 150 feet 46 m in length captained by Winborn Sanborn operated by the Cocheco Railroad traveled the lake in the 1850s The Dover was lengthened to 162 feet 49 m and renamed the Chocorua and sank in the late 1860s It was refloated but by the 1870s the new Mount Washington had replaced it 21 Seaplane base editThe Alton Bay Seaplane Base is a state owned public use seaplane base in Alton Bay the southeast arm of the lake In the winter it is the only FAA approved ice runway in the contiguous United States conditions permitting 22 Weather and climate editAverage summertime on or next to the water brings days around 80 F 26 C with overnight lows around 65 F 18 C Less than one half mile 800 m away from the water days can be warmer and nights cooler by several degrees Summer s most extreme temperatures away from the water may be as high as 100 F 38 C and as low as 50 F 10 C A typical winter day brings a maximum of 28 F 2 C with overnight minimum around 15 F 9 C Typical wintertime extremes are 50 F 10 C and 20 F 30 C but even greater extremes have been recorded nearby The water temperature typically reaches the upper 70s F around 25 C in late July and cools into the 60s around 18 C in September Several days of hot humid weather at the height of summer can bring the water temperature well above 80 F 26 C It normally freezes during the last week of December Ice thickness during a typical winter can be in excess of 18 inches 460 mm in many parts of the lake Ice In and Ice Out editMain article Lake Winnipesaukee Ice Out Lake Winnipesaukee is known for its annual Ice Out Contest in which people try to guess the earliest date that the Mount Washington can safely leave her port in Center Harbor and motor to four other ports Weirs Beach Alton Bay Wolfeboro and Meredith Since records began in 1851 ice out has happened as early as March 17 in 2024 and as late as May 12 although 90 percent of the time it is declared during April This official ruling is made by David Emerson of Emerson Aviation 23 In popular culture edit nbsp View on Lake Winnipiseogee 1828 by American painter Thomas Cole Thornton Wilder s 1938 Pulitzer Prize winning play Our Town refers to Lake Winnipesaukee at the beginning of Act III In a Three Stooges 1940 short No Census No Feeling the Stooges are census takers and Curly answers a query about his birthplace with Lake Winnipesaukee When Moe asks him to spell it he switches course and says Make it Lake Erie I ve got an uncle there 24 Some boating scenes from the 1981 Academy Award winning film On Golden Pond were shot on the lake though the main scenes were on nearby Squam Lake In 1982 composer Alan Hovhaness who spent much of his childhood in New Hampshire composed Lake Winnipesaukee Op 363 a sextet for flute oboe cello two percussion and piano The 1991 comedy movie What About Bob was set at Lake Winnipesaukee although the actual filming was done at Smith Mountain Lake in Virginia The 2006 comedy Click has a flashback depicting Adam Sandler as a kid playing on a beach on Lake Winnipesaukee In the debut of Adam Sandler s Thanksgiving Song on Saturday Night Live November 21 1992 the long time New Hampshire resident sings I used to go to camp at Lake Winnipesaukee 25 On The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon host Jimmy Fallon and frequent guest Justin Timberlake have filmed a series of sketches set at a fictional Camp Winnipesaukee 26 In Nemesis Games the fifth book in The Expanse novel series Rattlesnake Island is the site of a private spaceship launchpad for the wealthy It was then featured in the fifth season of the TV series of the same name in the ninth episode titled Winnipesaukee In Spymaster part of Brad Thor s Scot Harvath series of books the character Reed Carlton is cared for in a house on Governors Island on Lake Winnipesaukee Irish acoustic folk rock band Hermitage Green wrote a song about the lake entitled Lake Winnipesaukee Mentioned as the destination of a fishing trip Archie wanted to take in Season 8 Episode 6 of All in the Family Unequal Partners See also edit nbsp New Hampshire portal Lake Winnipesaukee mystery stone List of lakes in New HampshireReferences edit a b c Bizer s list of islands of Lake Winnipesaukee New Hampshire GRANIT database Lake Winnipesaukee bathymetry PDF New Hampshire Fish and Game Department State of New Hampshire a b Heald Bruce D 1 May 1998 Boats and Ports of Lake Winnipesaukee Arcadia Publishing ISBN 978 1 4396 2199 8 Lakeport Dam LKPN3 NH Dept of Environmental Services Retrieved May 20 2016 a b Heald Bruce 2001 Lake Winnipesaukee Charleston South Carolina Arcadia Publishing ISBN 9780738523552 Wilkin Elizabeth Crawford 1949 Winnipesaukee Whoppers Fabulous Legends of the Lake Once Called Winnipiseogee Melvin Village New Hampshire Pine Point Press McKenna Robert 2003 The Dictionary of Nautical Literacy McGraw Hill Professional Reference p 157 ISBN 0 07 141950 0 The Harvard Yale Regatta Archived from the original on 2011 04 29 Richardson Tom March 31 2011 Bill Raises Winnipesaukee Broads Speed Limit New England Boating Retrieved 22 November 2014 U S Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System Lake Winnipesaukee Lake Winnipesaukee Fun Facts in New Hampshire Lake Winnipesaukee Travel Guide Retrieved June 23 2014 a b c Amsden Roger 27 May 2017 Byron Hedblom s extraordinary life The Laconia Daily Sun Retrieved 14 August 2018 Paul H Blaisdell Three Centuries on Winnipesaukee 1975 New Hampshire Publishing Company Somersworth N H Carbone Ray 19 July 2019 Winnipesaukee s Mail Boat Is Part Floating Post Office Part Time Machine New Hampshire Public Radio Retrieved 11 November 2019 Ramer Holly 12 September 2011 Anne Nix makes N H s floating postal office run Seacost Online GateHouse Media Retrieved 11 November 2019 Masin Moyer Lucas 3 August 2017 Mail boat on Winnipesaukee brings island residents together Concord Monitor Retrieved 14 August 2018 U S Mail Boat Sophie C on Lake Winnipesaukee NH Cruise Mount Washington Retrieved June 23 2014 Morash Jim 31 July 2018 Nearing the Halfway Point Mount Washington Cruises Retrieved 14 August 2018 Mailboat Cruises Mount Washington Cruises Retrieved 2019 08 08 Caldwell Hopper Kathi Summer 2020 Steadfast Steamers of Days Gone By Boating on the Lakes 42 45 Pilots Take Advantage of Runway on Frozen Lake Winnipesaukee CBS Boston February 28 2015 Retrieved 2015 03 01 Winter lasted just 37 days on Lake Winnipesaukee Concord Monitor s Granite Geek March 18 2024 Retrieved March 19 2024 Three Stooges No Census No Feeling Pop culture in and around the Lakes Region Bizer com Retrieved June 23 2014 Schnurr Samantha 27 October 2016 Justin Timberlake and Jimmy Fallon Return to Camp Winnipesaukee to Wreak Musical Havoc E Online E Entertainment Television Retrieved 3 November 2016 The New Hampshire State AlmanacExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lake Winnipesaukee LakeWinnipesaukee info LakeWinnipesaukee net Winnipesaukee com Lake level graphs NH Dept of Environmental Services Lake Winnipesaukee Historical Society Lakes Region Conservation Trust Lake Winnipesaukee Gallery at Whitemountainart com Lake Winnipesauke sic Steamer watercolor 1893 by D J Kennedy Historical Society of Pennsylvania Webcams edit Alton Bay WinnipesaukeeCam Bear Island Conservation Association BearCam Black Cat Island Lake Winnipesaukee WeatherCam Rattlesnake Island Weirs Beach WeirsCAM Weirs Channel Wolfeboro Bay WolfeboroCam Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lake Winnipesaukee amp oldid 1214530747, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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