Baxter State Park and the Allagash River covers two spectacular areas in
the northern Maine woods. Baxter State Park, with more than 200,000
acres, is the largest park in the country purchased by one individual,
former governor Percival P. Baxter. The park includes Mount Katahdin,
the northern terminus of the Appalachian Trail and the highest peak in
Maine. Breathtaking photographs portray the scenic Allagash River, which
was designated a wilderness waterway in 1966 by the Maine legislature.
It was the first state-managed river area in the National Wild and
Scenic Rivers System in 1970. Included in this volume are stereoscopic
photographs of Mount Katahdin from the early 1870s. This mountain,
sacred to the Native Americans, has an atmosphere that is masterfully
conveyed in the extraordinary photographs used in this history. The
Allagash River is portrayed as it was before the wilderness waterway was
created. Baxter State Park and the Allagash River chronicles the
progression of the river and park from lumbering, hunting, and fishing
to its eventual preservation and tourism.