In the early days, New Hampshire was full of a most-needed resource: wood. New Hampshire’s tall trees and rolling forests gave rise to a logging industry that supported the state through much of its early development. Logging wasn’t just an industry – it was a way of life for New Hampshire residents. These 11 historic New Hampshire photos will show the logging industry in a way you’ve never seen.

  1. These men standing on a pile of logs in Keene in the nearly 1900s shows that hard work didn’t stop once the logs were out of the woods.

Keene Public Library/flickr

  1. You would never believe that this is a photo of Concord, back when the state capital was little more than a logging town.

Stuart Ratkin/flickr

  1. Back in the day there were no massive logging trucks. Logs moved through Keene in a much slower fashion.

Keene Public Library/flickr

  1. Rolling the logs onto a transport sled was a massive undertaking.

Forest History Society/flickr

  1. Nothing like a little snow to complicate the work for these horses in Gillford in 1939.

Forest Society/flickr

  1. In 1954, horses were working hard to clear the land on Dartmouth College Grant in Coos County.

Forest History Society/flickr

  1. Trains were an essential part of transporting lumber out of the Granite State.

David G. Hawkin/flickr

  1. Driving logs down the river was dangerous work where men balanced on wood to keep it moving downstream.

Wikimedia/creative commons

  1. Berlin was one of the largest logging meccas in the state.

tuckedDB/creative commons

  1. Driving around New Hampshire today you still see plenty of logging, like this scene from Andover.

BEV Norton/flickr

  1. Logging gets a bad reputation, but it can lead to some beautiful scenery.

mwms1916/flickr

Love New Hampshire history? Check out these 12 photos of New Hampshire in the 1960s!

Keene Public Library/flickr

Stuart Ratkin/flickr

Forest History Society/flickr

Forest Society/flickr

David G. Hawkin/flickr

Wikimedia/creative commons

tuckedDB/creative commons

BEV Norton/flickr

mwms1916/flickr

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