Glimpses Of America
James W. (James William) Buel
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16 chapters
“Glimpses of America” A PICTORIAL AND DESCRIPTIVE HISTORY OF Our Country’s Scenic Marvels, DELINEATED BY PEN AND CAMERA.
“Glimpses of America” A PICTORIAL AND DESCRIPTIVE HISTORY OF Our Country’s Scenic Marvels, DELINEATED BY PEN AND CAMERA.
The Engravings in this volume were made from original photographs, and are specially protected by Copyright, and notice is hereby given, that any person or persons guilty of reproducing or infringing the copyright in any way will be dealt with according to law....
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GLIMPSES OF AMERICA.
GLIMPSES OF AMERICA.
The most interesting, because most diversified, country in the world is America, and the center of that unexampled interest belongs to the territory comprised within the United States. The castles of England, crushed by the hand of time; the lochs and friths of Scotland, that murmur to the sea their wails of the Viking invaders; the lakes and heaths of Ireland, around which old legends hold perpetual carnival; the Rhine of Germany, whose banks are strewn with the relics of feudalism; the Bernese
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CHAPTER I. AMONG THE WILD SCENES OF COLORADO.
CHAPTER I. AMONG THE WILD SCENES OF COLORADO.
PIKE’S PEAK FROM COLORADO SPRINGS. Enthusiasm sometimes exaggerates the reality, just as colored glass confuses the sight; but when it serves to please without doing harm, the fault may be pardoned. To the enthusiasm of the occasion, and our great and unique enterprise, may therefore be charged the burst of admiration that manifested our feelings, when, rolling along the prairies on the Union Pacific R. R., we saw, rising far to the southwest, nearly one hundred miles away, the broad shoulders o
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CHAPTER II. MANITOU, THE MIGHTY!
CHAPTER II. MANITOU, THE MIGHTY!
THE SEAL AND BEAR, GARDEN OF THE GODS. The glory of Colorado, in the splendor of its waterfalls, the awesomeness of its mountains, the wealth of its mines, and the picturesqueness of its natural parks, is by no means confined to those Rocky Mountain districts which we have just pictured and described, for greater marvels remain to be spoken of, and pictorially represented. Returning to Denver, our tour took us southward, across a plain that hugs the gnarled bosom of the Continental Divide, by th
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THE GRAND CAÑON OF THE COLORADO.
THE GRAND CAÑON OF THE COLORADO.
TRIPLE FALLS, CASCADE CAÑON. The tumultuous anarchism of nature, the wild riot of natural forces, the savage disarrangement, the chaotically indefinable throes of internal madness that characterize the region, suggests other wonders of eruption and erosion, the dissolution and disorganization which have been wrought along the water-course and which has gnawed its way through these everlasting—nay, it would appear, transitory—mountains. The first travelers that fought their way into these vastnes
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CHAPTER IV. MARVELS OF THE GREAT DESERT.
CHAPTER IV. MARVELS OF THE GREAT DESERT.
TWIN LAKES, COTTONWOOD CAÑON, UTAH. Grand River valley is followed by the railroad from a point about forty miles north of Leadville for a distance of nearly two hundred miles, and until State Line is reached, when the road cuts across the plains of Utah, which are relieved by little diversity of landscape until Mount Nebo, of the Wasatch range, breaks into view. The scenery along Grand River is, however, extremely beautiful, being very rugged and at times mountainous. The road leads through sev
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CHAPTER V. OVER THE HEIGHTS AND INTO THE DEEPS OF WONDERLAND.
CHAPTER V. OVER THE HEIGHTS AND INTO THE DEEPS OF WONDERLAND.
UNAWEEP CAÑON. Having satisfied our curiosity and embalmed the views of Shoshone Falls, as here presented, our party of photographers and historiographer returned to Colorado over the same route that we had come, but at Grand Junction we proceeded southward over the Denver & Rio Grande Railroad to Gunnison, Ouray and Tulleride. At Grand Junction, Grand River divides, the southern branch of which is called Gunnison River, and takes its rise in the Sagauche and Elk ranges; and it was along
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CHAPTER VI. ACROSS THE CACTUS DESERT INTO CALIFORNIA’S GOLDEN LAND.
CHAPTER VI. ACROSS THE CACTUS DESERT INTO CALIFORNIA’S GOLDEN LAND.
NAVAJO CHURCH, NEAR FORT WINGATE. Leaving Santa Fe, we continued our journey westward over the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad, and striking the Rio Grande a short distance south of White Rock Cañon, followed the bank of that stream through some very handsome scenery until we reached Atlantic and Pacific Junction. Thence for a while the route was through an arid section, where alkali and musquite abounded; an unchangeable waste of black sterility; a country so level that the laying of a r
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A SIDE-TRIP TO CRATER LAKE.
A SIDE-TRIP TO CRATER LAKE.
Before leaving San Francisco, one of our photographers expressed a very great desire to visit Crater Lake, one of the most remarkable bodies of water on the face of the earth, and so urgent were his pleadings, that it was decided he should make the trip, while the rest of the party continued on to Portland, to perform the work of photographing points of interest thereabouts, and on the Columbia River. In pursuance of this arrangement, he left us at a station called Medford, on the Southern Pacif
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AWAY TO THE NORTH, AND THENCE TO ALASKA.
AWAY TO THE NORTH, AND THENCE TO ALASKA.
Our trip up the Columbia, and along the Willamette as far as Willamette Falls, was delightful beyond any one’s ability to describe; but though wonder succeeded wonder, and kept us as under a spell of enchantment, there were other surprises in store which were to hold our interest and even add something to our astonishment. Returning to Portland, we might have carried out our original resolution to take the steamer at that point direct for Alaska, but we very wisely made a change in our plans, by
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CHAPTER VIII. ACROSS THE MOUNTAINS TO YELLOWSTONE PARK.
CHAPTER VIII. ACROSS THE MOUNTAINS TO YELLOWSTONE PARK.
SPOKANE FALLS, WASHINGTON. It was the 15th of May when we returned to Victoria, and without any waste of time we proceeded to Seattle, and there made hasty preparation to continue our work along the northern lines of road towards the east. A little change was made in our original plans, by a brief diversion from the routes we had marked out, in order to view and take some pictures of the marvelous scenery along Fraser River, on the line of the Canadian Pacific Railroad. This stream is as wide as
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CHAPTER IX. AMONG THE WONDERS OF THE BLACK HILLS.
CHAPTER IX. AMONG THE WONDERS OF THE BLACK HILLS.
DELLS OF SIOUX RIVER. Soon after reaching St. Paul our party divided, two of our photographers being instructed to take views of the falls, lakes and river-scenery thereabouts, while the other set out with the camera car, over the Chicago, St. Paul and Omaha Railroad, to Sioux City, and thence by the Fremont, Elkhorn and Missouri Valley Railroad to Deadwood. There is nothing of particular interest to entertain the traveler in search of scenic wonders until Iowa is crossed and we reach the Big Si
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CHAPTER X. SCENIC MARVELS OF THE GREAT NORTHEAST.
CHAPTER X. SCENIC MARVELS OF THE GREAT NORTHEAST.
STARVED ROCK, ON ILLINOIS RIVER, NEAR OTTAWA, ILLINOIS. Our circuit of the West had now been completed, and having surrendered the camera car which we had chartered, we made hasty preparations for a grand tour of all that section lying east of the Mississippi. Before departing for the East, however, we made a flying trip over the St. Louis & San Francisco Railroad to Eureka Springs, a popular health resort in Northern Arkansas, surrounded by some very beautiful scenery that spreads away
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CHAPTER XI. A PICTORIAL TOUR OF THE EASTERN STATES.
CHAPTER XI. A PICTORIAL TOUR OF THE EASTERN STATES.
WINOOSKI RIVER GORGE, VERMONT. As explained in the preceding chapter, one of our photographers was despatched into Canada from Ogdensburg, and instructed to take views of the most pleasing scenery of the Dominion, after which to make a tour of the Eastern States and join the others at New York upon the completion of his labors in that section. While Canada is not a part of the United States, its contiguous scenery, some of which is very beautiful, and the intimate relations subsisting between th
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CHAPTER XII. ON HISTORIC FIELDS OF VIRGINIA AND PENNSYLVANIA.
CHAPTER XII. ON HISTORIC FIELDS OF VIRGINIA AND PENNSYLVANIA.
A MIXED TRAIN FROM THE WILDERNESS. The instructions given upon the separation of our three photographers, after leaving St. Louis, were necessarily indefinite, and discrimination in the selection of routes and views had to be left to individual judgment, since weather and conditions play an important part in the artists’ profession. Our third photographer departed somewhat from the route which he had selected to cover, for after the separation, instead of proceeding directly east through Pennsyl
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CHAPTER XIII. THROUGH LANGUOROUS LANDS OF THE SUNNY SOUTH.
CHAPTER XIII. THROUGH LANGUOROUS LANDS OF THE SUNNY SOUTH.
TOMB OVER THE GRAVE OF WASHINGTON’S MOTHER, AT FREDERICKSBURG, VIRGINIA. New York City possesses many attractions for the cosmopolitan, but not for the artist, who prefers nature’s solitudes to the artificial glamor and noisy hum of a large city; hence our stay in that city was only for such time as it required to make preparations for extending our pictorial journey through summer lands of the southeast. Instead of carrying our original plans into immediate execution, however, it was decided to
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