Chocorua River

Summary

The Chocorua River is a 15.2-mile (24.5 km)[1] river located in eastern New Hampshire in the United States. It is a tributary of the Bearcamp River, part of the Ossipee Lake / Saco River watershed leading to the Atlantic Ocean.

Chocorua River
A small dam on the Chocorua River in the village of Chocorua
Chocorua River is located in New Hampshire
Chocorua River
Chocorua River is located in the United States
Chocorua River
Location
CountryUnited States
StateNew Hampshire
CountyCarroll
TownsAlbany, Tamworth, Ossipee
Physical characteristics
SourceMount Chocorua
 • locationAlbany
 • coordinates43°57′42″N 71°16′1″W / 43.96167°N 71.26694°W / 43.96167; -71.26694
 • elevation2,820 ft (860 m)
MouthBearcamp River
 • location
West Ossipee
 • coordinates
43°48′55″N 71°11′56″W / 43.81528°N 71.19889°W / 43.81528; -71.19889
 • elevation
410 ft (120 m)
Length15.2 mi (24.5 km)
Basin features
Tributaries 
 • leftDeer Brook
 • rightStony Brook

The Chocorua River rises on the eastern slopes of Mount Chocorua, a prominent rocky knob at the southeast margin of the White Mountains. The river flows south into lowlands at the base of the mountain and arrives at Chocorua Lake, noted for its outstanding view of Mount Chocorua. Beyond the lake, the river flows south to the village of Chocorua with a picturesque mill dam, then continues into the flat, sandy Ossipee Lake region, reaching the Bearcamp River at West Ossipee.

New Hampshire Route 16 parallels the Chocorua River for most of its length.

Local history edit

In the early 20th century, innkeepers purchased the granite mill dam at the southern end of Moore's Pond on the river in Chocorua village. In 1912, the owners of the Chocorua Inn converted the mill dam into a hydroelectric operation hoping to supply energy to part of the town. A year or so later the dam was demolished in a flood, never to be reconstructed. As the eastern portion of the dam was breached, the levee broke and released two thirds of the pond in a few hours, causing the water level to drop 15 feet (4.6 m) and allowing former marshlands to thrive again.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ New Hampshire GRANIT state geographic information system