Lake Sunapee
Lake Sunapee is located within Sullivan County and Merrimack County in western New Hampshire, the United States. It is the fifth-largest lake located entirely in New Hampshire.
The lake is approximately long and from wide, covering, with a maximum depth of. It contains eleven islands and is indented by several peninsulas and lake fingers, a combination which yields a total shoreline of some. There are seven sandy beach areas including Mount Sunapee State Park beach; some with restricted town access. There are six boat ramps to access the lake at Sunapee Harbor, Georges Mills, Newbury, Mount Sunapee State Park, Burkehaven Marina, and a private marina. The lake contains three lighthouses on the National Register of Historic Places. The driving distance around the lake is with many miles of lake water view. The lake is above sea level.
The lake's outlet is in Sunapee Harbor, the headway for the Sugar River, which flows west through Newport and Claremont to the Connecticut River and then to the Atlantic Ocean. The lake discharges about 250 cubic feet per second, and the Sugar River drops approximately on its journey to the Connecticut River.
History
Lake Sunapee is a glacial lake. The glaciers deposited large rocks scattered everywhere in the woods when the ice melted about 11,000 years ago. These rocks are called glacial erratics. An example of a large glacial erratic can be found sitting on Minute Island in front of the John Hay Wildlife Refuge accessible along the wildlife shoreline trail.Native Americans, likely Algonquins, called the lake Soo-Nipi or "Wild Goose Waters" for the many geese that passed over the lake during migration. From an aerial view, and at times from Mount Sunapee, Lake Sunapee also resembles a goose in flight, with the bird's head as the harbor area.
Some local residents can trace their ancestry back to the Native American Penacooks, who hunted geese in the autumn and fished for speckled trout using nets, weirs and spears.
The steamboat era
Following the extension of the B&M Railroad into Newbury, Lake Sunapee became a popular vacation area long before the introduction of the automobile. The main rail station was at Newbury Harbor, the southernmost point of the lake. Today, the village contains a colorful antique caboose commemorating the railroad line that passed by, bringing vacationers from other parts of the country.Steamboat service developed on the lake to accommodate the new populace. Steamships ferried passengers from the south end of the lake to cottages and large resort hotels around the lake. Bay Point, Blodgett Landing, and Indian Cave, later known as Lake Avenue, were the most populated piers. One of the first commercial boats was actually propelled by horses in 1854.
Image:Sunapee dinner boat.jpg|thumb|left|250px|The on Lake Sunapee with Herrick Cove Lighthouse at a distance
N.S. Gardner purchased Little Island for $1.00 and put a bowling alley on it. He then launched the Penacook steamer to carry passengers to Little Island, and so the steamboat era began. The Woodsum brothers launched the Lady Woodsum in 1876. It was long and could carry 75 passengers. The Edmund Burke was launched in 1885, carrying 600 passengers. In 1887, the Amenia White was launched; it was long and carried 650. It was the flagship of the Woodsum fleet and the biggest steamer ever to sail Lake Sunapee.
In 1897 the steamship Kearsarge was launched carrying 250 passengers. In 1902 the Weetamoo was launched and was later scuttled near Newbury. The ship is still intact and is visited frequently by local scuba clubs. The pilothouse of the Kearsarge was salvaged from the lake in the 1960s and is on display at the Sunapee Historical Center.
The MV Mount Sunapee II was launched in 1965 and takes passengers on lake cruises in summer months. The original Mount Sunapee was named Susie Q and had been a rum runner in Damariscotta, Maine.
The MV Kearsarge, named for the original steamship Kearsarge, was built and launched on Lake Sunapee in 1970 as the Sunapee Belle, a replica of a Mississippi River boat, and operated as a dinner boat. In 1974, the original Sunapee Belle wooden hull was replaced with a steel hull. The hull was cut in half and lengthened to 65 feet in 1980, and the MV Kearsarge restaurant ship was built on top of the new hull.
There were major steamer landings at Sunapee Harbor, Georges Mills, Lakeside Landing, Hastings Landing, Auburn Landing, Blodgett Landing, Brightwood, Pine Cliff, Lake Station, Soo-Nipi, Burkehaven, and Granliden to serve the grand hotels. The automobile led to the demise of the steamer era.
Cities and towns
The lake is surrounded by three towns: Sunapee lies to the west, incorporating the villages of Sunapee Harbor and Georges Mills; Newbury lies to its southeast and southwest; and New London is to its east.Facts about Lake Sunapee
DepthAt its deepest, Lake Sunapee is about deep at a point called Hedgehog. Historical maps indicate a depth of, but no recent soundings have exceeded.
Water Quality
The water is exceptionally pure. The water is captured frequently by the LSPA and analyzed at the Colby–Sawyer College aquatic laboratory. The source of much of the water comes from cold underground springs rising from a bedrock aquifer. On a sunny day, objects can be seen to a depth of. The lake has a generally rocky base and is currently milfoil-free, except for a quarantined area.
Rainfall
One inch of rainfall on the lake produces of water. One inch in the watershed potentially produces nearly of water in Lake Sunapee.
Ice Out
Records have been kept since 1869. The official "Ice Out" report was given by Artie Osborne until his death in 2010; now his son Richard Osborne carries that duty. Ice Out usually occurs in April each year. Occasionally Ice Out occurs in March or May, including:
- May 10, 1869
- May 10, 1870
- May 3, 1872
- May 6, 1873
- May 9, 1972
- May 12, 1975
- May 11, 1876
- May 12, 1879
- May 6, 1881
- May 7, 1883
- May 7, 1887
- May 14, 1888
- May 13, 1893
- May 3, 1899
- March 22, 2012
- March 18, 2016
Image:SunapeeHarbor BurkehavenHill2005.jpg|thumb|300px|Looking westward at Gardiner Bay, with entrance to Sunapee Harbor, upper left, and Burkehaven Hill; shows about 5% of Lake Sunapee water surface
Golden trout and Sunapee trout
Salvelinus aureolus oquassa. Common names: blueback trout, Sunapee trout. Other names: blueback char, golden trout, white trout.The Sunapee Historical Society published a report in 1968 about Sunapee's golden trout which had a dull silver color like the females most of the year. The golden trout were really white trout, but in the fall, their nuptial season, the males turned a flaming color, giving them the name aureolus. The golden trout had a forked tail rather than the square tail of the brook trout.
On January 15, 1921, the Lake Sunapee Fish and Game Club was founded. Rearing tanks were built at Georges Mills in 1922, and 50,000 land-locked salmon, 12,000 chinook salmon, 10,000 silver trout, and 2,000 brook trout, all fingerlings, were reared and planted. By 1940, when the fishery was closed, it had planted 347,403 landlocked and chinook salmon, 196,040 trout, 345,000 mixed trout and salmon, and more than 70 million smelt eggs.
With the introduction of lake trout into Sunapee, which was believed to be an error, the golden trout were bred out of existence.
Other fish
; landlocked salmon requiring deep, pure cold water; smallmouth bass; chain pickerel; yellow perch; brown bullhead catfish ; rock bass —predatory, introduced accidentally into the lake, population controlled with children's fishing contests; rainbow smelt; burbot.Animals of the watershed
It is not uncommon to spot a moose swimming across the lake in the morning; black bear; red foxes; whitetail deer; porcupines; woodchucks; eastern cottontail rabbits; eastern chipmunks; gray squirrels, red squirrels; northern flying squirrels; raccoons; beavers; muskrats; mink; river otters; long-tailed weasels; American martens; and fishers.Notable residents
- Peter A. Diamond, Nobel laureate, Professor of Economics MIT, and Federal Reserve Board nominee
- John Hay, private secretary to President Abraham Lincoln and Secretary of State under Presidents William McKinley and Theodore Roosevelt. Hay's lakeshore estate is located within the John Hay National Wildlife Refuge and is open for tours.
- Nobel laureate Robert Coleman Richardson
- Steven Tyler of the band Aerosmith
- Ken Burns, American filmmaker, known for his style of using archival footage and photographs in documentary films
Lake Sunapee watershed