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Purgatory Brook

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River in New Hampshire, United States
Purgatory Brook
Purgatory Brook is located in New HampshirePurgatory BrookShow map of New HampshirePurgatory Brook is located in the United StatesPurgatory BrookShow map of the United States
Location
CountryUnited States
StateNew Hampshire
CountyHillsborough
TownsMont Vernon, Lyndeborough, Milford
Physical characteristics
Source 
 • locationMont Vernon
 • coordinates42°53′43″N 71°43′28″W / 42.89528°N 71.72444°W / 42.89528; -71.72444
 • elevation765 ft (233 m)
MouthSouhegan River
 • locationMilford
 • coordinates42°50′48″N 71°40′56″W / 42.84667°N 71.68222°W / 42.84667; -71.68222
 • elevation246 ft (75 m)
Length5.8 mi (9.3 km)
Basin features
Tributaries 
 • leftBlack Brook
 • rightCurtis Brook

Purgatory Brook is a 5.8-mile-long (9.3 km) tributary of the Souhegan River in southern New Hampshire. It rises in a marshy area on the border of Lyndeborough and Mont Vernon, and flows south over three small waterfalls, intersecting the Souhegan in Milford. For much of its length, it constitutes the border between Lyndeborough and Mont Vernon.

Mont Vernon town histories say it is unclear where the name "Purgatory" came from. At least one other brook with the same name exists in nearby Massachusetts.

The northernmost cascade, Upper Purgatory Falls, drew many visitors in the late 19th and early 20th century when Mont Vernon was home to a number of hotels that drew summer visitors from the heat of Boston. At one time the area had a dance hall and a bowling alley, as well as camping sites - none of which exist today. Evidence of railings around the upper falls are still visible. Town-wide celebrations drew hundreds of people up through the Great Depression, according to Mont Vernon town histories.

Today the upper falls can be reached on the Mont Vernon side by four-wheel drive vehicles, and on the Lyndeborough side by a short walk from a town-maintained road. The lowest waterfall can only be reached by a short hiking trail from a parking lot, which has been closed due to overcrowding spurred by the COVID-19 pandemic. The middle waterfall can be reached by a hiking public trail that runs the length of the brook.

See also

References

  1. New Hampshire GRANIT state geographic information system
  2. Mont Vernon Historical Society newsletter: "Mont Vernon Tourist Town"
Merrimack River watershed
Tributaries
Massachusetts
New Hampshire
Lakes
Massachusetts
New Hampshire
Towns
Massachusetts
New Hampshire
Landmarks
Rivers of New Hampshire by drainage system
Gulf of Maine
Atlantic coastal tributaries
Merrimack River watershed
Merrymeeting Bay
(Androscoggin River watershed)
Piscataqua River watershed
Saco Bay
(Saco River watershed)
Long Island Sound
Connecticut River watershed
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