Well John Nuduke, I do seem to have left a few gaps in my narrative!
Google Maps says it should have taken me exactly 2 hours to drive the 109 miles from home to the start of my hike:
https://tinyurl.com/ydhy4pd6Rather than figure out my mileage on the hike, I'll show you the map (my copy is dated 1972, and good for another 45 years).
https://i.imgur.com/oPXMcSJ.jpgI started from the Appalachian Mountain Club (AMC) lodge near the top right of the map, and took the Duke's Ski Trail up and over Firescrew, then had lunch on the top of Cardigan, then came down the Clark trail and the "Woodland Cutoff" that leads directly back to the lodge. The lodge itself isn't very distinguished architecturally, but I took a picture anyway:
I really don't think we need to waste time talking about my lunch. Anyway, it's a little personal.
I'm sure that as a Duke, you'd be interested in the Duke's Ski Trail. Apparently it was originally laid out by the Russian-German refugee Dimitri von Leuchtenberg, who was related to the Russian royal family:
http://www.newenglandskihistory.com/cccskitrails/NewHampshire/mtcardigan.phphttp://www.royalhistorian.com/how-a-romanov-duke-popularized-skiing-in-quebecs-laurentian-mountains/The CCC was the Civilian Conservation Corps, an organization set up by the government during the Depression to provide jobs and training for the unemployed; a lot of infrastructure in parks was built as part of the CCC's work. As for Dimitri, he settled in Quebec, but he evidently found time to work on some trails south of the border!
Regarding that rope tow, I was intrigued by the car that powered it (via a pulley attached in place of a rear wheel). I'm not quite sure, but it looks like a Volvo PV60, which was the first post-war Volvo (as Wikipedia told me). Could this be a luckier model of that same car? That would fit the date mentioned on the ski history site: "There would a rope tow in operation through at least the early 1960s."
Note that in the top right corner of the map is Welton Falls. I've been there on previous visits, and it's a very nice place to cool down after a few hours on the trail. But this time I wasn't overheated, and the daylight was fading, so I skipped that stop (though I had brought a towel). Next time, maybe.