Add to this the thousands of farms that have grown back to woods
since the Civil War, and you have the most forested state, by
percentage, in the United States. But the “uninterrupted
forest” that Henry David Thoreau first saw in the 1840s was never
exactly that. Loggers had cut it severely, European settlers had
gnawed into it, and, much earlier, native people had left their
mark. This book takes you deep into the past to understand the
present, allowing you to hear the stories of the people and events
that have shaped the woods and made them what they are today.
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