Temple Mountain Ski Area
Temple Mountain Ski Area was a downhill, or alpine, ski area that operated from 1938 until 2001 on Temple Mountain in the U.S. state of New Hampshire. During peak operation, the ski area featured a quad chairlift, a double chairlift, and multiple T-bars and rope tows. Like many other small ski areas in the country, it closed due to poor weather, rising costs and changing recreational habits.
Its entrance was located on New Hampshire Route 101, straddling the border of the towns of Temple and Peterborough.
The 350-acre (1.4 km2) site, of which about 60 acres (240,000 m2) was used for the ski area, closed after the 2000–01 season. John and Connie Kieley of Temple Highlands LLC purchased the ski area in 2003. The quad chairlift was sold to Nashoba Valley Ski Area in Massachusetts, while the double was sold to SkyTrans Manufacturing and was later used as a ride at the Milwaukee Zoo.[1]
In December 2007, the State of New Hampshire, with some federal funds, purchased the 352 acres (142 ha) for a reported $1 million, creating the Temple Mountain State Reservation.[2]
References
External links
42°50′48″N 71°53′07″W / 42.84667°N 71.88528°W / 42.84667; -71.88528
- Temple Mountain - New England Lost Ski Areas Project
- Temple Mountain History - NewEnglandSkiHistory.com
- Friends of the Wapack
- v
- t
- e
- Arrowhead (Claremont)
- Attitash (Bartlett)
- Black Mountain (Jackson)
- Bretton Woods (Bretton Woods)
- Cannon Mountain (Franconia Notch)
- Cranmore (North Conway)
- Crotched Mountain (Bennington)
- Dartmouth Skiway (Lyme)
- Granite Gorge (Keene)
- Gunstock (Gilford)
- King Pine (Madison)
- Loon Mountain (Lincoln)
- McIntyre (Manchester)
- Mount Sunapee (Sunapee)
- Pats Peak (Henniker)
- Ragged Mountain (Danbury)
- Tenney Mountain (Plymouth)
- Waterville Valley (Waterville Valley)
- Whaleback (Enfield)
- Wildcat (Jackson)
- The Balsams (Dixville Notch)
- Mount Rowe (Gilford)
- Mount Whittier (West Ossipee)
- Potanipo Hill (Brookline)
- Temple Mountain (Temple/Peterborough)