Walking to Wachusett: Concord to Wachusett with Henry David Thoreau Leominster resident Bob Young presented a lively re-enactment of the journey taken by Concord native Henry David Thoreau and described in his essay "A Walk to Wachusett." Thoreau’s walk was taken on July 19, 1842. Beginning in Concord, he and companion Richard Fuller walked to Mt. Wachusett. Bob and his wife Kathy have resided in Leominster for the past 17 years. While researching a trip to Mount Katahdin in Maine (also visited by Thoreau), Bob came across the Wachusett essay and decided to study it further. It was Kathy who suggested walking the route in order to capture in observations and photographs his thoughts and feelings about the historic, but little known journey. To experience Thoreau’s trip, Young first researched and then walked the exact route taken by Thoreau. Re-enacting the journey consisted of a three-day excursion in 2005 through the towns of Concord, Acton, Stow, Bolton, Lancaster, Sterling, West Sterling, East Princeton and Princeton. Young’s walk is the first recorded re-enactment of Thoreau’s journey. His presentation provided background information followed by a series of pictures and explanations of what he found and learned along the route. Recent article. Highlights:
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