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"The Seasons in Estabrook Country"

Index to Substantive Endnotes:

* What's in a name? The place name Estabrook-Easterbrooks (in note 1)
* Thoreau's old Carlisle road is now the Estabrook road (in note 4).
* The town boundary and Samuel Kibbe's personal declaration of independence (in note 8)

* The 1683 Estabrook Cellar Hole, Estabrook's colonial history, and the "tedious question" of Carlisle's almost­first-meeting-house on old Estabrook road (in note 10)
* The Northwest Passage in Estabrook Country (in note 13)

* Yellow Birch Swamp: its discovery and naming, and its corrected location (in note 14)
* Minot Pratt's famous elm (in note 15)
* The Brooks Clark­Raym. Emerson House, now Stratton Tavern­Rasmussen House (note 16)

* Ernst Mayr's and Thomas Flint's vision in the 1960s for the Concord Field Station
    and Harvard's 1997 permanent dedication of its MCZ land for conservation (in note 17)
* $2.5 million tax dollars plus large private donations protect Estabrook (in note 18)

* Native People in Estabrook country (in note 22)
* William Brewster and his October Farm (in note 23)
* The lime kiln (in note 24)

* My steps are symbolical steps (in note 30)
* Estabrook's role in the start of the American Revolution (in note 33)
* Bateman's Pond and nature in Estabrook Country (in note 40)

* Lime Quarries and the stone circles (in note 45)
* Mink or Stump Pond and Donald Griffin's beavers (in note 47)
* Huckleberries and blueberries (in note 50)

* The Rebecca Estabrook-Paul Adams cellar site (in note 51)
* The crazy uncle who tried to dig to China (in note 53)
* First Biodiversity Day (in note 54)
* The Minot Pratt Spring (in note 58)

* Emerson's savage fertile houseless land (in endnote 65)
* The fate of Thoreau's Walden house in Estabrook Country (in note 70)
* Emerson's Estabrook Farm paradise with its apples gone wild (in note 73)

* Heaven's gate (in note 78)
* Vision Quest (in note 79)
* Barberrying and a wild harvest (in note 81)

* The seasons at Middlesex School: graduates' memories
    and Middlesex School's proposed development in Estabrook Woods (in note 83)

* A transcendentalist's vision of harmony (in note 85 and note 86)
* Henry Thoreau and the life of the forest: succession of forest trees (in note 97)
* The stewardship of the forest (in note 99)

* Why not control our own woods and destiny more? (in note 101)
* The Easterbrooks moraine (in note 103)
* The old corn hills: Thoreau as Discriminating Archaeological Observer (in note 104)

* Wild apples (in note 105)
* Three score acres at Bullocks wigwam (in note 106)
* Evolution as a constant new creation (in note 110)
* Reginald Heber Howe & the Thoreau Museum of Natural History at Middlesex School (n 112)

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