Middle Branch Little Magalloway River

The Middle Branch of the Little Magalloway River is a 4.6-mile-long (7.4 km) river in northern New Hampshire and northwestern Maine in the United States. It is a tributary of the West Branch of the Little Magalloway, located in the Androscoggin River watershed of Maine and New Hampshire.

The river rises in Pittsburg, New Hampshire, south of Prospect Mountain (2,714 feet above sea level), and flows east into Maine. The river joins the West Branch of the Little Magalloway .7 miles upstream of the West Branch's juncture with the Little Magalloway, itself only .3 miles above the river's inlet in Aziscohos Lake.

Coordinates: 45°07′58″N 71°01′47″W / 45.13278°N 71.02972°W / 45.13278; -71.02972

Famous quotes containing the words middle, branch and/or river:

    “When I used to read fairy tales, I fancied that kind of thing never happened, and now here I am in the middle of one! There ought to be a book written about me, that there ought! And when I grow up, I’ll write one—but I’m grown up now,” she added in a sorrowful tone: “At least there’s no room to grow up any more here.”
    Lewis Carroll [Charles Lutwidge Dodgson] (1832–1898)

    True variety is in that plenitude of real and unexpected elements, in the branch charged with blue flowers thrusting itself, against all expectations, from the springtime hedge which seems already too full, while the purely formal imitation of variety ... is but void and uniformity, that is, that which is most opposed to variety....
    Marcel Proust (1871–1922)

    Up a lazy river by the old mill run, that lazy, lazy river in the noonday sun.
    Sidney Arodin, U.S. songwriter. “Lazy River,” Peer International Corp. (1931)