[A Busy Year at the Old Squire’s by Charles Asbury Stephens]@TWC D-Link bookA Busy Year at the Old Squire’s CHAPTER XVII 1/15
OUR FOURTH OF JULY AT THE DEN Farm work as usual occupied us quite closely during May and June that year; and ere long we began to think of what we would do on the approaching Fourth of July.
So far as we could hear, no public celebration was being planned either at the village in our own town, or in any of the towns immediately adjoining.
Apparently we would have to organize our own celebration, if we had one; and after talking the matter over with the other young folks of the school district, we decided to celebrate the day by making a picnic excursion to the "Den," and carrying out a long contemplated plan for exploring it. The Den was a pokerish cavern near Overset Pond, nine or ten miles to the northeast of the old Squire's place, about which clung many legends. In the spring of 1839 a large female panther is said to have been trapped there, and an end made of her young family.
Several bears, too, had been surprised inside the Den, for the place presented great attractions as a secure retreat from winter cold.
But the story that most interested us was a tradition that somewhere in the recesses of the cave the notorious Androscoggin Indian Adwanko had hidden a bag of silver money that he had received from the French for the scalps of white settlers. The entrance to the cave fronts the pond near the foot of a precipitous mountain, called the Fall-off.
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