Additional RMC Donation

(Single Transaction) Please consider donating to the Randolph Mountain Club! This donation should be added to your shopping cart along with other purchases.



If you have recently stayed at the Perch or the Log Cabin, the suggested donation is $8 per member and $15 per non-member.



General donations are the primary funding for the RMC trails, camps, and the Sterns Lodge. These donations also support general operational expenses, such as this website. Any amount is greatly appreciated.



We are currently having an intermittent issue where the "Donation" box is not showing up for some users.

If this is happening, please send a quick note to webmaster@randolphmountainclub.com and use the PayPal donation button above to complete your donation. It will be in a different transaction than any other items (including memberships) purchased through the online store; however, everything else should remain the same. We apologize for the inconvenience, and thank you for your continued support!

Additional RMC Donation

(Recurring Monthly)



A new feature! Donation Options: Donate : $5.00 USD - monthly Donate : $10.00 USD - monthly Donate : $15.00 USD - monthly Donate : $20.00 USD - monthly Donate : $25.00 USD - monthly Donate : $50.00 USD - monthly Donate : $75.00 USD - monthly Donate : $100.00 USD - monthly This donation is for: General Donation Andrew S. Tucker Fund Benjamin Hill Campbell Fund Mt. Madison Fund (memorial donation) In memory of:

RMC Glasses

Six-inch-tall RMC glasses - wouldn't you want to have about ten of these on the top shelf in your kitchen or wet bar? Currently on order - check back soon!

Click for larger image. $10.00

Temporarily out of stock

Randolph Paths (RMC Guidebook)

9th Edition, 2016. The updated guide describes changes in our trail system over the past eleven years. You will find information on the Community Forest Trailhead and consequent changes to paths on the Hill, and a new section on Trail Running by Doug Mayer. References and website addresses have been corrected as well. While the format is familiar, new photos and revised articles provide the data you'll need to plan your hikes. Check out Points of Interest, including Abigail Adams and the Pony Truss Bridge. Jon Hall's newly designed map (Randolph Valley and the Northern Peaks of the Presidential Range, 2016) is inserted, as always, inside the back cover. Many thanks go to Allison Bell. In addition to painstakingly entering revisions, large and small, her design skills have given the guide a fresh new appearance. All this, and it still fits in your pocket or pack!

Click for larger image. $18.95



Randolph Valley and Northern Peaks of the Presidential Range Trail Map (2016) While the map includes the guidebook's updates to trails, land ownership and other geographic information, more noticeable is its overall redesign, in comparison to the editions of 2005 and 1996. The area traditionally shown on the RMC map has been divided in two, with the "Hill" side (the town of Randolph and the Crescent Range) on one side of the sheet, and the "Mountain" side (Mts. Madison, Adams and Jefferson) on the other. The Randolph Valley, with the trailheads along Durand Road and U.S. Route 2, appears on both sides. Since the map sheet is the same size as the previous editions, the two-sided map is printed at a larger scale and with a smaller contour interval, and displays denser sections of the trail network with more accuracy and higher resolution. Also for the first time, the map uses color to indicate types of forest areas, with a darker green for conifers and a lighter green for deciduous trees; note that this is completely different from the conventional use of graduated colors to indicate changing elevation. This forest-type overlay significantly increases the amount of information on the map compared to the 2005 edition (which differentiated between forest and non-forest only) and the 1996 edition (which had no such information at all). Updates to man-made features within the map area include the Randolph Community Forest Trailhead and the RMC's associated new trails and trail changes, the Community Forest's new interpretive trail current boundaries and logging roads, other protected land areas abutting the RCF and WMNF, the bike trails in Moose Brook State Park, the route of the overhead power lines south of Route 2, and seasonal-use information about the Presidential Rail Trail. The RMC thanks Jonathan Hall for the many hours he has put into designing and creating the new map. We are grateful also for the collaboration and assistance of Doug Mayer, Jim Anderson, Dwight Bradley, Jamie Maddock, Carl Herz, and Judy Hudson. Printed on: Tyvek paper

Scale = 1:20,000

Contour Interval = 50 feet

Dimensions of map = 24" x 18" Trail map credits and Location (Locus) Map

Click for larger image. $8.95



Randolph Valley and Northern Peaks of the Presidential Range Trail Map (2016)

Unfolded Map The same map as above, but the entire map is printed on one side and is shipped unfolded. Suitable for framing! Printed on: Poster paper

Scale = 1:20,000

Contour Interval = 50 feet

Dimensions of map = 36" x 24"

Click for larger image. $15.00



Trails or Timber?

By Judith Maddock Hudson, 40 pages, paperback, 2018 Today the slopes of Mts. Madison and Adams in northern New Hampshire are covered by mature trees that create a rich green blanket on the mountains. One hundred years ago, logging had decimated this forest to provide lumber for construction and pulp for paper. Trails or Timber?--a new publication from the Randolph Mountain Club--provides pictures of the era from 1851 to 1914 in which these mountains were first explored by hikers but then denuded for their timber. The creation in 1911 of a National Forest in the White Mountains halted the wholesale lumbering and led to the restoration of the forest. In the twenty-first century, the Presidential Range is protected from destructive timbering practices. This slim volume publishes more than 80 images, many that have never appeared in print.

Click for larger image. $20.00



Trail Dreams

New Fundraiser - 10% of sale profits will go to the Randolph Mountain Club! Brad Cook, as a deeply troubled young man, had a chance encounter with a stranger, who shared his intriguing story around the campfire one evening in the summer of 1975. The seed of a dream was planted, which turned out to be the spark Brad needed to initiate a complete physical, mental, and spiritual transformation, a quest for more. This is a story of one man's passion to experience life to its fullest, to take risks, to imagine a better world. It's a journey he followed and on the way discovered the true source of happiness and inner peace. Cook understands that it is our responsibility to shut off the electronic devices for a while. We need to share some quality time with our children, as we lead them back into active participation in nature, rather than sheltering them from it. His informative and inspirational story examines the reasons why children have been increasingly denied access to their natural environment, and the negative physical, psychological, spiritual and societal effects from this unwarranted separation. His perspectives were developed during his 35-year career in public education and his captivating adventures in the world of nature.

Click for larger image. $14.99



RMC Climber T-Shirt A 100 % cotton t-shirt featuring the RMC Climber logo on the back! The RMC logo is printed on the front.



Out of stock

Click for larger image. $25.00



Gray Knob T-Shirt (GILDAN Performance® ) Printed on GILDAN Performance® fabric, the t-shirt features a wintery photograph of Gray Knob by Carl Herz on the back. The RMC logo is printed on the front.

Click for larger image. $20.00



RMC Logo Mug The RMC now offers a hot beverage mug featuring the Club's official logo. Now you can relax with your favorite drink while showing off your RMC pride!



Click for larger image. $10.00



Peaks & Paths: A Century of the Randolph Mountain Club

By Judith Maddock Hudson, 288 pages, 165 illustrations, hard cover, 2010 New Hampshire's Crescent and northern Presidential ranges, the site of spectacular mountain scenery, boast an intricate network of hiking paths centered on the small town of Randolph. This trail system, which began in the 1850s and expanded in the 1880s and 1890s, was largely destroyed by intensive logging in the early 1900s. The Randolph Mountain Club was founded in 1910 to "put the paths in order" and, over the last hundred years, the RMC has become the principal custodian of these trails. Today the Club maintains over 100 miles of paths, including a section of the Appalachian Trail, as well as four high-altitude camps on the slopes of Mt. Adams. At this, the century mark, Peaks & Paths lays out the history of the Club as it has responded to changing times and conditions, and celebrates the enduring spirit that has led to its emergence today as a major year-round steward for preserving the integrity of paths and camps on the Crescent Range, the slopes of Mts. Madison, Adams, Jefferson, and outliers Starr King and Owl's Head. With a foreword by Laura Waterman, the book also contains biographical sketches of important important figures, among them early pathmakers Charles E. Lowe, W. H. Peek, E. B. Cook and J. R. Edmands, as well as listings of former RMC board members, camp caretakers, and trail crews.

Click for larger image. $29.95



Fleece Hat Don't be caught in the cold this winter without this classic fleece hat - now back by popular demand. This winter hat will keep you warm and where you want to be: skiing, hiking or snowshoeing on snowy, untrodden RMC trails. Back in stock!



Click for larger image. $20.00



RMC Posters We have two beautiful designs that would look great hanging on your favorite wall. Leroy Woodard's Randolph in the early 20th century (12" x 15" printed on heavy stock poster board) Annual Picnic and Charades Centennial, 1913-2013 (18" x 24" glossy print)

Click for larger image. $15.00 each



Long Sleeve Crew (COOLMAX®) This dark blue long sleeve crew features the RMC logo on the front, and a Tim Sappington illustration of Randolph Valley and the Northern Presidentials on the back. New in 2011, the Long Sleeve Crew is now printed on COOLMAX® fabric. COOLMAX® fabric is the performance fabric that includes an effective fiber-based moisture management system. The system can move perspiration away from the body, and through the fabric, where it can evaporate quickly, allowing the wearer to feel cooler and more comfortable.

Click for larger image. $25.00



Crag Camp T-Shirt (COOLMAX®) Printed on COOLMAX® fabric, the t-shirt features an incredible hand-drawn sketch of Crag Camp, King Ravine, Mt. Madison and Mt. Adams on the back, made by Eric Scharnberg (former RMC Winter Caretaker and Field Supervisor.) The RMC logo is printed on the front. COOLMAX® fabric is the performance fabric that includes an effective fiber-based moisture management system. The system can move perspiration away from the body, and through the fabric, where it can evaporate quickly, allowing the wearer to feel cooler and more comfortable.

Click for larger image. $20.00



Baseball Hat Now back in stock, the RMC baseball hat has proven to be quite popular. We selected the highest quality that we could find, with a brass closure and embroidered RMC logo. The RMC cotton baseball hat is khaki with two colored bills to chose from - green or blue. (Sorry, not guaranteed to hold down your toupee or wig in winds over 80 mph on Mount Adams!)

Click for larger image. $15.00



RMC Patch

The official Randolph Mountain Club patch features the distinctive, traditional RMC logo designed by Leroy Woodard. A beautiful addition to your pack, jacket, or the pack of a four footed friend. Three inches in diameter.

Click for larger image. $5.00



RMC Sticker

Proudly display your support of the Randolph Mountain Club with our sticker. Put it on your car, water bottle... anywhere! The sticker is 3.5" in diameter.

Click for larger image. $1.50



Spur Cabin Registers, 1900-1915

Revised Edition, 108 pages, 24 photos, 7 appendices, transcribed and edited by Al Hudson, RMC Archivist, 2009. In the late summer of 1899 George F. Moore and Charles C. Torrey contracted with John H. Boothman to build them a log cabin near Spur Brook opposite Chandler Fall at the 3200 foot level on the northern slope of Mt. Adams. The cabin was completed in 1900 and was a much-visited site on Spur Path, one of the major trails to the summit of Mt. Adams, until 1929, when the sadly deteriorated structure was razed by the USFS. This publication contains: a complete transcription from the original registers of the entries in the first two volumes (1900-1907, 1908-1915) plus a 3-page remnant of a "lost" third volume; 24 photographs; lists of names, hotels/inns, places, camps and paths appearing in the register. Introduction by Al Hudson.

Click for larger image. $25.00



Polo T-Shirt A very classy-looking addition to your RMC wardrobe! The pique collared polo is 100% cotton, powder blue in colour, and has an embroidered RMC logo. *ON SALE*

Click for larger image. $20.00 $5.00



Guide to the Cultural and Natural History of the Four Soldiers Path The RMC's new Four Soldiers Path winds its way north through Randolph Community Forest, onto the Kilkenny section of the White Mountain National Forest, and ends at the wild and rugged Pond of Safety. The club's interpretive guide provides interested hikers with a fascinating tour of the cultural, historic and natural history to the lands traversed by the path. Produced by more than a dozen RMC volunteers, with supervision by well known New England Naturalist Dave Thurlow, the guide is designed to be enjoyed by hikers of all ages. Artwork by Tim Sappington and Ginger Beringer.

Click for larger image. $5.00

