A. P. Coleman in Appalachia for Pec. 1924, page 33 et seq. 
"In reality the mountains of Gaspe fonn the most trackless arfiunvisited 
wilderness in eastern North America, with no nap worthy of the name showing 
the mountains, and without a single road or trail crossing the range from 
i'Wv'vC^” 
to sou tip* 
iixxxxik^icx 
" Sir William Logan, many years ago, crossed the Shickshocks on a geolog¬ 
ical surgey, and gave a brief acceunt of them, naming several of the peaks, 
but the topographer who prepared a map from his field notes mixed things 
up so that the mountains do not correspond with the description in the letter 
piress. The map looks all right, but is quite unreliable" 
"There is no true pass across the fcange, though there are two dips in its 
crest where the Cap Chat and the Ste, Anne Hivers have carved wild canyons 
2500 feet in depth" 
p.37 "as one might expect, the people of Gaspe, especially those of the 
strip of lowland between the mountains and the St. Lawrence, are the most 
primitive in North America." 
