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Saint-Gaudens National Historic SiteThe Pan Garden next to the Little Studio. Mt. Ascutney is in the distance.
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Saint-Gaudens National Historic Site
Amphibians
Close up image of an amphibian known as a Spring Peeper
Close up image of an amphibian known as a Spring Peeper.

Saint-Gaudens NHS has several species of amphibians including five frogs, and several salamanders. Common amphibians include American Toads, Red Efts, Spring Peepers, Red-backed Salamanders, Bullfrogs, and Green Frogs. They can be found in garden pools, along seeps, springs, and streams, in the woods, or on the hiking trails.

Amphibians are known for their dual ability to live in water or on land. Red Efts are no different. Red Efts, also known as Eastern Newts or Red-spotted Newts, are a common site along the park’s hiking trails, particularly following a rain. They spend their youth in the water, then on land for two to seven years, before returning to the water to mature into aquatic adults. As aquatic adults they are water bound and no longer able to return to land. They can often be seen moving under the ice in the winter, as they stay active year round.

Saint-Gaudens and his family arrived in Boston on the ship, Desdemona in September 1848  

Did You Know?
Though considered an American artist, Augustus Saint-Gaudens was born in Dublin, Ireland to a French father and Irish mother. He made the month-long voyage to the United States with his parents in 1848, at the age of six months.

Last Updated: August 20, 2006 at 15:29 EST