For a time, David Lidstone, better known as River Dave, was the antihero in this saga, the rebellious figure who stood up against the powerful and bent the rules in search of a peaceful, quiet life.A different reputation, however, attached itself to.
Nearly a quarter-million dollars donated and set aside for Canterbury squatter David Lidstone to buy property of his own are now in the hands of River Dave himself, after the trust that held the funds was dissolved at the end of March.The trust held.
CONCORD A former hermit in New Hampshire who went back to live on the wooded property he was ordered to leave realizes that his time there is drawing to a close but he appears willing to keep fighting against his removal for now.David Lidstone,.
David Lidstone, who just turned 82, failed to show up for a contempt of court hearing Thursday in his tug-of-war with a Vermont landowner over a patch of forest near the Merrimack River that he’s called home for 27 years before his cabin burned down in an accidental fire.
A former hermit in New Hampshire who went back to live on the wooded property he was ordered to leave realizes that his time there is drawing to a close