Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Cornish is dotted with several small villages, including Cornish Center, Cornish Flat, Cornish City, Cornish Mills, South Cornish, Balloch, and Squag City. Cornish is served by state routes 12A and 120, both of which connect Claremont to the south with Lebanon to the north.
Traveling from the north, from West Lebanon, New Hampshire, New Hampshire Route 12A is a notably scenic route along the Connecticut River. Historical marker Traveling from Cornish, just before the bridge intersection (about 100 feet (30 m) south of the bridge intersection), on the left, there is a parking area (about 175 by 27 feet (53 by 8 m ...
The Kenyon Bridge, also known as the Blacksmith Shop Bridge, is a historic covered bridge spanning Mill Brook near Town House Road in Cornish, New Hampshire, United States. Built in 1882, it is one of New Hampshire's few surviving 19th-century covered bridges. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978. [1]
The Cornish Art Colony (or Cornish Artists’ Colony, or Cornish Colony) was a popular art colony centered in Cornish, New Hampshire, from about 1895 through the years of World War I. Attracted by the natural beauty of the area, about 100 artists, sculptors, writers, designers, and politicians lived there either full-time or during the summer ...
A map of numbered covered bridges in New Hampshire, 1967 Stark Covered Bridge, built in 1857, over the Upper Ammonoosuc River Contoocook Railroad Bridge is the oldest covered railroad bridge of its kind in the United States Conway is home to the Saco River Bridge, built in 1890 Sign for NH Covered Bridge No. 2 (Coombs Covered Bridge) along NH Route 10
Blow-me-down Brook is a 12.8-mile (20.6 km) long [1] stream located in western New Hampshire in the United States. It is a tributary of the Connecticut River , which flows to Long Island Sound . Blow-me-down Brook begins near the northeast border of the town of Cornish, New Hampshire , below Stowell Hill.
Corbin Park (also known as the Blue Mountain Forest and Game Preserve) is a private game reserve in New Hampshire. It contains land in Croydon, Cornish, Plainfield, and Grantham. [1] [2] It occupies somewhere between 24,000 and 26,000 acres (97 and 105 km 2) of land [3] and was started in 1889 by businessman Austin Corbin. [1]
Cornish Flat is an unincorporated community in the town of Cornish in Sullivan County, New Hampshire, United States.. The village is located in the northeastern corner of Cornish, at the southern end of a valley floor which is bordered westerly by Cornish Stage Road, easterly by New Hampshire Route 120, and whose northerly end is in the town of Plainfield.