Ads
related to: log park cabins for sale nh maine country store
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Abenaki Indian Shop and Camp is a historic Native American site in the Intervale section of Conway, New Hampshire.The site is a camp established by Abenakis who were lured to the area by the prospect of making baskets and selling them to visitors to the resort areas of the White Mountains in the late 19th century, and operated into the late 20th century.
Yarmouth's marina in 2022, looking south. Also known as Falls Village or The Falls, Lower Falls (named for the nearby First Falls) was the location of several mills from the 17th century onward, while—on the southern side of today's East Main Street Bridge—was Yarmouth's harbor, where many hundreds of ships were built and launched in the century between 1790 and 1890.
½ mile from park entrance, 160 yd (150 m) south of Allenstown-Deerfield Rd., in Bear Brook State Park 43°09′29″N 71°22′44″W / 43.1581°N 71.3789°W / 43.1581; -71.3789 ( Bear Brook State Park Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) Camp Historic
Moosilauke Ravine Lodge is a cabin complex at the base of Mount Moosilauke in the White Mountains of New Hampshire. Owned and operated by Dartmouth College, the Lodge is open to the public from May through November. The Lodge is managed by the Outdoor Programs Office and staffed by Dartmouth College and Dartmouth Outing Club students and recent ...
The park is home to the New Hampshire Snowmobile Museum, Old Allenstown Meeting House, and the Richard Diehl Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) Museum, which are in historic buildings built by the Civilian Conservation Corps. [6] In 1985 and 2000, the remains of a total of four female bodies, one adult and three children, were found in the park.
New Hampshire Bank Building: New Hampshire Bank Building: September 10, 1979 : 22-26 Market Sq. Portsmouth: 66: Newington Center Historic District: Newington Center Historic District: November 30, 1987
Robie's Country Store is a historic store at 9 Riverside Street in Hooksett, New Hampshire, United States.As a business, the general store was in continuous operation between 1822 and 1997, the last 110 years under the ownership of the Robie family from 1887, from whence it gets its name.
By 1910 a full-scale conversion of the area to coastal estate homes was well underway, with landowners selling off coastal properties for development. The family of Ralph S. Norton, an insurance executive based in Portland , owned a small farm in the area, and Norton decided in 1911 to build a more substantial summer house on a high point ...