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The New Hampshire State Register of Historic Places ... Wagon Hill Farm Piscataqua Road, Durham: Strafford: January 2020 (TBA) Farmhouse built circa 1804; 139 acres ...
Dec. 13—Twenty-five land conservation and historic preservation projects across the state have been approved to receive $3.7 million in matching grants from the New Hampshire Land and Community ...
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Cheshire County, New Hampshire, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are provided for many National Register properties and districts; these locations may be seen together in a map.
New Hampshire Farm Museum: Milton: Strafford: Lakes Region: Agriculture: Includes historic farmhouse and tavern, agricultural machinery, farm tools, sleighs and wagons, farm animals New Hampshire Historical Society: Concord: Merrimack: Merrimack Valley: History: State history and culture New Hampshire Snowmobile Museum: Allenstown: Merrimack ...
The New Hampshire Farm Museum is set on over 60 acres (24 ha) of land between New Hampshire Route 125 to the east, and the Spaulding Turnpike to the west. This land is a subset of land settled in the 1780s by Joseph and Beard Plumer, two of the area's early settlers.
The Shepard Hill Historic District encompasses an enclave of summer retreat properties in Holderness, New Hampshire.Centered on a stretch of Shepard Hill Road east of Holderness center, the area was one of the first to be developed as a summer estate area in the vicinity of Squam Lake, which Shepard Hill provided expansive views of.
Spring Hill Farm is located in a rural setting in southeastern Lebanon, on 91.5 acres (37.0 ha) bounded at its southern and western sides by Meriden Road and Laplante Road. The farm complex is located near the road junction, containing a main house, barn, and other smaller outbuildings.
The Murray Hill Summer Home District is a collection of farmhouses and related buildings on Murray Hill Road, a rural road in Hill, New Hampshire.The area is distinctive as a cohesive collection of rural properties that were adapted for use as summer estates between 1873 and 1937, the start date representing an early transition from agricultural to tourist use of such properties in the state.