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Populated places in New Hampshire generally fall into one or more of the following categories (which see): Category:Cities in New Hampshire (13 cities) Category:Towns in New Hampshire (221 towns) Category:Census-designated places in New Hampshire (46 places) Category:Unincorporated communities in New Hampshire (villages, hamlets, settlements, etc.)
Map of the United States with New Hampshire highlighted. This article lists incorporated places and census-designated places (CDPs) in the U.S. state of New Hampshire. As of 2020, there were a total of 13 incorporated places in New Hampshire, and 88 census-designated places.
In 2020 New Hampshire ranked sixth in terms of per capita income in the United States of America, at $41,234 as of the 2016-2020 American Community Survey 5-year estimate. [ 1 ] New Hampshire counties ranked by per capita income
In 1766, New Hampshire Governor John Wentworth promised Eleazar Wheelock a grant of a township on which to build Dartmouth College. In 1770, a month after Wheelock received the royal charter, the governor granted the college the township of Landaff (east of present-day Woodsville, New Hampshire), but Wheelock, after viewing the land and others under consideration, decided to establish the ...
New Amesbury: Now Warner, also called Number One in 1735. [citation needed] New Boston Addition: 1760 name of Francestown. [8] New Chester: Early name of Hill until 1837. [3] [8] New Garden: Early name of Ossipee. [8] New Grantham: Temporary name (1786 to 1818) of Grantham. [8] New Durham Gore: Alton. [8] New Holderness: Early name for what is ...
The Hixville Village Historic District is a historic district in Dartmouth, Massachusetts.. The intersections of North Hixville Road and Old Fall River Roads, the historic cemetery, The North Hixville Road Fire Station, Cornell Pond on the Copicut River, Hixville General Convenience Store and The First Church of Hixville define the center of Hixville Village in North Dartmouth, Massachusetts.
New Hampshire's major regions are the Great North Woods, the White Mountains, the Lakes Region, the Seacoast, the Merrimack Valley, the Monadnock Region, and the Dartmouth-Lake Sunapee area. New Hampshire has the shortest ocean coastline of any U.S. coastal state, with a length of 18 miles (29 km), [26] sometimes measured as only 13 miles (21 km).
The district is home to Dartmouth College, the state's second-largest college, and three of its representatives since 1995 (Charles Bass, Paul Hodes, and Annie Kuster) have been Dartmouth alumni. Some of the largest employers in the district are Dartmouth–Hitchcock Medical Center , Dartmouth College , Southern New Hampshire Health System ...