List of New Hampshire historical markers (226–250)
This is part of the list of New Hampshire historical markers. Though there are only 244 markers, the name of this article anticipates future markers.
NH historical markers: | Main 1–25 26–50 51–75 76–100 101–125 126–150 151–175 176–200 201–225 226–250 |
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Markers 226-250: | 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 - See also |
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The text of the markers is reproduced below.
Markers 226 to 250
226. Jonathan Myrick Daniels 1939–1965
- City of Keene
"Civil rights activist Daniels worshiped at St. James Episcopal Church during his high school years. Born in Keene, he graduated from Virginia Military Institute before entering the Episcopal Theological School in Cambridge, MA. While studying for the priesthood, he went south to assist with voter registration. On August 20, 1965 in Hayneville, AL, Daniels was shot and killed as he stepped in front of a young African-American coworker, saving her life. His funeral was held at St. James."[1]
227. The Nansen Ski Jump
- Town of Milan
"Named for Fridtjof Nansen, the Greenland explorer, Berlin's first ski club formed in 1872. The club sponsored the 'Big Nansen' constructed in 1936–38 by the National Youth Administration and the City of Berlin. At the time, it was possibly the tallest steel-tower ski jump in the world, standing 171 feet high. The first jumper was Clarence 'Spike' Oleson in 1937. In 1938, the Olympic trials were held here. Four times Milan hosted the United States Ski Jumping National Championships: 1940, '57, '65, '72."[2]
228. Cork Plain Bridge – Second NH Turnpike
- Town of Antrim
"This Contoocook River crossing was established by the Second New Hampshire Turnpike Corporation, chartered in 1799 to build a toll highway sixty miles from Amherst to Claremont. Opened in 1801 and made free in 1837, the turnpike joined rich Connecticut River Valley farms with Massachusetts markets. Named for the wide plain to the south, a steel Warren Truss bridge of late 19th or early 20th century design stood here until 2009."[3]
229. Granny Stalbird 1755–1845
- Town of Jefferson
"Known as Granny Stalbird, Deborah Vicker came through Crawford Notch c.1796 as cook for Col. Joseph Whipple. It is said she brought the first bible to the north country. She married Richard Stalbird and settle on land deeded to her by Whipple in payment for her service. She became the region's 'doctress,' a traveling herbalist who learned native wisdom about plants and healing. Stories of her knowledge, bravery and dedication to settlers of this new frontier are part of the history of White Mountain settlement."[4]
230. Robert Frost in Allenstown/Buck Street Mills
- Town of Allenstown
"In the summer of 1896, aspiring post Robert Frost (1874–1963) and his wife Elinor spent a belated honeymoon in a rented cottage near the Suncook River in Allenstown. Carl Burell, a high school friend and avid naturalist, was foreman at the Moulton box shop at Buck Street dam. Botany walks with Burell awakened Frost to the natural world, coloring his later writings. Frost recalled these walks in 'The Quest of the Orchis' (1901). Burell's 1896 injury in a mill accident inspired Frost's poem, 'The Self-Seeker'."[5]
"A bridge was built at 'Buck Street,' by the 1750s. Natural falls were dammed to power saw and grist mills before 1767. The 19th c. added a water-powered fulling mill for cleansing wool cloth by 1813, a bedstead shop by 1845, a spoke shop in the 1850s and twine mills. By the 1890s, the dams powered Charles Fisher's axe handle factory and Reuben C. Moulton's box and trunk shop. Then known as East Pembroke, the area had a post office, store, blacksmith shop, houses and workers' tenements."[6]
231. Norris Cotton statesman 1900–1989
- Town of Warren
"In 1975 Norris Cotton celebrated 50 years of elected public service, having served in both the state legislature and Congress. Born in Warren in 1900, Cotton worked his way through Phillips Exeter Academy and Wesleyan University before being elected to the State House in 1922. In 1947 he began writing weekly reports from Congress to his constituents, published in local newspapers. His humble beginnings, rise to power, and consistent connection to New Hampshire's people embodied an American way of life."[7]
232. The Homestead Woolen Mills Dam
- Town of Swanzey
"The Homestead Woolen Mills Dam on the Ashuelot River was a rock-filled, timber crib dam, a common dam type in the 19th century. It was originally built in the 1850s to power woolen and woodenware mills. In the late 19th century it served the Stratton Mills and the West Swanzey Mfg. Co. Homestead Woolen Mills, Inc., took over the buildings and dam in 1911. The company employed many residents of the area until it closed in 1985. The dam was used only for water control after the 1920s until its removal in 2010."[8]
233. Zealand and James Everell Henry
- Town of Carroll
"The village of Zealand grew up in 1875 to serve the logging industry. Henry owned 10,000 acres in the heart of the White Mtns., with a 10-mile railroad to move logs from forest to sawmill. The village had a post office, school, store, housing, and charcoal kilns to eke out every bit of forest value. Depending on the season, the logging business employed 80-250 men. By 1885, Henry left the Valley moving on to Lincoln, leaving the area mostly clear cut. From 1886-1903, fires destroyed the valley and village."[9]
234. US Route 1 Bypass of Portsmouth, NH (1940)
- City of Portsmouth
"The Bypass was part of a major New Deal project to move U.S. Route 1 traffic away from the congested streets of downtown Portsmouth. The Bypass created a second Piscataqua River crossing into Maine via the Interstate (Sarah M. Long) Bridge. The highway's wide divided lanes and grade separations were the first in the state, earning it the title 'New Hampshire's Most Modern Highway.' Today, the U.S. Route 1 Bypass is one of the oldest signed bypasses in the country's numbered route system."[10]
235. Belmont Mill
- Town of Belmont
"The Gilmanton Village Manufacturing Co., under the leadership of Gov. William Badger, built the Belmont Mill in the 1830s. It first produced cotton cloth, but was converted to hosiery knitting in 1865. In 1885, it had the largest annual production of hosiery in NH. With major renovation and mechanization in the 1920s, the Belmont Hosiery Co. was famous for its full-fashioned hosiery, distributed worldwide. The last stocking was knit in 1970, after over a century of local manufacturing in Belmont."[11]
"SAVING THE BELMONT MILL: Mostly abandoned in the 1970s, the mill suffered a devastating 1992 fire. In 1995, the mill was on the verge of demolition when citizens fought to explore re-use options. After a charrette conducted by Plan NH, federal funding restored the roof to its 1830s design, and helped rehabilitate facade and interiors. Press rededication reports in 1998 called the building's new era as town and community center the 'Miracle in Main Street.'"[12]
236. Concord's Civil War Mustering Camps
- City of Concord
"'We can have but "one country, one Constitution and one destiny": the Union must be preserved.' Gov. Nathaniel S. Berry."
"From May 1861 to December 1864, twelve New Hampshire Civil War regiments and a cavalry unit mustered on 'The Plains' and other nearby locations in Concord. Here they gathered to equip, train, and await orders, living in tents or temporary barracks. 32,486 soldiers from NH served in the war, which cost the state at least 4,840 lives, more than 1% of the population. 21 soldiers from NH units were awarded the Medal of Honor, established 1861."[13]
237. East Candia: The Langford District / Candia: One Town, Five Villages
- Town of Candia
"East Candia was a dense neighborhood of workers' housing developed around the local shoe industry in the 1850s, exemplifying a late-19c. industrial economy made possible by the arrival of the Portsmouth and Concord Railroad in 1852. The area's most significant growth came after 1855, when the first of two mechanized shoe factories opened. The new prosperity resulted in a building boom in the popular Stick Style, characterized by decorative trusses in gable ends, many in porches and door hoods, still visible today."[14]
"The town of Candia developed five distinct village centers, each with a strong visual character and identiry. The Hill remains the most picturesque and was the site of the 1763 town meetinghouse and school lot. The Village was a diverse 19th c. mill complex on the North Branch River. Bean's Island was established around a mill in 1872. Candia Depot sprang up with the 1851 arrival of the Portsmouth-Concord Railroad. East Candia was created around the local shoe industry. These five centers made up the town of Candia."[15]
238. The Pennacook
- City of Concord
"When Europeans settled in New England in the 1620s, the largest Native American tribal group in the future state of New Hampshire used the flat lands and bends of the Merrimack River in present Concord for its central village. Named 'Pennacook', which means 'at the falling bank', they were a branch of the Abenaki. The Pennacook were allied with other tribal groups in the Merrimack watershed and owed allegiance to the sagamore Passaconaway. Once numbering in the thousands, by the 1720s only a remnant of the group remained in the area."[16]
239. The Gilford Outing Club, 1946–1992
- Town of Gilford
"Established by local families, the Gilford Outing Club provided all-seasons outdoor recreation for local children through parent volunteering. Particularly well-known for ski instruction, the Club trained hundreds of children including three Olympic athletes: Marty Hall, Dick Taylor, and medalist Penny Pitou. The Club operated from this site from 1950 until it disbanded in 1992. Donated to the town in 1994 by Gary and Lucille Allen's family, the land and buildings still serve to provide outdoor recreation for the town."[17]
240. Abraham Lincoln Speaks in New Hampshire
- Town of Exeter
"On March 3, 1860, Abraham Lincoln delivered his final of four speeches in New Hampshire at Exeter Town Hall. Lincoln had strong ties to Exeter due to the influence of Amos Tuck, of this town, who is credited with the creation of the Republican Party. Both men served in Congress from 1847–1850. It was at the suggestion of Tuck that Lincoln enrolled his son, Robert, in Phillips Exeter Academy. Both Lincoln and Tuck promoted free-state policies and opposed the extension of slavery into the western territories."[18]
241. Downtown Enfield Village
- Town of Enfield
"This village, formerly called North Enfield, grew around mills powered by the Mascoma River. In the 1840s, railroad service and economic investment by the Enfield Shakers laid the foundation for its growth as a mill village that prospered over the next 100 years. The village's connection with the Shakers is a defining element of its economic and cultural history. In 2010, downtown Enfield Village was listed in the National Register of Historic Places."[19]
242. Ice Harvesting in Wolfeboro
- Town of Wolfeboro
"Natural ice was harvested in the Lakes Region. Goodwin Basin and Crescent Lake, visible across the road, and Lake Wentworth were local sources. In 1895, Alonso Avery set up an ice house near Crescent Lake. In 1913 a warm winter caused an ice shortage in Boston, and ice was shipped from NH by rail. Locally, ice was delivered to family ice chests, businesses, camps, and lake cruisers. Refrigeration technology in the 1930s decreased the need for natural ice. The last family ice business, Moody's, closed in 1965."[20]
243. Mount Kearsarge and the U.S.S. Kearsarge
- Town of Warner
"Three miles from here looms Mt. Kearsarge, elev. 2,937 ft. Since the Civil War, four U.S. Naval vessels have been named 'Kearsarge'. The first, a 1,550-ton sloop of war built largely of oak timber from the Mt. Kearsarge foothills, earned fame under the command of Capt. John Winslow when it sank the CSS Alabama near Cherbourg, France in 1864. In 1992, the U.S. Navy christened the newest USS Kearsarge (LHD3), an amphibious assault ship, [and] each of its commissioning crewmembers received a commemorative plank crafted from Mt. Kearsarge red oak trees."[21]
244. Revolutionary War Drummer William Diamond
- Town of Peterborough
"Born in Boston on July 21, 1755, Diamond was a wheelwright by trade. He learned the art of drumming from a British soldier. April 19, 1775, he was part of the guard of Rev. Jonas Clarke's Lexington, MA house, where John Hancock and Samuel Adams were meeting. Paul Revere's alert that British troops were coming prompted Capt. John Parker to have Diamond beat the call to arms, sounding the start of the American Revolution. Diamond died in 1828 and is buried here in Peterborough's Second Cemetery with many Revolutionary War vets."[22]
See also
- List of New Hampshire historical markers (1–25)
- List of New Hampshire historical markers (26–50)
- List of New Hampshire historical markers (51–75)
- List of New Hampshire historical markers (76–100)
- List of New Hampshire historical markers (101–125)
- List of New Hampshire historical markers (126–150)
- List of New Hampshire historical markers (151–175)
- List of New Hampshire historical markers (176–200)
- List of New Hampshire historical markers (201–225)
References
- ↑ New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources (2011). Jonathan Myrick Daniels 1939–1965 (Historical marker). Keene, New Hampshire: New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources. Retrieved August 13, 2014.
- ↑ New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources (2011). The Nansen Ski Jump (Historical marker). Milan, New Hampshire: New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources. Retrieved August 13, 2014.
- ↑ New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources (2011). Cork Plain Bridge – Second NH Turnpike (Historical marker). Antrim, New Hampshire: New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources. Retrieved August 13, 2014.
- ↑ New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources (2011). Granny Stalbird 1755–1845 (Historical marker). Jefferson, New Hampshire: New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources. Retrieved August 13, 2014.
- ↑ New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources (2012). Robert Frost in Allenstown (Historical marker). Allenstown, New Hampshire: New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources. Retrieved August 13, 2014.
- ↑ New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources (2012). Buck Street Mills (Historical marker). Allenstown, New Hampshire: New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources. Retrieved August 19, 2014.
- ↑ New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources (2012). Norris Cotton statesman 1900–1989 (Historical marker). Warren, New Hampshire: New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources. Retrieved August 13, 2014.
- ↑ New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources (2013). The Homestead Woolen Mills Dam (Historical marker). Swanzey, New Hampshire: New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources. Retrieved August 13, 2014.
- ↑ New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources (2013). Zealand and James Everell Henry (Historical marker). Carroll, New Hampshire: New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources. Retrieved August 13, 2014.
- ↑ New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources (2013). US Route 1 Bypass of Portsmouth, NH (1940) (Historical marker). Portsmouth, New Hampshire: New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources. Retrieved August 13, 2014.
- ↑ New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources (2013). Belmont Mill (Historical marker). Belmont, New Hampshire: New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources. Retrieved August 13, 2014.
- ↑ New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources (2013). Saving the Belmont Mill (Historical marker). Belmont, New Hampshire: New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources. Retrieved August 13, 2014.
- ↑ New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources (2013). Concord's Civil War Mustering Camps (Historical marker). Concord, New Hampshire: New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources. Retrieved August 13, 2014.
- ↑ New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources (2013). East Candia: The Langford District (Historical marker). East Candia, New Hampshire: New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources. Retrieved August 13, 2014.
- ↑ New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources (2013). Candia: One Town, Five Villages (Historical marker). East Candia, New Hampshire: New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources. Retrieved August 13, 2014.
- ↑ New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources (2013). The Pennacook (Historical marker). Concord, New Hampshire: New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources. Retrieved August 13, 2014.
- ↑ New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources (2013). Gilford Outing Club (Historical marker). Gilford, New Hampshire: New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources.
- ↑ New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources (2014). Lincoln Speaks in New Hampshire (Historical marker). Exeter, New Hampshire: New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources.
- ↑ New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources (2014). Downtown Enfield Village (Historical marker). Enfield, New Hampshire: New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources.
- ↑ New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources (2014). Crescent Lake Ice Harvest (Historical marker). Wolfeboro, New Hampshire: New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources.
- ↑ New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources (2014). USS Kearsarge and Mt Kearsarge (Historical marker). Warner, New Hampshire: New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources.
- ↑ New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources (2014). Revolutionary War Drummer William Diamond (Historical marker). Peterborough, New Hampshire: New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources.
External links
- New Hampshire Historical Highway Markers - New Hampshire Division of Historical Resources