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Examines what makes New Hampshire unique, including its history, geography, people, culture, and attractions.
In Manchester Ghosts of Portsmouth New Hampshire, Renee Mallett took you on a tour of some of the Granite State's most haunted cities. Now let her show you the other strange people, places, and points in history that New Hampshire has to offer. Covers every region of New Hampshire with more than 50 different locations and stories. Tales of lost treasure, hauntings, abandoned tourist attractions, off-beat travel spots, unusual world records and other oddities. Has both historical and modern-day people, places, and legends. More than 40 photographs. Whether you are on the trail of Marie Antoinette's lost diamond necklace, looking for the strange Blue Lady specter haunting one of Wilton's cemeteries, curious to find out what New Hampshire has to do with Saturday Night Live, or in the mood to visit strange tourist attractions like America's Stonehenge and the haunted High Hut of the state's tallest mountain, Strange New Hampshire is the guide for you.
New Hampshire history is uniquely on display along the highways of the Granite State. The New Hampshire roadside historical markers commemorate significant events and individuals from the first settlers arriving in 1623 to notable individuals who helped define what New Hampshire is today. New Hampshire played a major role in the birth of our nation. From Revolutionary battlefields to individuals of political influence, the Granite State has made an indelible mark on history. This book explores the 255 New Hampshire historical markers that dot the state highways and roads. Each marker is described with its location (to include GPS coordinates), date installed, marker inscription, and expanded historical references of this event/individual. Information may also be provided about other points of interest in the vicinity of the historical marker.
WHEN WE FIRST MOVED TO NEW HAMPSHIRE, my wife and I were in for a surprise. Some states have little sense of their identities. That isn't true of New Hampshire, which knows full well that it is a libertarian state and dares anyone to change it. Lord knows, we newcomers sometimes, even inadvertently, tried to budge it in a new direction, but we bumped into the attitude that Granite Staters don't mind being different. As a matter of fact, they thoroughly enjoy it. The phrase "That's not the New Hampshire Way" is heard here not infrequently. Newcomers to New Hampshire are known variously as "outtastatahs," "people from away," or "flatlanders." As new-comers, we had a lot to learn about our newly-adopted home. If you move to the Granite State, you, not the state, will have to change. Granite doesn't chip easily. This book reflects some of the lessons we learned.
“The first of my father’s illusions was that bears could survive the life lived by human beings, and the second was that human beings could survive a life led in hotels.” So says John Berry, son of a hapless dreamer, brother to a cadre of eccentric siblings, and chronicler of the lives lived, the loves experienced, the deaths met, and the myriad strange and wonderful times encountered by the family Berry. Hoteliers, pet-bear owners, friends of Freud (the animal trainer and vaudevillian, that is), and playthings of mad fate, they “dream on” in a funny, sad, outrageous, and moving novel by the remarkable author of A Son of the Circus and A Prayer for Owen Meany.
Three New Hampshire women live their lives on their own terms, each struggling with the need for change and fulfillment. Taylor hopes moving to White Birch will be the perfect place to regroup and refocus. Julie has to face the fact she will never have children and keep it from destroying her marriage. Elizabeth's ambitions have always led her to success, but they may keep her from true love.
Examines what makes Vermont unique, including its symbols, flags, songs, recipes, landmarks, and more.
New Hampshire literally has something for everyone: urban types looking for bookstores, coffee shops, swank eateries, and nightclubs; outdoorsy folks searching for endless vistas atop the high peaks of the White Mountains; history buffs seeking clues to the state’s rich past; or snow-loving families hoping to schuss the slopes all day long. It is a place of quaint villages, swimming holes, general stores, and hillside farms. And its people, those singular Granite Staters, are the friendly caretakers who make sure it’s there for all to enjoy. Profiled within these pages are fifty classic symbols of this extraordinary state, revealing little-known facts, longtime secrets, and historical legends. From frost heaves to Robert Frost, from Stonyfield Yogurt to the New Hampshire State House, New Hampshire Icons offers up the inside story on the Granite State. Did you know that New Hampshire has the shortest coastline of any state (18 miles)? That Mt. Washington is the official home of the world’s worst weather? That pumpkins are the official state fruit? New Hampshire Icons features the people, places, events, foods, animals, and traditions that make it the singular state it is.
Examines what makes Maine unique, including its symbols, flags, songs, recipes, landmarks, and more.