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Since 2017, the division's parent agency has been the New Hampshire Department of Natural and Cultural Resources (DNCR). [2] Projects include study and development of the Temple Mountain Ski Area, acquired by the state in 2007, [3] slated to become a state park. [citation needed]
Pawtuckaway State Park is a 5,000-acre (20 km 2) preserve in New Hampshire, United States. It is one of the largest state parks in southeastern New Hampshire [1] and is named for Pawtuckaway Lake and the Pawtuckaway Mountains. The park extends from the west shore of the lake to the west side of the mountains.
Echo Lake State Park: Carroll: Conway: 118 acres (48 ha) Eisenhower Memorial Wayside Park: Coös: Crawford's Purchase: 7 acres (2.8 ha) 1979: Ellacoya State Park: Belknap: Gilford: 82 acres (33 ha) 1956: Forest Lake State Park: Coös: Dalton: 397 acres (161 ha) 1935: Franconia Notch State Park: Grafton: Franconia: 6,692.8 acres (2,708.5 ha ...
website, 130 acres (53 ha), environmental education center about the Merrimack River watershed, operated by New Hampshire Audubon, the State and the USFWS, located at Amoskeag Falls: Bear Brook State Park: Allenstown: Merrimack: Merrimack Valley: Over 10,000 acres (4,000 ha) extending into Deerfield, Hooksett, and Candia, small 4-H nature center
Revolutionary War monument, Nottingham Square Oldest continuously operated recycling center in the US, Nottingham, NH. Incorporated in 1722 by Lieutenant Governor John Wentworth, Nottingham was named for Daniel Finch, 2nd Earl of Nottingham. The earl was a close friend of Samuel Shute and Joseph Dudley, previous colonial governors of New Hampshire.
Nottingham: 4 acres (1.6 ha) Strawberry Hill State Forest: Bethlehem: 53 acres (21 ha) Sugar Hill State Forest: Bristol: 684 acres (277 ha) Swain State Forest: Laconia: 106 acres (43 ha) Taylor State Forest: Concord: 10 acres (4.0 ha) Totten Trails State Forest: Henniker: 109 acres (44 ha) Upton-Morgan State Forest: Concord: 21 acres (8.5 ha ...
Crawford Notch State Park is located on U.S. Highway 302, in northern New Hampshire, between Bretton Woods and Bartlett. The 5,775-acre (2,337 ha) park occupies the center of Crawford Notch, a major pass through the White Mountains. The park includes the Willey House historical site and the Dry
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.