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The Danville Town House is the town hall of Danville, New Hampshire. It is located at 210 Main Street (New Hampshire Route 111A). The 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story wood-frame building was completed in 1887, replacing the old 18th-century meetinghouse. It houses the town offices, and a meeting space in which town meetings and other civic and social events ...
Elm Farm is located in rural northern Danville, on the west side of Main Street just south of its junction with Beach Plain Road. The property consists of 85 acres (34 ha) of land, stretching in a relatively narrow strip all the way west to the town line with Sandown. The westernmost portions of the property consists of woods and swamp, while ...
The John Elkins Farmstead is a historic farmstead at 155 Beach Plain Road in Danville, New Hampshire, United States.The property includes one of Danville's finest examples of a 19th-century connected farmstead, with buildings dating from the late 18th to late 19th centuries.
Danville is a town in Rockingham County, New Hampshire, United States. The population was 4,408 at the 2020 census . [ 2 ] Danville is part of the Timberlane Regional School District, with students attending Danville Elementary School, Timberlane Regional Middle School, and Timberlane Regional High School .
The New Hampshire Union Leader, Manchester. January 30, 2024 at 11:59 PM ... Lucier, a shortstop, was born in Exeter and lives in Sandown. He attended Central Catholic High School in Lawrence, Mass.
Two New Hampshire state routes cross Sandown. NH 121 crosses the extreme southwestern corner of town, running from Chester (via a small corner of Derry) to Hampstead. NH 121A is the main road through the center of town, running from Chester in the west to the village of East Hampstead in the southeast. It is locally known as Main Street.
Colton Cowser threw Craig Kimbrel's 422nd save ball, which tied him with Billy Wagner for seventhth on the career saves list, into the fountain. Whoops!
The Sandown Old Meetinghouse is a historic meeting house on Fremont Road in Sandown, New Hampshire. Built in 1773, this two-story timber-frame structure is a virtually unaltered late-Colonial civic and religious structure. It is believed to be unique in the state for its level of preservation, both internal and external.