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The Jeremiah Hutchins Tavern is a historic former tavern on United States Route 302 in northwestern Bath, New Hampshire.Built by 1799 by one of the town's early settlers, the building (now a private residence) is one of the town's finest surviving examples of transitional Georgian-Federal architecture.
The pub is on Hare & Billet Road, and across that road lies Hare and Billet Pond, considered to have the most natural appearance and probably the best wildlife habitat of the four ponds on Blackheath. [5] The road is said to be haunted by the ghost of an 18th century woman who hanged herself from an elm tree when her lover failed to meet her there.
Oct. 18—Downtown dining changes in Manchester and Nashua A RESTAURANT on Elm Street in Manchester is slowly evolving into a new identity. The BluAqua Restobar is undergoing a complete revamp and ...
The Moon Under Water, Watford.One of many pubs named after Orwell's description. "The Moon Under Water" is a 1946 essay by George Orwell, originally published as the Saturday Essay in the Evening Standard on 9 February 1946, [1] in which he provided a detailed description of his ideal public house, the fictitious "Moon Under Water".
List of pubs in Hampshire owned by JD Wetherspoon; T. The Tumbledown Dick This page was last edited on 12 February 2017, at 15:51 (UTC). ...
The pub is located adjacent to the Way Foot, a cobbled slipway that connects the beach with the road leading through the village. [16] Due to the Bay Hotel's proximity to the beach and water, it is often used as a restpoint for walkers completing the Coast to Coast walking route, who after dipping their boots into the North Sea, go to the pub ...
The Mad River is a 17.9-mile-long (28.8 km) [1] river in the White Mountains of New Hampshire in the United States.It is a tributary of the Pemigewasset River, part of the Merrimack River watershed.
Bodies of water of New Hampshire by county (12 C) E. Estuaries of New Hampshire (2 P) L. Lakes of New Hampshire (3 C, 26 P) R. Rivers of New Hampshire (7 C, 197 P)