Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Hollis Village Historic District encompasses the historic village center of Hollis, New Hampshire. The district is centered on Monument Square, which connects Main Street (New Hampshire Route 122) to Depot Street and Broad Street. It covers about 400 acres (160 ha), and extends along all three of those roads for some distance, and includes ...
The following is from Worcester's History of Hollis: When Hollis was incorporated, the town tax list comprised 54 families. By 1760, that number had risen to over 105 families. [4]: 100 In 1767, two of the 384 slaves in New Hampshire resided in Hollis. In 1775, four of the 656 slaves in New Hampshire resided in Hollis. [4]: 116
New Hampshire Route 111 (abbreviated NH 111) is a 50.027-mile-long (80.511 km) east–west highway in Hillsborough and Rockingham counties in southeastern New Hampshire.The road runs from the Massachusetts border at Hollis to North Hampton on the Atlantic shore.
Due to non-settlement the land was regranted in 1766, then renewed in 1772. In 1796, one of the later grantees, Samuel Blood, succeeded in renaming the town after his hometown, Groton, Massachusetts. [3] [4] Groton's surface is uneven, although farmers found the soil arable for growing corn and potatoes.
Route 119 east / Route 225 east – Westford, Groton: Northern end of Route 225 concurrency; southern end of Route 119 concurrency: Pepperell: 21.000: 33.796: Route 119 west – Townsend, Ashby: Northern end of Route 119 concurrency: 23.800: 38.302: Route 113 – Townsend, Dunstable, Tyngsboro: 27.282: 43.906: NH 111 east – Hollis, Nashua
Location: 78 Hollis Street, Groton, MA Coordinates: 42°36′52″N 71°34′21″W / 42.6145°N 71.5725°W / 42.6145; -71 Principal: Russell Alfred Hoyt
New Hampshire Route 130 (abbreviated NH 130) is a 12.739-mile-long (20.501 km) secondary east–west state highway in New Hampshire. The road runs between Brookline and Nashua, passing through the town of Hollis in the middle. The western terminus of NH 130 is at the junction with New Hampshire Route 13 in Brookline as Milford Street.
In 1883, St. Paul's hosted the first organized ice hockey game in the United States. [23] The St. Grottlesex schools entrenched their social distinctiveness by charging much higher tuition than the academies. When Groton was founded in 1884, it charged $500 a year for tuition, room, and board. [24]