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Crawford Notch (1867), by Thomas Hill (1829–1908), looking north, collection of the New Hampshire Historical Society A well-documented historic event within the notch was a rockslide that killed the entire Samuel Willey family in August 1826.
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 River Campground with 36 sites.
This is a list of mountain passes — generally called notches — in New Hampshire in the United States. [1 ... Crawford Notch: 871738: Hart's Location: Dickey Notch ...
Hart's Location is a town in Carroll County, New Hampshire, United States. Since 1948, the town has frequently been one of the first places to declare its results for the New Hampshire presidential primary and U.S. presidential elections. [3] The population was 68 in the 2020 census. [2] It was incorporated in 1795. [4]
New Hampshire Route 16 (NH 16) is a 154.771-mile (249.080 km), north–south state highway in New Hampshire, United States, the main road connecting the Seacoast region to the Lakes Region and the White Mountains. Much of its length is close to the border with Maine.
Nash & Sawyer Location, New Hampshire, is a historic designation of part of Coos County, which was shown on the 1896 topographic map of the area north of Crawford Notch. It contained the areas now known as Bretton Woods and Fabyans , each annexed by the town of Carroll before 1935.
Vermont–New Hampshire state line: New Hampshire: Grafton: Haverhill: 0.224: 0.360: NH 135 (Woodsville Road / South Court Street) – Monroe: Village of Woodsville: 1.245: 2.004: NH 10 south (Dartmouth College Highway) – North Haverhill, Hanover: Northern terminus of NH 10: Bath: 3.812: 6.135: NH 112 east (Wild Ammonoosuc Road ...
Section of Geo. T. Crawford's map of the White Mountains of New Hampshire, ca. 1896, showing Hart's Location and Nash and Sawyer's Location The Notch of the White Mountains (Crawford Notch) by Thomas Cole (1839, oil on canvas). The building is "the Crawford house" [1]