Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Dixville Notch State Park is a park in northern New Hampshire, United States.The park encompasses 127 acres (51 ha) in Dixville Township where New Hampshire State Route 26 passes through Dixville Notch (New England's terminology for mountain gap or pass).
The notch lies within Dixville Notch State Park. (The term "notch" is the local equivalent of "pass" or "gap", and refers to a low place between mountains or mountain ranges.) Nearby Dixville Peak, at 3,482 feet (1,061 m), is the highest point in the township. New Hampshire Route 26 crosses the
Crawford Notch State Park: Carroll: Hart's Location: 5,775 acres (2,337 ha) 1913: Deer Mountain Campground: Coös: Pittsburg: Dixville Notch State Park: Coös: Dixville: 127 acres (51 ha) 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 ...
Dixville Notch split evenly between Harris and Trump in very first result. ... Monument about Trump’s ‘crowd size’ featuring Stormy Daniels quote is removed from NY state park. 03:40, ...
Franconia Notch State Park is in the heart of the White Mountains, with scenic drives, challenging hikes, and gorgeous photo opportunities. I love hiking through the popular Flume Gorge, a natural ...
Dixville Notch is an unincorporated community in Dixville township, Coös County, New Hampshire, United States. The population of the township, all of whom live in Dixville Notch, was 4 as of the 2020 census. [1] The village is known for being the first place to declare its results during the New Hampshire presidential primary. [3]
A voter casts her ballot in the First-in-the-Nation midnight vote for the New Hampshire primary elections in the Living Room of the Tillotson House at the Balsams Grand Resort in Dixville Notch ...
NH 26 runs through Dixville Notch, a mountain pass of the northernmost White Mountains at an altitude of approximately 1,800 feet (550 m), which has its own state park. The site of the 15,000-acre (61 km 2 ) Balsams Grand Resort Hotel , which opened during the Civil War but was closed in 2011, is also located along NH 26.