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Rindge is a town in Cheshire County, New Hampshire, United States. The population was 6,476 at the 2020 census , [ 2 ] up from 6,014 at the 2010 census . [ 3 ] Rindge is home to Franklin Pierce University , the Cathedral of the Pines and part of Annett State Forest .
Tuesday Briefings have invited government, civic and business leaders to Rindge New Hampshire to meet with students and answer questions. Guests have included Ann Compton from ABC News, Boston Globe New Hampshire Political correspondent James Pindell, Journalist and Author Linda Killian, former senior advisor to the Iraqi Ministry of Education and a member of the Franklin Pierce College Board ...
Newspapers published in Colebrook, New Hampshire: The News and Sentinel (1870-2024) [2] Concord. Newspapers published in Concord, New Hampshire: Concord Herald. W.,
A judge has found the New Hampshire publisher of a weekly community newspaper guilty of five misdemeanor charges that she ran advertisements for local races without properly marking them as ...
It was formed October 27, 1995, to operate the newspapers acquired through the purchase of a various newspapers. In addition to its Massachusetts operations, the company owns the Salmon Press group of weekly newspapers of New Hampshire and also publishes four weekly newspapers in Northeastern Connecticut under the name Villager Newspapers. In ...
In 1876, Stearns published the History of Rindge and in 1887 the History of Ashburnham, both of which were well received throughout New England, and entitled him to a foremost rank among local historians. He was a resident member of the New Hampshire Historical Society, and an honorary member of several kindred societies in other states. For ...
Oct. 2—A new 20,000-square-foot New Hampshire Liquor & Wine Outlet opened in Swanzey earlier this week. The new outlet is a consolidation of the previous Keene store at 6 Ash Brook Road, as well ...
Colonel Enoch Hale (1733–1813) was born in Rowley, Province of Massachusetts Bay, on November 28, 1733.He and his brother Nathan (who was not the like-named Nathan Hale, famous spy of the American Revolution) lived as children in Hampstead, Province of New Hampshire, before moving to Rindge as young men and rising to prominence in the area.