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In 1835 the town was the third largest city of New Hampshire after Dover and Portsmouth, and the Nashua Manufacturing Company opened their own bank, called the Nashua Bank. The creation of a new railroad line to Nashua from Lowell, Massachusetts , in 1838 gave the local economy a further boost, and the Nashua Iron Company opened, specializing ...
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Nashua & Lowell Freight House of c. 1853 (14-16 Railroad Square) Laton House Hotel of 1878–1881 (28 Railroad Square) Stearns' Block of 1898–1899 (17-19 Railroad Square) Whiting Block of 1892–1893 (29-37 Main Street) former First Baptist Church of 1849 (43-49 Main Street) First Church of Nashua of 1893–1894 (1 Concord Street)
Nashua: Church 5: Brady Sullivan Tower [6] 180 ft (55 m) 14: 1969: Manchester: Office, retail 6: Sacred Heart Catholic Church [7] 175 ft (53 m) 1850: Concord: Former church (neo gothic style) (currently being used as residential) [8] 7: South Congregational Church [9] 169 ft (52 m) 1860: Concord: Church 8: First Church of Christ Scientist [10 ...
As The Post’s map shows, the cost of entering the congestion zone, defined as entering Manhattan anywhere on 60th Street or below, in a car from Jan. 5 will be significantly higher —between $9 ...
In 1987, the Nashua River Canal and the Nashua Manufacturing Company Historic District (the Millyard) were placed on the National Register of Historic Places. [14] [15] In 1992, the park trails were designated part of the New Hampshire Heritage Trail system, which extends 130 miles (210 km) along the Merrimack River from Massachusetts to Canada. [16]
The western segment of NH 111A is a 4.935-mile-long (7.942 km) northeast–southwest loop road in Hollis and Nashua in Hillsborough County. The segment is signed east–west. The eastern terminus is in Nashua at NH 111, west of the point where NH 111 and U.S. Route 3 meet. At that location, NH 111A is known as Main Dunstable Road.
The station came to the air at 8 p.m. on January 29, 1988, as W13BG on VHF channel 13 in Nashua; [4] its license was granted on July 29. [5] Founded by Robert Rines [6] and owned by Center Broadcasting Corporation of New Hampshire, a non-profit partnership between the Concord–based Franklin Pierce Law Center and the Boston–based Academy of Law Sciences, the station aired local community ...