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Bear's Den Natural Area Cheshire: Gilsum: 95 acres (38 ha) [6] [7] Binney Pond Natural Area Hillsborough: New Ipswich: 99 acres (40 ha) [8] Bradford Pines Natural Area Merrimack: Bradford: 5 acres (2.0 ha) [9] Crosby Mountain State Park Grafton: Groton: 86 acres (35 ha) [10] Donated in 1971 Curtiss Dogwood Natural Area Hillsborough: Wilton: 14 ...
Since 2017, the division's parent agency has been the New Hampshire Department of Natural and Cultural Resources (DNCR). [2] Projects include study and development of the Temple Mountain Ski Area, acquired by the state in 2007, [3] slated to become a state park. [citation needed]
Aerial map of Pawtuckaway Lake and part of Pawtuckaway State Park (green overlay); the southeast quarter of the ring dike is visible in the upper left corner. The park has 32 miles (51 km) of hiking trails. Trails lead to the approximately 900-foot (270 m) summits of North and South Pawtuckaway mountains and connect the ring dike area to the lake.
Revolutionary War monument, Nottingham Square Oldest continuously operated recycling center in the US, Nottingham, NH. Incorporated in 1722 by Lieutenant Governor John Wentworth, Nottingham was named for Daniel Finch, 2nd Earl of Nottingham. The earl was a close friend of Samuel Shute and Joseph Dudley, previous colonial governors of New Hampshire.
Nottingham: 4 acres (1.6 ha) Strawberry Hill State Forest: Bethlehem: 53 acres (21 ha) Sugar Hill State Forest: Bristol: 684 acres (277 ha) Swain State Forest: Laconia: 106 acres (43 ha) Taylor State Forest: Concord: 10 acres (4.0 ha) Totten Trails State Forest: Henniker: 109 acres (44 ha) Upton-Morgan State Forest: Concord: 21 acres (8.5 ha ...
In this 2018 map by the N.H. Department of Transportation, the White Mountains region is located in the north-central portion of New Hampshire, colored orange in this map. The White Mountains Region is a tourism region designated by the New Hampshire Division of Travel and Tourism. [1]
New Hampshire Route 156 (NH 156) is a 6.424-mile-long (10.338 km) secondary north–south highway in Rockingham County in southeastern New Hampshire. The road runs from Raymond to Nottingham . The southern terminus of NH 156 is at New Hampshire Route 27 and New Hampshire Route 107 on the east side of Raymond.
The 50-mile (80 km) Monadnock-Sunapee Greenway links the park to Pillsbury State Park and southern New Hampshire. The Sunapee-Ragged-Kearsarge Greenway, a 75-mile (121 km) loop trail (the "emerald necklace") links the park to Wadleigh State Park, Winslow State Park, and Rollins State Park as well as Gile, Kearsarge and Shadow Hill state forests and the Bog Mountain Wildlife Management Area.