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The Norman and Marion Perry House is a historic house at 352 Ellsworth Hill Road in Campton, New Hampshire. [3] The house was built in 1960 to a design by Hugh Stubbins, [1] and is a residential embodiment of Modernist architecture. The property was landscaped by Leon Pearson, [4] and has views of the surrounding mountain landscape. The house ...
True Farm is located about 4 miles (6 km) northeast of the village center of Holderness, on more than 140 acres (57 ha) of land which is crossed by True Farm Road and New Hampshire Route 113. The property is a mix of woodlands, open fields, and manicured landscapes, and includes residences, farm outbuildings, and estate outbuildings including a ...
A "farm-to-table" dinner at Kendall-Jackson used produce from the winery's on-site garden.. Farm-to-table (or farm-to-fork, and in some cases farm-to-school) is a social movement which promotes serving local food at restaurants and school cafeterias, preferably through direct acquisition from the producer (which might be a winery, brewery, ranch, fishery, or other type of food producer which ...
Here’s Where Farm-to-Table Actually Lives Up to the Hype. Breana Lai Killeen. September 6, 2024 at 4:00 AM.
Campton lies fully within the Merrimack River watershed. [6] The town is crossed by Interstate 93, U.S. Route 3, New Hampshire Route 49 and New Hampshire Route 175. Starting with the 2012 election, Campton was redistricted from NH's 2nd Congressional District to New Hampshire's 1st Congressional District; it was the only town in Grafton County ...
Toggle the table of contents. ... Location of Grafton County in New Hampshire. ... 53, 64, and 70 True Farm Rd., and 884 NH 113
The farm's largest crop is sweet corn. [6] 25% of the Tuttle Farm is classified as wetland and 60% is wooded. [7] The Tuttle Farm includes a modern upscale 10,000-square-foot (930 m 2) retail facility constructed in 1987 adjoining an old New England barn, the original "Tuttle's Red Barn". [4] It now conducts business as Tendercrop Farm at the ...
The company was founded by silversmith William Butler Durgin (July 29, 1833 – May 6, 1905). Durgin was born in Campton, New Hampshire, and from 1849-1853 apprenticed to Boston silversmith Newell Harding. [1] In the 1840s Durgin moved back to Concord, where he opened a small shop making spoons opposite the Free Bridge Road.