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The Robert Frost Farm in Derry, New Hampshire is a two-story, clapboard, connected farm built in 1884. [5] It was the home of poet Robert Frost from 1900 to 1911. Today it is a New Hampshire state park in use as a historic house museum. [6]
Location of Cheshire County in New Hampshire. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Cheshire County, New Hampshire.. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Cheshire County, New Hampshire, United States.
The East Jaffrey Historic District is a historic district running roughly along NH Route 124 (Main Street) through Jaffrey, New Hampshire. It encompasses what is now the economic and civic heart of the town, centered on the Jaffrey Mills and the crossing of the Contoocook River by Route 124. It extends as far west as St. Patrick's Church beyond ...
A commercial area centered on Washington Street is Claremont's primary commercial district. An Italian Renaissance-styled City Hall building, which houses the historic Claremont Opera House, was built in 1897 and designed by architect Charles A. Rich. [26] City Hall faces Broad Street Park, a rotary-style town square. This square connects ...
The restaurant, located at 155 Market Place Blvd., is the newest offering at The Ridge Marketplace shopping center. The Italian-themed establishment is the eighth Evviva Trattoria and the first in ...
The Adams Farm is a historic farmhouse on MacVeagh Road in Harrisville, New Hampshire.With a construction history dating to about 1780, and its later association with the nearby Fasnacloich estate, it has more than two centuries of ownership by just two families.
The Italian restaurant will open in the space formerly occupied by The Sassy Biscuit Co. in the Orpheum building at 104 Washington St. ... La Dolce Vita opening in Dover NH in former Sassy Biscuit ...
Mountain View Farm is a historic farmhouse on Close Road, off Upper Jaffrey Road in Dublin, New Hampshire. Built about 1780 and enlarged in 1903, it encapsulates both Dublin's early residential history, and its early 20th-century period as a summer retreat area. The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983. [1]