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The courthouse (now used for other purposes) stands on a hill set well back from Main Street. [2] The west side of Main Street became the locus for commercial development, and now sports a series of buildings mostly built before 1930, anchored at one end by a modern state liquor store, and at the other end by a c. 1930 Worcester Lunch Car ...
The Isaac Reed House is located opposite Newport's row of 19th-century commercial blocks, on the east side of Main Street a short way south of the Newport Opera House. It is a 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story wood-frame structure, with a clapboarded exterior. The house is Second Empire in style, with a mansard roof punctured by dormers with central segmented ...
New Hampshire Route 10 is Newport's Main Street, leading north 10 miles (16 km) to Interstate 89 in Grantham and south 35 miles (56 km) to Keene. Routes 11/103 lead west together 9 miles (14 km) to Claremont. The two highways lead east out of town as Sunapee Street, splitting 3 miles (5 km) east of the center of Newport in the village of Wendell.
Newport is a town in and the county seat of Sullivan County, New Hampshire, United States. [3] It is 43 miles (69 km) west-northwest of Concord , the state capital. The population of Newport was 6,299 at the 2020 census . [ 4 ]
The Seth Mason Richards House, housing the Richards Free Library and the Library Arts Center, is a historic house, public library, and art gallery at 58 North Main Street in Newport, New Hampshire. This three-story Colonial Revival house was designed by Boston, Massachusetts architect James T. Kelley and built in 1898-99 for Captain Seth Mason ...
The Nettleton House is a historic house at 20 Central Street in Newport, New Hampshire. The two-story brick structure was probably built in the 1830s, since it exhibits a commonality of materials and construction techniques with the nearby former county courthouse, which was built in 1824. It was probably built by Joel Nettleton, and is ...
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Built in 1823, the church is one of western New Hampshire's finest surviving Federal period churches. It was built two years after the similar Acworth Congregational Church, a wooden church tentatively attributed to builder Elias Carter.