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This is a list of broadcast television stations that are licensed in the U.S. state of New Hampshire.. Note: The state of New Hampshire is also part of the Boston television market, with the exceptions of Grafton & Sullivan counties in the Burlington, VT market, along with Carroll & Coös counties in the Portland, ME market.
The term "fairway" usually means all the navigable waters between the fairway buoys (that indicate the ends of the channel), even the routes only accessible to the lighter-draft vessels. [1] Some authors restrict the definition to the linear approach part of a marine waterway, the approach channel leading into a port. [5]
Paugus Bay is a 1,227-acre (4.97 km 2) [1] water body located in Belknap County in the Lakes Region of central New Hampshire, United States, in the city of Laconia.A short channel at its north end connects it with Lake Winnipesaukee in the village of Weirs Beach, and a dam on its southern end separates it from Opechee Bay in the village of Lakeport.
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 ...
However, the station dropped Pax programming in June 1999 after DP Media (whose owner, Devon Paxson, was the son of Paxson Communications founder Bud Paxson) took over WABU (channel 68, now WBPX-TV) and made it Boston's new Pax station; WABU operated a satellite in New Hampshire, WNBU (channel 21, now WPXG-TV) in Concord. [18]
The river runs southeastward, with New Hampshire to the south and west and Maine to the north and east, and empties into the Gulf of Maine east of Portsmouth, New Hampshire. The last 6 miles (10 km) before the sea are known as Portsmouth Harbor and have a tidal current of around 4 knots (7.4 km/h; 4.6 mph). [1]
The channel 50 allocation in the Boston market originally belonged to WXPO-TV, which launched in October 1969.It operated from two studios: its offices and master production facilities were located on Dutton Street in downtown Lowell, Massachusetts; however, its transmitter and "main" studio was on Governor Dinsmore Road in Windham, New Hampshire, to comply with FCC regulations requiring that ...
The Wentworth by the Sea is a historic grand resort hotel in New Castle, New Hampshire, United States.It is one of a handful of the state's surviving Gilded Age grand hotels, and the last located on the seacoast.