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Hill-Woodman-Ffrost House (Three Chimneys Inn - ffrost Sawyer Tavern), ca. 1649, one of the oldest houses in New Hampshire. Prominent buildings in the district include Durham's town hall (a c. 1825 brick building) and town office building (a c. 1860 vernacular house), and the Durham Community Church, built in 1848–49, which is the focal point of the Main Street section of the district.
The Streets at Southpoint is Durham’s only remaining mall after Northgate closed in 2021 and South Square was torn down in 2003 and replaced with big-box stores.
Aura 751, which could bring 350 apartments to southern Durham, was unanimously approved by the Durham City Council during an annexation hearing on April 1, 2024.
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Hill-Woodman-Ffrost House (also known as the Three Chimneys Inn - ffrost Sawyer Tavern) in Durham, New Hampshire is purportedly one of the oldest buildings in the State of New Hampshire [1] and is located within the Durham Historic District. The owners claim that it "has an ell that is believed to date to 1649."
New Hampshire currently has 24 National Historic Landmarks; the most recent addition was Lucknow (Castle in the Clouds) in Moultonborough added in 2024. [1] Three of the sites—Canterbury Shaker Village, Harrisville Historic District, and the MacDowell Colony—are categorized as National Historic Landmark Districts.
Most recently, they opened a storefront at The Streets at Southpoint in Durham. JP and Amy Phinney launched their pet supply store, Unleashed, at the N.C. State Fairgrounds’ Raleigh Market in 2007.
Oldest church building in New Hampshire James House Hampton 1723 First period house, dated by dendrochronology [6] Jaquith House (Farley Garrison House) Gilmanton: c.1725 [7] Building was moved to NH from Billerica, Massachusetts, in 2010. Once thought to date from 1665; architectural survey estimates c.1725 Newington Old Parsonage: Newington