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The 1686 House is a fine dining restaurant in Kingston, New Hampshire, USA, that is best known for its extensive wine list and colonial decor. In 1992, it won one of the six 1992 Grand Awards for Outstanding Restaurant Wine Lists given by Wine Spectator. [1] [2]
Kingston was the fifth town to be established in New Hampshire.Originally, it was a part of Hampton.After King Philip's War, the establishment of new settlements was made possible by peace treaties with the local Indian tribes and, in 1692, by geographical and jurisdictional agreements between the provinces of Massachusetts Bay and New Hampshire.
East Kingston was once a part of Kingston called "Kingston East Parish", but was granted a separate charter in 1738 by Governor Jonathan Belcher.Several residents of East Kingston had petitioned Governor Belcher that its location was too distant from the Kingston school and place of worship.
Aug. 9—IN THE WORLD of retail, the term "rightsizing" is when a store wants to stay but shrink its footprint. That's likely what is happening at Burlington (Coat Factory) in Concord as part of ...
The Josiah Bartlett House is a house in Kingston, New Hampshire. The 2 + 1 ⁄ 2-story wood-frame house is located on Main Street, opposite Town Hall. The main block of the house, five bays wide and three deep, was built in 1774 by U.S. Founding Father Josiah Bartlett, replacing a house which was destroyed by fire. During the first decades of ...
The restaurant has appeared many times in popular culture, showing up on TV shows such as Sex and the City, The Bachelor and Desperate Housewives. [3] In 2013, Business Insider named it the rowdiest bar in the United States.
Sanborn Regional High School is located in Kingston, New Hampshire and serves the towns of Kingston, Newton, and Fremont SRHS is a part of the Sanborn Regional School District. The school has a current population of approximately 500 students.
Plains Cemetery, also known as Village Cemetery, is a historic cemetery on Cemetery Lane in Kingston, New Hampshire. Established circa 1725, it includes the resting place of Josiah Bartlett, the second signer of the Declaration of Independence. [2] The cemetery was added to the National Register of Historic Places in December 2021. [2]