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The Blair Bridge is a wooden covered bridge built in 1870 that crosses the Pemigewasset River near Campton, New Hampshire, United States. It connects New Hampshire Route 175 to the east and U.S. Route 3 and Interstate 93 to the west. The previous bridge at this location was built in 1829.
A map of numbered covered bridges in New Hampshire, 1967 Stark Covered Bridge, built in 1857, over the Upper Ammonoosuc River Contoocook Railroad Bridge is the oldest covered railroad bridge of its kind in the United States Conway is home to the Saco River Bridge, built in 1890 Sign for NH Covered Bridge No. 2 (Coombs Covered Bridge) along NH Route 10
Location of Grafton County in New Hampshire. ... Haverhill–Bath Covered Bridge. April 18, 1977 ... and 70 True Farm Rd., and 884 NH 113
Marked by New Hampshire Historical Marker No. 258. Was moved across NH 111A in 2008 and restored by the town's Heritage Commission. [44] Governor Wentworth State Historic Site: 56 Wentworth Farm Road, Wolfeboro: Carroll: July 30, 2007 (WOL0025) Former estate of New Hampshire's second Royal Governor, John Wentworth. West Street Mill Building ...
NH-8: Cornish–Windsor Covered Bridge: Extant Town lattice truss: 1866 1984 Connecticut River: Cornish, New Hampshire, and Windsor, Vermont: Sullivan County, New Hampshire, and Windsor County, Vermont: NH-9: Cohas Brook Bridge Replaced
In 1903, with funding from the State of New Hampshire, the U.S. Geological Survey began to measure the discharge of the river to determine available waterpower and the effects of White Mountain deforestation. The original gage was on the abutment of a covered bridge at this site. The concrete gaging station, just downstream, dates from 1926 ...
The Brotherton bridge, built in 1875, reopened on Nov. 7. A ribbon-cutting ceremony is planned for Friday at 5 p.m. Recovered: Historic covered bridge has been repaired and reassembled in Waterford
The Kenyon Bridge, also known as the Blacksmith Shop Bridge, is a historic covered bridge spanning Mill Brook near Town House Road in Cornish, New Hampshire, United States. Built in 1882, it is one of New Hampshire's few surviving 19th-century covered bridges. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978. [1]