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New Hampshire - Historic Homes and Sites New Hampshire >
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Historic Homes and Sites
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Amos Blanchard House and Barn Museum
97 Main Street
Andover, MA 01810 
Phone: 978-475-2236
Open: Year-round, Tuesday-Saturday, 1-4 p.m.; closed in August
Interiors restored to the 1820 to 1840s period using display wallpaper, carpets and floor cloths that are reproductions and furnishings donated by Andover residents. A highlight of the tour is a recently restored faux marble floor in the entrance hall. The original English style barn contains 19th century farm tools, 18th-century cobbler's bench, and an 1829 Hunneman hand-pulled fire pumper. Guides interpret themes of 19th century politics, religion, women's roles, economics, banking, youth, education, household management, and agriculture. Cost: Tour fee: Adults, $5; students, $3.
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Canaan Historic District Meeting House
Canaan Street
Canaan, NH
Phone: 603-523-4809
This 1793 structure is currently being restored, and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Open for tours by appointment only.
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Canaan Historical Museum
Canaan Street
Canaan, NH 03741 
Phone: 603-523-7364
Open: July-October, Saturday, 1-4 p.m.
This museum houses historic items from the 18th and 19th centuries. Of particular interest is a collection of Shaker items.
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Claremont Historical Society Museum
26 Mulberry Street
Claremont, NH 03743 
Phone: 603-543-1400
Open: June-September
Collections of early New England artifacts, focusing on Claremont history. Cost: Admission is free.
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Enfield Shaker Museum
24 Caleb Dyer Lane / 447 Route 4A
Enfield, NH 03748 
Phone: 603-632-4346
This museum features the history of the Shakers, including gardens, a walking tour, demonstrations and classes. Events are scheduled throughout the year.
Fee charged.
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Fells Historic Site John Hay National Wildlife Refuge on Lake Sunapee
Route 103A / P.O. Box 276
Newbury, NH 03255 
Phone: 603-763-4789
Outstanding gardens, a 100-foot perennial border, and a view of Lake Sunapee from the Rose Terrace. A brook trickles to a Japanese water lily pool in the hillside rock garden, which includes a large collection of alpine and native plants. Hidden behind masses of rhododendron, a walled secret garden awaits discovery.
Hours: Late May through October, daily with tours of the estate on weekends.
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Fort at No. 4
267 Springfield Road
Charlestown, NH
Phone: 603-826-5700
The French and Indian Wars come to life in New Hampshire! The Fort at No. 4 is a living history museum focused on New England frontier life during the French and Indian Wars, 1740s - 1760s. The reconstructed 13 buildings of the Fort mirror what life was like for the settlers and soldiers in an isolated community on the brink of war. Guided tours and living history demonstrations are conducted daily. Experience 18th century cooking demonstrations, see Fort militia soldiers drilling to defend against French and Indians, learn to spin wool, and many other activities that were a prt of every day colonial life. The Fort is open 10:00 - 4:00 daily, May 20 to October 29, 2000 and is located on Route 11, just 1.5 miles off Exit 7 of Interstate 95. An admission fee is charged. Call 1-800-376-8284 for information.
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Historic South Sutton
Meeting House Hill Road
South Sutton, NH
Phone: 603-927-4183
A collection of 19th century structures features a one-room school house, meeting house and general store. The store contains thousands of historic items. Donations are requested. Open July - August.
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Mary Baker Eddy House
Hall's Brook Road
Groton, NH
Phone: 603-786-9943
The founder of the Christian Science Church, Mary Baker Eddy, lived at this site from 1855 - 1860. Tours are available, and there is an admission fee.
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New London Historical Society
179 Little Sunapee Road
New London, NH 03257 
Phone: 603-526-6564
Open: Memorial Day -Columbus Day, Sunday, 12:30-3:30 p.m.; July-August, Tuesday, 12:30-3:30 p.m.
This museum focuses on life in 19th century New London. The society maintains a small village of 19th century buildings and a collection of horse-drawn vehicles, among many other artifacts. Events are scheduled there throughout the year. Cost: Admission is free; donations are welcome.
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Newport Opera House
20 Main Street
Newport, NH
Phone: 603-863-2412
This theatre was built in 1886, and still serves as a concert and performing arts center.
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Old Webster Meeting House
Route 127
Webster, NH
Phone: 603-796-2211
Historic site open to the public on Sundays in July and August only, otherwise by appointment. A donation is requested.
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Saint - Gaudens National Historic Site
139 Saint Gaudens Road
Cornish, NH 03745 
Phone: 603-675-2175
Open: Daily late May- late October, 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
This site was once the home of one of the country’s greatest sculptors, Augustus Saint-Gaudens. The estate has a house, studio, and gardens. Fee charged.
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Sunapee Historic Society Museum
Sunapee Harbor
Sunapee, NH
Phone: 603-763-9872
Museum on the shores of Lake Sunapee focuses on the area's history. Of particular interest is the exhibit on Lake Sunapee's old steamboats. A donation is requested.
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The Fort at No.4 Living History Museum
267 Springfield Road (Route 11)
Charlestown, NH 03603 
Phone: 603-826-5700
Open: June-October, Wednesday-Sunday, 10 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
Travel back in time to Charlestown, New Hampshire in the 1740's to visit an authentically reconstructed settlement. Tour with guides dressed as original settlers of No. 4. Demonstrations of hearth cooking, musket firings, military drills and much more are conducted daily. Cost: Adults, $8; seniors (65 and older), $6; youth (age 6-12), $5.
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Webster Cottage Museum
32 North Main Street
Hanover, NH 03755 
Phone: 603-643-6529
Open: Memorial day-Columbus Day, Wednesday, Saturday, Sunday, 2:30-4:30 p.m.
Eighteenth-century farm house and residence of Daniel Webster as a student at Dartmouth College. The exhibits feature Webster's life and Shaker furniture as well as typical furnishings of the time. Cost: Admission is free.
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Belknap Mill Society
The Mill Plaza
Laconia, NH
Phone: 603-524-8813
The oldest brick textile mill in the country, the Belknap is now home to exhibits on knitting and mill history. Live demonstrations are offered.
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Daniel Webster Birthplace
Route 127
Franklin, NH
Phone: 603-934-5057
This home, built in 1782, was the birthplace of Daniel Webster, one of the best-known and most important statesman of the 19th century. This house offers exhibits on Webster's life, as well as objects from the period.
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Endicott Rock
Weir's Beach, off Route 3
Laconia, NH
In 1652, surveyors employed by Massachusetts Bay Colony Governor John Endicott signed their initials in this rock.
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Governor John Wentworth Historic Site
Route 109
Wolfeboro, NH
Phone: 603-436-1552
Governor John Wentworth, one of the state's last colonial governors, made this estate his summer home.
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Lake Winnipesaukee Museum
Route 3
Laconia, NH 03246 
Open: year-round, Tuesday-Saturday, 10 a.m.-2 p.m.
The museum property is a historic landmark and represents an era which changed the way Americans spent their summer vacations --- an example of the tradition of hospitality vital to the area’s history and economy since the 1800’s. The property was purchased in 1923 by David O’Shan, who first had a poultry farm on the site. The museum building is the original residence and the yellow cottages nearby are part of the original cabin colony. One of the buildings is from the former Shangrila Resort.
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Mary Baker Eddy Historic Homes
Stinson Lake Road
Rumney, NH
Phone: 603-786-9943
The home of Christian Science Church founder, Mary Baker Eddy, from 1860 - 1862. Open May - October.
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Museum of Childhood
2784 Wakefield Road
Wakefield Corner, NH 03872 
Phone: 603-522-8073
Open: Late May-early September, Monday-Saturday, 11 a.m.- 4 p.m.; Sunday, 1-4 p.m.
This museum specializes in the history of child life and children's items in New England. Exhibits feature thousands of dolls, sleds, a one-room school and more. Cost: Adults, $3; children under age 9, $1.25.
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New Hampshire Farm Museum
Route 125, Plummer’s Ridge
Milton, NH 03851 
Phone: 603-652-7840
Open: April through October.
The Farm Museum consists of the historic Jones Farm and the Plummer Homestead. The properties consist of 50 acres of field and forest, a working farm, historic houses and barns, a blacksmith shop, a shoe shop and exhibits on agriculture and rural life. The museum hosts special events, programs, and workshops.
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Remick Country Doctor Museum and Farm
58 Cleveland Hill Road
Tamworth, NH 03886 
Phone: 603-323-7591
Open: Year-round, Monday-Friday, 10 a.m.– 4 p.m. except major holidays; summer hours are July 8–October 7, Monday – Saturday, 10 a.m.–4 p.m.
The chores and traditions of agricultural and domestic life are presented in self-guided exhibits in the museum’s Visitor Center, as well as through interactive education programs and workshops. The Visitor Center houses father and son’s medical equipment. The animals and crops we raise are used in historic cooking programs. Seasonal activities like ice harvesting and maple sugaring are celebrated during special events. The Remick family’s Tamworth connection is preserved in a nearly intact collection of family artifacts in the Captain Enoch Remick House, Dr. Remick’s boyhood home, as well as painted wall murals from the early 19th century. Exhibits change with the seasons. Cost: Admission is free.
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Sandwich Historical Society Museum
4 Maple Street
Center Sandwich, NH 03227 
Phone: 603-284-6269
Open: For tours late June 24-early October 6, Saturday, 10 a.m.- 4 p.m.
This museum offers a barn and home built in 1850. Inside, exhibits trace the history of Sandwich from the 18th century. Of particular interest is the transportation exhibit.
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Tuftonboro Historical Society Museum
Route 109
Melvin Village, NH 03850 
Phone: 603-544-7225
Open: July – August, Monday-Friday, 2-4 p.m.
Exhibits in this museum focus on local history. Admission is free.
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Whipple House Museum
4 Pleasant Street
Ashland, NH 03217 
Phone: 603-968-7716
Open: July- Labor Day, Wednesdays and Saturdays,1-4 p.m.
This site was the home of Dr. George Hoyt Whipple, who won the Nobel Prize for Medicine. Inside visitors will find information about him, his family and the area. Museum exhibits include period rooms and local history displays.Of particular interest is the Glidden Toy Museum, which features over 1000 items. Cost: Admission is free.
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Wolfeboro Historical Museum Complex
337 South Main Street
Wolfeboro, NH 03894 
Phone: 603-569-4997
Open: July- August. Wednesday-Friday, 10am-4pm.; Saturday, 10 a.m.-2 p.m.; tours by appointment spring and fall
A collection of historic exhibits and structures includes the Clark House (built in the 18th century), an 1805 schoolhouse, and a firehouse museum featuring antique machinery. There is an admission fee.
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Wright Museum
77 Center Street
Wolfeboro, NH 03894 
Phone: 603-569-1212
Open: May 1-October 30, Monday – Saturday, 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Sunday, noon-4p.m.
A museum of history, focusing on the American home front during World War II (1939-1945). Exhibits feature information, memorabilia, costumes, vehicles, and more. There are three distinct buildings: the Home Front and theater, the two-story educational building or Visitor's Center and the military building which houses memorabilia from all branches of service from WWII including a large collection of military vehicles from this era. Cost: Adults, $6; seniors and veterans, $5; students, $3
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Abbot-Spalding House Museum
1 Nashville Street
Nashua, NH 03060 
Phone: 603-883-0015
Open: April-November, some Saturdays and by appointment
Built in 1804, this museum offers exhibits of early 19th century household items and furniture. Admission is free; donations are welcome.
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Chester Village Cemetery
Routes 102 and 121
Chester, NH
Phone: 603-887-3951
This cemetery is full of interesting and unusual monuments, most of which date from the 18th century. It is one of only two New Hampshire cemetaries that are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
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Florence Hyde Speare Memorial Building
5 Abbot Street
Nashua, NH
Phone: 603-883-5336
This building houses 8 galleries of historic items and artwork, as well as a library full of historic documents and a meeting room.
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Hannah Duston Memorial Historic Site
Exit 17 off I-93
Boscawen, NH
This monument commemorates the historic actions of Hannah Duston, a young woman who courageously fought off an attack by Indians in 1697. Eventually she was captured.
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Manchester Historic Association & Millyard Museum
129 Amherst Street
Manchester, NH
Phone: 603-622-7531
Exhibits and programs which feature the history of Manchester's society and industry. A research library is open to the public. Open year-round.
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Mary Baker Eddy Historic House
62 North State Street
Concord, NH
Phone: 617-277-8943
The founder of the Christian Science Church, Mary Baker Eddy lived at this site from 1889 - 1892.
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Museum of New Hampshire History
6 Eagle Square
Concord, NH 03301 
Phone: 603-228-6688
Open: Tuesday- Saturday, 9:30 a.m.-5 p.m. and Sunday, noon to 5 p.m.; July-October 15 and all of December, additional hours on Monday, 9:30 a.m.- 5 p.m.
Interactive and detailed museum exhibits tell visitors about the history of the Granite State, its indigenous peoples, and colonial settlers. The museum has a store. Cost: Adults, $5.50; seniors, $4.50; children age 6-18, $3.
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New Hampshire Antiquarian Society
300 Main Street
Hopkinton, NH
Phone: 603-746-3825
Exhibits focus on the history of Hopkinton and New Hampshire. Admission is free.
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New Hampshire State House and Visitor's Center
107 North Main Street
Concord, NH
Phone: 603-271-2154
Tour the complex and learn about the activities, function and history of New Hampshire's government. Self-guided and guided tours by reservation are available.
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Robert Frost Farm Historic Site
Route 28
Derry, NH
Phone: 603-432-3091
This National Historic Landmark was the home of poet Robert Frost from 1901 to 1909. Open mid-June to Labor Day.
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Amos J. Blake House Museum
On the Common
Fitzwilliam, NH 03447 
Phone: 603-585-7742
Open: Tours conducted Memorial Day-Labor Day, Saturday, 1-4 p.m.
Headquarters of the Fitzwilliam Historical Society features exhibits pertaining to area history and development. Admission is free.
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Barrett House and Forest Hall
Main Street
New Ipswich, NH
Phone: 603-878-2517
This Gothic Revival summer home was built in 1800. Inside visitors will find interesting artwork, decor and furnishings. The ballroom is of particular interest. Open June - October. Tours are available.
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Franklin Pierce Homestead Historic Site
Routes 31 and 9
Hillsborough, NH
Phone: 603-478-3165
Built in 1804, this mansion was the childhood home of Franklin Pierce, the 14th President of the United States. Open Memorial Day - Columbus Day. There is an admission fee.
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Frye's Measure Mill
12 Frye Mill Road
Wilton, NH
Phone: 603-654-6581
The last water-powered measure mill remaining in the United States. Open April - December. The site also has a gift shop.
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Historical Society of Cheshire County
246 Main Street
Keene, NH
Phone: 603-352-1895
The site features a genealogy research library and exhibits of local history including glass, pottery and household items.
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Holocaust Resource Center
229 Main Street, Mason Library, Keene State College
Keene, NH
Phone: 603-358-2490
Dedicated to the study of the Holocaust, a tragedy unparalleled in human history. The center contains articles, books and multi-media resources on the subject. Admission is free.
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Horatio Colony House Museum and Nature Preserve
199 Main Street
Keene, NH 03431 
Phone: 603-352-0460
Open: Museum tours offered May 1-October 15, Wednesday through Sunday, 11 a.m.- 4 pm.; winter hours by appointment
Built in 1806, Horatio Colony decorated his home with outstanding collections of furniture, artwork, books and silver. Admission is free. Nature Preserve, located on Daniel’s Hill Road, is three and one half miles of well-marked trails with numbered stops that point out dramatic geological features, historical ruins, and plant communities are located across the preserve. Admission is free.
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Melville Academy Museum
Thorndike Pond Road
Jaffrey Center, NH 03452 
Phone: 603-532-5857
Open: July-August, Saturday-Sunday, 2-4 p.m. and by special request
Melville Academy has an excellent collection of Hannah Davis Bandboxes, scrapbooks documenting VIS activities, 19th century kitchen and agricultural tools, samplers made by local residents in the early 19th century, the old mailboxes of the Jaffrey Center Post Office (which closed in 1991), and other artifacts relating to life in 19th century Jaffrey Center. The upstairs has been maintained as a schoolroom, with information on Melville Academy. Cost: Admission is free.
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Peterborough Historical Society & Museum
19 Grove Street
Peterborough, NH 03458 
Phone: 603-924-3235
Open: Tuesday – Saturday, 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
This museum focuses on local history. Of particular interest are the early American kitchen display, the country store and the 19th century mill worker's home. Cost: Adults, $3, children under 12, free.
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Wyman Tavern Museum
339 Main Street
Keene, NH 03431 
Phone: 603-352-1895
Open: June 1-Labor Day, Thursday-Saturday, 11 a.m.-4 p.m. and by appointment.
Built in 1762, this museum is now furnished as a tavern and residence from that period. Historically, the first meeting of the Dartmouth College Trustees took place on the site in the 18th century. There is an admission fee.
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Albacore Park
600 Market Street,
Portsmouth, NH 03801 
Phone: 603-436-3680
Open: Memorial Day to Columbus Day, daily, 9:30 a.m.- 5 p.m.; Columbus Day to Memorial Day, Thursday through Monday, 9:30 a.m.- 4:30 p.m. Call ahead for seasonal changes.
The focal point of this park is an exhibit of life on a modern submarine. Visitors will tour the sub and view all its compartments. Cost: Adults, $5; children age 7-17, $3; Military, $4; family, $10.
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American Independence Museum
1 Governor's Lane
Exeter, NH 03833 
Phone: 603-772-2262
Open: May 16 - October 27, Wednesday – Saturday, 10 a.m. - 4 p.m.
Housed in the Ladd-Gilman House, built in the first decades of the 18th century. During the American Revolution, this building stored the state's treasury. Among the museum’s permanent collection of documents chronicling the nation’s founding are an original Dunlap Broadside of the Declaration of Independence and early drafts of the U.S. Constitution. Permanent collections include American furnishings, ceramics, silver, textiles and military ephemera. Exhibits detail the history of Portsmouth and the structure itself. Cost: Adults, $5; students, $3.
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Barrett House at Forest Hall
Main Street
New Ipswich, NH 03071 
Phone: 860-928-4074
Open: June through October, First Saturday of the month, Tours at 11 a.m., noon, 1 p.m., 2 p.m., 3 p.m. and 4 p.m.
According to tradition, Forest Hall was built as a wedding gift for Charles Barrett and his bride. New Ipswich was a flourishing mill town at the beginning of the 19th century, and Forest Hall reflects the prosperity of that era. Ultimately, the town was bypassed by the expanding railroad, which led to a decline of industry in the area. Today, the stately mansion is a relic of a vanished way of life. Cost: $5, Historic New England/SPNEA members and New Ipswich residents free.
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Dover Walking Tours
299 Central Avenue
Dover, NH
Phone: 603-742-2218
The Dover Chamber of Commerce offers three self-guided walking tours of historic sites: The Pine Hill Cemetary, the Old Mill and the Riverfront, and a tour of Dover's historic homes.
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Durham Historic Association Museum
Main Street
Durham, NH 03824 
Phone: 603- 868-2700
Open: June-August, Wednesday, 1-3 p.m. or by appointment
Exhibits on the local history of Durham feature items and documents dating back to 1632. Old photos and maps, farm implements, dolls, historic clothing, the 1875 town hearse and more.
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Fort Constitution Historic Site
Route 1B, U.S. Coastguard Station
New Castle, NH
Phone: 603-435-1552
Originally constructed in the 1600's, this site was known as Fort William and Mary. A British stronghold that sat on Portsmouth Harbor, it was captured by colonists in 1774, 2 years before the American Revolution. Only ruins of the fort now remain, and visitors can glean information from the panels located at the site. This site is a National Historic Landmark.
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Fort Stark Historic Site
Off Wild Rose Lane
New Castle, NH
Phone: 603-436-1552
This fort was first put into use in 1746, and remained active through World War II. Visitors can tour the information center and the fort, which give a sense of how forts have changed over the centuries.
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Governor John Langdon Mansion
143 Pleasant Street
Portsmouth, NH
Phone: 603-436-3205
Built in 1784, this city manor was the home of John Langdon, who served as New Hampshire Governor for three terms, and was a signer of the U.S. Constitution. Open June - October. There is an admission charge.
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Jackson House
76 Northwest Street
Portsmouth, NH
Phone: 603-436-3205
The oldest house remaining in New Hampshire, built in 1664. The plank construction is of particular note. Open June - October, the first Saturday of every month only. There is an admission fee.
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John Paul Jones House and Museum
43 Middle Street
Portsmouth, NH
Phone: 603-436-8420
This National Historic Landmark was built in 1758, and was home for a time during the Revolutionary War to national hero John Paul Jones. Visitors will enjoy the collections of 18th and 19th century clothing, guns, furnishings and china. Open June - October. There is an admission fee.
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Moffatt - Ladd House
154 Market Street
Portsmouth, NH
Phone: 603-436-8221
This was the home of U.S. General Whipple, and it sports an authentic underground passage. The building was constructed in 1763. Open June - October.
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Odiorne Point State Park
Route 1A
Rye, NH
Phone: 603-436-7406
The site of the first European settlement in New Hampshire, founded in 1623. During World War II, it was home to Fort Dearborn, a U.S. Army Base. Today, the park offers a look back at the history and a view of the area's nature through panels set throughout the park. In addition, visitors will enjoy canoeing, walking trails, a bike path and picnic areas. In the winter, cross-country ski trails are available. The park is also home to the Seacoast Science Center, which holds events throughout the year.
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Old Meeting House
Fremont Road
Sandown, NH
Phone: 603-887-3453
Built in 1774, this meeting house is still in original condition. Inside visitors will find the pews (including seperate seating for slaves), paupers benches, and a pulpit. Open by appointment only. Donations are suggested.
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Portsmouth Harbor Trail
Portsmouth, NH 03801
Phone: 603-436-3988
The trail passes more than 70 points of scenic and historic significance in Portsmouth, include ten buildings on the National Register of Historic Buildings, ten National Historic Landmarks, and three homes maintained by the Society for the Preservation of New England Antiquities.
Hours: Tours offered July 4 through Columbus Day, 10:30 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. on Thursday, Friday, Saturday, and Monday; and 1:30 p.m. on Sunday.
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Portsmouth Old Graves: the History of Portsmouth NH
P.O. Box 606
Portsmouth, NH 03802-0606 
Phone: 603-436-5096
Experience the rich history of Portsmouth NH as told through its 17th, 18th, and 19th century gravestones. Portsmouth was settled in 1623 and has contributed to major events of history ever since. The gravestones of Portsmouth and New England in general are unique places to learn this history firsthand as well as view beautiful early art through their carvings. In addition to numerous historic figures and interesting people of note, in Portsmouth rests some of the first settlers of our country, sea captains and shipping merchants, colonial revolutionaries, civil war veterans, a signer of the Declaration of Independence, African-American slaves, colonial politicians and governors, and other people whose lives contributed to history.
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Rundlett - May House
364 Middle Street
Portsmouth, NH
Phone: 603-436-3205
Built by James Rundlet in 1807, this house boasts technology ahead of its time. Rundlet's success was in the textile industry, so the ornate furniture is of particular interest.
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Sandown Historical Society Museum
Route 121A
Sandown, NH
Phone: 603-887-6100
Originally a storage house built in 1873, at the time it handled the largest volume of freight in the country. The exhibits feature local history, industry history, and 19th century artifacts. Open May - October, weekends only.
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Strawbery Banke Museum
68 Marcy Street
Portsmouth, NH 03802 
Phone: 603-433-1100
Open: May through October, Monday-Saturday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. and Sunday, noon-5 p.m.; November through April, (guided tours only),Thursday-Saturday, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. and Sunday, noon-2 p.m.; closed January and first two weekends of December
For more than 300 years people lived and worked in the neighborhood known as Puddle Dock, today Strawbery Banke Museum. On this ten-acre site one hour north of Boston the houses, shops, taverns and gardens continue to tell the stories of the generations who called this neighborhood home for almost four centuries of New England history. Through restored furnished houses, exhibits, period gardens, historic landscapes and costumed role players Strawbery Banke is the living history of the people who settled in Portsmouth, New Hampshire from the late 17th century to the mid-20th century. The Museum Shop supports Stawbery Banke’s educational activities by offering reproductions, books and other items related to the Museum’s narrative of the neighborhood’s evolution from 1690 to the 1950s.
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Tuck Memorial Museum
40 Park Avenue
Hampton, NH 03842 
Phone: 603-929-0781
Open: Wednesday, Friday, and Sunday, 1-4 p.m. or by appointment
This museum presents a variety of exhibits involving 19th century history, including furniture, artwork, the area trolley system, farm implements, fire-fighting equipment, and a schoolhouse from the 1840's. The complex contains four buildings, The Tuck Museum, Farm Museum, Seacoast Fire Museum, and the 19th-Century District Schoolhouse. A children's playground and picnic facilities are located next to the museum. Admission is free.
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Warner House
150 Daniel Street
Portsmouth, NH
Phone: 603-436-5909
This brick Georgian mansion was built in 1716 for Archibald McPhaedris, a sea captain. Inside, visitors will find 18th century household items and furnishings, including wall murals that are among the oldest in the United States. Open June - October. There is an admission fee.
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Wentworth - Coolidge Mansion
375 Little Harbor Road
Portsmouth, NH
Phone: 603-436-1552
A large house, believed to be as old as 1695, was also the home of New Hampshire Royal Governor Benning Wentworth in the mid 18th century. A council chamber inside was the first meeting place for the earliest New Hampshire state government.
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Wentworth - Gardner House
50 Mechanic Street
Portsmouth, NH
Phone: 603-436-4406
A Georgian colonial, built in 1760. Open May - October.
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Woodman Institute
182 - 190 Central Avenue
Dover, NH 03820 
Phone: 603-742-1038
Open: Wednesday to Sunday, except holidays, 12:30-4:30 p.m.; December-January, Saturdays and Sundays only; closed February 1-March 31
This four-building complex includes the Woodman House (1818), former home to famous lawyer Daniel Christie; Hale House (1813), home of U.S.Senator John Parker Hale; Keefe House (1827) and the William Damm Garrison home (1675). Collections of natural science to include the largest mineral exhibit north of Boston, items of local history from the 1600s to present, and a fine collection of paintings and early furniture. Cost: There is an admission charge.
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Bedell Bridge Historic Site
Routes 10 and 25
Haverhill, NH
Phone: 603-547-3373
On this plain was the second longest, 2 span covered bridge in the United States. Built in 1866, the bridge was destroyed by wind in 1979. Visitors to the area will enjoy the history, plus fishing and canoeing.
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Conway Historical Society
100 Main Street
Conway, NH
Phone: 603-447-5551
Information covers the Conway history between 1818 and 1845. Programs and events are scheduled throughout the summer, when the society is open regularly to the public. A donation is requested.
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Crawford Notch State Park
Route 302
Harts Location, NH
Phone: 603-374-2272
This park is a fount of natural beauty: A mountain pass, the Presidential Mountain Range, and waterfalls. The falls are the Flume Cascades, the Silver Cascades, and the Arethusa Falls. There is a visitor's center, hiking trails, a scenic drive, fishing spots, and picnic areas. The park is also the site the Willey House, an 18th century way-station for travelers through the mountains. A campground is available to the public. Pets are permitted in campground area and other designated places only.
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Eastman Lord House
100 Main Street
Conway, NH 03818 
Phone: 603-447-5551
Open: open from Memorial Day through Labor Day, Wednesday, 2-4 p.m.; Thursday, 6-8 p.m.
This is the residence of Conway mill owner, William Kimball Eastman. Built in 1818, the house's 17 rooms are open to the public and are furnished in periods from 1818 through 1945. Eastman Lord House Museum has recently been named to the National Register of Historic Places. Cost: $3 per person; $6 per family
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Gorham Historical Society and Rail Museum
25 Railroad Street
Gorham, NH
Phone: 603-466-5570
This museum is set in a rail station built in 1907. Exhibits feature railroad-related documents and artifacts, including a box car, steam locomotive and model railroad. Open May - November. Donations are requested.
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Jefferson Historical Museum
900 Presidential Highway (Route 2)
Jefferson, NH 03584 
Phone: 603-586-7021
Open: June-Columbus Day, Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, 11 a.m.-2 p.m.
Located in a church built in 1869, this museum features a look at the history of the town of Jefferson and the surrounding area. Of particular interest is the focus on the Waumbek Hotel, an important structure in Jefferson's history. Admission is free.
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John Wingate Weeks Historic Site
Route 3
Lancaster, NH
Phone: 603-788-4004
A turn-of-the-century estate owned by John Wingate Weeks, who served as U.S. Congressman and Secretary of War. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Open June - October. There is an admission fee.
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Littleton Historic Sites Walking Tour
Main Street
Littleton, NH
Phone: 603-444-6561
Sponsored by the local Chamber of Commerce, this walking tour features a dozen historic buildings and pieces of architecture. A free brochure provides a map, directions and details. Available year-round.
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Sugar Hill Historical Museum
Route 117
Sugar Hill, NH 03586 
Phone: 603-823-5336
Open: June 10-Columbus Weekend, Thursday-Saturday, 1-4 p.m.
A set of exhibits on the past two centuries of life in Northern New Hampshire. Includes collections of furniture, tools, clothing, a stage coach and recreated tavern kitchen. Admission is free.
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