Dexter's Inn (Sunapee, NH)
Dexters Inn is a special country resort-inn, blessed with an idyllic setting on a 20-acre estate, in the lovely and unhurried Lake Sunapee region. Our hilltop location, which features magnificent views of Mount Sunapee, Mount Kearsarge, and the surrounding countryside, provides a private, peaceful and relaxing backdrop for your visit. In addition to our award-winning location, we are known for our many on-site amenities which include three tennis courts, swimming pool, walking trails, lawn games, cross-country skiing, snowshoeing, game room, and library. We are only minutes from the Mount Sunapee ski area, three golf courses and Lake Sunapee, which offers fishing, boating and swimming. Shopping and cultural activities are also available nearby. We are conveniently located just 90 miles from Boston, 30 miles from Dartmouth College and 10 miles from Colby-Sawyer College.
Concord New Hampshire (NH) Real Estate Tour
-- Tour Concord, NH neighborhoods, condominium developments, subdivisions, schools, landmarks, recreational areas, and town offices.
is the state capital of New Hampshire, a city of nearly 40,000 and a gateway to New Hampshire's White Mountain and Lakes Regions. The land which Concord now occupies along the banks of the Merrimack River was settled thousands of years ago by Abenaki Native Americans called the Penacook.
The broad sweeps of the river valley, fertile soil for farming, and easy transportation on the Merrimack made the site of Concord equally inviting to English-speaking colonists in the eighteenth century. Settled by immigrants from Massachusetts in 1725, the community grew in prominence during the colonial era. Some of Concord's earliest houses remain today at the north end of Main Street.
In the years following the American Revolution, the city's central location made it a logical choice for the state capital, and in 1808 Concord was named the official seat of state government. Today the 1819 State House is the oldest state capitol in which the legislative branches meet in their original chambers.
Concord's location also made it a hub for inland trade and commerce. One of the city's best-known industries was carriage manufacturing, and here world famous Concord coaches were built throughout the nineteenth century. Many surviving coaches remain on display at the Museum of New Hampshire History.
Furniture making and granite quarrying were also major local industries. The granite for the library of Congress in Washington, D.C. came from nearby Rattlesnake Hill, which to this day remains a major granite quarry. Because of Concord's central location, it became the northern hub of the railroad industry. For more than a century, scores of trains, headed in every direction, passed through the city daily.
Concord was also the home of the nation's fourteenth President, Franklin Pierce, and the Pierce Manse at the north end of Main Street is open to the public. A few miles northeast of Concord in Canterbury, members of an unusual and fascinating religious order settled in the 1790s. Today Canterbury Shaker Village is the premier museum of Shaker life. Concord was also the home of teacher-astronaut Christa McAuliffe. She is memorialized at the Christa McAuliffe Planetarium, the nation's most technologically sophisticated planetarium. Other sites of interest include the New Hampshire State House, which dates from 1818; the Eagle Hotel, which hosted several presidents during the 19th century; and the Walker-Woodman House (built ca. 1735), Concord's oldest free-standing house.
Centrally located, the city of Concord offers easy access to the scenic White Mountains, Dartmouth-Lake Sunapee and Lakes Regions, New Hampshire's gorgeous Atlantic Ocean coast, and the cultural and economic hub of Boston, Massachusetts. In addition to being the state capital, Concord is a center for health care in Northern New England and home to several major insurance companies today. Its neighborhoods and main street reflect almost 270 years of history. So please come and enjoy Concord's beautiful capitol, its historic downtown shopping area, parks and neighborhoods, as well as its magnificent setting on the bluffs of the Merrimack River. You'll be glad you came! For other town tours visit . For towns in NH visit . For NH relocation information go to .
Eastman Lake Community, Eastman, NH
Welcome to Eastman Lake Community, brought to you by Coldwell Banker - Redpath & Co. A cozy lake community nestled in the Dartmouth Lake Sunapee Region. Enjoy four seasons of recreation on the lake, in the mountains, enjoy boating, golf, tennis, skiing, snowshoeing, hiking, fishing, all within 20 minutes to Hanover and Lebanon, NH. Enjoy these images of Eastman's semi-private Championship Golf Links. Visit eastman-lake.com for more information.
Tour of Rochester
Phantom 3 Litchi App Tour of Rochester NH
Mount Washington Cog Railway
Recorded September 17, 2016
The Mount Washington Cog Railway is the world's first mountain-climbing cog railway. It is the second steepest rack railway in the world, with an average grade of over 25% and a maximum grade of 37.41%. The railway is approximately 3 miles long and ascends New Hampshire's Mount Washington's western slope beginning at an elevation of approximately 2,700 feet and ending just short of the mountain's summit peak of 6,288 feet.
For more of Mount Washington, see my Mount Washington Auto Road video @
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