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Langdon, New Hampshire

Langdon, New HampshirePopulated places established in 1787Towns in New HampshireTowns in Sullivan County, New HampshireUse mdy dates from July 2023
Street Scene, Langdon, NH
Street Scene, Langdon, NH

Langdon is a town in Sullivan County, New Hampshire, United States. The population was 651 at the 2020 census.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Langdon, New Hampshire (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Langdon, New Hampshire
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Wikipedia: Langdon, New HampshireContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 43.166666666667 ° E -72.380277777778 °
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Address

Sarah Porter School

Village Road 111
03602
New Hampshire, United States
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Street Scene, Langdon, NH
Street Scene, Langdon, NH
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Nearby Places

Bascom Maple Farms
Bascom Maple Farms

Bascom Maple Farms, Inc., is a privately held company based at the Bascom Maple Farm in Acworth, New Hampshire, with a mailing address of Alstead, New Hampshire. Officers of the company include President Bruce Bascom and Vice-Presidents David Bascom and Kevin Bascom.The company is one of the largest independent maple wholesalers in the United States, as well as the country's largest distributor of new and used sugaring equipment to maple farmers and sugar houses. Bascom Maple Farms is one of the top four maple syrup processors in the United States and also buys, produces, bottles and sells pure maple syrup and maple sugar.The Bascom family began producing maple syrup in 1853 and has operated commercial syrup production and maple packing facilities for over 40 years. Its division Bascom Family Farms is the largest independent supplier of pure and organic maple syrup and maple sugar products.Kenneth Bascom, who was instrumental in bringing the Bascom Farm maple products to the forefront of the industry, was inducted into the American Maple Hall of Fame in 1994. In 2010, Bruce Bascom was also honored by the North American Maple Syrup Council with induction into the Maple Hall of Fame, headquartered at the International Maple Museum Centre in Croghan, New York. Kenneth Bascom and his son Bruce are one of only three father-son inductions honored in the Maple Hall of Fame.Author Douglas Whynott records some of Bascom Maple Farms' history in his 2014 book The Sugar Season.

Great Falls (Connecticut River)
Great Falls (Connecticut River)

Great Falls is a waterfall along the Connecticut River between Walpole, New Hampshire, and Bellows Falls, Vermont. It has also been called Bellows Falls, and its Abenaki name is Kitchee Pontegu, which means "great falls". Great Falls became its official name, based on local usage, in 2016. It drops 52 feet (16 m), and the village of Bellows Falls (within the town of Rockingham, Vermont) was established next to it, to take advantage of its water power. Previously, the main settlement in town, Rockingham Village, was on a high point of land overlooking the Williams River, with no potential for water power.The Bellows Falls Canal, one of the first canals built in the United States, was dug by a British-owned company from 1791-1802 to bypass Great Falls for river travel. After it was widened and deepened in 1926-28 to bring more water to a new hydroelectric plant, increasing its flow from 1 million gallons per minute to 4.2 million gallons per minute, there was less water going over Great Falls, except during late winter and spring high flow (see fourth photo at right). In order to make room in the river below the tail race for this much greater volume of water, extensive blasting of the bedrock of the river bed was done in winter 1928, and the stone removed was used to extend the shoreline on the Vermont side, just downriver of the tail race. Three workers were killed when the dynamite shed exploded.The Great Falls gorge is the narrowest point along the whole river, so it was the site of the first bridge across the river, built by Colonel Enoch Hale in 1785. This bridge was replaced by the Tucker Toll Bridge in 1840, built 15 feet (4.6 m) above the old bridge; the old bridge had come close to being washed away in floods. The Tucker Toll Bridge is visible in the second and third images at the right of this page. Tolls were suspended on the Tucker Bridge after it was bought by the two adjoining towns in 1904.The Tucker Bridge was presumably used less after a new bridge between Bellows Falls and Walpole, the steel Arch Bridge, was built upriver of the dam in 1905. The Tucker Bridge was then replaced by the Vilas Bridge in 1930 (fourth image at the right). The Vilas Bridge was closed to all traffic in 2009 because it was dangerous, and there are currently (as of 2020) no firm plans to repair or replace it.There was a covered railroad bridge just upriver of the toll bridge, visible in the second and third images at the right. This bridge was built for the Cheshire Railroad a few months after the completion of the railroad between Fitchburg and Bellows Falls in 1849. The covered railroad bridge was replaced by an uncovered stone arch bridge in 1899 which still stands, and parts of it are visible behind the Vilas Bridge in the fourth image at the right.There were major spring log drives on the Connecticut River from 1869 to 1915, with smaller drives through 1919. Some of the logs were pulled out of the river above the dam and the falls, and used in local paper mills, but some were sent over the dam and down the falls, with men in the gorge guiding the logs. Most of the logs were sent to sawmills near Holyoke, Massachusetts. Logs were stored in coves along the river, including Albees Cove just upriver of Bellows Falls. Stone piers were built at intervals around these coves, which were used to anchor long logs that were chained between the piers just before the log drive. The tops of those piers were later removed, but the shortened pillars of stone can still be seen at low water.Two people are known to have traversed the falls and survived. The first was an "Indian woman" (before 1781, when it was reported) who made the trip lying down in a canoe. She had been attempting to cross the river above the falls but was pulled into the falls by the current. The second was Captain Paul Boyton, who passed through the falls in a rubber floating suit on October 30, 1879, with about 2,000 spectators. "[Boyton] said the water bore him down with a terrible weight to the bottom of the channel and for a few moments he confidently expected it would hold him there to his death."There are two groups of petroglyphs on the Vermont side of the falls, called the Bellows Falls Petroglyph Site, just downstream of the Vilas Bridge. Depending on the height and density of the riverbank vegetation, and the river level, the petroglyphs may be visible through binoculars from near the eastern end of Bridge Street in Bellows Falls, without climbing down the steep bank.