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Great Hollow Road Stone Arch Bridge

Bridges in Grafton County, New HampshireBuildings and structures in Hanover, New HampshireNational Register of Historic Places in Grafton County, New HampshireRoad bridges on the National Register of Historic Places in New HampshireStone arch bridges in the United States
GtHollowHanover
GtHollowHanover

The Great Hollow Road Stone Arch Bridge (also known as the Etna Stone Bridge) is a historic stone arch bridge carrying Great Hollow Road over Mink Brook in Hanover, New Hampshire. Built by the town in 1914, it is one of two stone bridges in the town, and a finely crafted and little-altered example of stone masonry of the period. The bridge was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1997.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Great Hollow Road Stone Arch Bridge (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Great Hollow Road Stone Arch Bridge
Great Hollow Road,

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Wikipedia: Great Hollow Road Stone Arch BridgeContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 43.686944444444 ° E -72.233333333333 °
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Address

Great Hollow Road
03750
New Hampshire, United States
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GtHollowHanover
GtHollowHanover
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Nearby Places

Colburn Park Historic District
Colburn Park Historic District

The Colburn Park Historic District encompasses the heart of Lebanon, New Hampshire. It consists of Colburn Park, a large rectangular park in the center of the city, the buildings that are arrayed around it, and several 19th century buildings that are immediately adjacent to those. The district covers 12 acres (4.9 ha), and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1986.Colburn Park is located a short way south and east of the Mascoma River, whose generally east–west route is interrupted by a semicircular bend to the north, within which lies the center of Lebanon. The park's origin is in 1792, when the land was donated by Robert Colburn as the site of the community's meeting house (church and town hall). Arterial roads were built to the area, and it began to develop as a commercial and civic center in the early 19th century. The Greek Revival First Congregational Church, designed by Ammi Burnham Young, was built in 1828, and a few early houses survive. The meeting house was moved in 1849 to the present location of City Hall.Lebanon's central business district was struck by devastating fire in 1887, in which more than 80 buildings were destroyed. This did not directly affect the area around the park, but Lebanon's population continued to grow, and the business district expanded, resulting in the relocation of houses around the park, and the construction of a number of Victorian buildings around its perimeter. After the 1923 destruction by fire of the town hall, the area acquired a somewhat unified late-19th to early-20th century commercial and civic architecture.