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Andy's Summer Playhouse

Education in Hillsborough County, New HampshireTheatre companies in New HampshireTheatres in New HampshireTourist attractions in Hillsborough County, New HampshireWilton, New Hampshire
Youth theatre companies
Andys Summer Playhouse
Andys Summer Playhouse

Andy's Summer Playhouse is a youth theater located in Wilton, New Hampshire.Andy's Summer Playhouse programs foster creative collaborations between children and professional artists who work in a variety of media: performance art, theater, dance, music, puppetry, video, set and lighting design and playwriting. In addition to its unique mission to produce original and adapted plays for children, the theater boasts a number of well-known alumni and teaching artists, including Tony Award winning artists Stephen Karam and Lisa Kron, Emmy Award winning artists Paul Jacobs and Sarah Durkee, Pulitzer Prize winning playwright David Lindsay-Abaire, Caldecott Medal winning authors Brian Selznick and Elizabeth Orton Jones, as well as several Alpert, Bessie, Obie, and Drama Desk Award winning artists.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Andy's Summer Playhouse (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Andy's Summer Playhouse
Isaac Frye Highway,

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 42.831111111111 ° E -71.776388888889 °
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Address

First Unitarian Congregational Society of Wilton Center

Isaac Frye Highway 598
03086
New Hampshire, United States
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Phone number

call+16036549518

Website
uuwilton.org

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Andys Summer Playhouse
Andys Summer Playhouse
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Nearby Places

Hamblet-Putnam-Frye House
Hamblet-Putnam-Frye House

The Hamblet-Putnam-Frye House is a historic house at 293 Burton Highway in Wilton, New Hampshire. This two story wood-frame house was probably built in the 1760s, and significantly altered in the late 19th century. The property includes a c. 1840 barn, a c. 1900 carriage house that has been converted into a garage, and a small c. 1900 ice house. There are also remnants of an early 19th-century mill works, including a stone foundation, canal and sluice gate. The canal and sluice gate were altered in the early 20th century to permit the canal section to be filled for swimming. The northern boundary of the 6.8-acre (2.8 ha) property is defined by a surviving section of a road that was laid out c. 1760 which was taken out of public use before the end of the 18th century.The property captures the adaptive alteration of early farmsteads and industrial properties to more recreational purpose. The house was built by Hezekiah Hamblet, and acquired in 1808 by Eliphalet Putnam, who operated what is now called Frye's Measure Mill, located just east of this property, as well as the millworks on this land. Although the ownership of the two parcels diverged in the 19th century, they were reunited by purchases made by Alice and Edmund Frye, who used the house as a summer residence, and continued to operate the Frye's Measure Mill, while that on this property was demolished.The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2000.