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Brick Schoolhouse (Sharon, New Hampshire)

Buildings and structures in Hillsborough County, New HampshireGreek Revival architecture in New HampshireNational Register of Historic Places in Hillsborough County, New HampshireNew Hampshire State Register of Historic PlacesSchool buildings completed in 1832
School buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in New Hampshire
SharonNH BrickSchoolhouse
SharonNH BrickSchoolhouse

The Brick Schoolhouse is a historic one-room schoolhouse at 432 New Hampshire Route 123 in Sharon, New Hampshire. Built in 1832, it is the only of the town's three such buildings to survive, and was the only one made of brick. It is also the only school building now standing in the town, since its students have been schooled in neighboring Peterborough since 1920. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2002, and the New Hampshire State Register of Historic Places in 2001.

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

Brick Schoolhouse (Sharon, New Hampshire)
Route 123,

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 42.814444444444 ° E -71.916666666667 °
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Address

Route 123

Route 123
03458
New Hampshire, United States
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SharonNH BrickSchoolhouse
SharonNH BrickSchoolhouse
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Nearby Places

Wapack Range
Wapack Range

The Wapack Range, sometimes referred to as the Pack Monadnock Range, is a 20-mile-long (32 km) range of mountains in south-central New Hampshire and adjacent Massachusetts, in the northeastern United States. The range is considered very scenic and rugged with many bare summits and ledges ranging from 1,800 to 2,290 feet (550 to 700 m). The 22-mile (35 km) Wapack Trail, one of the oldest interstate hiking trails in the United States, traverses it. The Wapack Range is also the northern terminus of the 90-mile (140 km) Midstate Trail. The range, composed of heavily metamorphosed schist and quartzite, is oriented north–south and is located in the towns of New Ipswich, Temple, Sharon, Peterborough, and Greenfield, New Hampshire; and in Massachusetts, the towns of Ashburnham and Ashby. Notable peaks include, from south to north, Mount Watatic, Pratt Mountain, New Ipswich Mountain, Barrett Mountain, Kidder Mountain, Temple Mountain, Pack Monadnock and North Pack Monadnock. Significant parcels on the Wapack Range have been conserved as state parks, state forests, or properties managed by non-profit land conservation organizations. Miller State Park, the oldest state park in New Hampshire, is located on Pack Monadnock. A defunct ski area on Temple Mountain was acquired by the state of New Hampshire in 2006 and is also slated for state park status. Windblown Ski Area, on and around Barrett Mountain, is one of the oldest operating cross country ski areas in the United States. Conservation efforts on Mount Watatic have resulted in the protection of the mountain from recent attempts to blast a communications tower road to the summit and open the mountain to housing development on the location of another former ski area. The non-profit Friends of the Wapack have been involved in conservation of the range since 1985.