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Little Red School House (Newport, New Hampshire)

Buildings and structures in Sullivan County, New HampshireEducation museums in the United StatesMuseums in Sullivan County, New HampshireNational Register of Historic Places in Sullivan County, New HampshireNewport, New Hampshire
One-room schoolhouses in New HampshireSchool buildings completed in 1835School buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in New Hampshire
NewportNH LittleRedSchoolhouse
NewportNH LittleRedSchoolhouse

The Little Red School House, or the District No. 7 Schoolhouse, is a one-room schoolhouse on New Hampshire Route 10, south of downtown Newport, New Hampshire. Built in 1835, it is one of the state's few surviving pre-1850 district schoolhouses, and one of the least-altered of that group. It served the city as a school until 1891, and was acquired in 1951 by the local chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution. It is open as a museum during the summer months. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Little Red School House (Newport, New Hampshire) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Little Red School House (Newport, New Hampshire)
Pollards Mills Road,

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N 43.335555555556 ° E -72.168333333333 °
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Address

Pollards Mills Road 13
03773
New Hampshire, United States
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NewportNH LittleRedSchoolhouse
NewportNH LittleRedSchoolhouse
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Newport Downtown Historic District (New Hampshire)
Newport Downtown Historic District (New Hampshire)

The Newport Downtown Historic District encompasses the 19th century heart of Newport, New Hampshire, the county seat of Sullivan County. The district includes the major commercial and civic (current and former) buildings which line Main Street between Depot Street and the Sugar River. The district was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985.Although Newport was settled in 1765, its current center began to take shape with the construction of the Croydon Turnpike, along what is now Main Street. The area was soon lined with services for travelers. The oldest commercial building in the district, the Eagle Block at 64 Main Street, was built in 1825-26; it is a three-story Federal-style brick building. The town gained in importance when Sullivan County was set off from Cheshire County in 1826, resulting in the construction of the records office, jail, and the first courthouse, all brick Federal-style buildings. on the east side of Main Street. The courthouse (now used for other purposes) stands on a hill set well back from Main Street.The west side of Main Street became the locus for commercial development, and now sports a series of buildings mostly built before 1930, anchored at one end by a modern state liquor store, and at the other end by a c. 1930 Worcester Lunch Car Company diner, which abuts the Eagle Block. The dominant feature of the east side is now the Newport Opera House building, which was designed by Hira R. Beckwith to serve as the courthouse and town hall, and replaced an 1872 building destroyed by a major fire. This building is now used mainly as a performing venue; the municipal offices are now located just outside the district on Sunapee Street. Also notable on the east side is the Isaac Reed House, one of the last private residences built in the area, and a particularly fine example of Italianate and Second Empire styling.