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Stone School (Newmarket, New Hampshire)

Buildings and structures in Rockingham County, New HampshireHistory museums in New HampshireMuseums in Rockingham County, New HampshireNational Register of Historic Places in Rockingham County, New HampshireNewmarket, New Hampshire
School buildings completed in 1841School buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in New Hampshire
NewmarketNH StoneSchool
NewmarketNH StoneSchool

The Stone School is a historic school building at 1 Granite Street in Newmarket, New Hampshire. Built in 1841-42, it served the town as a school until 1966, and is a distinctive example of the town's stone architecture. It is now the Stone School Museum, a local history museum. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978.

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

Stone School (Newmarket, New Hampshire)
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Latitude Longitude
N 43.078888888889 ° E -70.938333333333 °
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Newmarket Industrial and Commercial Historic District

Main Street
03857
New Hampshire, United States
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NewmarketNH StoneSchool
NewmarketNH StoneSchool
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The Stone Church

The Stone Church is a live music venue in Newmarket, New Hampshire. In operation since 1970, the Stone Church offers local food, a handpicked selection of local and craft beers, and local musical performances, along with national touring acts. The venue is located at 5 Granite Street, atop Zion Hill in Newmarket. It features parking for visitors and an electric vehicle charging station.The Church has had a rather eclectic past, even during its days as a church for Newmarket's mill workers, when the town housed a mill that at one time held more looms in its gigantic factory than any other building in the world. Built in 1832, the church first served as a Universalist meeting house, then 20 years later as a Unitarian meeting house. The Catholics bought the church in 1865, retaining ownership until approximately the turn of the 20th century when they sold it. The church then acted alternately as a VFW hall, a roller-skating rink, and a shoe-assembly plant, the Newmarket Heel Company, which suffered a major fire in 1968. In 1970, two former University of New Hampshire students (Rod Philbrick and John Williamson) and a third person, not at UNH (Arnet Taylor), purchased the burnt-out church and turned it into a venue for live music. From then on, the Stone Church served as a home for local musicians and touring acts such as Phish, Aerosmith, Bonnie Raitt, Parliament, Patty Larkin, Béla Fleck, David Grisman Quintet, Joan Osborne, Dirty Dozen Brass Band, The Radiators, Guster, moe., John Butler Trio, John Scofield, Soulive, Grace Potter and the Nocturnals, and local acts such as Percy Hill, Say Zuzu, Scissorfight, Thanks to Gravity, Bill Morrissey, and Truffle.