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New Hampshire is a state in the New England region of the
United States (U.S. postal abbreviation NH), named for the
English county of Hampshire. New Hampshire is called the "Granite
State" because it has numerous granite quarries, although
that industry has declined greatly in recent decades. The
nickname has also come to reflect the state's attachment to
tradition and its history of frugal government. The state
motto is "Live free or die".
New Hampshire's state flower is the purple lilac. Its state
bird is the purple finch. Its state tree is the white birch.
New Hampshire is best known as the state with the first primary
in the presidential election (see New Hampshire primary),
the spot with the worst recorded weather at an inhabited location
(the Mount Washington weather observatory in the Presidential
Range), and colorful fall foliage. In 2003 it gained international
attention for having the first openly gay bishop, Gene Robinson,
within the Anglican Communion (the Episcopal Church in the
USA).
New Hampshire's recreational attractions include skiing in
the White Mountains, the Lakes Region, and the New Hampshire
International Speedway (formerly the Loudon Racetrack), the
home of the Loudon Classic, the longest-running motorcycle
race in the United States.
USS New Hampshire was named in honor of this state.
Contents [showhide]
1 History
2 Law and Government
3 Geography
4 Economy
5 Demographics
6 Important cities and towns
7 Education
7.1 Colleges and universities
8 Professional sport teams
9 Miscellaneous information
9.1 Daily newspapers
9.2 Other publications
10 External links
[edit]
History
New Hampshire was founded by Captain John Mason and first
settled in 1623, just three years after the Pilgrims landed
in Massachusetts and it was one of the thirteen colonies that
revolted against British rule in the American Revolution.
[edit]
Law and Government
The New Hampshire state capital is Concord, which has also
been known over time by the names Rumford and Penacook. The
governor of New Hampshire is Craig Benson (Republican) and
its two U.S. senators are Judd Gregg (Republican) and John
E. Sununu (Republican), whose father John H. Sununu was governor
of the state from 1983-1988. List of New Hampshire Governors.
Its strong libertarian heritage has attracted the Free State
Project to New Hampshire. It has also earned the positive
attention of residents in neighboring states: Killington,
Vermont voted on March 2, 2004 to secede from Vermont and
join New Hampshire.
The New Hampshire State House of Representatives, which has
400 members, claims to be the third-largest parliamentary
body in the English-speaking world, behind only the United
States Congress and the British Parliament. Both state representatives
and state senators are paid just $100 a year, effectively
meaning that state laws are written by volunteers.
[edit]
Geography
See: List of New Hampshire counties
New Hampshire is part of the New England region. It is bounded
by Quebec to the north, Maine and the Atlantic Ocean to the
east, Massachusetts to the south, and Vermont to the west.
New Hampshire's major regions are the White Mountains region,
the Lakes area, the Seacoast region, the Merrimack Valley
area, the Monadnock region, and the Dartmouth-Lake Sunapee
area.
The Presidential Range in New Hampshire spans the central
portion of the state, with Mount Washington being the tallest,
and other mountains like Mount Madison and Mount Quincy Adams
surrounding it.
Major rivers include the 116 mile (187 km) Merrimack River,
which bisects the state north-south and ends up in Massachusetts.
Its major tributaries include the Souhegan River. The 410
mile (670 km) Connecticut River, which starts at New Hampshire's
Connecticut Lakes and flows south to Connecticut, forms the
western border of New Hampshire. Oddly, the state border is
not in the center of that river, as is usually the case, but
lies at the low-water mark on the Vermont side, so New Hampshire
actually owns the whole river. The Piscataqua River and its
several tributaries form the state's only significant ocean
port where they flow into the Atlantic at Portsmouth.
The largest lake is Lake Winnipesaukee, which covers 72 square
miles (186 km²) in the central part of New Hampshire.
New Hampshire has the shortest ocean coastline of any coastal
state, just 18 miles (29 km²). Hampton Beach is a popular
local summer tourist destination. About 10 miles (16 km) offshore
are the Isles of Shoals, nine small islands best known as
the site of a 19th-century art colony founded by poet Celia
Thaxter.
[edit]
Economy
New Hampshire's 1999 total state gross product was $44 billion,
placing it 39th in the nation. Its 2000 Per Capita Personal
Income was $33,332, 6th in the nation. Its agricultural outputs
are dairy products, nursery stock, cattle, apples, and eggs.
Its industrial outputs are machinery, electric equipment,
rubber and plastic products, and tourism.
New Hampshire experienced a significant shift in its economic
base during the last century. Historically, the base was composed
of the traditional New England manufactures of textiles, shoe-making,
and small machining shops drawing upon low wage labor from
nearby small farms and from Quebec. Today, these sectors contribute
only 2% for textiles, 2% for leather goods, and 9% for machining
of the state's total manufacturing dollar value ( Source:
US Economic Census for 1997, Manufacturing, New Hampshire).
These traditional sectors experienced their sharp decline
during the Twentieth Century due to increasingly obsolete
plants and increasingly cheaper wages available in the US
South.
Today's New Hampshire economy is largely driven by fiscal
policy. The state has no personal income tax and advocates
a frugal budget, thereby attracting commuters, light industry,
specialty horticulture, and service firms from other jurisdictions
with high tax policies, notably from neighboring Massachusetts.
This is a viable fiscal policy for a small, high-income state
with limited social service demands, but it has not been one
hundred per cent successful, and pockets of depressed manufacturing
activity still remain.
[edit]
Demographics
The population of the state in 2000 is 1,235,786.
[edit]
Important cities and towns
New Hampshire, showing roads, rivers and major citiesManchester,
the largest city in the state, has a main street (Elm Street)
which is a dead-end at both ends.
Keene is still often called "The Elm City" despite
the fact that the Dutch Tree Blight destroyed most of the
city's Elm Trees in the 1930s.
Peterborough is the inspiration for the town of Grover's Corners
portrayed in Thornton Wilder's play Our Town.
Manchester
Nashua
Concord
Derry
Portsmouth
Rochester
Keene
Lebanon
Durham
Peterborough
Loudon
Claremont
Salem
Dover
Merrimack
Londonderry
Hudson
Hampton
Milford
Hanover
New London
Randolph
Tilton
Franklin
[edit]
Education
[edit]
Colleges and universities
Antioch New England
Chester College of New England
Colby-Sawyer College
College for Lifelong Learning
Daniel Webster College
Dartmouth College
Franklin Pierce College
Franklin Pierce Law Center
Keene State College
New England College
Southern New Hampshire University
Notre Dame College
Plymouth State University
Rivier College
Saint Anselm College
The Thomas More College of Liberal Arts
University of New Hampshire
University of New Hampshire at Manchester
[edit]
Professional sport teams
Minor league baseball teams:
Nashua Pride
New Hampshire Fisher Cats
Hockey teams:
Manchester Monarchs
Arena football teams:
Manchester Wolves
[edit]
Miscellaneous information
See List of New Hampshire-related topics
New Hampshire was the last of the New England states to observe
Fast Day, a day of prayer for a bountiful harvest. Traditionallly
observed on the 4th Thursday in April, from 1949 was observed
as a legal holiday on the 4th Monday in April until 1991 when
it was replaced by Civil Rights Day. [1] (http://www.state.nh.us/nhinfo/fast.html)
In 1999 New Hampshire changed the name of Civil Rights Day
to Martin Luther King Day. [2] (http://www.factmonster.com/spot/mlkhistory1.html)
There are no general sales or individual income taxes in New
Hampshire, though the state does have meals, lodging, and
other taxes. (List of other states without personal income
taxes)
New Hampshire is the only state that does not mandate public
kindergarten, partly out of frugality and lack of funding,
and partly out of belief in local control, a philosophy under
which towns and cities, not the state, make as many decisions
as possible. As of 2003, all but about two dozen communities
in the state provided public kindergarten with local property-tax
money.
Like several states, New Hampshire requires all hard liquor
to be sold in state-owned, state-run stores. This system generates
millions of dollars annually for the state and results in
liquor being so cheap that it attracts many out-of-state customers.
Many liquor stores are located near state lines, often on
interstate highways.
New Hampshire is host to the New Hampshire Highland Games,
formerly the Scottish Games. New Hampshire has also registered
an official Tartan with the proper authorities in Scotland;
this tartan is used to make kilts worn by the State Police
while they serve during the games.
New Hampshire has the only piece of Interstate highway that
is two-lane (i.e. a single northbound lane and a single southbound
lane) with a cobblestone median. This was done to preserve
Franconia Notch, the site of the Old Man of the Mountain,
a rock formation visible from Interstate 93 in Franconia.
The formation was the symbol of the state until it fell apart,
due to natural erosion, on May 3, 2003.
The Census of 2000 says the unincorporated town of Erving's
Location has a population of exactly 1 - although this fact
is disputed. A June 27, 2004, article in the Union-Leader
of Manchester quoted the administrator of Coos County as saying
the town's only taxable property is some utility poles, and
that nobody has ever lived there.
In northern New Hampshire the town of Dixville Notch is traditionally
the first city or town in the U.S. to vote in presidential
primaries and the presidential election. The few dozen residents
of Dixville Notch all stay awake until after midnight to vote.
State law grants that a town where all registered citizens
have voted may close early and announce their results.
New Hampshire is the only state with no mandatory seatbelt
law for adults, no motorcycle helmet law for adults nor mandatory
vehicle insurance for automobiles.
[edit]
Daily newspapers
Union Leader of Manchester
Telegraph of Nashua
Concord Monitor
Foster's Daily Democrat of Dover
Portsmouth Herald
Keene Sentinel
Conway Daily Sun
Eagle Times of Claremont
[edit]
Other publications
New Hampshire Business Review (statewide)
Hippo Press (Manchester)
[edit]
External links
Official State Website (http://www.state.nh.us)
The New Hampshire Almanac (http://www.state.nh.us/nhinfo/)
Regions of New Hampshire
Dartmouth Sunapee | Great North Woods | Lakes | Merrimack
Valley | Monadnock | Seacoast | White Mountains
Counties
Belknap | Carroll | Cheshire | Coos | Grafton | Hillsborough
| Merrimack | Rockingham | Strafford | Sullivan
This article is licensed
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Wikipedia
article "New Hampshire".
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