Born in Keene, he graduated from Virginia Military Institute before entering the Episcopal Theological School in Cambridge, MA.
On August 20, 1965 in Hayneville, AL, Daniels was shot and killed as he stepped in front of a young African-American coworker, saving her life.
"[2] Location: NH 16 near Berlin–Milan town line[1] "Named for Fridtjof Nansen, the Greenland explorer, Berlin's first ski club formed in 1872.
[a] Opened in 1801 and made free in 1837, the turnpike joined rich Connecticut River Valley farms with Massachusetts markets.
Named for the wide plain to the south,[b] a steel Warren Truss bridge of late 19th or early 20th century design stood here until 2009.
"[6] Location: 110 Meadows Road (NH 115A)[1] "Known as Granny Stalbird, Deborah Vicker came through Crawford Notch c.1796 as cook for Col. Joseph Whipple.
"In the summer of 1896, aspiring post Robert Frost (1874–1963) and his wife Elinor spent a belated honeymoon in a rented cottage near the Suncook River in Allenstown.
Carl Burell, a high school friend and avid naturalist, was foreman at the Moulton box shop at Buck Street dam.
By the 1890s, the dams powered Charles Fisher's axe handle factory and Reuben C. Moulton's box and trunk shop.
Then known as East Pembroke, the area had a post office, store, blacksmith shop, houses and workers' tenements.
"[10] Location: Water Street at Warren Historical Society[1] "In 1975 Norris Cotton celebrated 50 years of elected public service, having served in both the state legislature and Congress.
Born in Warren in 1900, Cotton worked his way through Phillips Exeter Academy and Wesleyan University before being elected to the State House in 1922.
His humble beginnings, rise to power, and consistent connection to New Hampshire's people embodied an American way of life.
After a charrette conducted by Plan NH, federal funding restored the roof to its 1830s design, and helped rehabilitate facade and interiors.
Press rededication reports in 1998 called the building's new era as town and community center the 'Miracle in Main Street.
Nathaniel S. Berry From May 1861 to December 1864, twelve New Hampshire Civil War regiments and a cavalry unit mustered on 'The Plains' and other nearby locations in Concord.
"East Candia was a dense neighborhood of workers' housing developed around the local shoe industry in the 1850s, exemplifying a late-19c.
The new prosperity resulted in a building boom in the popular Stick Style, characterized by decorative trusses in gable ends, many in porches and door hoods, still visible today.
"[22] Location: College Drive at NHTI campus[1] "When Europeans settled in New England in the 1620s, the largest Native American tribal group in the future state of New Hampshire used the flat lands and bends of the Merrimack River in present Concord for its central village.
Particularly well-known for ski instruction, the Club trained hundreds of children including three Olympic athletes: Marty Hall, Dick Taylor, and medalist Penny Pitou.
Lincoln had strong ties to Exeter due to the influence of Amos Tuck, of this town, who is credited with the creation of the Republican Party.
In the 1840s, railroad service and economic investment by the Enfield Shakers laid the foundation for its growth as a mill village that prospered over the next 100 years.
In 1992, the U.S. Navy christened the newest USS Kearsarge (LHD3), an amphibious assault ship, each of its commissioning crewmembers received a commemorative plank crafted from Mt.
"[29] Location: NH 25 at mile marker 14.6[1] "The US Forest Service purchased 7,022 acres of timber-covered mountain slopes, cliffs, streams, ponds, and abandoned farmland from Haverhill businessman E. Bertram Pike on January 2, 1914.
The purchase was the first acquisition towards the establishment of the White Mountains National Forest in 1918, a significant accomplishment to restore and protect lands and watersheds from the impact of years or destructive practices.
The school opened in 1835, but months later, outraged opponents used a team of oxen to drag the Academy building down Canaan Street and forced the Black pupils out of town.
This brief experiment in educational equality helped launch the public careers of Black leaders Henry Highland Garnet, Alexander Crummell, and Thomas Sipkins Sidney.
"[31] Location: Emerson Avenue, east of NH 121[1] "Donated in 1809 by Mr. Thomas Huse, this bell is likely from Paul Revere Jr.'s foundry.
Beede was a dominant character in the early history of Sandwich, a surveyor, a businessman, the first town clerk and on the first Board of Selectmen.
A state statute of 1858 authorized towns to reimburse private citizens who provided and maintained watering troughs for the use of travelers' horses.