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Written by Old Berwick Historical
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HEAR YE! HEAR YE!
South Berwick,Maine– Sarah Arenberg, 10, was swimming off the Rollinsford boat ramp in the SalmonFalls River this summer, when she saw something white glint on the muddy bottom.
“I thought at first that it was a shark’s tooth,” said the Marshwood Great Works School fifth grader who lives in South Berwick. To local historians, Sarah’s find was no less interesting. It is, after all, a clay pipe that someone may have smoked near that spot over 125 years ago. (Continued below)
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Written by History News Team
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HEAR YE! HEAR YE!
September 25, 2011, Portsmouth will remember two grand city traditions. The parade will be salute to Labor, particularly the workers of the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard who form a critical part of the Seacoast economy. It will also honor the month the 1905 Portsmouth Peace Treaty with a public was signed. (Continued below)
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Written by History News Team
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HEAR YE! HEAR YE!
I ask that you visit Popovers on the Square in Portsmouth, NH this Wednesday, August 10th, anytime from 7am to 11pm and buy any type of coffee related product while you are there. That day, Popovers is celebrating their fifth anniversary and as a way of saying "Thank you" to the commiunity, John Tinios (owner of Popovers) is making a magnanimous offer to benefit a cause that is very important to Portsmouth and all of us. (Continued below)
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Written by History News
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HEAR YE! HEAR YE!
A photo from the Old Berwick Historical Society’s collection shows that bridge repairs, like those now underway on Route 4 over the Salmon Falls River, are timeless. To the right in both photos, the Counting House – once the business office of the cotton mill located at the falls below the bridge – is now the historical society’s museum. Today it contains thousands of pictures, maps, documents and objects dating from the 1600s through the 1900s. Volunteers offer new displays every year or two, and the latest new feature, “Village Voices,” presents livelihoods in the local economy. (See photos below)
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Written by Seacoast History News
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HEAR YE! HEAR YE!
The Rochester Opera House Board of Directors is pleased to announce the award of a $20,000 grant for operations support for the 2011/2012 season from the New Hampshire Charitable Foundation (the Piscataqua Region Community Fund and the Charles & Aroline B. Greenfield Fund). This NHCF grant award follows the Foundation's $20,000 grant award for the previous season. We are extremely pleased and fortunate to have been selected for this extremely competitive award, which is a tremendous boost for operations stabilization. (Continued below)
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