New
Hampshire is a state in the New
England region of the northeastern United States
of America. The state was named after the southern English county
of Hampshire. It borders Massachusetts
to the south, Vermont
to the west, Maine to the east, and the Canadian
province of Quebec to the north. New Hampshire ranks 44th in
land area, 46th in total area of the 50 states, and 41st in
population. It became the first post-colonial sovereign nation
in the Americas when it broke off from Great Britain in January
1776, and was one of the original thirteen states that founded
the United States of America six months later. It was the ninth
state to ratify the United States Constitution, bringing that
document into effect. New Hampshire was the first U.S. state
to have its own state constitution, and is the only state with
neither a general sales tax nor a personal income tax at either
the state or local level. Concord is the state capital, while
Manchester is the largest city in the state.
It is known internationally for the
New Hampshire primary, the first primary in the
quadrennial U.S. presidential election cycle.
Its
license plates carry the state motto: "Live Free or Die."
The state nickname is "The Granite State", in reference
to its geology and its tradition of self-sufficiency. Several
other official nicknames exist but are rarely used
Among prominent individuals
from New Hampshire are founding father Nicholas Gilman, Senator
Daniel Webster, editor Horace Greeley, founder of the Christian
Science religion Mary Baker Eddy, poet Robert Frost, author
Dan Brown, and comedians Adam Sandler, Sarah Silverman, and
Seth Meyers. New Hampshire has produced one president, Franklin
Pierce.
New
Hampshire's recreational attractions include skiing and other
winter sports, observing the fall foliage, summer cottages along
many lakes, motor sports at the New Hampshire Motor Speedway,
and Motorcycle Week, a popular motorcycle rally held in Laconia
in June.
New Hampshire is part of the New England region. It is bounded
by Quebec, Canada to the north and northwest; Maine
and the Atlantic Ocean to the east; Massachusetts
to the south; and Vermont to the west. New Hampshire's major
regions are the Great North Woods, the White
Mountains, the Lakes Region, the Seacoast, the
Merrimack Valley, the Monadnock Region, and the Dartmouth-Lake
Sunapee area. New Hampshire has the shortest ocean coastline
of any U.S. coastal state, with a length of 18 miles (29 km).
New Hampshire, showing roads, rivers and major cities. New Hampshire
was home to the rock formation called the Old Man of the Mountain,
a face-like profile in Franconia Notch, until the formation
fell apart in May 2003.
The
White Mountains
range in New Hampshire spans the north-central portion
of the state, with Mount Washington the tallest in the northeastern
U.S., and other mountains like Mount Madison and Mount Adams
surrounding it. With hurricane-force winds every third day on
average, over 100 recorded deaths among visitors, and conspicuous
krumholtz (dwarf, matted trees much like a carpet of bonsai
trees), the upper reaches of Mount Washington claim the title
of "worst weather on earth." A non-profit weather
observatory is on the peak.
In the flatter southwest
corner of New Hampshire, the landmark Mount Monadnock has given
its name to a class of earth-forms—a monadnock—signifying,
in geomorphology, any isolated resistant peak rising from a
less resistant eroded plain.
Major
rivers include the 110-mile (177 km) Merrimack River, which
bisects the lower half of the state north-south and ends up
in Newburyport, Massachusetts. Its tributaries include the Contoocook
River, Pemigewasset River, and Winnipesaukee River. The 410-mile
(660 km) Connecticut River, which starts at New Hampshire's
Connecticut Lakes and flows south to Connecticut, defines the
western border with Vermont. The state border is not in the
center of that river, as usually the case, but at the low-water
mark on the Vermont side; so New Hampshire owns the entire river
where it runs adjacent to Vermont. The "northwesternmost
headwaters" of the Connecticut also define the Canadian
border with New Hampshire.
The Piscataqua River and
its several tributaries form the state's only significant ocean
port where they flow into the Atlantic at Portsmouth. The Salmon
Falls River and the Piscataqua define the southern portion of
the border with Maine. The state has an ongoing boundary dispute
with Maine in the area of Portsmouth Harbor, with New Hampshire
claiming dominion over several islands (now known as Seavey
Island) that include the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard as well as
to the Maine towns of Kittery and Berwick.
The
largest lake is Lake Winnipesaukee, which covers 71 square miles
(184 km2) in the east-central part of New Hampshire.
Lake Winnipesaukee.Hampton Beach is a popular local summer destination.
About 10 miles (16 km) offshore are the Isles of Shoals, nine
small islands (four of which are in New Hampshire) known as
the site of a 19th century art colony founded by poet Celia
Thaxter, as well as the alleged location of one of the buried
treasures of the pirate Blackbeard.
It
is the second most forested state in the country, after Maine,
in percentage of land covered by woods. This change was caused
by the abandonment of farms during the 20th century as many
farmers took wage jobs in urban areas or moved to more productive
areas. The return of woodlands from open fields forms the subject
of many poems by Robert Frost.
The
northern third of the state is locally referred to as the "north
country" or "north of the notches," in reference
to White Mountain passes that channel traffic. It contains less
than 5% of the state's population, suffers relatively high poverty,
and is losing population as the logging and paper industries
decline. However, the tourist industry, in particular visitors
who go to northern New Hampshire to ski, has helped offset economic
losses from mill closures.
Various Algonquian tribes inhabited the area prior to European
settlement. English and French explorers visited New Hampshire
in 1600–1605, and English fishermen settled at Odiorne's
Point in present-day Rye in 1623. The first permanent settlement
was at Hilton's Point (present-day Dover). By 1631, the Upper
Plantation comprised modern-day Dover, Durham and Stratham;
in 1679, it became the "Royal Province."
The New Hampshire State House in Concord was designed by Albe
Cady. It is the oldest U.S. state capitol where legislators
still meet in their original chambers.It was one of the thirteen
colonies that revolted against British rule in the American
Revolution. By the time of the American Revolution, New Hampshire
was a divided province. The economic and social life of the
Seacoast revolved around sawmills, shipyards, merchant's warehouses,
and established village and town centers. Wealthy merchants
built substantial homes, furnished them with the finest luxuries,
and invested their capital in trade and land speculation. At
the other end of the social scale, there developed a permanent
class of day laborers, mariners, indentured servants, and even
slaves. It was the first state to declare its independence,
but the only battle fought there was the raid on Fort William
and Mary, December 14, 1774 in Portsmouth Harbor, which netted
the rebellion sizable quantities of gunpowder, small arms, and
cannon (General Sullivan, leader of the raid, described it as,
"remainder of the powder, the small arms, bayonets, and
cartouch-boxes, together with the cannon and ordnance stores")
over the course of two nights. This raid was preceded by a warning
to local patriots the previous day, by Paul Revere on December
13, 1774 that the fort was to be reinforced by troops sailing
from Boston. According to unverified accounts, the gunpowder
was later used at the Battle of Bunker Hill, transported there
by Major Demerit, who was one of several New Hampshire patriots
who stored the powder in their homes until it was transported
elsewhere for use in revolutionary activities.
New
Hampshire was a Jacksonian stronghold; the state sent Franklin
Pierce to the White House in the election of 1852. Industrialization
took the form of numerous textile mills, which in turn attracted
large flows of immigrants from Quebec
(the "French Canadians") and Ireland. The northern
parts of the state produced lumber and the mountains provided
tourist attractions. After 1960, the textile industry collapsed,
but the economy rebounded as a center of high technology and
a service provider.
Since 1952, New Hampshire
gained national and international attention for its presidential
primary held early in every presidential election year. It immediately
became the most important testing grounds for candidates for
the Republican and Democratic nominations. The media give New
Hampshire (and Iowa) about half of all the attention paid to
all states in the primary process, magnifying the state's decision
power (and spurring repeated efforts by out-of-state politicians
to change the rules.)