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  1. May 23, 2024 · John Thomson went on to become a founder and prominent citizen of Mendon, Massachusetts. When Native Americans burned Mendon in 1675, Thomson was among the first settlers to return and rebuild. History strongly suggests that John Thomson was the first Englishman born in New Hampshire and, therefore, the first white settler born in Portsmouth.

  2. First, in 1623 the council awarded to an entrepreneur named David Thomson 6,000 acres in New Hampshire. Thomson established a commercial fishing operation in a settlement called Pannaway, creating the first year-round English settlement in New Hampshire. Today it is known as Odiorne Point in Rye.

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    • Geographical Location
    • "Mother of Rivers"
    • "The Granite State"
    • Fish and Game

    New Hampshire is situated the most northern of the thirteen original states and lies between latitude 42-40 and 45-18 north and longitude 70-37 west. It is about 180 miles long and 50 miles wide, although the extreme width is 93 miles. It is bounded on the north by Quebec province in Canada, on the east by Maine and the Atlantic ocean, on the south...

    Geographies sometimes speak of the state as the "Mother of Rivers." Five of the great streams of New England originate in its granite hills. The Connecticut River rises in the northern part, and for nearly one hundred miles of its winding course hems the shores of the state with a "broad seam of silver." The Pemigewasset River starts in the Profile...

    New Hampshire is commonly known as the Granite State, and of late years by some writers is called the Queen State - "Queen by right of her natural beauty; queen by her native hardy spirit; queen by her diversified industry; queen by reason of her motherhood of great men. She is enthroned on hills of granite, diademed with sparkling waters and scept...

    In 1865 New Hampshire joined the vanguard of American science by establishing a fish and game department, the first one of its kind in New England. Since that date, the efforts of this department have been devoted to the propagation and conservation of fish and game. In modern times the cultivation of fish and the protection of wildlife have demand...

  4. Apr 12, 2023 · How NH Really Started: A 400th Anniversary Return to 1623. Precious little is known about the first tiny group of English settlers who arrived aboard the Jonathan in spring 1623. They set up a fortified fishing and trading post at Little Harbor, now Odiorne State Park, in the town of Rye, New Hampshire. April 12, 2023.

    • Was John Thomson the first white settlers in New Hampshire?1
    • Was John Thomson the first white settlers in New Hampshire?2
    • Was John Thomson the first white settlers in New Hampshire?3
    • Was John Thomson the first white settlers in New Hampshire?4
    • Was John Thomson the first white settlers in New Hampshire?5
  5. But one curious fact is clear. New Hampshire’s seaport, Portsmouth, was founded by mistake. Captain John Mason, the primary English investor in the colony at Strawbery Banke, pinned his hopes on bad information. Mason was looking for a shortcut to an imaginary place called "The Lake of the Iroquois."

  6. The 17th century was a period of great change for New Hampshire. English settlers arrived and created communities that relied on gathering the natural resources around them and shipping them back to Europe. Life for the Abenaki changed a great deal once the English arrived, as the Abenaki were pushed off their land by the English. Sometimes the Abenaki and the English worked together, and ...

  7. Nov 22, 2018 · Inside NH’s forgotten first family. Giving thanks to the Thomsons. J. Dennis Robinson. 0:03. 0:45. Portsmouth loves to flaunt its 1623 birth date, but it rarely gives a cranberry for New ...

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