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  1. Lancaster, New Hampshire. /  44.48889°N 71.56917°W  / 44.48889; -71.56917. Lancaster is a town located along the Connecticut River in Coös County, New Hampshire, United States. The town is named after the city of Lancaster in England. As of the 2020 census, the town population was 3,218, [2] the second largest in the county after Berlin.

  2. Lancaster is a town located along the Connecticut River in Coös County, New Hampshire, United States. The town is named after the city of Lancaster in England. As of the 2020 census, the town population was 3,218, the second largest in the county after Berlin. It is the county seat of Coos County and gateway to the Great North Woods Region of the state. Lancaster, which includes the villages ...

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  4. The Story of the Fox. For well over a century, the clever, caring, independent fox has stood as a symbol of the community of Lancaster. For the people that make Lancaster home, it is a reminder of our relationship to the wild and wooded landscape we reside in, and all forms of life we call neighbors. Our embrace of the fox dates to 1913 when ...

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Weeks_EstateWeeks Estate - Wikipedia

    June 6, 1985 [3] The Weeks Estate is a historic country estate on U.S. Route 3 in Lancaster, New Hampshire. Built in 1912 for John Wingate Weeks, atop Prospect Mountain overlooking the Connecticut River, it is one of the state's best preserved early 20th-century country estates. It was given to the state by Weeks' children, and is now Weeks ...

  6. Lancaster, New Hampshire. Coos county. Shire town of the county, and situated on the southeastern bank of Connecticut river, which forms and washes its N.W. boundary, a distance of ten miles. It lies distant 110 miles W. from Portland, 130 N. from Portsmouth, 95 N. from Concord, and 75 above Dartmouth College.

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