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CONCORD , the capital of New Hampshire, U.S.A., and the county-seat of Merrimack county, on both sides of theSee also: Merrimac. See also: river, about 75 M
.
N.W. of See also: Boston, Massachusetts
.
Pop
.
(189o) 17,004; (1900) 19,632, of whom 3813 were See also: foreign-See also: born; (191o, census) 21,497
.
Concord is served by the Boston & Maine railway
.
The See also: area of the city in 1906 was 4'5.16 sq. m
.
Concord has broad streets bordered with shade trees; and has several parks, including Penacook, See also: White, Rollins and the Contoocook river
.
Among the
See also: principal buildings are the See also: state capitol, the state library, the city See also: hall, the county
See also: court-See also: house, the See also: post-office, a public library (17,000 vols.), the state hospital, the state prison, the Centennial home for the aged, the See also: Margaret Pillsbury memorial hospital, the Rolfe See also: ann Rumford See also: asylum for See also: orphan girls, founded by Count Rumford's daughter, and some See also: fine churches, including the Christian Science See also: church built by Mrs Eddy
.
There are a soldiers' memorial
See also: arch, a statue of Daniel See also: Webster by See also: Thomas
See also: Ball, and statues of See also: John P
.
See also: Hale, John Stark, and Commodore See also: George H, Perkins, the last by Daniel C
.
French; and at Penacook, 6 m
.
N.W. of Concord, there is a monument to Hannah Dustin (see See also: HAVERHILL), Among the educational institutions are the well-known St See also: Paul's school for boys (See also: Protestant Episcopal, 1853), about 2 M
.
W. of the city, and St Mary's school for girls (Protestant Episcopal, ,885) . From 1847 to 1867 Concord was the seat of the Biblical Institute (Methodist Episcopal), founded inSee also: Newbury, See also: Vermont, in 1841, removed to Boston as the Boston Theological Seminary in 1867, and after 1871 a See also: part of Boston University
.
The city has various manufactures, including See also: flour and grist See also: mill products,
See also: silver See also: ware, See also: cotton • and woollen goods, carriages, harnesses and See also: leather belting, furniture, wooden ware, pianos and clothing; the Boston & Maine Railroad has a large repair See also: shop in the city, and there are valuable granite quarries in the vicinity
.
In 1905 .Concord ranked third among the cities of the state in the value of : its factory products, which was $6,387,372, being an increase of 51.7 % since 1900
.
When first visited by the See also: English settlers, the site of Concord was occupied by Penacook See also: Indians; a trading post was built here about 166o
.
In 1725 Massachusetts granted the See also: land in this vicinity to some of her citizens; but this See also: grant was not recognized by New Hampshire, whose legislature issued (1727) a grant (the Township of
See also: Bow) overlapping the Massachusetts grant, which was known as Penacook or See also: Penny See also: Cook
.
The New Hampshire grantees undertook to establish here a colony of See also: Londonderry Irish; but the
.
Massachusetts settlers were firmly established by the spring of 1727,• Massachusetts definitely assumed jurisdiction in 1731, and in 1734 her general court incorporated the See also: settlement under the name of Rumford
.
The conflicting rights of Rumford and Bow gave rise to one of the most celebrated of colonial land cases, and although the New Hampshire authorities enforced their claims of jurisdiction, the privy council in 1755 confirmed. the Rumford settlers in their possession
.
In 1765 the name was. changed to the " parish of Concord," and in 1784 the See also: town of Concord was incorporated
.
Here, for some years before the War of See also: American Independence, lived Benjamin See also: Thompson, later Count Rumford
.
In 1778 and again in 1781-1782 a state constitutional See also: convention met here; the first New Hampshire. legislature met at Concord in 1782; the convention which ratified for New Hampshire the Federal Constitution met here in 1788; and in ,8o8 the state capital was definitely established here
.
The New Hampshire Patriot, founded here in 18o8 (and for twenty years edited) by IsaacSee also: Hill (1788-1851), who was a member of the
See also: United States Senate in 1831-1836, and governor of New Hampshire in 1836-1839, became one of the leading exponents of Jacksonian Democracy in New See also: England
.
In 1814 the Middlesex Canal, connecting Concord with Boston, was completed
.
A city charter granted by the legislature in 1849 was not accepted by the city until 1853
.
See J
.
O
.
Lyford, The See also: History of Concord, New Hampshire (City History Commission) (2 vols., Concord, 1903) ; Concord Town Records, 1732-1820 (Concord, 1894) ; J
.
B
.
See also: Moore, See also: Annals of Concord I726-18a3 (Concord, 1824); and Nathaniel Bouton, The History of Concord (Concord, 1856)
.
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