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The state derives its name from the county of Hampshire, England, where Capt. John Mason, the founder and first proprietor of the colony, was governor of the English city of Portsmouth, for which New Hampshire's only port city is named.
Topographically, the state's most conspicuous feature is the WHITE MOUNTAINS, whose 86 peaks in the north central part of the state are the highest mountain range in the northeastern United States. Eleven peaks in Coos County, five more than 1.6 km (1 mi) above sea level, form the Presidential Range, which culminates in Mount Washington at 1,917 m (6,288 ft; see WASHINGTON, MOUNT). Immediately north of the White Mountain National Forest lies the high land of New Hampshire's North Country, coinciding with most of Coos County. Along the Vermont border, the Connecticut River valley provides New Hampshire's best farming country. In the southeastern corner of the state, New Hampshire's Eastern Slope descends gradually to the sea. The brief New Hampshire coastline consists of sandy beaches in addition to Portsmouth Harbor at the mouth of the Piscataqua River. Rivers and Lakes Climate Historic Sites and Recreation Areas Tourism
Recent archaeological discoveries suggest the presence of human life in the area about 10,000 years ago. At the time of the first English settlements in 1623, there probably were about 4,000 Indians within the present area of the state, more than half in the various tribes of the PENNACOOK Confederacy in the Connecticut and Merrimack valleys and the seacoast area. The rest, in the eastern White Mountains and the Saco Valley, were on the western edge of the Sokoki Confederacy and merged with the ABNAKIS of Maine. The Pennacooks patronized English trading stations on the Piscataqua and, under the influence of their friendly chief, Passaconaway, negotiated sales of land (which were misunderstood on both sides) as the settlements moved inland. Friendly relations ceased at the time of KING PHILIP'S WAR (1675-76), and in 1676 most of the Pennacooks moved to Canada. Colonial Period The decisive change in the importance and prospective fortunes of the province came in 1741 with the settlement of the long-disputed boundary with Massachusetts in New Hampshire's favor and the appointment of Benning Wentworth as governor. A dispute with New York over the area west of the Connecticut River, the so-called New Hampshire Grants (present-day Vermont), was temporarily resolved in 1764. Benning Wentworth was succeeded (1767) by his nephew, John Wentworth. The latter's administration began auspiciously with a series of successful moves to bind Portsmouth and the seacoast more closely to the developing interior, but the Revolutionary crisis proved to be a stronger force than was the young governor's popularity. In the first overtly hostile act of the American Revolution, an armed mob stormed the fort in Portsmouth Harbor in December 1774, seized arms and powder, and distributed them among several inland towns, some of whose militiamen subsequently used them in the Battle of Bunker Hill. Wentworth left the province on a British warship in June 1775. The following year New Hampshire adopted its own constitution and was, therefore, the first colony to become wholly independent of Great Britain. In 1788, New Hampshire became the ninth state to ratify the U.S. Constitution. Economic Development The primacy of farming was short-lived, however, for as early as 1810 water-powered textile manufacturing arrived in New Hampshire with the founding of the Amoskeag Cotton and Woolen Manufacturing Company on the Merrimack River at the site of Manchester. Many other textile mills were soon constructed throughout most of the state. The coming of the railroad in the late 1830s also contributed to the agricultural decline, for now farm goods produced in the fertile Midwest could reach Boston and New York markets and New England mill towns more abundantly and cheaply than those grown on marginal farmlands closer to home. Nothing documents more dramatically the decline of farming in New Hampshire than both the widespread repossession of once-cleared land by the forest and the many miles of stone walls that remain to mark abandoned fields and pastures. The textile industry reached its peak between 1910 and 1920 and then began a long decline, primarily because of competition from the South. Large-scale shoe manufacturing, which appeared after the Civil War, has also declined but not to the same extent. Since World War II, industries attracted by an underutilized labor force, low land costs (until recently), low taxes and few regulations, and New Hampshire's proximity to the large northeastern market have moved in to take the place of the departed woolen and cotton mills--often occupying the same buildings. An industrial group increasingly important to the state is the high-technology sector. New Hampshire is trying to plan for a future that must balance a grave concern for continuing the quality of life to which most New Hampshire people are attached with strong pressures for further economic development.
Area: 24,219 sq km (9,351 sq mi); rank: 46th.
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