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TAMWORTH TODAY
With
its majestic backdrop of Mount Chocorua, the most photographed
mountain in America, Tamworth, New Hampshire is a picturesque
town offering dramatic mountain views from many locations.
Lake Chocorua, White Lake, flowing brooks and rivers, trout
streams and ponds all contribute to the natural beauty and
scenic vistas found at every turn. Because of its charming
rural character and proximity to the White
Mountain National Forest, Tamworth provides many opportunities
for aficionados of both summer and winter recreation, notably
hiking, canoeing, sailing, fishing, camping, and cross country
skiing and snowmobiling in the winter.
Located in Carroll County between
the Lakes and White Mountain regions of New Hampshire, Tamworth
is comprised of the five villages of Tamworth, Chocorua, Whittier,
South Tamworth and Wonalancet. The site of the town was granted
in 1765 to John Webster and others, and named in honor of
British Admiral Washington Shirley, Viscount Tamworth, who
was a close friend of then New Hampshire Governor Benning
Wentworth.
This lovely town is populated by approximately 2,600 people who have formed a strong community.
Governed by elected selectmen, Tamworth supports the K.A. Brett Elementary/Middle School.
High school students attend Kennett High School in North Conway. Privately funded schools include the Bearcamp
Valley School and Children's Center, South Tamworth Community School, and Tamworth Learning Circles.
Tamworth
is culturally active with two libraries, Cook
Memorial Library in Tamworth Village, and the Chocorua
Public Library, which is supported by fundraising and
an endowment. In addition, Tamworth is home to the oldest
repertory theatre in the United States, the Barnstormers,
which boasts an eclectic summer program of plays and musicals,
and hosts many of programs sponsored by the Arts
Council of Tamworth from Fall to Spring. The Arts Council
supports many other cultural and educational endeavors as
well, including workshops and art exhibits. A favorite venue
for residents and visitors alike is the Remick
Country Doctor and Farm Museum, which is free to the public
and hosts many workshops, talks, exhibits and festivals in
keeping with the seasons. The town hosts Tamworth Family Day
with music, food and games on every 4th of July immediately
after the annual parade, followed by a huge fireworks display
in the evening.
Famous people throughout the years have lived in Tamworth, including former
President Grover Cleveland and John Greenleaf Whittier, who received much of his inspiration from
the surrounding beauty of the town.
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Note: the following history appeared
originally in Tamworth Today, a comprehensive town profile
and guidebook edited by Amy Berrier and published in 2000.
Used with permission.
A BRIEF HISTORY
OF TAMWORTH
The
history of Tamworth officially began with the granting of
a charter from George the Third of England to the town in
the name of Benning Wentworth in 1766. Settlers ventured slowly
north into the towering forest that was broken only by the
Indians trail along the Bearcamp and occasional grassy
intervals. They burned and chopped the great trees,
built the first homesteads, and planted the first crops.
By 1790 there were 47 heads of families in Tamworth; 126
by 1800. Among them were names still familiar today: Ames,
Gilman, Bryant, Mason, Berry, Roberts, Nickerson, Hayford,
Durrell, Remick, Boyden and Wiggen. Parson Samuel Hidden was
ordained here in 1792 and led the town for nearly fifty of
its formative years. The meeting house and one-room school
house were built; sheep grazed the hillsides; every farmer
grew corn, wheat and rye; grist mills flourished on the streams.
The hardy people of Tamworth, sustained, like their contemporaries,
by strong religious faith, came through the smallpox epidemic
of 1813; the cold years and famines of 1815, 16,
and 17; the siege of the wolves on Great
Hill in 1820; and the year 1827, when it snowed in every month.
The remnants of the Pequaket and Ossipee peoples, branches
of the Abenaki, who still lived in the region, were primarily
peaceful in their relations to the earliest settlers, as counseled
by their great Pennacook chief Passaconaway. But the fragility
of the understanding between the two cultures comes down to
us in the poignant legend of Chief Chocorua.
After Chocoruas father Paugus was killed on Lovells
Pond, Passaconaways son Wonalancet led his remaining
tribesmen away to the town of St. Francis on the St. Lawrence
River.
The native people are remembered in local place names, some
of them bestowed by the poet Lucy Larcom and others during
the 1870s and 80s.
As
soon as the first farms were established, saw mills, shingle
mills, and turning mills proliferated in every part of town.
Houses, churches, and schools were built close to them, forming
the villages of South Tamworth, Whittier Chocorua, Wonalancet
and Tamworth. Industry and inventiveness flourished. Loggers,
blacksmiths, millers, shoemakers, storekeepers, furniture-
and barrel-makers plied their trades. Nearly all were farmers
too. The womens prodigious skills in spinning, weaving,
sewing, baking, and preserving are hard to imagine today.
In the 1850s, Tamworths population peaked at 1,766
souls, a level not to be reached again until the early 1980s.
The coming of the railroad, which provided easier access to
the more fertile land to the west, and the end of the Civil
War, an experience that had given many New Hampshire soldiers
a look at what lay beyond the rocky soils of their home state,
contributed to the waning of the local agricultural era.
Tamworth and surrounding towns were to find their true economic
future in the beauty of the spectacular mountains and valleys,
lakes and rivers, fields and forests that make up the landscape.
To supply the growing number of visitors with comfortable
shelter and food, the farmers and their wives opened their
homes to summer boarders. Carriages collected visitors at
the Mt. Whittier station, and drove them with their luggage
(and often servants as well) to local inns and boarding houses,
where many stayed for extended periods of time, enjoying walking
trails, scenic vistas, and homegrown country food.
Entertainment abounded. On July 4th, 1882, the Willow Inn
in Tamworth Village had about 100 guests. Its guest book for
the period includes glass blowers, comic vocalists, minstrel
shows, a ventriloquist, a cornet band, a Grand Opera,
and even Christine Nilsson, the great Swedish singer
with the majority of the performances occurring at the Town
House. There were horse races on the Depot Road, visiting
baseball teams, and a traveling circus, whose elephants refused
to cross the Swift River Bridge and, instead, had to be led
through the water!
As knowledge of the beauty of the area spread, the influx
of visitors gradually encompassed not only the summer season,
but also autumn for its incomparably vivid foliage, and winter
for the sports activities skiing, skating, snowshoeing,
and, eventually, snowmobiling. Inns, cabins, and hotels sprang
up, and the purchase of second homes was widespread.
Many of the newcomers, some quite well-known outside Tamworth,
originally came as tourists to enjoy the scenic beauty and
outdoor activities and later chose to stay on as second home
owners or permanent residents. Of these, perhaps the most
famous was President Grover Cleveland, whose son Francis Cleveland
founded The Barnstormers Theatre with his wife Alice in 1931.
It is today the oldest professional summer theater in the
country.
As
the town grew, countless townspeople left their mark on the
quality of life in Tamworth. Added to the oldest family names
were new ones like Brett, Currier, Evans, Vittum and Welch;
Later still, Bolles and Bowditch, James and Runnells, Finley,
Read, Steele, Bowles, Cannon, Harkness, McGrew, and many,
many others, some of which we find on the roads and buildings,
trails and parks we all encounter every day. In fact, quite
a few present day Tamworth residents proudly carry the names
of their ancestors who have called Tamworth home throughout
its history.
Perhaps the person most influential in Tamworth history was
Parson Samuel Hidden. He came to Tamworth freshly graduated
from Dartmouth College in 1792. He was ordained at Ordination
Rock and became the first settled minister in town. His interests
were broad and, besides spiritual leadership, he brought cultural
benefits to this small town. He taught music and started a
choir, supervised existing schools and opened new ones, and
started the Tamworth Social Library (the fourth in the entire
state).
With this cultural start in the 1700s, it is no surprise
that Tamworth is still known today for its artistic, literary
and religious organizations. The town currently boasts two
public libraries, an art gallery, the Arts Council of Tamworth,
the Tamworth Historical Society, the Tamworth Foundation,
The Barnstormers, six churches, and many resident authors,
poets and artists.
Todays Tamworth citizens, like their predecessors,
pursue an astonishing variety of occupations and livelihoods,
from the small-scale farming and logging familiar to earlier
residents, to all manner of service and construction industries,
educational endeavors, and long-distance electronic businesses.
Yankee inventiveness thrives, and the mix of year-round and
part-time residents with many talents and interests provides
a vitality unusual in a town of this size.
Written by Jean Ulitz and Amy
Berrier, with grateful acknowledgement to Marjory Gane Harkness
and the wealth of historical information included in her book,
The Tamworth Narrative.
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