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Sugar River (New Hampshire)

Coordinates:43°24′7″N72°23′57″W / 43.40194°N 72.39917°W /43.40194; -72.39917
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

River in New Hampshire, United States
Sugar River
The Sugar River inClaremont, NH, approachingMount Ascutney in Vermont
Sugar River (New Hampshire) is located in New Hampshire
Sugar River (New Hampshire)
Show map of New Hampshire
Sugar River (New Hampshire) is located in the United States
Sugar River (New Hampshire)
Show map of the United States
Location
CountryUnited States
StateNew Hampshire
CountySullivan
Towns and citySunapee,Newport,Claremont
Physical characteristics
SourceLake Sunapee
 • locationSunapee
 • coordinates43°23′8″N72°4′52″W / 43.38556°N 72.08111°W /43.38556; -72.08111
 • elevation1,093 ft (333 m)
MouthConnecticut River
 • location
Claremont
 • coordinates
43°24′7″N72°23′57″W / 43.40194°N 72.39917°W /43.40194; -72.39917
 • elevation
292 ft (89 m)
Length27.0 mi (43.5 km)
Basin features
Tributaries 
 • leftTrask Brook,South Branch Sugar River, Cutts Brook, Quabbinight Brook
 • rightTucker Brook, Long Pond Brook,North Branch Sugar River, Dodge Brook, Kimball Brook, Ram Brook, Peabody Brook, Grandy Brook, Stevens Brook, Redwater Brook, Walker Brook

TheSugar River is a 27.0-mile-long (43.5 km)[1]river inSullivan County in westernNew Hampshire, in theNew England region of theUnited States. It is atributary of theConnecticut River, New England's longest river, which flows south toLong Island Sound.

The Sugar River originates at the outlet ofLake Sunapee in the town ofSunapee, New Hampshire. From Sunapee, the river flows west through the town ofNewport (the Sullivan County seat) and the city ofClaremont. Flowing northwest from Claremont, the Sugar River reaches its mouth at the Connecticut River across from the village ofAscutney, Vermont in the town ofWeathersfield.

Numerous falls and steep drops on the Sugar River have led to hydro-powered industrial development. Besides the largemill towns of Claremont andNewport, hydro-related developments occur in the villages of Sunapee, Wendell,Guild, and West Claremont.

Three New Hampshire state highways parallel portions of the Sugar River's path.New Hampshire Route 103 follows the river westward from the village of Wendell all the way to its mouth at the Connecticut River.New Hampshire Route 11, which runs entirely across the state, follows the river from the village of Sunapee westward to Claremont's city center (overlapped with NH Route 103).New Hampshire Route 12 then follows the river from the center of Claremont northwest to its mouth (also overlapped with NH Route 103). Just north of the river's mouth, NH Route 103 terminates at the Connecticut River (which is also theVermont state line), while NH Route 12 crosses the Connecticut and becomesVermont Route 12.

An inactive railroad known as theConcord to Claremont Line follows the Sugar River from Wendell to the river's mouth.

Tributaries of the Sugar River include theSouth Branch, entering in Newport, and theNorth Branch, entering between Newport and North Newport.

History

[edit]

The upper Connecticut River valley is the ancestral home of theAbenaki people. A significant prehistoric native american site, theHunter Archeological Site, is located at a series of terraces near the mouth of the Sugar River.

In popular culture

[edit]

In the 1906 best-selling novelConiston, "Coniston Water" was based on the Sugar River.[2]

TheNewport-based Sugar River Bank takes its name from the river. The bank currently operates in six New Hampshire communities, including the state capital ofConcord.[3]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^New Hampshire GRANIT state geographic information system
  2. ^Henderson, Brooks.Winston Churchill's Country,The Bookman (New York), August 1915, pp. 607, 617
  3. ^[1]
Tributaries
Connecticut
Massachusetts
New Hampshire
Vermont
Lakes
Connecticut
Massachusetts
New Hampshire
Vermont
Towns
Connecticut
Massachusetts
New Hampshire
Quebec
Vermont
Crossings
Gulf of Maine
Atlantic coastal tributaries
Merrimack River watershed
Merrymeeting Bay
(Androscoggin River watershed)
Piscataqua River watershed
Saco Bay
(Saco River watershed)
Long Island Sound
Connecticut River watershed
International
National


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