Submitted by Timzawesome t3_10i22z9 in newhampshire
What town do you consider the line between southern New Hampshire, and the rest of the state?
Submitted by Timzawesome t3_10i22z9 in newhampshire
What town do you consider the line between southern New Hampshire, and the rest of the state?
You nailed it.
I feel like it's more like Manchester.
Having it drawn at Concord would put places like Epsom, Deerfield, Northwood and Barrington in "southern NH" and they feel very central (Epsom and Deerfield almost feels like northern NH)
So what are Hinsdale & Keene?
Southwest or Monadnock region
The boonies.
Lower valley.
Western NH
Concord. North of Lincoln is the land of the White Walkers (and is awesome.)
But New Hampshire in general is all still “North Of The Wall”.
North of Franconia Notch. Lincoln is the northlands.
Jesus Fucking Christ guys
Concord isn’t even remotely southern NH. Completely different culture than the areas south of Manchester. It doesn’t have the “stick up my ass” attitude of those who live north of the whites either. Kind of a central nh area of its own.
Agreed....
Concord is unique, more central than south.
I always say "south of the hooksett tolls"
Concord and points south
Anything south of wherever you live.
Haha isn't that the truth.
That's what these posts make it sound like.
Funnily enough there is a book called: North of Wherever You Are: A Guide to the Real New Hampshire
That's where the people are. Greater Manchester Nashua Salem triangle.
Contrary to what some wrote, the seacoast is the seacoast, not part of Southern NH.
Nor is Concord. That's Central NH.
Life's different in and around the triangle. As it is around the seacoast. As it is Keene way. As it is some Concord. Etc.
That's the way I think of the regions, about lifestyle.
Came here to say this. The Seacoast definitely isn't southern NH. I'd say it ends around Rt 125 going east. I think southern NH ends at the Hooksett park and ride, before Concord. Southern NH is kinda just another name for the Merrimack valley imho.
Concord and below
I feel below concord is better description than concord and below
Old school wisdom south of Concord, the reality is south of tilton
Maybe, but I'm looking for a new place to live and Concord North is the line tilton Franklin is just be on the pale not part of Southern New Hampshire for me. Of course this is purely pedantic and you could clearly make your case that everything to the big lake is largely Southern tier and so heavily influenced
Salem, Derry and Manchester
You can add plaistow to that
Windham, Hudson and Nashua too
Merrimack, Amherst, Milford, Hollis and Brookline while we're at it.
Yup 👍
I consider it the towns that are close to Everett turn pike and 93. Manchester south.
Franconia & south
Concord and south
Draw a line from Concord south to the Massachusetts border, then draw a line East of Concord to the Maine border. Everything in between is southern NH.
South of the notch
Which one?
Both!
Dixville, and Pinkham?
I thought it was Franconia.
Being from and currently in a Nh, I feel concord south is southern. But then I can see how someone from coos could see the line at tilton or further north . Cheshire, Hillsboro and Rockingham counties for sure
So what makes up central NH?? Anything south of Colbrook and north of Tilton?? (eye roll) /s
Concord and below but to anyone who lives south of concord it’s Manchester or below
I live north of concord, it’s definitely Manchester and below.
Bottom half
Everything south of the hooksett toll booths IMO....
Concord straddles the line.
Manchester
I've always seen Concord/Manchester area as Central NH, anything south of that is Southern NH, like Nashua, Merrimack, Salem, Hudson, etc.
Southern NH is Concords south until you hit sullivan county it is sullivan county south. So the line is a bit diagonal. I calculate southern NH based on weather events in the winter and is how WMUR seems to do it too.
South of the Notch
[removed]
Where peoples last names are still mostly Irish and not French.
Plenty of Frenchies in S. NH.
I always thought it was anything below 101
The southernmost point of 101 is south of the northernmost point of the Mass border.
I would call it anything South of Winni
anything Hillsborough and Rockingham county
Nashua up through Manchester and then everything east of that line; Windham, Londonderry, Derry, Exeter, Seabrook, Rye, Hampton, etc. Ya know I might also include Durham, Dover, and Portsmouth. Not sure about those three.
EDIT: Also, this is just my opinion/guess. This isn't some formal list I know of.
This question is always fun lol
Technically Ashland is the middle, so everything south of that..
The opposite of "northern" new Hampshire
The southern part of Nh
Anything south of Littleton!
Berlin here. Southern New Hampshire is northern Massachusetts now. South of the notches is home of the flatlander.
Idk why people think Southern NH isn't "real" NH.
NH was founded in Portsmouth, its original capital. OG New Hampshire is the Seacoast. Southern NH is very much NH.
If your address says New Hampshire, you're in New Hampshire
Because it’s become infested with mass people and their attitudes and politics.
Salty9Volt t1_j5c3jxv wrote
As others have said, Concord is a common demarcation. But in conversation, Southern NH often refers to the part of NH that has a lot of Boston commuters, or at least folks that commute to Massachusetts. By that standard, I would say start at Hollis, draw a line up to concord, then over to the Maine border. That area is kind of what i would call Southern NH. I definitely don't think of Hinsdale or Keene in that description.