merrimack river valley (n.h. and mass.)

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merrimack river valley (n.h. and mass.)

The Concord and the Merrimack

excerpts from A week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers
1965
Presents selections from Thoreau's journals that describe the details and daily changes in the environment of his native Concord over a period of almost forty-five years.

Massacre on the Merrimack

Hannah Duston's captivity and revenge in colonial America
On March 15, 1697, Abenaki warriors, in service to the French, raided the English frontier village of Haverhill, Massachusetts. They killed twenty-seven men, women, and children and took thirteen captives, including thirty-nine-year-old Hannah Duston and her week-old daughter, Martha. Her daughter was murdered a short distance from the village, and Hannah resolved to get even. Two weeks into their captivity near present-day Concord, New Hampshire, Hannah Duston, and two of her companions, moved among the sleeping Abenaki with tomahawks and knives, killing two men, two women, and six children. Hannah and the others then escaped down the Merrimack River in a stolen canoe and returned to English civilization. Her courageous story gave hope to the English settlers, whose domain the French hoped to occupy, as the French and English continued to battle over dominance in the new world.

Five thousand days like this one

an American family history
1999
A memoir in which the author, stung by her father's death, searches out the history of her family, and the lives of other farmers and immigrant workers who populated New England's Merrimack Valley during the industrial textile age.

A week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers

2004
Contains Henry David Thoreau's personal account of the two-week boating and hiking trip he and his older brother made in the late summer of 1839 from Concord, Massachusetts to the White Mountains of New Hampshire.
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