Search Term Record
Metadata
Name |
Lincoln Hill |
Details |
West from Richards Ave. at the cemetery, South Street leads over Lincoln Hill, the highest part of Portsmouth. Suburban development began after 1865 when the old Packer Pasture, a 30-acre tract off South Road was acquired from John Elwyn and renamed Lincoln Hill by newspaperman Frank W. Miller. Also known as Rundlet's Mountain, Wibird's Hill, Spring Hill, or as the children called it Bread and Cheese Rock. |
Number of Archive records |
1 |
Number of Library records |
2 |
Number of Object records |
0 |
Number of Photo records |
2 |
Related Records
-
Diaries of Supply Foss Trefethen, Jul. 12, 1856-Oct. 13, 1907. - pdf on web
Trefethen, Supply Foss, 1833-1907
Record Type: Library
-
MS152 - Ray Brighton papers, 1960-1995
Papers of Ray Brighton, dated from approximately the 1960s to the early 1990s. Includes unpublished manuscripts, other unpublished writings, presentation notes, research notes, correspondence, and two audiocassettes of Brighton dictating shipping information from newspapers. FOLDER LISTING BOX 1 (acc. #2024.0059) Folder 1 The Portsmouth Country Club: An Experience in Golf unpublished manuscript (preface, pp. 1-106), undated Folder ...
Record Type: Archive
-
-
-