Inscription
A reminder of bygone days, this stone structure was used to make wood into charcoal for the nearby iron smelters. Pine knots, a waste material from the adjacent lumber mill, were a prime source for charcoal. Charcoal production through this kiln, built in the 1860s, was necessary to the iron mining industry.
Location
Sources
More markers in Grafton
Stone Iron Furnace
Franconia, NH
Due west stands New Hampshire's sole surviving example of a post-Revolutionary furnace for smelting local iron ore.
Canaan Street
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First known as 'Broad Street,' this early venture in town planning was laid out in 1788.
Samuel Livermore (1732–1803)
Holderness, NH
Proprietor of more than half the Town of Holderness, this jurist, congressman and senator was New Hampshire's first attorney general and...
Baker River
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First Ski School in America
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In 1929, on the slopes of the hill to the east, Austrian-born Sig Buchmayr established the first organized ski school in the United States.
