Inscription
Built by her father, Capt. Caleb Page, c. 1759, this was Molly Page's home in her youth and as the wife of Gen. John Stark. Their first son, Caleb, who served with his illustrious father during the Revolution, was born here, as was Molly's brother Jeremiah Page, later a Superior Court Justice and delegate to the first Constitutional Convention (1778).
This structure also housed the first Dunbarton Post Office (1834).
Location
Sources
More markers in Merrimack
Shaker Village
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Take opposite road 2.6 miles to the attractive buildings of this Utopian community organized in 1792 in the township of Canterbury.
Andrew Jackson's Visit
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Just north of this point, on the boundary between Bow and Concord a large cavalcade of enthusiastic citizens met President Jackson and...
John Sargent Pillsbury 1828–1901
Sutton, NH
Born in a house bordering this common, he migrated to Minneapolis in 1855.
Hannah Dustin 1657–1737
Boscawen, NH
Famous symbol of frontier heroism.
State Capitol
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The State Capitol Building of New Hampshire was built in 1816 to 1819 by Stuart J. Park.
