(See below Great North Wood Region Map of Towns and Cities)

Below links will provide you with information regarding each town or city so you can make an informed decision where you would like to live in the State of New Hampshire.

Click on the Town or City map below

 
Pittsburg New Hampshire, Clarksville New Hampshire, Atkinson and Gilmanton Academy Grant New Hampshire , Stewartstown New Hampshire, Dix's Grant New Hampshire, Second College Grant New Hampshire, Colebrook New Hampshire, Dixville New Hampshire, Columbia New Hampshire, Erving's Location New Hampshire, Wentworth's Location New Hampshire, Odell New Hampshire, Millsfield New Hampshire, Errol New Hampshire, Stratford New Hampshire, Dummer New Hampshire, Cambridge New Hampshire, Stark New Hampshire, Milan New Hampshire, Northumberland New Hampshire, Kilkenny New Hampshire, Berlin New Hampshire, Success New Hampshire, Lancaster New Hampshire, Dalton New Hampshire, Whitefiled New Hampshire

*New Hampshire Route 145 (abbreviated NH 145) is a 13.12 mile long north–south state highway in Coos County in northern New Hampshire. The highway runs between Colebrook and Pittsburg.  The highway passes through the town of Clarksville.

 

*U.S. Route 3 is a north-south United States highway that runs from Cambridge, Massachusetts through New Hampshire near Connecticut Lake at the Canadian border, where the road continues north as Québec Autoroute 257.

In New Hampshire parts of US 3 are known as the Daniel Webster Highway. From Burlington, Massachusetts to Nashua, New Hampshire, US 3 is a freeway (the 6.7 miles in New Hampshire are a free portion of the Everett Turnpike). A second freeway portion exists in northern New Hampshire, where US 3 utilizes the Franconia Notch Parkway and a short segment of Interstate 93, before proceeding on two-lane roads north to the border with Canada.  Massachusetts Route 3 continues beyond Boston to Cape Cod, but has never been part of US 3.

 

*Route 26 is a multi-state state highway in the New England region of the United States. It runs from Portland, Maine north and northwest via Errol, New Hampshire to Lemington, Vermont. The number was assigned in 1922 as part of the New England Interstate Routes (also known as the Dixville Notch Way), and, other than being extended from U.S. Route 3 into Vermont, the route has changed little since then.

 

New Hampshire Route 16 (abbreviated NH 16) is a 149.75 mile long north–south highway in the U.S. state of New Hampshire. Much of its length is close to the border with Maine. NH 16 is the main route from the Seacoast region north to the Lakes Region and the White Mountains. The section from Portsmouth to Milton is a controlled-access toll highway known as the Spaulding Turnpike. Between the Portsmouth Circle and Dover Point, US 4 is also routed along the Turnpike. The northern section of Route 16 is called the White Mountain Highway.

Route 16 is at the Portsmouth Circle, intersecting with Interstate 95 and the US 1 Bypass. The northern Maine state line in Wentworth's Location, it becomes Maine State Route 16.

There are three secondary state routes related to Route 16. Two loops from NH 16 are designated as New Hampshire Route 16A, and the northern NH 16A connects to both ends of the New Hampshire Route 16B loop.

 

New Hampshire Route 110 (abbreviated NH 110) is a 24.78 mile long east–west state highway in Coos County, northern New Hampshire. The road winds through the scenic, mountainous country of New Hampshire north of the White Mountain National Forest. NH 110 is locally named the Berlin-Groveton Highway.

Eastern NH 110 in Berlin at New Hampshire Route 16 (White Mountain Road). Western NH 110 is at U.S. Route 3 in the village of Groveton, town of Northumberland, on the Connecticut River.

 

New Hampshire Route 110A (abbreviated NH 110A) is a 3.89 mile long connector road in the town of Milan, north of Berlin.  NH 110A is locally named Cedar Pond Road.

NH 110A is at New Hampshire Route 16 (White Mountain Road) 12 miles (19.3 km) north of Berlin. New Hampshire Route 110 11.2 miles (18 km) northwest of Berlin.

 

New Hampshire Route 116 (abbreviated NH 116) is a 48.62 mile long east–west highway in northern New Hampshire. NH 116 is a scenic rural highway stretching from Haverhill, which lies along the Connecticut River, to Jefferson, in the White Mountains Region.

NH 116 is U.S. Route 2 (the Presidential Highway) in Jefferson. The highway winds southwest through the towns of Whitefield and Bethlehem to Littleton, then turns south, concurrent with NH 18, to the village of Franconia. The road then runs southwest through Easton to NH 112, then turns west to reach its western area. Major intersections include Interstate 93 and U.S. Route 3. The western area is in North Haverhill at the junction with New Hampshire Route 10, which runs north and south along the Connecticut River.

All information in this web including links are subject to errors, omissions, withdrawal and changes without notice.  Maps are not to scale.

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