New Hampshire Slanguage: Hoodsie

To New Hampshirites, and other New Englangers, a “hoodsie” is a cup of ice cream.  This year it is turning 65 years of age. [70 in 2018].

This word, “hoodsie” that originated around the end of World War II, is taken directly from a local producer of milk products, including ice cream–H.P. Hood & Sons.

H.P. Hood & Sons was founded in 1846 in Charlestown MA by Harvey Perley Hood. The company started off as a milk delivery business, and branched off into milk-related products later.  Harvey Hood had his farm in Derry New Hampshire.  There isn’t much left to it now, and if rumors are correct, it’s site is now a Chinese restaurant.
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Derry, Rockingham County, New Hampshire Educator & Library Trustee: Mary Harriett (Day) Low (1868-1957)

A 36-year-old Mary Harriett Day, also known as “Hattie” peers out at you from this

Mary Harriett Day Low Derry NH teacher

Photograph of Mary Harriett (Day) Low of Derry NH. She was a school teacher and 50 year trustee of the Derry Public Library.

circa 1904 photograph.  She was unmarried at the time the photograph was taken, and probably a school teacher in the Derry-Londonderry area.  Within a year she would wed one of the local men, Benjamin Franklin Low, a prosperous businessman and farmer, with whom she would begin a family.
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Manchester New Hampshire’s Michael Prout: He put the ‘Prout’ in ‘Prout Park’

Michael Prout from "The Mirror's Pictorial Manchester 1846-1896."

Michael Prout from “The Mirror’s Pictorial Manchester 1846-1896,” John B. Clarke Co., Manchester NH, 1896.

Michael Prout was an English farmer’s son, born 24 Feb 1824 in Plymouth, Devon, England.  It is not known what influenced his immigration to the United States, that  occurred about 1845.  What is definitively known is that Michael Prout was living and working in Manchester, Hillsborough County, New Hampshire as early as 1846 when he is shown in the city directory with his occupation as ‘car'(penter).  Ten years later in 1856 the directory shows his industriousness: “Prout, Michael brewer, 16 Elm, board 4 do.”  This would seem to indicate that the vicinity of the current Blessed Sacrament church and rectory was his residence and brewery.
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1844: How a Yankee Weathervane Caused a Chinese Riot

Another New Hampshire Blogger, Heather Wilkinson Rojo of Nutfield Genealogy, inspired this story.  Her photographic collection of weather vanes and the stories that go with them  caused me to ponder the importance of these metal spire ornaments in our state’s history.  It is obvious that they were essential to the farmer and the sea captain in predicting the weather.  However, nowadays they seem more decorative than predictive.

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Prominent Events in Early America (and New Hampshire) History

PROMINENT EVENTS  in Early America, New England and New Hampshire (including the American Revolution)

The following was gleaned from the History of Barnstead NH from its first settlement in 1727 to 1872, by Jeremiah P. Jewett, Lowell Mass., Marden & Rowell, printers; 1872; page 208

Print from History of Barnstead NH from its first settlement in 1727 to 1872, by Jeremiah P. Jewett, Lowell Mass., Marden & Rowell, printers; 1872; page 10

Print from History of Barnstead NH from its first settlement in 1727 to 1872, by Jeremiah P. Jewett, Lowell Mass., Marden & Rowell, printers; 1872; page 10

1492 — Columbus discovered America.

1586 — Sir Francis Drake visited the New England shores.

1600 — Canada was settled by the French.

1607 — Virginia was settled by the English.

1614 — Capt. John Smith explored this part of the New World.
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