How old is derry




















Question 6. The man who locked himself in the room died because a a picture fell on his head b he slipped over a banana peel c a donkey kicked him to death d a bus ran over him. Question 7. Question 8. Question 9. Question No one liked to look at him. Why was Derry startled? What draws Derry towards Lamb? What specific things about Mr. Lamb does Derry notice? Why did Mr.

Lamb not have curtains in his house? Why was Derry startled entering the garden? Lamb d none. How was Mr. Lamb happy inspite of his disability? How the meeting With Mr. Lamb became a turning point for Derry?

Why did Derry develop an inferiority complex? Why even inspite of physical disability Mr. Lamb did not feel lonely? Where was Mr. Which story did Mr. This uninhabited frontier land had previously been named Nutfield because of its many nut trees and wide expanse of marshy grasslands.

On April 11, , the sixteen families finally arrived at their new homes and knelt in prayer on the shores of Beaver Lake to thank God for giving them this land. Here they could raise their families, and live free from cultural, economic and religious oppression. In they appealed to the royal government in Portsmouth to became a town. They threw off the old name of Nutfield and instead called their new town Londonderry - after their old home in Northern Ireland.

This land included what is now the towns of Windham, Derry and Londonderry as well as portions of Salem, Manchester and Hudson. Here on their common field they planted what is claimed to be the first crop of potatoes in North America. To make money, almost every home had a patch of flax growing in their yards.

From every house could be heard the sounds of looms making cloth. Their linen was sold all over New England. Soon however, weavers from other towns were making linen of inferior quality and claiming it was real, honest-to-goodness Londonderry Linen. Londonderry Linen is claimed to be the first trade-marked product in America. During the Revolutionary War, the overwhelming majority of the townsfolk were decidedly on the side of the patriot cause. Men from our Town served first at Bunker Hill and continued on bravely to the end of the war at Yorktown.

There were a few from our town who remained loyal to the king. Foremost of these Tories was Colonel Stephen Holland who, while serving as our selectmen, was actually a major British spy. During the years since , our men and women have fought in a dozen wars. From the time of the French and Indian War, the Civil War and onto the current conflicts against terrorism, our sons and daughters have fought bravely and with pride. Too many of these warriors did not survive to return to Derry and grow old surrounded by friends and family in their hometown.

Throughout the 18th century, pieces of the original Nutfield grant broke away to form separate towns. In there were efforts made to separate the remaining area into 2 separate towns.

There was considerable agitation both for and against the split. Finally, after much political rancor and ill will, the division was approved by the state government and signed into law on July 2, A new town was born which took the name of Derry - the original name of Londonderry in Northern Ireland which means a hill covered with oak trees. The town maintained an agriculture-based economy until when Colonel William Pillsbury began shoe factories in the Broadway section of Town.

Prior to Pillsbury, that part of Derry was home to a single store, a hotel, a lumber mill, 5 houses and a railroad depot. As the decades passed, Broadway began a remarkable growth because of the booming shoe factories.

Soon the streets in western Derry were lined with new stores, churches and houses. Trolley lines were built to connect Derry to Manchester and Chester. One of our shoe factories claimed to be the longest wooden building in the country!

The H. Hood Co. Each year millions of shoes were manufactured in Derry and shipped to 5 continents. During the early 20th century, the shoe industry began to move to the southern states and the Hood Company moved its operations to Massachusetts. In , the last of our Broadway shoe factories was destroyed in a fire. More and more of our working men and women were now forced to drive to Manchester or to Massachusetts to find employment.

A few of our local stores and apartment buildings actually closed and were boarded up. The population of Derry from to remained relatively unchanged as too many of our young people decided against remaining in Derry. They saw their futures lying in other towns.



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