Using funds provided by a N.H. Division of Historical Resources’ Conservation License Plate Grant, the Town of Plymouth was able to restore a caisson that supports a Revolutionary War-era cannon captured by General John Stark from British troops in 1777 at the Battle of Bennington—a turning point during the Revolutionary War. You can visit them in front of the town hall in downtown Plymouth. (The DHR is part of the N.H. Department of Natural & Cultural Resources.)
Blanding’s turtles, a species native to New England, are critically imperiled and face conservation threats due to road mortality, alteration and loss of terrestrial and nesting habitats, and more. But thanks to funding assistance from NH State Conservation Committee Moose Plate Grants, New Hampshire Fish & Game is able to do valuable research work to help protect the Blanding’s turtle, along with other species native to the Granite State.
The 445-acre Piscassic Greenway’s four-mile-long trail system in Newfields and Newmarket has long been popular with outdoor enthusiasts of all kinds. A $150,000 Land & Community Heritage Investment Program grant helped the Southeast Land Trust of New Hampshire add 32 acres to the Greenway (after an unprecedented increase in use) to preserve the sweeping views from the trail system and strengthen important water quality and wildlife habitat protection.
To counter the decline of pollinator habitat, 20 pollinator habitat sites were installed to demonstrate innovative approaches to converting sites, landowner workshops were held, and pollinator habitats on Cheshire County farms were inventoried to better understand the impacts of native pollinators.
Fuller Public Library in Hillsborough received a N.H. State Council on the Arts’ Conservation License Plate Grant to restore its historic hand-painted ceilings. The ornate hand-painted designs were carefully restored to revive the beauty and elegance of these decorative features, originally commissioned in the late 19th century by the building’s former owner, New Hampshire Governor John B. Smith. (The Arts Council is part of the N.H. Department of Natural & Cultural Resources.)
The Trust for Public Land received funding from the NH State Conservation Committee Moose Plate grant and the Land & Community Heritage Investment Program to purchase a conservation easement on over 275 acres in Pearl and Sons Farm in Loudon, NH. The easement will forever prevent subdivision and development, maintaining the land’s role as a working farm.
A grant was awarded to the Fiske Free Library to stabilize Historical Reference Materials through the purchase of archival-quality products.