@@ew921 hey kid, you should probably not post your exact school or the address of the school anywhere online. Nothing will come from it I bet, but on the off chance someone wants to pull a wicked mean prank, that could make your school a target. Maybe think about deleting the school name and address, and maybe not post it again until you finish school? Hope you’re doing good in classes&stay active in any extra school activities you like! Oh, &remember, a Bully is only a bully until they get hit hard enough.
You are absolutely correct w the extreme beauty assumption as there is so much from the Atlantic Ocean coastline to the White Mountains. Toss in that it's a short trip to Boston or Maine, and NH has much to offer.
New Hampshire: one of the most important primaries in determining presidential candidates Also New Hampshire: has produced only one president, and even he was a dud
1976 Gerald Ford 1980, 1984 Ronald Reagan 1988 George H. W. Bush 1992, 1996 Bill Clinton 2000 George W. Bush 2004 John Kerry 2008, 2012 Barack Obama 2016 Hillary Clinton 2020 Joe Biden Donald Trump lost New Hampshire in 2016 by less than 10,000 votes.
@@WalkmanYT it’s NH voting history as we’re usually republican but in the last 3 elections we voted Democrat but we still have that Florida of the north ideas
New Hampshire has always been a policy-focused state on the local level, but straight ticket voting on the federal level has really hurt our reputation.
As a NH person, i don’t remember singing the song i was so young when i had to move away from N.H. but i know the song is the National state song the background music has to be my favorite part
The itinerant music teacher Miss Morse would make sure every year that we relearned it (mid 1960s, Straw School). She would also always insist that we get the rhythm right on "Dear-old. Granite. State," which the singer here does not.
I've been all over the state, and I don't recognize the town at the beginning. It's definitely larger than Keene, but smaller than Nashua... can someone help me with this?
@@ColonelOsonzOfficial Nope, it's Nashua. I was close, you can tell by the church with city hall in the background. Our cities are all pretty distinct, I just haven't spent much time in the south. You can absolutely tell Dover from Rochester, or Berlin from Littleton. They all have their own personalities.
By definition, an oxymoron is when two words following each other in a conjunction appear to directly contrast each other ("Old New Hampshire", "bittersweet", that Simon and Garfunkel song "The Sounds of Silence", "small crowd"). :)