New Hampshire Tea Rooms
From Mystic Tea Room
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== Hampton Beach == | == Hampton Beach == | ||
- | [[File:Garlands-Fairview-Tea-Room-Hampton-Beach-Postcard-Front.jpg|center|thumb|600px|Garlands Fairview Tea Room, Hampton Beach, New Hampshire postcard front.]] | + | [[File:Garlands-Fairview-Tea-Room-Hampton-Beach-Postcard-Front.jpg|center|thumb|600px|Garlands Fairview Tea Room, Fairview Hotel, Hampton Beach, New Hampshire postcard front.]] |
- | [[File:Rocky-Bend-Tea-Room-Hampton-Beach-NH-exterior-postcard-front.jpg|center|thumb|600px| | + | [[File:Rocky-Bend-Tea-Room-Hampton-Beach-NH-exterior-postcard-front.jpg|center|thumb|600px|The Rocky Bend Tea Room, Hampton Beach, New Hampshire postcard front.]] |
== Manchester == | == Manchester == |
Revision as of 08:00, 30 October 2020
New Hampshire State Tea Room Gallery, in alphabetical order by name of city or town.
Contents |
Hampton Beach
Manchester
Portsmouth
![](/w/images/thumb/a/a5/Colonial-Tea-Room-Rockingham-Hotel-Portsmouth-NH-interior-postcard-front.jpg/600px-Colonial-Tea-Room-Rockingham-Hotel-Portsmouth-NH-interior-postcard-front.jpg)
Colonial Tea Room. Rockingham Hotel, Portsmouth, New Hampshire, interior, postcard front, George Q. Patee, proprietor. The date of 1784 in the description of the room indicates that this was a "theme" tea room, evoking a time period about 130 years before the photo was taken. The Rockingham Hotel was built in 1885 in the Colonial Revival style. The tea room, however, preserves the dining room of an earlier building that once occupied the site, the 1784 home of Woodbury Langdon, a locally prominent merchant and politician. The building still stands and has been converted to condominiums. The tea room is a restaurant at the present time.
Sandwich
catherine yronwode
curator, historian, and docent
The Mystic Tea Room