Misplaced Pages

Ham Branch

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

The Gale River is a 13.1-mile-long (21.1 km) tributary of the Ammonoosuc River in northwestern New Hampshire in the United States . Via the Ammonoosuc, it is part of the watershed of the Connecticut River , which flows to Long Island Sound .

#869130

3-935: The Ham Branch of the Gale River is a 12.2-mile-long (19.6 km) river in northwestern New Hampshire in the United States . Via the Gale River, it is a tributary of the Ammonoosuc River and part of the Connecticut River watershed . The Ham Branch rises in the town of Easton and flows north through a valley at the western base of the Kinsman Range of the White Mountains . The river collects such tributaries as Reel Brook, Slide Brook, and Coppermine Brook before joining

6-672: The Gale River flows thence generally westwardly. Returning to Franconia, the river collects the Ham Branch , its most significant tributary , then passes through Sugar Hill to Lisbon , where it joins the Ammonoosuc River. The 1816 State map of New Hampshire calls the Gale River the "South Branch of the Ammonoosuck River". It may have received its local name because it flowed through the Gale Farm, as shown in

9-750: The Gale River in the village of Franconia . New Hampshire Route 116 follows the Ham Branch for nearly its entire course. This article related to a river in New Hampshire is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Gale River The Gale River flows for its entire length in Grafton County . It rises in the White Mountains in the town of Franconia as two short, northward-flowing streams: its North Branch and its South Branch . The two streams join in Bethlehem , and

#869130