Nashua Attractions and landmarks continued...
World-Class Heritage Abounds
Nashua’s attractions and landmarks are wonderfully expressive of our distinctive local heritage spanning some 325 years of history. The bells made for the grand 1893 Columbian Exposition in Chicago are here in Nashua, have you looked upon them? Portions of the famed American Civil War ironclad USS Monitor were manufactured in Nashua, have you seen the monument?; The last American standing on Bunker Hill, Col. Ebenezer Bancroft, rests in the Old South Burial Ground, have you visited his headstone?
Nashua Public Library (The Hunt Room Archives)
State of NH Department of Travel and Tourism
Locations of Selected Heritage Landmarks:
The 1889 Nashua Soldiers & Sailors Monument at Monument Square (at intersection of Amherst & Concord Streets)
The 1802 Abbot-Spalding House (Homestead of Daniel Abbot-Father of Nashua) (at 5 Abbott Street)
The Nashua Historical Society Museum (at 5 Abbott Street)
La Dame & Child de Notre Renaissance Francais Statue, at Le Parc de Notre Renaissance Francais on Water Street. (at north side of Water Street)
The President John F. Kennedy Monument at City Hall Plaza. (at 231 Main Street)
Indian Head Sculpture Columns at former 1926 Indian Head Bank Bldg by Angelo Luialdi. (at 146 Main Street)
The 1903 Hunt Memorial Library Building by Ralph Adams Cram (6 Main Street)
The Mary Parker Nutt Memorial “1893 World’s Fair” Chimes at the First Congregational Church (at 1 Concord Street)
The 1898 Nashua National Fish Hatchery (Exit 6, 151 Broad Street)
The 1896 St. Francis Xavier Church Building by Chickering & O’Connell (at 41 Chandler Street)
The Hassell Family Massacre Monument/Site at Almont Street upon Salmon Brook. The 1867 Nashua Manufacturing Co. Clock Tower. (at 2 Clocktower Place)
The 1826 Unitarian Church Building by Asher Benjamin (at 58 Lowell Street)
The 1835 Nashua Cemetery (at 58 Lowell Street)
The Old South Burial Ground & 1848 Schoolhouse (at Daniel Webster Highway South)
The Hannah Dustin / John Lovewell House Monument on Allds Street (at intersection of Allds & Fifield Strrets)
The USS Monitor / Nashua Iron Co. Monument on East Hollis Street (at 21 East Hollis Street)
The 19th century mansions of Concord Street (from 1 Concord Street to Greeley Park)