The Sugar River is a 27.0-mile-long (43.5 km)[1] river located in western New Hampshire in the United States. It is a tributary of the Connecticut River, which flows to Long Island Sound.
Sugar River | |
---|---|
Location | |
Country | United States |
State | New Hampshire |
County | Sullivan |
Towns and city | Sunapee, Newport, Claremont |
Physical characteristics | |
Source | Lake Sunapee |
• location | Sunapee |
• coordinates | 43°23′8″N 72°4′52″W / 43.38556°N 72.08111°W |
• elevation | 1,093 ft (333 m) |
Mouth | Connecticut River |
• location | Claremont |
• coordinates | 43°24′7″N 72°23′57″W / 43.40194°N 72.39917°W |
• elevation | 292 ft (89 m) |
Length | 27.0 mi (43.5 km) |
Basin features | |
Tributaries | |
• left | Trask Brook, South Branch Sugar River, Cutts Brook, Quabbinight Brook |
• right | Tucker Brook, Long Pond Brook, North Branch Sugar River, Dodge Brook, Kimball Brook, Ram Brook, Peabody Brook, Grandy Brook, Stevens Brook, Redwater Brook, Walker Brook |
The Sugar River originates at the outlet of Lake Sunapee in the town of Sunapee, New Hampshire. The river flows west through the town of Newport and the city of Claremont. It reaches the Connecticut across from the village of Ascutney, Vermont. Numerous falls and steep drops on the Sugar River have led to hydro-powered industrial development. Besides the large mill towns of Claremont and Newport, hydro-related developments occur in the villages of Sunapee, Wendell, Guild, and West Claremont. An inactive railroad known as the Concord to Claremont Line follows the Sugar River from Wendell to the river's mouth.
Tributaries of the Sugar River include the South Branch, entering in Newport, and the North Branch, entering between Newport and North Newport.
History
editThe upper Connecticut River valley is the ancestral home of the Abenaki people. A significant prehistoric native american site, the Hunter Archeological Site, is located at a series of terraces near the mouth of the Sugar River.
In popular culture
editIn the 1906 best-selling novel Coniston, "Coniston Water" was based on the Sugar River.[2]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ New Hampshire GRANIT state geographic information system
- ^ Henderson, Brooks. Winston Churchill's Country, The Bookman (New York), August 1915, pp. 607, 617