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| Looking into Brattleboro, Vermont from the west end of NH 119. |
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| East end of one of the two bridges spanning the Connecticut River. The state line and west end of NH 119 is at the other end of this bridge. The state line is along the west shore of the river. Brattleboro Vermont is in the background. |
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| Looking east (south) into Massachusetts from the east end of NH 119. |
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| Last Massachusetts reassurance marker just before the road enters New Hampshire and becomes NH 119 westbound. |
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| State line signs at NH 119's east end. There's slight confusion where Massachusetts and New Hampshire think the state line is, and which New Hampshire town you are entering. The first (rightmost and southernmost) sign is a typical New Hampshire state line sign, which says you are entering the town of New Ipswich. Further north is a typical Massachusetts town line sign, which it also places at state lines. It says you are entering Rindge NH. Notice it is north of where NH planted its state line sign. The next sign is the first NH 119 reassurance shield, and the thin green sign after it marks the New Ipswich/Rindge town line. NH 119 just barely clips the corner of the town of New Ipswich. |
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Granite marker (with an 1896 date) and an old stone wall marks the state line
which crosses the road at an angle. The seam on the pavement lines up almost
perfectly with the stone wall. The NH state line marker appears to be just
barely in Massachusetts, but the Massachusetts state line marker (partially
visible to the left) is well into New Hampshire. The granite marker is the triple point of Massachusetts, Rindge NH and New Ipswich NH. While northbound the time you spend in New Ipswich is short, when southbound it's much shorter. |