If you’re like me, your grandparents, and maybe even your parents, came to New Hampshire from Canada. I still remember my Grandmother telling me how she moved to New Hampshire from a farm in Quebec, and how she worked in the manufacturing mills as a teenager. Because so many French people immigrated here during the industrial revolution, New Hampshire had lots of cities and towns that began forming neighborhoods nicknamed “Little Canadas.” The French had a huge influence on the heritage and culture of many families, and our website is proud to feature a brand new Franco-American Itinerary that’s designed for folks who want to explore their French heritage in New Hampshire.
Amoskeag Manufacturing Company, looking up the Merrimack River, Manchester, NH; from a 1911 postcard by Alphonso H. Sanborn. Electronic Source: Wikipedia
The tour is centered in Manchester, as the Queen City was once home to the largest mill complex in the world, the Amoskeag Manufacturing Company. It features dining establishments that offer classic French dishes on their menus, organizations that center on educating visitors about the Franco-American culture in New Hampshire, and other points of interest directly related to the influence that the French-Canadians had in the Granite State.
Although the itinerary centers on Manchester, there are many other communities throughout New Hampshire that still carry remnants of a strong Franco-American presence within their architecture, their restaurants, and most of all, their people.
I love the Currier Museum of Art because it has on display New Hampshire’s foremost collection of world class American and European art including works by Monet, Picasso, O’Keefe, Remington, Saint-Gaudens, and NH’s own Aponovich to mention just a few of the many artists.
Please check out the Currier blog and my entry from 12/17/2010. Kind of makes you want to visit the Museum, doesn’t it.
As a docent for the Frank Lloyd Wright Usonian designed Zimmerman House tours, I highly recommend you include in your visit a tour of the Zimmerman House with me as your guide. I tell a lot of the guests who visit the house that I would move in tomorrow but often ponder where I would put my flat screen TV. The House tours take place between April and December and reservations for this tour are highly recommended. Viewing this short video will entice you even more to want to schedule your tour of the Zimmerman House:
The Currier’s Gift Shop has that unusual gift that is just right for any occasion. I am also a volunteer at the gift shop and enjoy interacting with all of the museum guests that visit the shop.
Are you looking for a new place to enjoy a quiet lunch? The Winter Garden Café at the Currier is where I have enjoyed a cup of fresh soup or chowder, a Caesar salad with freshly sliced chicken, or a selection of cheese and crackers. The dessert selection will certainly temp you. Entrance to the Café for lunch is free.
Visit www.currier.org for a schedule of the hours and days that the Museum is open or call 603-669-6144.
DIRECTIONS: I-293 to Exit 6—Amoskeag Bridge. Bear right and cross the bridge following signs for US Route 3 to Elm Street. At Elm Street traffic light, cross Elm and go 0.4 miles to Beech Street. Turn right on Beech and go 0.5 miles. The Museum will be on your left.
The Franco American Centre has a really interesting exhibit in their art gallery. The exhibit is called "Manchester By Bed" because the artist, Erwan LeBot, Googled Manchester on the internet from his home in France, and downloaded actual real-time photos of our Queen City. From these pictures, he painted a collection of watercolor paintings. That is the basis of his exhibit which will be on view until the end of December. It is definitely worth a visit!
Looking for more Franco-American activities? Check out the Franco-American Heritage Tour in Manchester, NH, which includes a stop at the Franco American Centre!