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Hill, New Hampshire Relocated: The Socio-Economic Impact of Regional Flood Control on a Small Community

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 May 2017

Steven P. Adler
Affiliation:
Institute of Environmental and Natural Resources, University of New Hampshire
Edmund F. Jansen Jr.
Affiliation:
Institute of Environmental and Natural Resources, University of New Hampshire
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Extract

This paper is a scenario of a decentralized land-use planning effort in a small New England community which faced extinction as a result of the construction of a flood control dam and reservoir in 1940. It reports on a study that was specifically designed to take a retrospective look at the social, political, and economic parameters from the pre-relocation period to post relocation. Also, social-psychological impacts were measured through an attitudinal study of the relocated and non-relocated populations of Hill.

Type
Land Use
Copyright
Copyright © Northeastern Agricultural and Resource Economics Association 

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Footnotes

Published as Scientific Contribution No. 937, N.H. Agr. Exp. Station.

References

1. Adler, S. P. and Jansen, E. F. Jr. Hill Reestablishment: Retrospective Community Study of a Relocated New England Town. Institute for Water Resources, U. S. Corps of Engineers, Fort Belvoir, Va. 1978.Google Scholar
2. Clark, Frederick P. The New Village of Hill, New Hampshire. New Hampshire State Planning and Development Commission. Concord, N. H. 1942.Google Scholar
3. Rogers, George. Effects of Flood Control Projects on Agriculture. Station Bulletin 449. Agricultural Experiment Station, University of New Hampshire, Durham, April, 1958.Google Scholar
4. Stiles, Don The Story of Hill, New Hampshire. The Sugar Bowl Press, Concord, N. H. 1942.Google Scholar
5. Town Reports. Alexandria, Danbury and Hill, New Hampshire. 1940–75.Google Scholar