Biggest cities in New Hampshire 150 years ago

Group of mill workers seated for portrait
Everett Collection // Shutterstock

Biggest cities in New Hampshire 150 years ago

After the completion of the 1860 census and the election of President Abraham Lincoln, America imploded. Eleven southern states seceded from the Union in 1861, instigating four bloody years of the Civil War and fundamentally altering the social history of the U.S. The estimates of deaths caused by the Civil War begin around 600,000, but some claim as many as 750,000 individuals died throughout the conflict.

With so many families looking for a new start after combat finally ended and approximately 4 million Black Americans emancipated from slavery, it was time for many Americans to look for a new home to put down roots. The obvious choice for many was to move west, where there was more land to buy, settle, and cultivate. Many traveled by covered wagon, spending months on the dusty trail. Others who could afford better accommodations took a 25-day ride by stagecoach. All of them picked new cities and towns to make their homes, spreading the U.S. population more evenly across different states and territories.

On May 10, 1869, the first transcontinental railroad route across the United States was completed, ushering in a new era of transportation. The project was completed ahead of schedule and under budget, though with the loss of many lives, including those of the many Irish and Chinese immigrants hired to work 12-hour days in the hot western sun. Riding by steam engine, passengers could cross the entire country in four days, enabling waves of Americans and immigrants to quickly occupy land that would otherwise take months to settle.

The years of Civil War reconstruction, coupled with wagon, stagecoach, and railroad passengers finding new lives across the U.S., made the urban development reflected in the 1870 census incredibly interesting. Stacker compiled a list of the biggest cities in New Hampshire from 150 years ago using data from the U.S. Census Bureau. By transcribing Table XXV of the Ninth Census of the U.S. it's easy to explore what the urban landscape looked like less than a decade after the end of the Civil War as America healed and grew.

The largest city in New Hampshire ranked #56 among all cities nationwide in 1870. Of the 100 largest cities in the U.S., 1 was in New Hampshire. Keep reading to find out more about the historic metropolitan landscape in your home state or check out the data on your own on our site, GitHub, or data.world.

Large trees shading dirt road on residential street
Detroit Publishing Company // Library of Congress

#12. Lebanon, Grafton County

- Total population: 3,094 (#1,382 nationwide)

--- Male population: 1,538

--- Female population: 1,556

--- Child population, ages 5-18: 750

Farrier shoeing a horse with blacksmith and two other men standing nearby.
Underwood Archives // Getty Images

#11. Gilford, Belknap County

- Total population: 3,361 (#1,172 nationwide)

--- Male population: 1,599

--- Female population: 1,762

--- Child population, ages 5-18: 735

Men on steps of rural General Store
Underwood Archives // Getty Images

#10. Exeter, Rockingham County

- Total population: 3,437 (#1,109 nationwide)

--- Male population: 1,574

--- Female population: 1,863

--- Child population, ages 5-18: 913

Waiters and waitresses pose for a group picture
Bettmann // Getty Images

#9. Claremont, Sullivan County

- Total population: 4,053 (#786 nationwide)

--- Male population: 1,836

--- Female population: 2,217

--- Child population, ages 5-18: 955

Horse and wagon outside general store
Minnesota Historical Society/Corbis via Getty Images

#8. Rochester, Strafford County

- Total population: 4,103 (#764 nationwide)

--- Male population: 2,110

--- Female population: 1,993

--- Child population, ages 5-18: 1,096

Group of young women out for a trip in a horse drawn Surrey
Transcendental Graphics // Getty Images

#7. Somersworth, Strafford County

- Total population: 4,504 (#647 nationwide)

--- Male population: 1,909

--- Female population: 2,595

--- Child population, ages 5-18: 1,214

Man standing in door of ice cream parlor
Minnesota Historical Society/Corbis via Getty Images

#6. Keene, Cheshire County

- Total population: 5,971 (#384 nationwide)

--- Male population: 2,910

--- Female population: 3,061

--- Child population, ages 5-18: 1,406

Postman delivers mail by horsedrawn carriage
Vintage Images // Getty Images

#5. Portsmouth, Rockingham County

- Total population: 9,211 (#212 nationwide)

--- Male population: 4,236

--- Female population: 4,975

--- Child population, ages 5-18: 2,259

Men standing next to horse drawn carriages in front of shops
American Stock/ClassicStock // Getty Images

#4. Dover, Strafford County

- Total population: 9,294 (#211 nationwide)

--- Male population: 4,354

--- Female population: 4,940

--- Child population, ages 5-18: 2,111

Men and women sitting with bicycles in park.
Chicago History Museum // Getty Images

#3. Nashua, Hillsborough County

- Total population: 10,543 (#168 nationwide)

--- Male population: 4,715

--- Female population: 5,828

--- Child population, ages 5-18: 2,453

Woman seated in horse drawn carriage with three people standing
H. Armstrong Roberts/ClassicStock // Getty Images

#2. Concord, Merrimack County

- Total population: 12,241 (#137 nationwide)

--- Male population: 6,073

--- Female population: 6,168

--- Child population, ages 5-18: 2,816

Group of mill workers seated for portrait
Universal History Archive/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

#1. Manchester, Hillsborough County

- Total population: 23,536 (#56 nationwide)

--- Male population: 10,475

--- Female population: 13,061

--- Child population, ages 5-18: 5,694

Originally published on stacker.com, part of the BLOX Digital Content Exchange.

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