Submitted by Lucky-Specialist-790 t3_11lv5w1 in vermont
[deleted] t1_jbedr32 wrote
New Hampshire has always had much larger scale industry than Vermont due to having ocean ports, being proximate to Boston, and having much gentler topography in the southern part of the state. This led to the development of larger cities like Manchester and Nashua, then the development of large suburbs in the mid-20th century.
There’s a great Brave Little State episode that really gets in the weeds on this topic.
Sudden_Dragonfly2638 t1_jbeks85 wrote
I think this is the one you're referring to. Talks about how geology has affected the development of VT and NH.
igneousigneous t1_jbero6m wrote
You beat me to it! Thanks for dropping the link!
[deleted] t1_jbeo4jb wrote
Correct!
[deleted] t1_jbg1m6o wrote
[deleted]
inbetweenthestrings t1_jbgyjzl wrote
Yes! Such a good episode :)
Salty_Charlemagne t1_jbfarud wrote
Thanks for a more in-depth answer than just "Boston suburbs," which is certainly true today but not 100 years ago. Your answer does a much better job of explaining it historically!
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