N E W H A M P S H I R E M AG A Z I N E
your Favorite Restaurants plan for winter The state's hospitality industry is hustling to keep you warm, welcome and well fed
november 2020
, t e S , y d Rea
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res ta u ran t s p l an f o r win t er
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nhmagazine.com | November 2020
from left: photos by jared charney, courtesy of loon mountain, by kendal j. bush; inset photos from left: courtesy of tuscan brands, by kendal j. bush, by jared charney, courtesy peacock tails lounge and illustration by brad fitzpatrick
Contents 40
First Things
50
November 2020
61
603 Navigator
603 Informer
10 Food & Drink
22 Culture
603 Living
4 Editor’s Note 6 Contributors Page 8 Feedback
Features 38 Transcript
Meet hypnotherapist Brandie Wells. by David Mendelsohn
40 What’s on the Menu
for Local Eateries?
Restauranting in the time of COVID-19 presents a series of challenges never seen before.
by Anders Morley photos by Jared Charney
50 It’s Snow Time!
Ski areas and resorts around the state are ready to open with new COVID-19 protocols and strategies designed to keep you safe — and on the trails — all winter long. Here’s what to expect. by Brion O’Connor
61 Best Lawyers
Each fall, professional polling firm Woodward/White produces “The Best Lawyers in America.” We’ve published the New Hampshire portion of the list, which includes more than 600 of the top legal minds. photos by Kendal J. Bush
Toscana italian chophouse in portsmouth
by Emily Heidt
14 Our Town Washington
by Barbara Radcliffe Rogers
18 Top Events
event roundup
the new hampshire tartan
by Anders Morley
27 Artistian
Gretchen Hill Woodman
by Susan Laughlin
and Service
by Emily Heidt
thanksgiving with the tuttles
by Emily Heidt
by Rebecca Tuttle
20 Sips
30 Blips
by Michael Hauptly-Pierce
by Casey McDermott
local drink news
90 Thirty Years of Stuffing
28 First Person
94 Health
delirium in hospital patients
by Karen A. Jamrog
nh in the news
96 Ayuh
32 Politics
peering into the future
by James Pindell
Thanksgiving on MArs
by Bill Burke
34 Good Cause
B
monadnock united way
by Bill Burke
36 What Do You Know? the dancing ladies
by Marshall Hudson
ON THE COVER Mount Sunapee and all your favorite resorts and ski areas are getting ready to open with new COVID-19 protocols. See what’s planned starting on page 50. Courtesy photo
Volume 34, Number 11 ISSN 1560-4949 nhmagazine.com | November 2020
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EDITOR’S NOTE
Maybe it’s the placement on the calendar between two holiday juggernauts, but there’s one annual celebration that is easy to forget, unless you are one of the millions of people for whom it was named.
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nhmagazine.com | November 2020
eterans Day began on November 11, 1918, as Armistice Day to commemorate the official end of the Great War. We now call it World War I, but, at the time, it must have seemed like something so bloody, terrible and costly could never happen again. That thought was embedded in the longer version of its name: “The War to End All Wars.” It’s such a hopeful and inaccurate title, but I don’t think people were naïve back then and I sure pray they aren’t now. Focusing the holiday on the veterans who have served in all our wars — hot, cold, swift or protracted — rather than on a specific armistice was a wise way to make sure that this day wouldn’t disappear into a historical memory hole. And the recognition of Veterans Day is a good way to support the brave souls who currently serve, and who will be the first to face any new conflicts that might ignite in our global tinderbox. Situating the holiday after Halloween — our peculiar national celebration of horror and death (OK, and candy) — and before Thanksgiving — our official salute to the blessings of home — seems weirdly appropriate. During war, a well-trained and -equipped military is all that keeps its horror away from the homeland. Sadly, the horrors of war often return home anyway, in the damaged bodies and afflicted memories of our soldiers. Thankfully, there are people who are helping to keep Veterans Day as a living event, not merely a parade of figures in uniforms of the past. Child psychologist and Hollis resident Laura Landerman-Garber took a cue from an old magazine story she found that encouraged sending cards with a handwritten note to military members stationed away from home. She got her family
and friends involved, using Veterans Day as a focal point to get the cards out in time for the holiday season. They had hit their annual stride when a family friend joined the Navy and they decided to collect cards for him and his shipmates. “We had no idea there were 5,000 sailors on that aircraft carrier,” says Landerman-Garber, “and 5,000 more on its support ships.” She knew this would require a lot of scaling up of the kitchen-table project, but that year they collected and mailed 17,000. The next year the number jumped to 50,000 and last year 175,000. Their efforts have been celebrated in national media, and Sen. Maggie Hassan read a tribute to Landerman-Garber’s work into the Congressional Record. Hassan and Sen. Jeanne Shaheen have since tapped her to create a year-round card program for vets who currently reside in VA hospitals. The impact of the project is illustrated by the touching, often heartrending responses she’s received from soldiers over the years, but also by the reactions of those who participate. She cites one card from a local 8-year-old from Hollis named Ashley that reads, “Dear Warrior, I am very lonely, but when someone loves me I feel better. How about I love you?” “And there’s the card that arrived from “someone way up north,” says Landerman-Garber. “It had a dollar in it and a note that said, ‘It’s not much but it may help.’ That’s so New Hampshire,” she says. With many schools working remotely now, she expects output to drop this year, but anyone wanting to help can learn more at militaryholidaycardchallenge.com and send cards to her at PO Box 103, Hollis, NH 03049.
photo by p.t. sullivan
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Contributors Anders Morley, who wrote the feature story “What’s on the Menu for Local Eateries?” and “Informer,” is a freelance writer and translator from New Hampshire. He divides his time between the Granite State and Canada, the latter of which is the subject of his first book, “This Land of Snow: A Journey Across the North in Winter.” Now available, it tells the story of a winter spent traveling alone on skis across northwestern Canada.
for November 2020
Photographer Kendal J. Bush took the photos for “Best Lawyers” and “Informer.” You can see more of her work at kendaljbush.com.
Writer and outdoor sports expert Brion O’Connor (pictured with his wife Lauri) wrote this month’s cover story “It’s Snow Time.”
New Hampshire Magazine contributing editor Bill Burke wrote “Ayuh” and “Good Cause.” He’s also the author of Disney World travel books.
Jared Charney’s work has appeared in numerous publications. He took the photos for “What’s on the Menu for Local Eateries?” and “Living.”
Local beer and spirits aficionado Michael Hauptly-Pierce is our regular “Sips” contributor and the cofounder of Lithermans Limited Brewery.
Author Rebecca Tuttle, who wrote “First Person,” grew up on “America’s Oldest Family Farm” in Dover. See more at rebeccatuttleauthor.com.
About | Behind The Scenes at New Hampshire Magazine Granite State Fashion Statements
You like us. You really like us. Or at least that’s how it seems after just a month in the T-shirt and branded merchandise business. We decided to take the plunge and have our team come up with some fun designs that let people know where you’re from (and maybe even what magazine you like to read) just to see if anyone was paying attention, and even before the issue was out we sold a batch of them. That kind of affirmation does good to the soul of a newly minted T-shirt artist, so after a trip back to the drawing board, our official merch team of Art Director John Goodwin and Contributing Editor Bill Burke (with input from others here) have unleashed a number of new designs. Check them out at nhmagazine.com/shop and let us know if you have any million-dollar ideas for cool fashion statements that can fit on a 100% cotton tee. If we use one of your ideas and it’s a hit, we’ll gladly set you up with some free merch, terms TBD.
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nhmagazine.com | November 2020
EMBRACE FIND YOUR COMFORT AND JOY
Make it an all day, open-air merry affair and revel in the various festivities this holiday season. Unwrap over 70 stores of tax-free shopping and savor delicious local food with one-of-a-kind menus. The whole family will enjoy the moment together.
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Send letters to Editor Rick Broussard, New Hampshire Magazine, 150 Dow St. Manchester, NH 03101 or email him at editor@nhmagazine.com.
Feedback
emails, snail mail, facebook, tweets
nhmagazine.com, facebook.com/NHMagazine & @nhmagazine
I recently came across a very beautiful story in your magazine about Alex Ray [of The Common Man Restaurants] written by Jack Kenny in 2019 [“The Common Man,” March 2019]. It was about his life and impressive accomplishments. The story fits right in with a project I am working on: a book about people who succeed in life after finding their strength and courage. I had wanted Ray to be one of my subjects, and after reading the article, I had all the information I needed. Thanks to you for letting me use it, and to Alex Ray as a student at the Culinary Institute of America Jack Kenny for in New Haven, Connecticut, writing it. when he was around 19. I am a retired high school English teacher who never thought of this project until my two oldest grandchildren began to have doubts about college and careers. I don’t want them to go through what I’d gone through in my early years, so I’m collecting stories of people who struggled and worked hard to achieve their goals. The people I’ve interviewed are fascinating and have unusual ideas that have helped them along the way, allowing them to make it where many others would have failed. For example, Ray was a handful in school, He was punished for his poor behavior and kept repeating his poor conduct until he finally matured. He struggled as an alcoholic and eventually worked his way out of that. His personality is unique, and he is willing to change when needed. I hope his story and the others I’ve collected can inspire this kind of change in many lives. I plan to donate copies to local high schools upon completion. Thank you for publishing Alex Ray’s wonderful story. It is quite special. Bobbie Lattig Manchester Editor’s Note: Send us a copy of your book when it’s complete. We’d love to see some of the other stories you found. 8
nhmagazine.com | November 2020
moose photos by tom thomson
Strength and Courage
Moose on the Loose
Above are photos I took this morning (September 24) on our tree farm on Mt. Cube of a large bull following a cow; the rutting season has begun. They both looked like they are in excellent condition. Feel free to share with your readers. Tom Thomson, Orford And two, you made me cry. I was happily reading “Wanted: Incredible Heroes” [“First Person,” September 2020] when suddenly I burst into tears. It was such an unexpected emotional response to a deeply touching story. Thank you for shining a light on hope and for giving me reason to believe that every generation is full of superheroes who are standing ready to bravely fight for what’s right: humanity. Kerrin Thompson New Hampton
Another Happy Newt Spotter
Thank you, the vase arrived today and it’s lovelier than I expected. This was the first time I’ve ever entered, although I look for the newt each month, so I was very surprised to be the winner. Thanks again. Barbara Trulson Exeter
Write On!
Two things, one, we’re in the process of converting Ernest Thompson’s “Write On Golden Pond” scriptwriting workshop to a virtual experience and are aiming for a November weekend workshop. Please pass this along to your readers if you can.
Editor’s Note: We passed your comments along to the author, Dan Szczesny. Full disclosure to readers, our editor attended Thompson’s workshop some years back and wrote a one-act play over the course of a weekend that was “almost” made into a movie. He remembers the experience as one of his most rewarding challenges. If you’re up for it, below are some details and info on how you might participate. Got a story to tell? Write it with an Oscar winner. Unlike other master classes, where you listen to legendary artists talk about their craft, at Ernest Thompson’s hands-on, total-immersion weekend writing workshop, you’ll create your own masterpiece, online this year. The Academy Award-winning author of the iconic film “On Golden Pond,” Thompson has encouraged hundreds of writers to finesse their storytelling skills. Now it’s your turn. Workshops take place November 6-8. ernestthompson.us/ workshops/writing.
Spot four newts like the one above (but much smaller) hidden on ads in this issue, tell us where you found them and you might win a great gift from a local artisan or company. To enter our drawing for Spot the Newt, send answers plus your name and mailing address to:
Spot the Newt c/o New Hampshire Magazine 150 Dow St., Manchester, NH 03101 Email them to newt@nhmagazine.com or fax them to (603) 624-1310. October’s “Spot the Newt” winner is Lucille Boutilette of Keene October issue newts were on pages 33, 39, 70 and 93.
BREWERY & TAPROOM 126B HALL ST., CONCORD, NH
WED-FRI 4-8 P.M. SAT 12-8 P.M. SUN 12-6 P.M. Outdoor and indoor seating available lithermans.beer (603) 219-0784
Subscribe today! nhmagazine.com/subscribe
NEED A GOOD REASON FOR SPOTTING THE NEWT?
This month’s lucky newt spotter will win a Tree of Life sun catcher (4 inches), made with healing stones, as well as a standalone tree statue (6 inches) made with silver-plated wire, healing stones, polished table slices and birch wood, from Tina’s Beauty Store of Wreaths in Salem. The company specializes in crafts and natural products and is a proud member of NH Made, the state’s official boosters of locally made products.
(877) 494-2036 Call or visit us to order.
Statement of Ownership Management and Circulation 1. 2. 3. 4.
Title: NEW HAMPSHIRE MAGAZINE Date of Filing: October 1, 2020 Frequency of Issue: Monthly except Jan/Feb and April/May – 10 Issues Location of known office of publication: 150 Dow Street, Manchester, NH 03101 5. Location of the headquarters or general business offices of the publishers: McLean Communications, LLC., 150 Dow Street, Manchester, NH 03101 6. Names and addresses of Publisher and Editor: Publisher – Ernesto Burden, 150 Dow Street, Manchester, NH 03101; Editor – Rick Broussard, 150 Dow Street, Manchester, NH 03101; Managing Editor – Erica Thoits, 150 Dow Street, Manchester, NH 03101 7. Owner: Yankee Publishing Inc., PO Box 520, Dublin, NH 03444 8. Known bondholders, mortgages, and other security holders owning or holding 1 percent or more of the total amount of bonds, mortgages, or other securities: None 9. For completion by nonprofit organizations authorized to mail at special rates: N/A Average No. 10. Extent and nature of circulation: No. Copies of Copies Each Single Issue Issue During Nearest to Preceding 12 Filing Date months a. Total Number of Copies (Net Press Run)
22,898
21,949
18,045
17,533
— 463
— 362
b. Paid and/or Requested Circulation 1. Paid/Requested Outside County Mail Subscriptions Stated on Form 3541. 2. Paid In-County Subscriptions 3. Sales Through Dealers and Carriers, Street Vendors, Counter Sales, and Other Non-USPS Paid Distribution 4. Other Classes Mailed Through the USPS c. Total Paid and/or Requested Circulation (Sum b1, b2, b3, and b4)
— 18,508
— 17,895
d. Free Distribution by Mail —
—
— —
— —
1,018
656
e. Total Free Distribution (sum of d1 thru 4)
1,018
656
f. Total Distribution (sum of c and e)
19,525
18,551
g. Copies not Distributed
3,373
3,398
h. Total (Sum of f and g)
22,898
21,949
i. Percent Paid and/or Requested Circulation (c divided by f times 100)
94.8%
96.5%
1. Outside-County as Stated on Form 3541 2. In-County as Stated on Form 3541 3. Other Classes Mailed Through the USPS 4. Free Distribution Outside the Mail (Carriers or other means)
I certify that the statements made by me above are correct and complete. Ernesto Burden, Publisher
nhmagazine.com | November 2020
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603 Navigator
courtesy images
“Food is our common ground, a universal experience.” — James Beard
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nhmagazine.com | November 2020
Our Town 14 Top Events 18 Sips 20
Old Meets New Tuscan Brands opens Toscana Italian Chophouse & Wine Bar in downtown Portsmouth by Emily Heidt
M
Artist rendering of the new Toscana Italian Chophouse & Wine Bar
arket Square in Portsmouth may look a little different these days, and a new restaurant is coming to change it once more. Tuscan Brands will open their new steakhouse concept, Toscana Italian Chophouse & Wine Bar, in the old Bank of New Hampshire building this month. Located within this historic building in the city’s charming Market Square neighborhood, the new restaurant will be a few doors down from its Tuscan Market location, which has been serving up handcrafted Italian specialties and house-roasted coffee to downtown guests since July 2019. “Portsmouth doesn’t have a modern steakhouse,” says Joe Farro, founder of Tuscan Brands. “The idea for us was all about being approachable and fun, and being able to offer a steakhouse concept that will be built around signature chops, incredible sides and, of course, many of the Italian favorites that our customers have come to expect from us.” The menu will include a lighter fare of fish, artisan craft pastas, desserts nhmagazine.com | November 2020
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603 NAVIGATOR / FOOD & DRINK
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a few different housemade breads. Additionally, as this is, after all, a steakhouse, the menu will feature the high-quality steaks, including the signature 38-ounce tomahawk bone-in ribeye and more. “Great Italian is simply fresh ingredients, delicious flavor and time-honored scratch preparation, which will all be reflected in our menu,” says Farro. Guests can also expect a craft cocktail list, an expansive collection of bourbons and whiskeys, and wines from Italy, California and France. Part of what draws people to Portsmouth is its rich history, and in keeping with a sense of place, the new restaurant isn’t exactly all new. “The vibe inside the space is 1910-meets-2020,” says Farro. “We preserved as much of the original interior as we could with the exposed brick, palladium copper-trimmed windows, and the most exciting part, which is the two bank vaults that we turned into a wine cellar and dry aging room.” The space will feature an impressive island bar made of stone from a quarry in Italy, two private dining rooms, an open-concept kitchen and a prominently placed wood grill.
Joe Farro, founder of Tuscan Brands
“Whether you’re looking to indulge in one of our wood fired steaks or mix and match a meal that caters to your tastes, you will be thrilled to find that our restaurant provides that one-of-a-kind dining experience that reflects the festive, historic vibe that Portsmouth is known for,” says Farro. NH
Guests can expect meals at Toscana Italian Chophouse & Wine Bar that are similar to the one from Tuscan Market pictured here.
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nhmagazine.com | November 2020
Tuscan Village The Tuscan Brand includes restaurants and markets in a variety of locations around New Hampshire and Massachusetts, and one of the other newest brand endeavors is Tuscan Village. The Village is a 170-acre, 3-million-square-foot mixed-used project that is being designed to create a hub for the community surrounding Salem, New Hampshire. The central theme is inspired by Old World urban development and traditional surroundings including lush landscaping and pocket parks. The first phase of the North Village portion of the project was completed in 2019, and features a 80,000-square-foot Market Basket grocery store, Homesense and luxury residential space. L.L.Bean, Williams Sonoma, Pottery Barn, Chipotle Grill, more luxury apartments and a new Mass General Hospital location will all be opening in 2021, along with local brands Drive Custom Fit, Pressed Café and Tuscan Market. Upon the completion of construction in 2022, the megacenter will be home to dozens of retail, bar, restaurant and lifestyle choices, as well as a fitness facility and live entertainment options all created for you to be able to “Live. Stay. Work. Play.”
Artist renderings of the completed Tuscan Village
nhmagazine.com | November 2020
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603 NAVIGATOR / our town
Wonderful Washington
Don’t miss out on the town’s history and artisty By Barbara Radcliffe Rogers / Photos by stillman rogers
O
ur fascination with New Hampshire stones is not limited to those boulders dropped by the glaciers or worn by eons of tumbling mountain streams. We’re quite inclusive in our tastes, which extend to stone monuments, especially those of an unusual nature. It was an unusual, but manmade set of stones that took us to the town of Washington. A milelong trail winds through the woods and across streams, punctuated by 40 engraved granite monuments that tell the story of the Sabbath, the foundation for the beliefs of the Seventh-day Adventists. At the highest point, the Ten Commandments are engraved on two large stones. Benches at each site provide a place to contemplate or just enjoy the surrounding forest and wildflowers that bloom beside the trail.
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nhmagazine.com | November 2020
Completed in 1998, the Sabbath Trail was the vision of the small congregation of Seventh-day Adventists, whose meetinghouse sits at the beginning of the trail. Washington is considered the birthplace of Seventh-day Adventism. Their story begins with a religious movement in the mid-1800s led by preacher William Miller, who proclaimed that Jesus Christ would return to Earth on October 22, 1844. In anticipation of this, his followers, who were especially numerous in New England, gave away their earthly possessions and gathered on hillsides and meadows on that evening to await the Advent. The result — or nonresult — was thereafter known as The Great Disappointment, and his disappointed followers disbanded into various groups,
The Washington Common, Town Hall, Old School and Congregational Church
some of which evolved into new religions. One of these became the Seventh-day Adventist Church, combining the beliefs of the Millerites with the practice of Saturday worship. Washington, although not the first Adventist congregation, was the place where the keeping of the Sabbath on Saturday was first practiced by an Adventist congregation. Their Meetinghouse stands today on remote King Street, a seasonal unpaved road. Changed very little from its appearance when it was built in 1842, the simple one-room building has large windows low enough for a look inside. Over the backs of the wooden bench pews are colorful quilts and crocheted afghans for chill mornings, a homey note to the historic building that’s still in seasonal use. On our route to King Street, along Faxon Hill Road from the center of town, we passed the Old
The milelong Sabbath Trail is dotted with 40 monuments that tell the story of the Seventh-day Adventists.
Cemetery, where we found another unusual stone, dated 1804. Capt. Samuel Jones Jr., after losing his leg in a construction accident, held a burial service for the leg, which is in a grave marked by a slate stone. History doesn’t record where the rest of Jones was laid to final rest.
In Washington’s town center, alongside Route 31, is a classic ensemble of white clapboard public buildings facing a small green. The 1787 meetinghouse is still in use as the Town Hall; until the Washington Congregational Church was built in 1840, the meetinghouse also served as the community’s
church. The third building, between the two, was a schoolhouse. A tablet on the green reminds us of another Washington first — it is the first town incorporated under the name of George Washington, in 1776, while he was commander-in-chief of the Continental Army. The town has some other distinctions as well — the first Civil War monument in New Hampshire, and the highest town center in the state at 1,538.667 feet. Follow the street past the church to find two charming little museums, the Washington Historical Society and, next to it, the Barn Museum. Three 19th-century rooms are recreated, including a kitchen complete with household gadgets of the day, and in the historical society building is a huge loom, which Gwen Gaskell might demonstrate. Gaskell has a wealth of information about the other exhibits too, so don’t hesitate to ask about anything that piques your curiosity. We learned a bit more about Washington at Gibson Pewter, in a large barn in the village center. Jonathan Gibson is the second-generation pewter artist, and the beautiful traditional and contemporary pieces he creates range from tankards and goblets
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603 NAVIGATOR / our town
Washington Museum of the Washington Historical Society on Half Moon Pond Road
to full tea sets. Smaller gift items, also in lead-free pewter, include charms, key rings and Christmas tree ornaments. The Gibson fruit bowl and woodgrain beaker are the only 20th-century pewter included in the permanent collection of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston. Gibson spent part of June building a larger show room so that shoppers can browse with plenty of social distancing. In the process he created not only more space to display the
pewter, but also gallery space for art by his wife Camille and other local artists. Visitors can watch him at work in his open workshop at one side of the gallery. He told us that the barn had been behind a set of carriage barns for a large hotel that once stood between his brick house and the Town Hall. Evidently, Washington was once a thriving destination for summer tourists with the hotel and several guest houses. The
brick house was a store, and on the back wall of his shop are old photographs of the store and the hotel. Until our recent visit, our only trips to Washington had been to camp at Pillsbury State Park, one of our favorites for kayaking. Especially in August, when juicy ripe blueberries surround its shores within reach of our kayaks. Campsites are roomy and well-spaced throughout a large lightly forested area. Other shaded campsites are along the lake shore. Several trails web through the park. Our favorite — no surprises here — is the Balance Rock Trail, a 1-mile gradual ascent to a glacial erratic perched on top of a larger boulder. NH
Learn more Seventh-day Adventist Meetinghouse firstadventistchurch.org
Washington Historical Society (603) 495-3231 / wnhhs.org
Gibson Pewter
(603) 495-1776 / gibsonpewter.com Collection at the Gibson Pewter shop on Washington’s Town Common
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nhmagazine.com | November 2020
Pillsbury State Park
(603) 863-2860 / nhstateparks.org
nhmagazine.com | November 2020
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603 NAVIGATOR / top events
November | Picks Event Roundup
photo by ernest withers
This photo by Ernest Withers is part of the “Photographs from the Civil Rights Movement” exhibit at the Currier Museum of Art in Manchester.
This month brings a variety of events, from fall fun on a farm and a 5K to a compelling civil rights exhibit and a chance to fill your Thanksgiving table with local products. 18
nhmagazine.com | November 2020
“Photographs from the Civil Rights Movement” Through December, Manchester
Drawn from the museum’s collection, these photographs were made in the course of the civil rights protests in the 1950s and 1960s. The passion, tragedy and essential humanity of the civil rights movement emerge in these images. Photographer Ernest Withers (1922-2007) captured some of the most compelling images of the American civil rights movement. In particular, his photographs of the Memphis sanitation workers’ strike of 1968 brought nationwide attention to the plight of African Americans trying to succeed in a systemically racist political and cultural system. currier.org
Fall Family Farm Day November 11, Troy
Get up bright and early to spend a morning milking a cow (or goat) with your kids. Then your little ones can take a pony ride, and maybe even hop on the wagon or enjoy making arts and crafts. The Best of NH award-winning Inn at East Hill Farm is a picturesque spot to learn about farming while having a great family time. east-hill-farm.com
Fisher Cats Thanksgiving 5K
Seacoast Holiday Craft & Artisan Show
The Fisher Cats are sponsors of this fun event, and this year you can run the race in person or virtually. The 3.1-mile course heads out of the stadium to Commercial Street and incorporates a loop through Manchester’s historic millyard, returning to finish back at center field in the stadium. millenniumrunning.com
Talented craftsmen and artisans will be offering their handmade wares of the finest quality in a safe environment in Hampton. There will be pottery, home décor, wood sculptures, wall art, linens, candles and more. gnecraftartisanshows.com
November 26, Manchester
Stonewall Farm Thanksgiving Farm Fare November 20-21, Keene
Make Thanksgiving prep fun (and local) with the annual Farm Fare. Your table (and tummies) will be delighted with items like meat, produce, breads, wine and beer, and other goodies from local farms. Vendors will also sell handmade crafts and gifts, a great opportunity to get a jump on your holiday shopping list. stonewallfarm.org
November 21-22, Hampton
Comedian Juston McKinney November 28, Plymouth
New Hampshire’s own police-officer-turned comedian Juston McKinney is no longer just a local favorite — he’s appeared on national shows such as the “Tonight Show” and “Conan O’Brien.” Still, expect this Best of NH award-winner to touch on familiar New Hampshire icons, plus New England life in general in a socially distanced show that you won’t want to miss. flyingmonkeynh.com
1. Stonewall Farm Thanksgiving Farm Fare, Keene 2. Fall Family Farm Day, Troy 3. “Photographs From the Civil Rights Movement,” Manchester 4. Fisher Cats Thanksgiving 5K, Manchester
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6. Comedian Juston McKinney, Plymouth
Still got it after
1
2
3, 4
rewarding years!
The place the New York Times calls “hip”. One of the top ten neighborhood restaurants in the Northeast - Bon Appetit Magazine. One of New England’s Not-To-Be Missed Restaurants and Best Martinis in New England - Yankee Magazine’s Travel Guide To New England. Best Chef, Best Restaurant Overall and Best Date Place in Manchester - Hippo Press Newspaper. Diner’s Choice Best of New Hampshire - Open Table. Best Martinis in New Hampshire year after year - New Hampshire Magazine. Best Restaurant, Southern New Hampshire - Taste of the Seacoast Magazine. The best retro meatloaf around - Phantom Gourmet’s Great Ate for Comfort Food. Named a TV Diner Hot Spot - NECN’s TV Diner.
C O T T O N Owners/Operators Peaches and Jeffrey Paige
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FOOD • COCKTAILS 603.622.5488
courtesy photos
5. Seacoast Holiday Craft & Artisan Show, Hampton
In the Historic Millyard District at 75 Arms Street, Manchester, NH •For current hours of operation please visit our website www.cottonfood.com
nhmagazine.com | November 2020
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603 NAVIGATOR / FOOD & DRINK
Sips
Local beverage news and reviews by Michael Hauptly-Pierce
Peacock Tails Lounge in Manchester
W
illiam Blake wrote “To see a World in a Grain of Sand, And a Heaven in a Wild Flower, Hold Infinity in the palm of your hand, And Eternity in an hour” — a reminder to remain aware of hidden possibilities. In a year of memes asking “Who had boat-sinking killer whales for November?” this is an important mindset, and it can be found without question in the world of professional hospitality. But to quote Axl Rose, which I am loathe to do but it is apropos, “Where do we go now?” Tables are too far apart to pass the butter, servers are hard to hear through masks, and doors of restaurants and gin joints are still being locked up every day. So where do we go now? Someplace different seems to be the resounding answer, but let’s dive in with some specificity. Peacock Tails Lounge at Cheddar & Rye in Manchester is our first stop on this quest 20
nhmagazine.com | November 2020
for The New. Cheddar & Rye opened a few years ago with likely the best collection of brown spirits in New Hampshire. It has a vibe soaked in dark wood and tradition, and a front door just far enough off of Elm Street to maintain the mystique while also bringing in some evening ambulators. Its sister storefront, actually situated on Elm, has had a few identities over the last few years, but also sort of an ongoing identity crisis. Every endeavor was unique, but lacked “stickiness.” Enter Peacock Tails Lounge. When I was summoned from my couch and PJs (it was wifey night) to their soft opening by co-owner Seth Simonian, I had to circle the block a gazillion (three) times just to park the Lithervan, and then I couldn’t find the door because it had been moved like the proverbial carrot. But I walked in to find a beautifully lit space that in no way
Seeking the Philosopher’s Stone: Jeremy Hart and Dan Haggerty are prominent figures in my craft cocktail mythos — they introduced me to many flavors I would now group as my favorites. When I think of my first shot of Fernet, my first Luxardo cherry, my first The Last Word cocktail — these two
courtesy photo
Where Do We Go Now?
reminded me of any of its previous incarnations. Co-owners Chaz Mitchell, who I knew from commercial real estate explorations, and Liu Vaine, who I knew because everyone knows Liu, were circulating the room telling tales and pouring drinks. My friends Marcia and Megan were sitting at the bar, as was Seth, and I felt immediate comfort and desire to hang out for a while, despite the fact that 15 minutes earlier I had been in Al Bundy mode with my mind on my mattress and my mattress on my mind. My habanero Margarita was perfect and simple and on point, as was the sequel, and then, with a smile, I drove into the moonset to unite my mattress and my mind once again.
photo by scott barbick
Dan Haggerty (right) and Jeremy Hart are proud owners of Industry East on Hanover Street.
guys are in all of those mental photographs. So, instead of driving home, wander with me just a few hundred feet down Hanover Street to Industry East. Jeremy is the kind of bartender who will create a drink for you based on his memory of what you enjoyed in the past, and what he has that is new. This is the Philosopher’s Stone for the flavor-seeker, and he plans to continue this time-consuming and mostly lost art in an even more intimate setting than the last time he made you a drink. With only 18 seats, attention to detail will be para-
mount. Dan is one of the warmest humans you could ever meet, wonderful at assessing needs unsaid, silent in passing unless the situation dictates that he should sit down at your table to discuss shoes and ships and sealing wax. He is the very model of a server’s server. The menu will be elevated bar food, from flatbread pizza and local charcuterie to gorgonzola treats and braised duck popovers. They are hoping to have the doors open by the time you read this. A Phoenix is rising on South Willow Street across town from the ashes of the
artist formerly known as the British Beer Company. With an outside shell known as The Flight Center Manchester, and a speakeasy inside called The Lost Luggage, this one-two punch of a concept is looking to “give Manchester something different than what they have right now,” says Seth. The FCM side will offer 36 rotating craft beer taps, similar to their Bedford location. The menu will have standards like burgers and hand-tossed pizza, but will also offer specialties such as prosciutto risotto and pad Thai. If you should lose your luggage and meander to the other side, you will be greeted by a bar specializing in New Hampshire spirits and you. Yes, you. Although there will be a menu of classic and house-designed cocktails, the experience, which is key, will center around your preferences and dislikes, based upon your conversation with your bartender. In a time when so many interactions are being dumbed down to transactions, this is a breath of fresh air. With a team that knows craft-casual, but is also on top of their speakeasy game, it is sure to be a pleasant flight, so look for their takeoff in early spring 2021. Until we meet again, at a bar or in my backyard, keep your glass full. NH
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603 Informer “Of all the small nations of this earth, perhaps only the ancient Greeks surpass the Scots in their contribution to mankind.” — Winston Churchill
New Hampshire Magazine sales representative Josh Auger models the New Hampshire tartan while his son Julian practices his moves. Julian is learning both Scottish and Irish step dancing. The Auger family attends the New Hampshire Highland Games each year, as Josh is on the board of NHSCOT, the state’s Scottish cultural organization and host of the games.
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Photos by Kendal J. Bush
Artist 27 Blips 30 Politics 32 Good Cause 34 What Do You Know? 36
The Granite State Tartan A piece of NH’s cultural history comes home again By Anders Morley
“Y
ou men of northern Vermont and northern New Hampshire,” said one-time British Ambassador to the United States James Bryce, “have had hearts full of love of freedom which exists in mountain people ... [and] the indomitable spirit and the unconquerable will which we always associate with the lake and mountain lands of the Alps and Scotland.” The rocky brown summits of the Presidential Range in summertime, when cloud-filtered sunlight greens them up and tinges the atmosphere with violet, are weirdly reminiscent of the Scottish Highlands. Yet New Hampshire resembles Scotland even more in the way the inhabitants of both places derive their sense of geographical identity primarily from their mountainous areas. A certain rustic nobility attaches to Lowland Scots and Rockingham County Flatlanders alike by virtue of their living north of a political line that happens also to encompass rough places. These lowlanders tend, rather unfairly, to look down on the lowlanders living south of that line. Meanwhile, England and Massachusetts both feel a mixture of horror and charm on contemplating the ragged lands to their north. nhmagazine.com | November 2020
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603 informer / NH Tartan An Englishman once told me, after I mentioned I’d lived in Scotland for a couple of years, that it was “a drunken land of misery.” Emerson famously said, “The God who made New Hampshire taunted the lofty land with little men.” Yet Bostonians subscribe to Yankee Magazine and suit up in L.L.Bean to strike out for the huts of the AMC, while the posher sectors of English society have long been enamored of tartan, single malt and hillwalking. I doubt whether very many Scots get together to ride Harley-Davidsons or sport T-shirts emblazoned with the words “Live Free or Die” (although what was it Mel Gibson told his array warriors, who looked like they’d fit in at Bike Week?). But every September some 30,000 people — many without a trace of Gaelic DNA — gather in New Hampshire’s White Mountains to have fun pretending they’re Scottish. They don kilts, listen to bagpipes and fiddles, dance and drink whisky, and — if they’re half as brave as William Wallace — eat haggis. And, of course, the New Hampshire Highland Games are always awash in a sea of clashing tartan.
With fellow NHSCOT board member Andrew Richardson, Josh Auger recently procured the rights to the state tartan.
Auger’s kilt belonged to Ralf Hartwell who, along with his wife Marguerite, created the tartan in the ’90s to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the Highland Games.
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We imagine tartan originating as a symbol of clan (or extended-family) membership, but historians say this is a fiction created in the 19th century as a bizarre blend of marketing, romanticism, and a sort of nonthreatening, tail-tucking nationalism (which we could do with more of in these hackle-raising days). Myths condition reality more often than we like to admit, but in the case of tartan the process is refreshingly transparent. But myths beget rules all the same, and the world of tartan is full of them. And wherever there are unimportant rules, human beings divide themselves into two basic types: the stuffy pedants, who rely on do’s and don’ts for their sense of order and stability; and the fun-loving ironists, for whom rules merely presuppose a game to be played. People either take tartan very seriously, or not at all. The Scots themselves are inclined to tolerate either attitude, as long as the orders keep rolling in. Did you know that New Hampshire has had a tartan all its own for over 25 years? It’s not unusual for US states, as well as Canadian provinces and territories, to have official tartans. Such a regional use of the woven patterns is actually in closer keeping with the original spirit of tartan than the contrived clan use. Because of the locally sourced materials they were made from, tartans in pre-19th-century Scotland said more about the wearer’s place of origin than about his bloodline. There’s something fitting, then, about 26
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weaving together threads the color of New Hampshire’s own highlands to create a wearable textile symbol. (Maybe it’s a step too far to see our state’s textile history as a hidden layer in the symbolism.) It’s a notion that guided Ralf and Marguerite Hartwell, two expert weavers who lived in Newton, when they set out to design a Scotlandinspired symbol for the Granite State in the early 1990s to commemorate the 20th annual Highland Games. Newton’s location, smack against the Massachusetts border, makes for a nice analogy with the fact that tartan’s keenest Scottish promoters have often been lowlanders, despite tartan’s roots firmly in the craggy north. The Hartwells chose purple and green as the most conspicuous colors for the New Hampshire tartan — purple for the finch and lilac (state bird and flower) and green for our shady forests. There are also threads of black for the granite of the mountains, white for the snow, and red for the blood of fallen heroes. Never one to swoon for tartan, I confess I find it very pretty. If you ask me, it would make a much nicer outfit than the increasingly ubiquitous combat clothing I see in our once-friendly woods — and probably disguise you better than Tactical Assault Camouflage too! Marguerite Hartwell died before the tartan took on a life of its own, but Ralf lived to see it officially adopted by the New Hampshire General Court in 1995. The New Hampshire tartan was initially produced by the now-defunct Pecora Wools,
Where to Buy Starting in late fall, you can purchase New Hampshire tartan products through NHSCOT. They plan to have the retail portion of their website up and running in November.
nhscot.org
courtesy photo
Due to COVID-19, this year NHSCOT canceled the live New Hampshire Highland Games, instead hosting Rocks, Hammers and Trees, an amateur heavy athletics training and competition that a few socially distanced spectators could watch at Loon Mountain. The usual event, which draws thousands of people from across the US and abroad, is currently planned for September 2021. It will be the 46th games.
Ltd., in Laconia, and later by Lochcarron of Scotland. Profits from tartan sales proceeded into scholarship funds administered by the New Hampshire Gathering of the Scottish Clans and the St. Andrew’s Society of New Hampshire. Ralf Hartwell eventually conceded the rights to the St. Andrew’s Society on condition that it would never use profits for anything but scholarship funding. But the Society’s membership eventually dwindled to a point at which it was unable to fund further tartan production — and the tartan itself fell into near-oblivion. But last year, Josh Auger and Andrew Richardson of NHSCOT, the state’s Scottish cultural organization and host of the New Hampshire Highland Games, managed to procure the rights to the pattern. Since then, production through Lochcarron of Scotland has recommenced, and yardage is expected to be available beginning in October. NHSCOT is developing a retail website and hopes to begin selling tartan accessories through the Statehouse and New Hampshire Made outlets. They are also in discussion with Vermont Flannel, exploring the possible manufacture of shirts and pyjama pants. A portion of all proceeds will continue to go to NHSCOT’s fund for scholarships and grants. NH
photo courtesy of nhscot
603 informer / NH Tartan
603 informer / artist
“Overtaken”: 72 by 36 by 2 inches on two cradled panels, pastel powder and gold leaf on board, $3,500
Drawn to Nature
Capturing the magic of wildlife with pencil dust By Susan Laughlin / art by Gretchen Woodman
N
ew Hampshire is packed with wildlife. It’s just that deer, bears and moose are too elusive to spot easily. But sure enough, your garden is gone in the morning or the bird feeder is upended — their transgressions can be frustrating. But who is really the transgressor? Humans and animals can end up sharing the same territory, making it a tough call. Gretchen Woodman of Nottingham tends to side with the animals, saying, “We are living in their world.” She started her studies in biology, but went back to art school, where she honed techniques to render wildlife in all their beauty and, maybe more importantly, their vulnerability. Borrowing a technique often used in medical illustration, she first makes dust of graphite pencils, colored pencils and pastel sticks. She then uses a brush to “paint” the powder on a smooth papered surface, often building up to 20 layers. Yes, it is time-consuming, she says. But the effect of softness,
extreme detail and subtle transitions is what she is looking to capture. Woodman’s wry take on the battleground between people and nature is on exhibit at the Bowersock Gallery in Provincetown. In a series of smaller works, a deer may be rendered with a furniture leg instead of a hoof or a plumb bob is added to further the statement. In the work shown here, human influence — fancy woodwork designs — is superimposed upon a deer leaping to escape, but the beauty of the animal reigns supreme. Deer are her favorite subject. She loves their agility, grace and soulful eyes. Woodman has a subset of work that focuses on the ephemeral aspect of wildlife, next revealed in an upcoming show at the Orlando Science Center. She is drawing large animals on translucent silk cloth set in motion with small fans. The aim is to offer the viewer a feeling for the fragility of life for wild animals.
Small nature studies range from $300 and up.
Woodman has exhibited widely in group shows throughout the US. For the month of November, she is participating in a two-person show at the Wren Gallery in Bethlehem with 8-inch square drawings that are drawn to distill the magic of nature — its beauty, its intangibility. Also, find a portfolio of her work online via her website and Instagram. It’s always a thrill to spot wildlife, in the wild or captured on paper. NH
Find It
Gretchen Hill Woodman
Nottingham / gretchenwoodman@yahoo.com gretchenwoodman.net The Gallery at Wren / wrenworks.org
“Curiosity”: 16 by 20 inches on paper, $1,800 nhmagazine.com | November 2020
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603 informer / first person
Tuttle High Holy Day If this old stove could talk ...
I
n early November of last year, I had lunch with my sister’s ex-husband Thomas. The conversation turned to Thanksgiving, which I said I’d be spending at my sister’s house with extended family. Thomas responded with a smirk and a trace of familiar bitterness. “Of course. Thanksgiving is High Holy Day for you Tuttles.” Thomas, like my late husband Bob, had always harbored a mix of awe and resentment for our family and our traditions. It seemed to irritate both of them that their children, half-Tuttle as they were, considered Thanksgiving at the Tuttle farm their favorite holiday of the year. The farm, on the seacoast of New Hampshire, had been in our family since the 1630s.
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The three-story Colonial farmhouse with its huge center chimney was built by our ancestors during the Revolutionary War, behind the site of the original chestnut log cabin built by the first Tuttles four generations earlier. From the time Abe Lincoln declared Thanksgiving Day a national holiday in 1863, my Tuttle ancestors celebrated it in that house. The vegetables served that day would have been grown on the same land that British-born John Tuttle and his sons had cleared 200 years before. I have a notebook of my grandfather’s in which he described how, in 1915, he and his soon-to-be-bride, my future grandmother, were modernizing the old farmhouse with
Top: One of the author’s grandparents’ wedding gifts in 1917 was a brand-new, cast-iron Kalamazoo wood-burning cookstove, which for generations was used to prepare the Thanksgiving feast. Above, a catalog from the same year, which claimed to have “the largest oven, the quickest oven, the most controllable and efficient fire, the oven that baked bread most uniformly.”
courtesy photos
By Rebecca Tuttle
courtesy photos
central heat, electricity and running water. He wrote about buying a round gate-legged Queen Anne walnut dining table with eight matching rush-seated chairs for $30 at an antique shop up near the White Mountains, and how he and my grandmother had refinished the entire set over the course of many evenings, after the farm work was done. When they married in 1917, one of my grandparents’ wedding gifts was a brandnew cast-iron Kalamazoo wood-burning cookstove, complete with ornate nickel trim, curved legs, an oven with a thermometer and, above the cooktop, a warming oven with a curved blue steel sliding door. My grandfather built a woodbox and kept it filled with firewood he’d cut and split himself on the farm and hauled to the house with his team of horses. That Kalamazoo stove, a blazing hardwood fire under its round iron lids, a fat tom turkey roasting in its oven, pots of potatoes and squash and onions and turnips simmering on its surface, and homemade pies waiting in its warming oven, was the heart of the old kitchen and the essence of Thanksgiving to me. My aunts and uncles and cousins would drive from their homes in Connecticut and Massachusetts for the long weekend; my family lived across the road and only had to walk down our long dirt driveway to join the rest of the clan. All six bedrooms in the old farmhouse would be full, with cots in the third-floor playroom for all the cousins. There were 10 of us grandchildren, the eleventh generation of Tuttles on that same New Hampshire farm.
Tuttle Thanksgiving in the 1960s with the author’s uncle Mark Tuttle digging in and grandfather Penn Tuttle carving the bird
As the family grew, my grandfather built a larger false top for the gate-legged dining room table so it could accommodate more of us. There was always room, and always too much food, and always the old family stories told by my grandfather and later by my father and aunt and uncle. In 2013 the farm was sold, along with the farmhouse. My sister and brother and cousins and I are now the elders. We still gather every Thanksgiving at my sister’s house, which overlooks the farm that holds our family’s history. We can see the old house, owned by strangers now, across the field from her porch. We still have room at the table for our children and our cousins and their children. There is still plenty of laughter, and too much food. This year, on
The Tuttle family was already a historic “institution” in New Hampshire when The Country Gentleman magazine published this story on them in the 1950s.
what I have now dubbed Tuttle High Holy Day, we will tell the children the family stories our grandparents and parents told. And I’ll add this one.
Author’s note: I wrote this piece in the prepandemic world of December 2019, while visiting one of the cousins I spent many childhood Thanksgivings with. It seems clear that this year, courtesy of COVID-19, we won’t be gathering for our much-anticipated family ritual. My sister won’t be poring through recipes to jazz up the traditional menu, and I won’t be rolling out pie crusts at midnight the night before. My nephew won’t be roasting a 30-pound turkey (something he’s been in charge of since he was 15). My other nephew won’t be mixing up massive batches of Tuttle Punch, a rum-based concoction my grandfather and his brothers-in-law invented for my Aunt Barbie’s wedding in 1951 and which has been served at every family gathering since. We won’t be secretly pouring a little Tuttle Punch into the gravy to thin it out when we’ve run out of chicken stock. I won’t get to meet my cousin Elizabeth’s newest grandchild, nor will she get to meet mine. In the grand scheme, of course, we are incredibly lucky that most of us are alive and healthy and that we can (perhaps) look forward to next year. It’ll take more than the loss of a family farm and a family homestead and a pandemic to break our Tuttle High Holy Day tradition. NH nhmagazine.com | November 2020
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603 informer / in the news
Blips
Monitoring appearances of the 603 on the media radar since 2006 Canobie Lake Park, which has been rated one of the country’s best small amusemenrt parks, is one reason Salem has been named one of the 50 Best Places to Live in America.
Salem Is Tops in Best Places to Live A mix of New England charm and attractions boosts the border town’s appeal Donna Hammett Morris grew up in Epping and migrated with her husband across the border to Cambridge after college. But when it came time to put roots down back in New Hampshire, one place was the clear choice. “I think Salem is New Hampshire’s bestkept secret,” says Hammett Morris, who’s now among its biggest cheerleaders as director of the Greater Salem Chamber of Commerce. What the border community lacks in mountains, lakes, beaches or even industrial millyards, she says, it more than makes up for in sprawling farmland, quaint cul de sacs and plenty of tax-free shopping — plus the knowledge that those
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lakes, mountains, beaches and bustling cities are only a quick drive away in any direction. Suffice it to say, Salem’s secret is out. MONEY magazine recently saw fit to recognize its charms with a spot on its annual roundup of the 50 Best Places to Live in America. It was the only New Hampshire town to get a nod this year, and one of only a handful in New England. Lest others worry that Salem’s pulling away all of the spotlight: Rest assured, plenty of other New Hampshire communities (including Nashua, Bedford, Merrimack and Windham) have been recognized on the same list in the past. So why Salem? MONEY singles out
attractions — such as Canobie Lake Park and America’s Stonehenge — and plenty of “New England charm.” While those in even smaller New Hampshire hamlets might quibble with MONEY’s definition of Salem — with its 30,000 or so residents — as a “small town,” Hammett Morris says the magazine was spot-on about its tight-knit feel. “It’s the biggest small town you’re going to find,” she says. And MONEY also aptly noted Salem’s status as a draw for “Bostonians looking for fresh air and the great outdoors” — or those more interested in retail therapy at Rockingham Park Mall, a “sprawling shopping mecca that draws
photo by vkelocity images
By Casey McDermott
Centuries-old treatment aids in modern-day health problem:
courtesy photos
Salem’s close proximity to Massachusetts attracts thousands who want to go tax-free shopping.
hundreds of Massachusetts visitors daily.” Scheduling shopping trips during offpeak hours is yet another secret of life in Salem, Hammett Morris says: “We all learn to shop on a Tuesday.” While Salem’s great for Morris and plenty of others, she acknowledges it’s not for everyone. And that’s OK. The nice thing about New Hampshire, she says, is that each community has its own character. “If I had my way, I think the top 100 would all be New Hampshire communities,” she says. (Then again, some other Granite Staters might prefer to keep their best-kept local secrets quiet for now.) NH
A Manchester acupuncturist who’s been at the forefront of local advocacy efforts to expand the practice as an established component of opioid recovery programs recently got the attention of researchers at Harvard University’s Asia Center. Scholar Eana Meng spotlights Elizabeth Ropp of Manchester Acupuncture Studio and her work with Hope for New Hampshire Recovery as part of a video series. More info can be found at ofpartandparcel.com.
In order to meet COVID-19 requirements, Republic Café recently moved a few doors down, and is cohabitating with its sister restaurant Campo Enoteca at 969 Elm St. Both menus are now available under one roof.
Make that to-go: If you’re ordering lots of takeout these days, you’re not alone. While we can’t vouch for its methodology, one new analysis from move.org (which, as you might imagine, specializes in the moving process) finds that the most sought-after takeout in New Hampshire is Republic Café’s. (Then again, that’s likely no surprise to readers of this magazine, who have repeatedly named the Manchester restaurant as having the best locally sourced menu in the Best of NH Readers’ Poll.)
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Now more than ever, as we continue to endure the pandemic, nurses deserve to be recognized for all the work they do on the front lines of our communities throughout the state. In partnership with the New Hampshire Nurses Association, New Hampshire Magazine needs your help to honor these healthcare professionals who deserve recognition for their efforts in fighting COVID-19. We also want to celebrate the very best in nursing – those who go above and beyond to comfort, heal and educate – and to bring to light how critical nursing is to achieving comprehensive health care. If you know a nurse, please consider nominating them in one of the award categories. Recognition is especially meaningful during these times, so say “Thank You” to these healthcare heroes by submitting a nomination today.
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Recipients will be featured in the June 2021 issue of New Hampshire Magazine.
• Senior Nursing Leader
For sponsorship information, contact Kimberly Lencki at klencki@mcleancommunications.com or call (603) 413-5154. nhmagazine.com | November 2020
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603 informer / politics
Sea Change
Rising oceans may mean rising — or new — taxes by James Pindell / illustration by peter noonan
A
t the moment, the state and the nation are deeply consumed with the 2020 elections — and rightly so. However, a look into New Hampshire’s political future, if projections are accurate, is head-spinning. For example, in 2070 it is logical to conclude New Hampshire will have a statewide income tax or sales tax (or both), while at the same time being a rock-ribbed Republican state. Such predictions are based on assumptions from exhaustive research conducted by the Pulitzer Prize-winning nonprofit journalism outlet Pro-Publica and The New York Times. They combined climate and insurance data with modeling of peoples’ movements in nations where climate change has already caused migrations, and concluded the United States is about to undergo the largest internal migration in North American history. For all the wildfires, hurricanes and flooding the nation has experienced lately, the story of the next half-century will be an America that’s growing hotter and drier. Living south of South Carolina and west of the Mississippi may someday be largely out of the comfortable range for humans. 32
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In this formulation, New Hampshire is positioned to become much more popular and wealthy. Some American cities would not survive a rise in sea level and other climate changes. New York and Boston will likely invest in climate mitigation efforts because they can afford it, and can’t afford not to — and preserving Boston would be very good news for New Hampshire. In other nations, climate migration has meant a move to cities, where people can find resources to live. At the same time, this will mean more resources need to be provided in both cities and suburbs, straining the tax base. Consider Windham, which already experienced huge growth in the last two decades. A crush of new people moving to the town due to its proximity to Boston means that real estate values will go up, and more taxes will be needed to fund infrastructure upgrades and schooling. This puts the squeeze on older residents who are cash-poor with property-rich homes, and who are now seeing the largest property bills of their lives. The thing about this group: They vote, and may demand a change in their taxes. But Windham has it a lot better than
Manchester and Nashua, the state’s largest cities, which could simply be overwhelmed. For a decade or so, as these cities swell in population, redistricting could skew to help Democrats gain seats in urban cores that cannot fund essential services adequately from property taxes. The scenario is ripe for a broad-based tax, especially if Democrats are in charge. Whether it took the form of an income tax or sales tax (or both), there could be a generations-long reaction: Republican control from a conservative rally against the Democrat-instituted broad-based tax. Demographers note that Americans are increasingly moving to areas that are politically aligned with them, and on the East Coast, there are only a few places like New Hampshire, where Republicans and Libertarians can find like-minded neighbors (and, most likely, no seat belt or helmet laws even by 2070). Some will argue there is no way New Hampshire could ever have an income tax, or note how the state is actually becoming more Democratic — not Republican. But those trends are nothing compared to what might happen in a changed climate where, after a brief mud season, New Hampshire had an actual spring. NH
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603 informer / good cause
In unprecedented times, Monadnock United Way tackles fundraising challenges by Bill Burke
A
year ago, the Monadnock United Way and its partner agencies were working to help vulnerable individuals and families through hardships and challenges. Then a global pandemic introduced a host of unforeseen complexities — affecting every aspect of work from relief efforts to fundraising. The challenge for the Monadnock United Way (MUW) then: Adapt, get creative and continue to offer assistance. “Certainly, I cannot, and neither can our partner agencies, make a 100% causal link in the ramp-up of homelessness and domestic violence to COVID-19, but anecdotally, because of people losing their jobs, additional unemployment funds have ceased, because COVID-19 interrupted pretty much everything, we’re seeing it,” says Monadnock United Way resource development director Katie Gardella. “What we’ve been hearing from our 34
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partner agencies is that homelessness is spiking, and domestic violence is spiking. Those are just a few of the issues that have been exacerbated due to COVID-19.” Fundraising, a key component in the MUW’s relief efforts, has also been affected. Workplace campaigns, typically an important element in fundraising, have been interrupted or put on hold by virus-related workplace shutdowns and remote-working arrangements.
“Our workplace campaigns — we depend on them to be dynamic, for there to be speakers, for there to be a lot of buy-in and enthusiasm,” Gardella says. “And in many places this year, in many instances, there isn’t anybody. No one is at the office. People are working from home or have staggered shifts. Some of our corporate partners have a no-visitors policy. We’re working as hard as we can to adapt.” Many corporate partners say they aren’t in the position to put more stresses on workers. Some have declined fundraising campaigns or are reluctant to ask more of a workforce already stretched thin, while some have agreed to honor pledges made last year, though those commitments are contingent on workers being currently employed. “There are a range of issues
“What we’ve been hearing is that homelessness is spiking, domestic violence is spiking, and child abuse is spiking. — Katie Gardella, Monadnock United Way resource development director
courtesy photos
Working to Adapt
Despite unforeseen challenges, Monadnock United Way is still showing up to serve our communities.
we’re dealing with.” Gardella says. The overarching message, Gardella says, is that the agency has objectives that need to be met. The MUW’s annual Better Together campaign has a goal of $1.277 million — a number that Gardella says is “crucial” to achieve this year. Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Monadnock Region had the third-highest rate of child abuse and neglect in the state, according to United Way statistics. Additionally, the region’s children scored lower than the rest of the state in English and math, and one-quarter of its residents were low-income — compared to one in five throughout the rest of New Hampshire. Now, those challenges have intensified. “Post-COVID, what we’re hearing from our partner agencies is that these statistics are likely to get worse,” Gardella says. “Things got much worse for people in our community who were vulnerable anyway.” The MUW was able to create virtual materials, including online pledges, but the results of those efforts haven’t been measured yet. “We don’t know how it’s going to affect us,” Gardella says. “That is a worry.”
The MUW is also in need of volunteers with diverse areas of expertise, such as marketing, fundraising, grant writing, finance and IT. “If there are people with those skill sets — retirees or anyone looking for a way to give back to the community — get in touch with us and we’ll plug you in with our agencies,” Gardella says. Despite forecasted shortfalls, unexpected obstacles and virus-related challenges, there have been bright moments in recent months. MUW partner agencies were forced to be creative: • The Cheshire Country Emergency Housing Collaborative ensured that 65 households were provided with direct client assistance to avoid a housing crisis.
were involved in face-to-face camp activities. “The good news is that we were able to launch a COVID-19 relief fund effort that raised over $200,000 — and that money went directly into the hands of our partner agencies,” Gardella says. “Those agencies took a very bad situation and rose to the occasion. They’re adaptable, they’re strong, they’ve got their ear to the ground, and they were able to work together for the people who needed it. “There were people stepping up and giving to our COVID-19 relief fund two to three times. We live in a generous community.” NH Note: New Hampshire Magazine is a media sponsor of the Better Together campaign.
• Monadnock Home Visiting Alliance received 255 referrals for home visits, a 28% increase from the same period in 2019. A total of 421 families were served during this time frame.
How to help
• With help from the Monadnock Region Afterschool Collective, 335 youth per week were provided supplies for virtual summer activities. One hundred children per week
• Send a check to: Monadnock United Way, 23 Center St., Keene, NH, 03431.
• Text MUW to 4144.
• Visit muw.org and click on the “donate now” button.
• Email katecote@muw.org to learn about volunteer opportunities.
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603 informer / what do you know?
The Dancing Ladies A delicate dance produces big power story and photos by Marshall Hudson
T
hey look like dancing ladies. I’m driving west on the Tenney Mountain Highway headed for Rumney, and off in the distance I can’t help but notice the line of windmills perched atop the Groton ridgeline. The blades of the windmills are turning at a mesmerizing pace, neither fast nor slow, and they capture my attention as they likely do with everyone who drives this stretch of road with their eyes open. When the wind speed and direction is right, the blades of adjoining windmills fall into a rhythm and rotate in a seemingly synchronized pattern. As the road and the ridgeline twist and turn, con-
verging and diverging, two or three of the windmills momentarily fall into a straightline alignment with my location. This straight-line alignment, coupled with the synchronized pattern of blades disappearing below the ridgeline and reappearing a moment later, resembles the Radio City Music Hall Rockettes or the Dallas Cowboy cheerleaders as they perform their linkedarm, long-line, high-kicking routine. Viewed individually, each tri-blade propeller perhaps resembles a white-clad ballerina doing a graceful leap while extending an arm above her head. In an apparent compliment to these wind turbines, some of the locals
Human scale
The windmills, from the concrete base to the tip of the blade at peak rotation, are 400 feet tall.
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Dubbed “The Dancing Ladies,” these windmills are located on a ridgeline in Groton.
have dubbed them “The Dancing Ladies.” The windmills all look alike, and they vanish and reappear as you progress down the road, creating an optical illusion as to the number of windmills there really are up on the ridge. I’m focusing on driving and can’t readily determine whether the one that just appeared is a new one, or one I’ve already counted. I’m wondering how many there are. Another optical illusion is the size of the windmills. As seen from the distant highway, they appear only inches tall. Judging by surrounding trees, I’m guessing their height at 40 to 60 feet or the approximate height of a five-story building, I’m also noticing that while most of the blades are rotating in this long line of windmills, there are one or maybe two that are stopped and motionless. Is the wind up there intermittent, or spotty and gusting from different directions? Why are some spinning and some aren’t? I decided I needed to find out. I know a guy and gave him a call. The wind towers are owned and operated by Avangrid Renewables, which is headquartered in Portland, Oregon, but the towers are situated on privately owned property. Avangrid Renewables pays a lease fee to the landowner for the privilege of placing their windmills on the landowner’s property. Avangrid also makes a payment in lieu of taxes to the town of Groton so that the landowner is not assessed for the windmills in their property tax bill. Some of the landowners allow nonmotorized activity on their property
istock photo
such as hunting, hiking, or cross-country skiing, and my contact arranged permission to bring me onto the site for an up-close introduction to the dancing ladies. I learned that there are 24 wind turbine towers situated on two adjoining ridges. The combined 24 towers produce an average of 48 megawatts, or enough electricity to power 20,000 New Hampshire homes. At peak production, this wind farm can generate enough electricity for approximately 58,000 homes. I also learned that the turbines and propeller sit atop a 256-foot-tall tower. Each blade in the propeller is 139 feet long from tip to nose. This gives a total height of almost 400 feet from the base of the concrete foundation to the extreme end of the blade at the peak of its rotation. About 10 times greater than the 40 feet that I had guessed. While they may appear only inches tall from the highway, up close, they are jaw-dropping tall. The propeller blades are designed to face
into the prevailing wind to maximize energy production, and the windmill head has a drive motor and gear system allowing it to rotate some 200 degrees to maximize the best wind direction. A velocity sensor measures wind speed and direction, and reports the data to an electronic controller in Portland, Oregon, who then turns the head of the windmill back in Groton. To extract the maximum energy from the wind, the individual blades must also be positioned at the correct angle. The blades can be adjusted individually to grab a bigger bite out of the air when wind conditions are slow, or less bite when the wind is really humming. Too much wind will trigger a shutdown so as not to damage the blades or turbine. When the wind is gusting from an irregular direction, one tower might steal the wind of another, causing the follow-on windmill to shut down due to inadequate air flow. So stolen wind, too much wind or a planned
The 24 windmills generate an average of 48 megawatts, enough to power 20,000 homes.
maintenance shutdown could explain the odd appearance seen from the highway of most windmills rotating but one that isn’t. Proponents of this wind farm, or windmills in general, say that we need to diversify our energy production away from fossil fuel-burning energy production plants, and that wind power is a safe, nonpolluting, readily available energy source that needs to be part of the solution to wean off nonrenewable or polluting forms of energy production. Opponents point out that, when the wind isn’t blowing, we still need to fall back on conventional fossil fuel-burning plants, so wind farms create a duplication in infrastructure while not eliminating any coal-burning plants. Opponents of these windmills have also suggested that they are noisy and have a negative impact on wildlife, particularly migrating birds or bats. A wildlife impact study by Stantec Consulting of Maine was conducted here, and no signs of bird or bat kills were observed. They did see an increase in wildlife that prefer the habitat created by the gravel service roads. Deer, moose, black bear, turkeys, coyotes, birds of prey, etc., have expanded in the area. On the day I visited the site, a bobcat, unconcerned by my presence, strolled across the road in front of me, and a hawk playing in the thermal currents drifted between the rotating blades. Perhaps I was there on a quiet day, but the wind noise created by the windmills was quieter than traffic noise on any moderately busy road. Perhaps the biggest complaint by wind farm opponents is that they are visually unattractive and detract from the beauty of the natural mountain scenery. I can respect that opinion, but I don’t think they spoil the view here; they look like dancing ladies. NH nhmagazine.com | November 2020
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603 informer / transcript
Ms. Mesmer Photo and interview by David Mendelsohn Hypnosis. If you want to watch someone scratch like a hen, this is not the right coop. You’ll need to go to a far off-Strip casino for that. Closer to home meet Brandie Wells, a certified hypnotherapist. If you are serious about knocking down a bad habit, reducing pain, losing some poundage, or simply living a positive life, this is your person. Couple that with clairvoyance and you might even time travel to one of your past lives. She will guide you through those mysterious portals of your own subconscious. All with compassion and in groups or one-on-one: in person or on Zoom. Yep, the old eyelids are becoming heavy now. You’re getting sleepy. Very sleepy.
Hypnosis is a deep relaxation of the subconscious mind. Once relaxed, one can speak directly to the subconscious and essentially reprogram it. It takes trust in the practitioner and a calming environment to be truly effective. In the hypnotic state, you are highly suggestible. When the hypnotist tells you do something, you’ll most likely embrace the idea completely. Although not my style, this is what makes stage hypnotist shows so entertaining. I have achieved a lot of awareness in my self-hypnosis, especially in journey work through past lives. In one of my past lives, I was born in the ’30s and was in my 20s in the 1950s and I can still identify with this life. In fact, I have embodied a lot of my being in this lifetime related to that past life. A hypnotist can’t get you to do anything you don’t want to do. Even then, you are entering at your own free will. Hypnotism can be dangerous if not performed in a safe environment with a trusted practitioner.
My sessions always include scripts of empowerment, self-esteem and positive mindset. What makes my work unique is I integrate my telepathic mind with my hypnosis. Therefore, I often see what my client is seeing. I typically work with adults, but occasionally I help children as well. Anyone at any age can be hypnotized. I do not use the word trance because it comes with a negative and fear-driven connotation. I send the message that hypnosis is a free-will experience with a willing participant who wants to bring positive changes to their life. On Zoom a session is about 40 minutes when tailored to the client. Sessions are recorded for personal use. Affirmations are self-hypnosis. Anytime we are “convincing ourselves” or “creating a new mindset,” we are retraining our subconscious mind. That is self-hypnosis! I have been self-hypnotizing for many years. Thoughts are things and what you think becomes your reality. I would love to hypnotize my 16-year-old to clean his room, but he wont let me!
While people have been experiencing hypnotic-type trances for thousands of years, modern hypnosis found its origin in the work of Austrian physician Franz Anton Mesmer (1734-1815), who believed that the phenomenon employed something called animal magnetism, or fluidum — an invisible substance that flows between the subject and the therapist. The movement his theory inspired was named after him: Mesmerism. Mesmer was gifted and well known in the upper echelons of Viennese society, becoming friends with Mozart and Haydn. Although he had many adherents and patients in Vienna and Paris, he was eventually denounced as a fraud and, by the time of his death, his practices and theories were largely dismissed. Within a matter of years after Mesmer’s death, the practice revived to play a role in medicine, though largely without the metaphysical constructs of Mesmer. It continues to fascinate both scientists and laypersons and anyone who happens upon a watch on a chain. For more information on Brandie Wells’s hypnotherapy, visit brandiewells.com Franz Anton Mesmer (above) says, “Don’t stare at me. I dare you.”
Thanks to Cynthia H. Sapier for her photo assistance and Julianne Gadoury, director of Concord’s Kimball Jenkins Estate, for allowing access to their amazing location.
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What’s on the
menu for local eateries?
Restauranting in the time of COVID-19 presents a series of challenges never seen before. Here’s how some Granite State establishments are dealing with the situation.
J
ean McKenna remembers that fateful day in March. A town officer came into the Coffee Pot Restaurant, which she and her husband run on
Main Street in Littleton, and ordered her to stop serving food inside at once. From that minute on, everything had to be carried out. Customers would wait outside in the cold. If she didn’t comply immediately, he would call the state police. “I knew the man personally,” McKenna says, “and was kind of upset that he took such a mean tone.” McKenna wears a pin on her shirt that reads, “Make America Kind Again.” Jean McKenna of the Coffee Pot By Anders Morley Restaurant in Lincoln
Photography by Jared Charney
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“Getting going again was a learning process for everyone. Simple things you’d never have thought about have to be done carefully now.” — Jean McKenna, the Coffee Pot Restaurant
The McKennas pose outside their Littleton eatery, the Coffee Pot Restaurant.
The restaurant shifted to takeout, but after a few days it proved unprofitable. “I said, ‘You know what, gang? We’re closing,’” McKenna recalls. The restaurant closed for three months. The McKennas made the most of it by tidying up inside — attending to things they’d been wanting to do for years, such as installing new lights and repainting. Their staff went on unemployment, but by then the McKennas had already applied for a PPP loan of $25,000. Because of a rule mandating that 75% of the loan be used within eight weeks to fund payroll, McKenna knew it was useless, now that they were closed. She returned the money. They then qualified for an Economic Injury Disaster Loan and a grant from the New Hampshire Main Street Relief Fund. “It was like going through a Harry Potter maze,” she says. “Poor Harry, trying to make his way through when all the trees kept growing in around him.” Rent, gas, electric bills, insurance and taxes all still had to be paid. Landlord Jack Eames owns the spaces out of which several downtown businesses are run. “He is remarkable,” says McKenna. He sent notifications to all his tenants explaining that he was monitoring the situation and intended to pass along to his tenants every benefit that was offered to him as a landlord. “And my kids were with me,” McKenna says, referring to her staff. When they reopened in mid-June, the whole staff came back. “Getting going again was a learning process for everyone,” she recalls. “Simple things you’d never have thought about have to be done carefully now. We used to just pass a ketchup bottle from one table to another if someone needed it. Now someone has to grab it, walk it over to the work area, clean it, and walk it to the other table. Everything hangs on sanitation and disinfecting.” Shower curtains separate the booths, which cannot be moved 6 feet apart. “Customers are learning that they have to wait for tables to be entirely sanitized and bussed before they can approach.” The Coffee Pot’s employees love being back, McKenna says. The kitchen staff is a little overwhelmed, since takeout service has continued — but she’s not complaining. It helps make up for losses elsewhere. The café now closes at 2 p.m. instead of 4. Wearing masks for so long was hard on the workers. When they made the change, McKenna called up customers who eat later in the afternoon to apologize and tell them they’d have to start coming in earlier. “We work with whatever happens,” she 42
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says. “A group came in this morning and I told them, ‘You know, you get what you get. And that’s me.’” Diners and cafés like the Coffee Pot play the role once played by the taverns that dotted the lonely highways of early New Hampshire. “The tavern barroom often served as a community bulletin board,” write James and Donna-Belle Garvin in “On the Road North of Boston,” their history of New Hampshire turnpikes and taverns. A community bulletin board flanks the entrance to the Coffee Pot today. It’s not just whim that makes McKenna talk about her staff and customers as her “family.” In small-town or neighborhood coffee shops, customers are often regulars; there is an almost sibling dynamic between staff and clientele; and meals become part of customers’ daily routines. On a recent Friday morning, six or eight unconnected guests sat around the Coffee Pot’s horseshoe-shaped counter and gabbed like cousins at a Thanksgiving table. This family dynamic, too, links coffee shops to the taverns of yore. “With few exceptions,” write the Garvins, “tavern guests ate their meals with the innkeeper’s family, just as if they were friends rather than strangers.” Another family business sits up the street from the Coffee Pot. Steve Bromley and his daughter Jillian Sartorelli own the Littleton Freehouse Taproom & Eatery. Different businesses face different challenges in the time of COVID-19, and the Littleton Freehouse’s challenge is that it opened its doors in December 2018, a little over a year before the pandemic hit, forcing it to close. Bromley and Sartorelli applied for various federal
Tom Boucher, owner and CEO of Great New Hampshire Restaurants (also next page), at the September grand opening of the Concord T-Bones location. This is the sixth T-Bones in the state.
“People have always used restaurants as places to socialize, but it’s who we socialize with that is changing.” — Tom Boucher, Great New Hampshire Restaurants
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“The idea is to have a restaurant-quality meal at home in 30 minutes for a good price. It’s one way we’re filling a need.” — Sean Brown, COO of Common Man Family of Restaurants
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loans, secured a payroll loan, and were able to keep their full staff employed to run the takeout business. Everyone had to learn the new health protocols. The Freehouse opened its frontside patio in May with the help of outdoor heaters. Last summer, they added additional patio seating at the back. Now they are glad they did, even though managing this spread-out dining area involves lots of hustling and close attention to sanitary guidelines. When they were greenlighted to open inside, they removed half the seats to comply with physical-distancing norms. They converted their function room to normal seating. Despite the decreased capacity, they did pretty well, because the patio business kept going. The public had to be trained too. There was some vocal pushback to masks, but Bromley says a majority were understanding of the situation. “We’re lucky to be in the North Country,” he says. “People come up here and feel very safe. It’s an opportunity to go for a trip and feel normal. I’ve talked to restaurant owners in southern areas who didn’t have the luxury of opening up. But here there were lots of hikers and day-trippers who would just come up, take a walk along Main Street, eat and drive home.” The flipside is that the outdoor dining season in the North Country is shorter than in southern New Hampshire. “We have a great local following too,” Bromley says. Even in a relatively small community, he insists, this amounts to something. With many students learning remotely, he suspects that more families will be living under the same roof this winter and that they will be among his regular customers. Bromley calls himself optimistic, and predicts that the restaurant will do about 75% of the business it did last year. It’s an outcome he says he can only be happy with. “It’s hard to hope for a return to normal before the discovery of a vaccine.” Meanwhile, south of the notches, the economic stakes are high for the kinds of multiple-outlet restaurant groups on whose success hundreds of people depend for their livelihoods. Conventional wisdom says they are the ones mostly likely to come through COVID-19 alive. Still, Tom Boucher, owner and CEO of Great New Hampshire Restaurants — which includes T-Bones, Cactus Jack’s, and The Copper Door — is worried. “Since the start of COVID-19, business has been kind of a mix,” he says. “July was very good,
August not quite as good, and September has fallen off.” Outdoor dining now represents 25-30% of the group’s volume, but Boucher is unsure whether his customers are eating outside because of health concerns or because the weather has been nice. At T-Bones in Hudson, he has brought in a heatable tent as a prewinter experiment. “But it’s obviously done at great expense,” he says. “In business your worst nightmare is uncertainty,” Boucher explains. “I’m not going to sugarcoat it. It’s grim. It’s going to be a very lean winter.” Boucher and his team have been brainstorming promotions to draw as many customers as they can safely accommodate. They paid Saint Anselm College to do an official poll that asked potential customers: “Would you dine out more often if you were offered a discount during slower periods?” Two-thirds of respondents said they would. Now Boucher and company are designing a promotion aimed at bringing guests in during the afternoon lull. Another promotion now underway at T-Bones is the Fair Menu. “It’s inspired by New England’s fall fairs,” Boucher says, “all of which have of course been canceled.” The National Restaurant Association recently reported that one in six US restaurants have closed since March. Many will never reopen. Restaurants that have remained open are often operating with reduced staff and higher-than-normal operating costs. “The public grossly underestimates how hard it is for restaurants to keep operating,” Boucher says. “In normal times, a restaurant makes something like 4 to 6 cents on the dollar. It’s a slim profit margin.” The number of closed restaurants is likely only to rise over the winter. “If there’s one thing I’d like the general public to be aware of,” he says, “it’s the ripple effect caused by restaurant closures and volume reductions. Meals and rental tax, business profits tax, business enterprise tax, property tax — we produce so much in taxes for the state of New Hampshire. And then there is the business generated to suppliers, from farms producing food to general food lines and basic restaurant supplies.” He says more relief funding is needed to avert disaster. But even Boucher sees a bright spot. “People have always used restaurants as places to socialize, but it’s who we socialize with that is changing,” he tells me, adding that as long as you follow all the protocols, restaurants are safe places to be. “The one weak point is if you’re sharing a table with nhmagazine.com | November 2020
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someone outside your family group.” He’s noticed, though, that when people go out these days, it’s often with their families. And he thinks that’s good. Compared to Tom Boucher, Sean Brown is upbeat. Brown is COO of the Common Man Family of Restaurants, another big player. He says things for the Common Man are better than anticipated. They’ve had a good summer and a loyal clientele. Brown expects an overall falloff with the arrival of cold weather, but there are no plans to extend the outdoor-eating season artificially. The Common Man has adapted in the same ways as other restaurants. On any given week, takeout represents about 20% of sales. According to Brown, however, much of the group’s success depends on their presence across the lower two-thirds of the state. “Different pockets are busy at different times,” he says. “The Lakes Region is busy in the summertime, while after Labor Day business in the southern tier starts to pick back up again. This year in the Lakes Region and Lincoln, we’ve have seen a lot of our southern-tier regulars with second homes take up residence and become regulars farther north.” Like Boucher’s group, the Common Man has also been exploring product innovation. One direct response to the pandemic is take-and-bake meals, geared towards families with kids studying from home or other people under more stress than normal. “The idea is to have a restaurant-quality meal at home in 30 minutes for a good price,” Brown says. “It’s one way we’re filling a need.” I am surprised to learn that no staff has been let go in the Common Man restaurants. “We are actively hiring for all positions in our restaurants,” Brown says, and seems almost surprised at my surprise. Carol Lawrence is one of three owners of another New Hampshire minichain, the Red Arrow Diner, which was bold enough to open a new location during the pandemic. “It was extremely challenging,” she tells me. The Nashua diner opened a few months later than the planned spring date in a way that was informed by lessons learned in the other three locations. “We just found out what was required and did whatever we needed to do to conform,” says Lawrence. All Red Arrow restaurants are usually open 24 hours, but at the moment only Manchester is functioning around the clock all week long. The reason is a staff shortage. 46
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“Online ordering has been off the wall. We need an employee just to answer the phones in all our locations.” — Carol Lawrence, co-owner of the Red Arrow Diners
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T
he breakfast place is the heart of every community. It’s the little, locally owned, mom-and-pop restaurant that’s only open for lunch and dinner, where the coffee is good and it’s poured for you by a friendly face that knows your name. There’s nothing better, is there? I’ve been thinking about those places after hearing that a few of my favorite places, like Young’s Restaurant in Durham, have closed for good. In my hometown of Somersworth, it was The
Poultry Shop. Every town has one. They’re places that aren’t just restaurants, they’re institutions. And losing them feels like time is chipping away pieces of our collective heart. The breakfast place is where the town news circulated before the local newspaper even hit the stands. It’s the place where yesterday (or last night’s) high school games get dissected, and where all the latest gossip got discussed in hushed tones while hiding their lips behind coffee cups. And at any minute, the empty chair at the table could suddenly be occupied by an old high school friend or former neighbor. You got the city news, which covered everything from road work to politics to real estate transactions. If you sat down at the breakfast place, you learned stuff. It’s heartbeat of a town. I always found it interesting that the food almost felt secondary to the place itself. Sure, the food was good, but it
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didn’t have to be great for you to love it. It had to be close to what you’d make at home — which most often isn’t extravagant. What made it special was the feeling that you were a part of something. You could call the server by name and maybe they even knew what you would order without even having to ask. In the breakfast place, you always felt like you belonged. I know I’m sounding like an old man, reminiscing about the good old days, and I guess that’s true. But with the closing of places like this, we’re losing our gathering places, our communal rallying points. It’s not just here in my town — it’s everywhere. Sure, there are great restaurants that serve amazing breakfasts and stellar coffee. But they aren’t “the breakfast place.” Those places are special in a different kind of way. Their position is not gifted to it the moment the doors open, it’s earned over time. Anointed by the locals. And if nurtured, can last generations. I will miss places like Young’s Restaurant, and The Poultry Shop. I’ve been going to them my whole life, just like you’ve been to those special places in your town. The staffs were friendly, the food was good, the coffee hit the table as soon as you sat down, and best of all: It felt like home. What more can you ask for? These last several months have been hard on the restaurant industry, especially the locally owned places like these, and as a result some have closed for good. It’s sad because I think we need the breakfast place more than ever. To those places that have closed, we thank you. You brightened many days and created lifelong memories. The pulse of those towns could be felt every morning when you opened the doors for the early risers. God bless you all for that. This isn’t a farewell to the breakfast place however. It’s more of a changing of the guard. It’s time for new family-owned places to step up and carry the mantle. And they will. Someone always does. Because we all need a place to belong. NH — Greg Kretschmar
photo by ann yoshi
An Ode to the Breakfast Joint
“Many employees prefer to collect unemployment,” Lawrence says. “This is just beginning to change. I say ‘kudos’ to our loyal Red Arrow family who stuck with us and kept on working.” Fortunately, the business has discovered new revenue streams likely to persist beyond COVID-19. “Online ordering has been off the wall. We need an employee just to answer the phones in all our locations,” Lawrence says. Outside seating will also likely become a permanent seasonal fixture. Thanks to this diversification, things have been going pretty well. Lawrence estimates total sales in Manchester are up by 8-9% over last year, while Londonderry sales are slightly down, and Concord is about the same. If she could go back to March and talk to herself as she was then, Lawrence says she would tell herself “to have more faith day to day. I’d say, ‘Be more confident in yourselves. Be more positive.’ I’d say, ‘You know, we got used to masks. It’s actually OK.’” She admits that she’s nervous about winter, but ends with a sober statement of fact: “Lots of restaurants have closed. Things happen in the world.” When the prognosticators say it’s the large restaurants that are most likely to come through this crisis, of course they’re right. But it’s easy to state the obvious: It’s survival of the fittest out there. Fortunately, fittest doesn’t just mean biggest. It may mean biggest, fastest, most convenient — or it may mean most flexible, most devoted to high-quality food or to providing customers with a unique dining experience. A fit restaurant may simply be one that makes its customers feel at home. One key to a restaurant’s fitness is its understanding of its role in the complex hospitality ecosystem. There’s room for generalists, and there’s also room for all kinds of specialists. Before COVID-19 made every restaurant into a takeout, if you wanted to eat at home but didn’t want to cook, you called for Chinese or pizza. Even so, Sean Chi, kitchen manager at Kim Lai Chinese Restaurant in Portsmouth, says that March, April and May were hard for everyone. “Three people quit at the same time in March,” he says. He had to pick up the slack and sometimes found himself alone in the kitchen at 2 a.m. “The food cost was very high then too,” he says. “It nearly doubled because there were problems with the supply. Some customers said, ‘You should raise your prices, at least
10%.’ But we said no. We’ve been here 20 years, and we have a very good relationship with our customers.” Since March, Kim Lai has operated exclusively on a takeout and delivery model. When I ask whether the total volume of business has fallen off, Chi says, “We think about the risks more than the business. We have no dining in because it makes our customers feel more safe. All our employees have their temperature taken every morning. Some takeout customers say, ‘I feel safer getting takeout here because there are no diners inside.’” Many of his regular dine-in customers have become regular takeout customers.
“We’ve got to learn to get by with a little less money, but we’ve been fortunate. ... This is the new normal. We all have to adapt.” — Hank Letarte, White Gates Farm Pizza Kim Lai Restaurant is focused on the present. As long as there is a risk to their customers, they will run things the way they run them now. They will worry about the future when the future looks clearer. There’s no doubt a similar niche for pizza joints, but that’s not the role of White Gates Farm Pizza in Tamworth, which isn’t exactly a restaurant either. In normal times, Hank and Heather Letarte host twice-weekly summer pizza nights on their farm, where guests sit at picnic tables, listen to live music, and enjoy a view over the Ossipee Range and the hills of the Lakes Region. In winter, for the last two years, the event has been held once a month inside a heated greenhouse. When COVID-19 hit, the Letartes were between seasons. They hired a company to set up a website that would manage the flow of guests coming through for dinner. They decided they would allow 35-40% fewer people than they normally expected. “We started with a number we thought would work and then upped it a bit,” says Hank Letarte. Pizzas had to be limited to a few preselected types. Guests were assigned halfhour increments during which their pizzas
could be picked up. Waste was no longer recycled. All this was done to eliminate lines and close contact. “We wanted it to be comfortably safe and manageable,” says Letarte. “We had zero people complaints. Everyone said, ‘Thank you so much for creating a safe and beautiful space for us to enjoy a meal.’” The Letartes’ priority is keeping their staff and customers safe. “We don’t want to end up in the news,” Letarte says. There will be no winter pizza nights this year. “We’ve got to learn to get by with a little less money, but we’ve been fortunate. The winter pizza nights are a side business for us. A lot of people are really suffering though.” He says he has no right to complain. “This is the new normal. We all have to adapt.” After talking for hours with restaurateurs throughout the state, what surprised me most was that nearly all of them remarked on a newfound sense of closeness and familiarity among guests and staff in their establishments. Perhaps it’s only the wishful thinking, but I can’t help but wonder whether COVID-19, after all the harm and havoc it has wrought, might somehow point toward a future in which the old spirit of the tavern is partly revived — a spirit like the one that, after a shutdown of three months, I saw almost completely brought back to life at the Coffee Pot in Littleton. For the Fox Tavern at the Hancock Inn, COVID-19 ushered in changes that were waiting in the wings. Marcia and Jarvis Coffin had been contemplating a shift to an owner-chef model for some time. Circumstances tipped the scales, and now Jarvis runs the kitchen. Their son, furloughed from his hospitality job, came home to help. He now handles the garde manger and dessert stations. “We’ve leaned heavily on family — both immediate and our extended family of employees,” says Marcia Coffin. “Our front-of-house manager has dived right in and is now waiting tables and tending bar as well.” Since theirs is a small, family-run business, many customers know the Coffins personally, and there is an element of trust, of confidence in their doing things right that you might not find in a bigger place. She exhibits an “optimism” suited to our times: “If you recalibrate your expectations so that 50% is the new 100%, then it’s been okay.” It’s impossible to say what the future holds — but the Fox Tavern has existed since 1789. NH nhmagazine.com | November 2020
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Waterville Valley Resort
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Statewide ski areas and resorts are ready for you to enjoy winter fun, with COVID-19 safety protocols in place for the “new normal”
By Brion O’Connor
Photo by Tyler Walker / Waterville Valley Resorts
S
hortly after the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic last spring, experts encouraged people to get outside, into nature’s open spaces. They emphasized the myriad benefits of fresh air and sunshine for our mental, emotional and physical well-being. Normally, skiing — both alpine and Nordic — would seem to check off all those boxes. But COVID-19 is having a negative impact on the skiing experience, in the lodges, in the lift lines, and on the lifts themselves. Of course, New Hampshire’s ski areas and resorts, large and small, are no strangers to negative impacts.
“Rightly or wrongly, we are total optimists in this business,” says Kris Blomback, general manager at Pats Peak for the past quarter century. “You have to be. Running a ski area 60 miles from the Atlantic Ocean has never been for the faint of heart.” Years of unpredictable weather and fluctuating energy costs have cultivated generations of resilient ski area managers who have combined Yankee ingenuity and dogged determination to deliver a great experience, on the slopes or on the trails. And they’ll need that combination of skills once again. “We’ve had ski seasons that have been gangbusters, and we have had seasons where we had to fight and claw our way through the entire season,” says Blomback. “We have had to reinvent how we do business on the fly. In the past, we were charged with filling the place up with people, and now we have to reimagine how we do business and still raise the critical amount of revenue that is needed to support the operation.” The same approach applies to the state’s Nordic ski areas. “We really are an industry of problemsolvers, and adaptation is our greatest strength,” says Ian Cullison, director of Waterville Valley’s Adventure Center. “I feel that we’re in an excellent position to make the most out of this situation and provide the public with a much-needed commodity — fun.” That said, ski area managers acknowledge that the current pandemic, which Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, anticipates impacting the country through 2021, is unlike any impediment they’ve faced before.
Outside après-ski, like this scene at Bretton Woods, may be this year’s new normal.
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“The ski industry is fortunate in the sense that we have so much open space for our guests to spread out,” says Brian Norton, vice president of operations at Loon Mountain. Among Loon’s plans are opening terrain in a different sequence and opening more terrain and lodges at a faster rate.
❆ The Balsams
Statewide Guide to NH Ski Areas Wildcat ❆
❆ Great Glen Trails
Bretton ❆ Woods Black Mountain ❆
Cannon ❆ Loon ❆
❆ Attitash Cranmore ❆
Waterville Valley ❆
King Pine ❆
❆ Dartmouth Skiway
Ragged Mountain ❆
❆ Gunstock
photos courtesy of loon mountain resort and bretton woods
❆ Whaleback
❆ Mount Sunapee Concord ❆ Pats Peak Manchester ❆ McIntyre ❆ Granite Gorge Keene
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Photo courtesy pat’s peak
At Pats Peak, the actual skiing part is “the least of our concerns,” says general manager Kris Blomback. While people can stay apart on the slopes, the challenge becomes what to do about things like food or ticket sales.
Likewise, Jackson’s Chandler says Nordic areas have natural spacing allowing participants to play free of crowds. Yet these areas do tend to promote gatherings. “Cross-country skiing is usually a wonderful combination of social distancing — just you and your glide out in nature — and face-to-face socializing and learning with like-minded individuals, from in-depth discussions with instructors, guest service staff, rental shop staff and fellow skiers,” she says. “We’ve still got as much glide as you want,
and experienced skiers will be OK for a year on their own,” she adds. “What’s more challenging is how to provide positive introductory experiences for new skiers, and we’re working on that,” says Chandler. “We’re going to provide them with as much one-on-one as we can, but face-to-face will include some video, online, more on-phone and 6-feet-back spacing.” According to Pats Peak’s Blomback, “The skiing component is the least of our concerns,” he says.
At Cranmore Mountain Resort, changing to block time period sales (as opposed to showing up whenever you want) has helped maintain social distancing. They will continue this practice at their popular tubing park, says resort president Benjamin Wilcox.
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Photo by Corey McMullen / cranmore mountain resort
“The challenges are different in that they’re new,” says Ellen Chandler, executive director of Jackson Ski Touring Foundation. “We’re accustomed to having bad weather and economic downturns, and we have plans in the toolbox for counteracting them. But the pandemic interferes with our strongest asset — our ability to interact with people.” Which begs the question: Exactly how are New Hampshire ski areas responding to the pandemic, especially during the upcoming winter, when The Old Farmer’s Almanac is predicting a banner snowfall? In short, both alpine and Nordic areas have embraced the many benefits of getting into the great outdoors, while identifying all the areas where congestion creates concerns. “The ski industry is fortunate in the sense that we have so much open space for our guests to spread out,” says Brian Norton, vice president of operations at Loon Mountain. “Imagine a movie theater that had 1,000 acres to spread their guests out on while still being able to see the movie. “We plan to use our exterior space to our advantage,” says Norton. “We will likely open terrain in a different sequence. We will have an increased focus on getting more terrain and lodges open faster than ever before. We’re set up for success here with our team, and our continued snowmaking upgrades allows us to maximize our efficiency.”
photo courtesy of gunstock mountain resort
“If you look at what has happened to cycling, hiking, running and paddling, we anticipate a similar increase in our business from those looking to get outside in a low-hassle, socially distanced activity,” says Reese Brown, executive director of the Cross Country Ski Areas Association. “We feel our numbers will be up significantly this winter due to restrictions the pandemic have placed on people. Although we’ll see a bump as a result of the challenges alpine skiing will face, our largest group will be those individuals and families that have been restrictive in their normal activities and looking for something that’s fun.”
Cross-country skiing might be the ultimate socially distanced winter activity. There are devoted Nordic centers, like Jackson Ski Touring Foundation, and many ski areas and resorts offer cross-country skiing, including Gunstock Mountain Resort, pictured here.
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Part of the Mount Washington Valley Chamber of Commerce’s “Mind Your Manners” campaign
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Photo courtesy of wiseguy creative photo / mount washington valley ski touring
“We have to pay real attention to what I call the funnel effect,” Blomback adds. “You can have thousands of people spread out over your terrain, but eventually those folks need to go to the bathroom, eat lunch, interact with guest relations. It’s those areas that we have had to mitigate.” Those mitigation efforts include increasing bathroom capacity, including placing additional temporary outhouses in parking lots (“We are encouraging people to use their car as a ‘personal base lodge,’” says Blomback), increasing outdoor seating at every dining facility and including togo windows, and streamlining the ticket purchase process, including an emphasis on online options and hands-free kiosks. “We’re looking at adding additional food areas and food trucks, and we’re are trying to improve the ‘tailgate’ experience as much as possible,” says Blomback. “We’re also looking into the possibility of maybe renting out portable pop-up tents, fire pits, et cetera.” At the state’s Vail Resort properties — Mount Sunapee, Wildcat, Attitash and Crotched Mountain — Vail CEO Rob Katz told season passholders that face coverings will be required to access the slopes and “in all parts of our operations, including in lift lines, and while loading, unloading and riding in lifts and gondolas,” he wrote. “To allow for physical distancing, we will be managing access to our mountains through a reservation system and limiting lift ticket sales in order to prioritize our passholders,” added Katz. “For the vast majority of days, we will be able to accommodate everyone who wants to visit. But this helps us ensure we can keep guests safe no matter when they come.” Areas and resorts are also doubling down
Mount Washington Valley Ski Touring & Snowshoe Foundation maintains a large network of trails —from easy rolling hills to more challenging backcountry terrain — for cross-country skiing, snowshoeing and fat biking.
on staff training to make sure all their employees are on the same page. “It starts with safety for the staff, and you need to look at your overall operation through that lens,” says Blomback. “If your employees don’t feel safe, then the rest of the business plan is a nonstarter. Safe to say we have had massive buy-in from our team in how we operate the facility.” Similarly, Benjamin Wilcox, president of Cranmore Mountain Resort, says, “We are adapting our fall training to address operating during a pandemic. Priority number one is to put protocols in place so your staff feels safe.” Many ski areas shuttered operations early last spring due to the pandemic’s sudden arrival. However, during the summer season, skis areas, especially those that offer lift-serviced mountain biking and sightseeing, such as Cranmore and Loon, have been able to conduct programs as a dry run to prepare the staff for the winter season. “What happened last spring happened so fast,” says Loon’s Norton. “We certainly learned some things at the time, but where we have really gained the most knowledge is by operating this summer. After opening for summer operations, we were having nightly meetings to tweak and adjust operations, lift lines, traffic flows, based on what we learned that day,” he says. “It was incredible to see how fast our team was able to adapt and change based on the lessons we were learning hourly. That mantra has stuck with us.” Similarly, Cranmore’s Wilcox says that
“changing our products from ‘show up whenever you like’ to ‘block time period selling’ has helped us spread out people and assure social distancing.” He adds that they’ll continue to use block-style selling at their popular tubing park in winter. “For skiing,” he says, “we know lodge traffic will be our biggest challenge. We’ve entertained the idea of reservations for food and beverage access.” At Waterville Valley’s Adventure Center, Cullison says, “The biggest lesson we’ve learned this summer is that it’s important to establish clear expectations with guests. We’ve produced some creative signage to help all our visitors understand how to move through our spaces and participate in activities safely.” Ski areas have also found a willing and motivated partner at the state capital in Gov. Chris Sununu, the former CEO at Waterville Valley Resort, who still has an ownership interest in Waterville Valley Holdings. Wilcox served on the governor’s Office of Emergency Relief and Recovery Stakeholder Committee this past spring and summer. “Most of our work was to identify sectors that were greatly impacted by COVID-19,” Wilcox says. “Governor Sununu has done a great job handling this crisis, and it’s nice having a governor that understands the ski and tourism industry.” Blomback says he’s buoyed by Sununu’s can-do attitude. “Governor Sununu is an optimist, and that’s what we love about him,” he says. “His
photo courtesy of loon mountain resort
Loon Mountain Resort
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The harsh reality of the COVID-19 pandemic is that it’s pervasive, due in large part to one of the virus’s most frightening traits — a high transmission rate. The virus goes where people go. It doesn’t recognize town lines, county lines or state lines. It is ubiquitous, which means ski areas and resorts need help from local communities and visitors to combat the pandemic effectively. That’s a key reason why ski hills and Nordic tracks are working closely with area businesses — retailers, restaurants, lodging accommodations — as well as visitors and government officials, is to ensure the measures they’re implemented on the snow are mirrored throughout the state. The bottom line is that everyone is in this together. “The Mount Washington Valley is a resilient community,” says Marti Mayne, public relations manager for the Mount Washington Valley Chamber of Commerce (MWVCC). “We’ve gotten through the past six months [as of September] and are adjusting to the challenges via messaging and working in partnership with northern New England chambers, Ski NH and White Mountains
Attractions. Together, we’ll remain vigilant to keep our communities the safe haven they’ve been so far,” says Mayne. North Country residents, officials, businesses and visitors all saw the “ripple effect” of the pandemic firsthand. Ski areas closed abruptly, and restaurants, bars and many retail outlets shuttered. When the initial springtime “lockdown” recommendation was lifted, people rushed outside, often ignoring precautions such as mask use and appropriate distancing. The MWVCC’s “Mind Your Manners” campaign was launched last summer in response to the subsequent “bad behavior” by residents and visitors. In an official MWVCC release, officials wrote: “From parking lots to recreation areas, overcrowding is resulting in an abundance of trash, a disregard for parking regulations and social distancing requests, plus a lack of mask wearing and a general disregard for the community that has worked so hard to remain a safe refuge for its residents and avid outdoor adventurers that have traditionally come to recreate here.” Several popular spots, such as Diana’s Bath, were
Signs of the times
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overwhelmed with illegally parked cars. “Once the cars leave, a trail of trash and refuse remains,” officials wrote. “And this kind of situation is repeated in parking lots, roadsides and attractions throughout the Mount Washington Valley.” With air travel limited, and accessible outdoor recreation destinations throughout New England in high demand, the pandemic resulted in more firsttimers to the White Mountains of New Hampshire. “We carefully crafted our way through a phased opening here in Mount Washington Valley,” says Janice Crawford, executive director of Mount Washington Valley. “The chamber took great care to be the best resource possible for the community and the visitors who come here. “We’ve created signage reminding people to wear masks and placed signs throughout the valley reminding visitors to maintain a 6-foot social distance, and to respect our community,” says Crawford. “Yet, we continue to see and hear stories at the chamber about the general disregard for ‘good old American manners.’ It’s taken us all by surprise.” Mayne says the “first-timer” trend is expected to continue this winter, so education is an important component to any approach to the pandemic. “We’ll see a younger traveler, and probably more people trying skiing for the first time. With homeschooling and remote working continuing, people are eager to get out of the house and into the mountains,” says Mayne. “If they’re not already skiers, snowboarders, crosscountry skiers, snowmobilers, or outdoor hikers, they may just consider trying it for the first time. This could be a boon for cross-country skiing and snowshoeing — the perfect socialdistance activities.”
Those numbers will rely on the ability of local businesses to remain open and profitable. Crawford and other North Country officials, including the Conway-based Ski NH association (which represents 33 downhill and Nordic ski areas) and the Cross Country Ski Areas Association, have engaged state officials to guarantee a true statewide effort to keep all businesses afloat. “We are currently working with members of the administration and the Department of Public Health to develop opening guidance for ski areas,” says Jessyca Keeler, Ski NH’s executive director. Keeler says Gov. Chris Sununu’s ski area management background helps, as does Department of Business and Economic Affairs Commissioner Taylor Caswell, an avid skier “who understands where the potential pinch points are at ski areas and can work with us on coming up with solutions,” she says. Those solutions, at a minimum, will likely be developed using state-issued guidelines and precautions as parameters. Caswell, a key member of Gov. Sununu’s Reopening Task Force, announced a “business help portal” (businesshelp.nheconomy.com) developed by the Department of Business and Economic Affairs last May to keep everyone up to speed. “Ensuring consistent and timely answers to questions from the business community, municipalities and all Granite Staters is very important,” says Caswell. “Our business help portal is a great tool to get clarity and further information on state-issued industry guidance. Governor Sununu has made a strong commitment to work collaboratively with the business community and municipalities to ensure that industries are able to reopen in a safe manner, and this is a tool to give them confidence to do so.”
Photo by Lori Butcher
Regional businesses feeling the same crunch as ski areas
photo courtesy of mount sunapee resort
Mount Sunapee is a part of the state’s Vail Resort properties. Vail CEO Rob Katz says face coverings will be required, and ticket sales (by reservation) will be limited to prioritize season passholders.
family was very bullish on Waterville Valley and you can see the effort, care and capital that is being poured into the place,” says Blomback. “His office has been very proactive and careful in reopening parts of the economy,” he adds. “Since skiing is a predominately an outdoor sport, he was bullish that it can be offered safely.” Loon’s Norton reserved special praise for his colleagues in the industry, and the Ski NH association (which represents 33 alpine and cross-country areas), with taking an “all boats rise with the tide” approach to tackling the pandemic. “Ski NH and the partner resorts have been a huge asset,” he says. “We can bounce ideas off each other and provide feedback on failures and successes along the way. This group has been in frequent contact with the state officials and has helped put the guidance in place for our summer operations.” Moreover, Jessyca Keeler, Ski NH’s executive director, says “the industry is tight across the country, and we’ve had the privi-
lege of working with the National Ski Areas Association and other state associations to share and learn from each other and our resort members.” In addition to the physical adjustments being made by ski areas, public awareness and cooperation will be enormous factors in keeping those areas open and operating safely, says Peter Disch, general manager of Mount Sunapee Resort. “The biggest challenge for everyone is going to be maintaining a high level of focus on safety and not to become complacent about it, especially as the situation improves,” says Disch. “We will all need to remain vigilant to ensure we continue an upward trajectory.” To accomplish that goal, areas are getting the message out via a number of avenues, including social media campaigns and increased signage. “We will have to use every communication tool in our kit this winter — email, mobile apps, signs, the Health & Safety page on our website, in-person conversation
— whatever it takes,” says Norton. “We will be spreading our message with everything we have.” Cullison says the Waterville Valley staff has created signs, featuring the resort’s moose mascot, reminding guests of the importance of wearing masks, washing their hands, social distancing, practicing “safe sneeze and cough etiquette,” and staying home if they’re not feeling well. “We believe that the success of this season will rely on all of us being patient, kind and respectful to one another,” he says. “If we all do our part now by wearing masks and following recommended guidelines, the better chance we’ll have for a successful winter season.” Even though snow has yet to fall (at least as of press time), Cullison’s staff was busy getting the message out. “To alert our guests, the marketing team has been making regular updates to our website, social media pages, and sending email campaigns as new information becomes available,” says Cullison. “We also have signage up resortwide to help set the tone for what visitors can expect during their time in the valley.” Across the Kancamagus Highway to the east, the Mount Washington Valley has launched a “Mind Your Manners” communication campaign (see sidebar on page 58) “after crowds of people descended on the mountains this summer,” says Marti Mayne, public relations manager for the Mount Washington Valley Chamber of Commerce. “This kind of messaging will continue through initiatives in partnership with the six chambers in New Hampshire’s North Country,” says Mayne. The overwhelming majority of medical experts and scientific researchers agree with Dr. Fauci that the battle against COVID-19 is a marathon, not a sprint. It may be years before life returns to some semblance of normalcy. Ultimately, the reality of whether ski areas stay open, or are forced to shutter operations, rests with the very people who hope to enjoy these activities. “I would just ask that skiers and riders — whether they’re veterans of the sport or new to it this year — be patient with our ski areas and staff and respectful of the changes we’ve had to make in order to be open,” says Ski NH’s Keeler. “No one wanted to have to make the kinds of changes that are being made, but more importantly, we do want to have a ski season. As such, we’re all going to have to make some sacrifices in order to make that happen.” NH nhmagazine.com | November 2020
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The
Best Lawyers in the Granite State
Every year the national polling firm Woodward/White performs its exhaustive search for the country’s top attorneys and publishes the results in one comprehensive volume:
“The Best Lawyers in America.” The 27th edition, for 2021, has just been completed. Here is the New Hampshire contingent, plus we asked nine “Lawyers of the Year” to share a favorite quotation and to tell us why they love what they do. Portraits by kendal J. bush
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• 2021
The List
LISTED ALPHABETICALLY BY specialty and attorney’s name
Names highlighted in red were selected by Woodward/White as “Lawyers of the Year.”
Administrative/ Regulatory Law Donald J. Pfundstein Gallagher, Callahan & Gartrell Concord / (603) 228-1181
George W. Roussos Orr & Reno
Concord / (603) 224-2381
Gregory H. Smith McLane Middleton
Concord / (603) 226-0400
Appellate Practice William L. Chapman Orr & Reno
Concord / (603) 224-2381
Doreen F. Connor Primmer Piper Eggleston & Cramer
Manchester / (603) 626-3300
Michael A. Delaney McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Andrew D. Dunn Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Samantha Elliott Gallagher, Callahan & Gartrell Concord / (603) 228-1181
Bruce W. Felmly McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Wilbur A. Glahn McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Jon Meyer Backus, Meyer & Branch
Manchester / (603) 244-3282
W. Scott O’Connell Nixon Peabody
Manchester / (603) 628-4000
Mary Elizabeth Tenn Tenn And Tenn
Manchester / (603) 624-3700
William A. Mulvey Mulvey, Cornell & Mulvey
Portsmouth / (603) 431-1333
Banking and Finance Law Denise J. Deschenes Primmer Piper Eggleston & Cramer
Littleton / (603) 444-4008
Camille Holton DiCroce Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Christopher M. Dube McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
W. John Funk Gallagher, Callahan & Gartrell Concord / (603) 228-1181
Curtis Little Cook, Little, Rosenblatt & Manson Manchester / (603) 621-7100
Donald J. Pfundstein Gallagher, Callahan & Gartrell Concord / (603) 228-1181
James F. Raymond Upton & Hatfield
Concord / (603) 716-9777
Peter B. Rotch McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Henry B. Stebbins Stebbins, Lazos & Van Der Beken Manchester / (603) 627-3700
David P. Van Der Beken Stebbins, Lazos & Van Der Beken Manchester / (603) 627-3700
Bankruptcy and Creditor Debtor Rights/ Insolvency and Reorganization Law Joseph A. Foster McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Charles P. Bauer Gallagher, Callahan & Gartrell
William S. Gannon William S. Gannon
John Burwell Garvey University of New Hampshire School of Law Concord / (603) 228-1541 nhmagazine.com | November 2020
Concord / (603) 224-2381
Arbitration Concord / (603) 228-1181
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Margaret R. Kerouac Orr & Reno
Manchester / (603) 769-4756
Steven M. Notinger Notinger Law
Nashua / (603) 417-2158
• 2021 Daniel W. Sklar Nixon Peabody
Manchester / (603) 628-4000
John M. Sullivan Preti Flaherty Beliveau & Pachios
Concord / (603) 410-1500
Bet-the-Company Litigation Doreen F. Connor Primmer Piper Eggleston & Cramer
“We all have a responsibility to create a just society.” — Bryan Stevenson
Manchester / (603) 626-3300
Bruce W. Felmly McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Wilbur A. Glahn McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Steven M. Gordon Shaheen & Gordon
Concord / (603) 819-4231
Cathy J. Green Shaheen & Gordon
Concord / (603) 819-4231
Jack B. Middleton McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
W. Scott O’Connell Nixon Peabody
Manchester / (603) 628-4000
Arnold Rosenblatt Cook, Little, Rosenblatt & Manson Manchester / (603) 621-7100
James Q. Shirley Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green Manchester / (603) 668-0300
James C. Wheat Wadleigh, Starr and Peters
Manchester / (603) 669-4140
Business Organizations (including LLCs and Partnerships) Peter Cline Gallagher, Callahan & Gartrell Concord / (603) 228-1181
Scott W. Ellison Cook, Little, Rosenblatt & Manson Manchester / (603) 621-7100
David K. Fries Cleveland, Waters and Bass Concord / (603) 224-7761
Dodd S. Griffith Gallagher, Callahan & Gartrell Concord / (603) 228-1181
Colleen Lyons Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Martha Van Oot Jackson Lewis Portsmouth Labor Law — Management “Despite the anomaly of being a lawyer at a time when the courthouse doors are just beginning to reopen, I still love what I do at Jackson Lewis. Workplace law is all about working with clients who really work so hard to make their workplaces fair and safe under ever more challenging conditions. It is a privilege to be a lawyer, and an even greater privilege to practice in New Hampshire.” nhmagazine.com | November 2020
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• 2021 James F. Raymond Upton & Hatfield
Concord / (603) 716-9777
“The best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago. The second best time is now.” — Chinese Proverb
Jeffrey J. Zellers Annis & Zellers
Concord / (603) 224-5800
Civil Rights Law Jon Meyer Backus, Meyer & Branch
Manchester / (603) 244-3282
Kirk C. Simoneau Nixon, Vogelman, Slawsky, & Simoneau
Manchester / (603) 669-7070
Lawrence A. Vogelman Shaheen & Gordon Dover / (603) 871-4144
Closely Held Companies and Family Businesses Law Matthew H. Benson Cook, Little, Rosenblatt & Manson Manchester / (603) 621-7100
Steve Cohen Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
James G. Cook Cook, Little, Rosenblatt & Manson Manchester / (603) 621-7100
Scott W. Ellison Cook, Little, Rosenblatt & Manson Manchester / (603) 621-7100
David K. Fries Cleveland, Waters and Bass Concord / (603) 224-7761
Colleen Lyons Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Angela B. Martin Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Jon B. Sparkman Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Collaborative Law — Family Law Tracey Goyette Cote Shaheen & Gordon
Tina L. Annis Annis & Zellers Concord Elder Law I enjoy practicing in the area of elder law because it allows me to help families. It is a proactive legal practice, and my clients are focused on ensuring that their loved ones are well cared for. I find it very rewarding to help give peace of mind, whether to an adult child who is concerned about an elderly parent, or to a parent who wishes to leave a legacy to the next generation. 64
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Concord / (603) 819-4231
Margaret R. Kerouac Orr & Reno Concord / (603) 224-2381
Debbie Martin-Demers Rousseau Law and Mediation Pembroke / (603) 715-2824
Kimberly Weibrecht Weibrecht Law Dover / (603) 842-5525
• 2021
Commercial Finance Law Martin J. Baroff Baroff & Craven
Manchester / (603) 647-4200
“If you are going through hell, keep going.”
Timothy E. Britain Cleveland, Waters and Bass Concord / (603) 224-7761
Peter F. Burger Orr & Reno
Concord / (603) 224-2381
— Winston Churchill
Peter Cline Gallagher, Callahan & Gartrell Concord / (603) 228-1181
Camille Holton DiCroce Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Dodd S. Griffith Gallagher, Callahan & Gartrell Concord / (603) 228-1181
Curtis Little Cook, Little, Rosenblatt & Manson Manchester / (603) 621-7100
Margaret E. Probish Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Commercial Litigation Gary M. Burt Primmer Piper Eggleston & Cramer
Manchester / (603) 626-3300
Peter G. Callaghan Preti Flaherty Beliveau & Pachios Concord / (603) 410-1500
Robert S. Carey Orr & Reno
Concord / (603) 224-2381
Christopher Cole Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Peter S. Cowan Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green
Steven Notinger
Daniel Deane Nixon Peabody
Notinger Law Nashua Bankruptcy and Creditor Debtor Rights/ Insolvency and Reorganization Law
Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Manchester / (603) 628-4000
Michael A. Delaney McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Daniel M. Deschenes Hinckley Allen
Manchester / (603) 225-4334
Andrew D. Dunn Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Steven J. Dutton McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
“The greatest enjoyment in what I do is to see a company (or individual) — that was struggling, and that has lost direction — resolve issues either in or out of bankruptcy, and emerge as a stronger entity, saving jobs, equity and its future. Many times [representatives of a] company or individuals come to see me, and they are overwhelmed, or are pursued on multiple fronts by various creditors, and I can help prioritize what needs to be done so a company or individual can focus on its core needs to survive, or shut down in an orderly fashion if it cannot be saved. Bankruptcy is not a remedy for creditor problems, but a tool (of many tools) to consider when in financial distress. It must be looked at as a process to get from A to B — it is not a solution itself. The business or individual must have a plan to survive. Many debtors file to get the benefit of the automatic suspension of collection efforts and a discharge, but that is not enough. You must have a plan to survive as a business or an individual. Those that have a plan going into bankruptcy are usually the most successful. That is why, if bankruptcy is looked at as a tool and not an answer, the creditor is likely to have the greatest chance of success.” nhmagazine.com | November 2020
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• 2021 Samantha Elliott Gallagher, Callahan & Gartrell
“You gain strength, courage and confidence by every experience in which you really stop to look fear in the face. Do the thing you think you cannot do.” — Eleanor Roosevelt
Concord / (603) 228-1181
Bruce W. Felmly McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Kevin M. Fitzgerald Nixon Peabody
Manchester / (603) 628-4000
Wilbur A. Glahn McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Jamie N. Hage Hage Hodes
Manchester / (603) 668-2222
Scott H. Harris McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
James P. Harris Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Russell F. Hilliard Upton & Hatfield
Portsmouth / (603) 436-7046
Ralph F. Holmes McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Ovide M. Lamontagne Bernstein, Shur, Sawyer & Nelson Manchester / (603) 623-8700
Robert R. Lucic Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Daniel P. Luker Preti Flaherty Beliveau & Pachios Concord / (603) 410-1500
Kathleen M. Mahan Cook, Little, Rosenblatt & Manson Manchester / (603) 621-7100
Marc W. McDonald Ford, McDonald, McPartlin & Borden Portsmouth / (603) 373-1600
David W. McGrath Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Pamela A. Peterson Devine Millimet & Branch Manchester Family Law “In my practice area of family law, many of my clients are facing one of the most challenging times in their lives: the breakup of a relationship or a family. There is not only a profound sadness in what they are experiencing, but a hard reality requiring them to move forward with difficult decisions that impact their future. My role is to advise them and guide them through the turbulent times. Issues and obstacles, which appear insurmountable at first, can many times be resolved without court intervention. If that is not possible, I stand with my clients in court to achieve a litigated result. I enjoy family law as every day is different, but more importantly, I help people through a difficult phase in their lives.” 66
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Jack B. Middleton McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Robert H. Miller Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Gregory A. Moffett Preti Flaherty Beliveau & Pachios Concord / (603) 410-1500
Names highlighted in red were selected by Woodward/White as “Lawyers of the Year.”
• 2021 W. Scott O’Connell Nixon Peabody
Manchester / (603) 628-4000
James F. Ogorchock Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Thomas J. Pappas Primmer Piper Eggleston & Cramer
Manchester / (603) 626-3300
Jennifer L. Parent McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Michael A. Pignatelli Rath Young Pignatelli Nashua / (603) 889-9952
David W. Rayment Cleveland, Waters and Bass
“Courage is what it takes to stand up and speak; it is also what it takes to sit down and listen.” — Author unknown
Concord / (603) 224-7761
Arnold Rosenblatt Cook, Little, Rosenblatt & Manson Manchester / (603) 621-7100
Mark C. Rouvalis McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Jonathan M. Shirley CullenCollimore
Nashua / (603) 881-5500
James Q. Shirley Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Donald Lee Smith Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Frank P. Spinella Wadleigh, Starr and Peters
Manchester / (603) 669-4140
Robert A. Stein The Stein Law Firm
Concord / (603) 228-1109
Mary Elizabeth Tenn Tenn And Tenn
Manchester / (603) 624-3700
Andru H. Volinsky Bernstein, Shur, Sawyer & Nelson Manchester / (603) 623-8700
Jeremy T. Walker McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
James C. Wheat Wadleigh, Starr and Peters
Manchester / (603) 669-4140
Jack S. White Welts, White & Fontaine Nashua / (603) 883-0797
David Wolowitz McLane Middleton
Newington / (603) 436-2818
Mark E. Beliveau Pierce Atwood Portsmouth Environmental Law “Working with clients to find sensible solutions to challenging environmental problems is one of the most gratifying aspects of my law practice. Environmental issues are ubiquitous; they are frequent front-page news and affect all parts of our society. The dynamic nature of environmental law keeps my work interesting and challenging. In the end, the appreciation I receive from my clients for helping them achieve their objectives is what makes the long hours and hard work worthwhile.” nhmagazine.com | November 2020
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• 2021
“Perfection is not attainable, but if we chase perfection we can catch excellence.” — Vince Lombardi
Commercial Transactions/UCC Law Timothy E. Britain Cleveland, Waters and Bass Concord / (603) 224-7761
Charles F. Cleary Wadleigh, Starr and Peters
Manchester / (603) 669-4140
Peter Cline Gallagher, Callahan & Gartrell Concord / (603) 228-1181
Camille Holton DiCroce Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Scott W. Ellison Cook, Little, Rosenblatt & Manson Manchester / (603) 621-7100
Edmond J. Ford Ford, McDonald, McPartlin & Borden Portsmouth / (603) 373-1600
David K. Fries Cleveland, Waters and Bass Concord / (603) 224-7761
James D. Kerouac Bernstein, Shur, Sawyer & Nelson Manchester / (603) 623-8700
Construction Law Daniel M. Deschenes Hinckley Allen
Manchester / (603) 225-4334
Kelly J. Gagliuso Bernstein, Shur, Sawyer & Nelson Manchester / (603) 623-8700
Richard C. Gagliuso Bernstein, Shur, Sawyer & Nelson Manchester / (603) 623-8700
Matthew R. Johnson Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Bruce J. Marshall Bruce Marshall Law
Bow / (603) 715-8720
Thomas J. Pappas Primmer Piper Eggleston & Cramer Manchester / (603) 626-3300
Linda S. Johnson McLane Middleton Manchester Education Law My practice focuses primarily on understanding and serving the needs of independent schools, largely on the K-12 level with some work for colleges and universities. I consult with schools in New Hampshire, New England, nationally and internationally on prevention and responses to all types of student and campus safety issues, boundary awareness, educator sexual misconduct, risk avoidance, crisis response, employment law and independent school law issues. It is very rewarding to work for clients who are focused on doing the right thing, the right way. 68
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Kenneth E. Rubinstein Preti Flaherty Beliveau & Pachios Concord / (603) 410-1500
Frank P. Spinella Wadleigh, Starr and Peters
Manchester / (603) 669-4140
Jeremy T. Walker McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Consumer Protection Law Christine M. Craig Shaheen & Gordon
Dover / (603) 871-4144
• 2021
Copyright Law Daniel J. Bourque Bourque & Associates
Manchester / (603) 623-5111
Michael J. Bujold Davis & Bujold
Concord / (603) 226-7490
James G. Cook Cook, Little, Rosenblatt & Manson Manchester / (603) 621-7100
Mark A. Wright McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Corporate Compliance Law Michael A. Delaney McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Corporate Law Erik T. Barstow Integral Business Counsel
“Real boats rock.” — Frank Herbert, author of “The Dune” series
Portsmouth / (603) 766-0408
John P. Beals Nixon Peabody
Manchester / (603) 628-4000
Matthew H. Benson Cook, Little, Rosenblatt & Manson Manchester / (603) 621-7100
John Bentas McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Peter F. Burger Orr & Reno
Concord / (603) 224-2381
Steven M. Burke McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Christopher M. Candon Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Patrick C. Closson McLane Middleton
Newington / (603) 436-2818
Steve Cohen Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
James G. Cook Cook, Little, Rosenblatt & Manson Manchester / (603) 621-7100
Anthony Delyani McLane Middleton
Newington / (603) 436-2818
Joseph A. DiBrigida Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Michael J. Drooff Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Anthony Sculimbrene Gill and Sculimbrene Nashua Criminal Defense — General Practice “As for the work I do, I am mainly a criminal defense lawyer that also does civil rights cases. I feel like this work allows me to do three things that I find valuable all at the same time. First, it represents a constant intellectual challenge. Second, it allows me to push back on a criminal justice system in dire need of reform. And finally, it allows me to serve others. People come to me at the lowest point in their lives, and helping them dig out and rebuild is enormously satisfying.” nhmagazine.com | November 2020
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• 2021 Christopher M. Dube McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Scott W. Ellison Cook, Little, Rosenblatt & Manson Manchester / (603) 621-7100
Joseph A. Foster McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
David K. Fries Cleveland, Waters and Bass Concord / (603) 224-7761
“In life there are leaders and there are followers. Be a leader.” — Author unknown
Benjamin F. Gayman Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Dodd S. Griffith Gallagher, Callahan & Gartrell Concord / (603) 228-1181
Jamie N. Hage Hage Hodes
Manchester / (603) 668-2222
Dennis J. Haley McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Susan B. Hollinger Gallagher, Callahan & Gartrell Concord / (603) 228-1181
Mary Susan Leahy McLane Middleton
Newington / (603) 436-2818
Simon C. Leeming Preti Flaherty Beliveau & Pachios Concord / (603) 410-1500
Curtis Little Cook, Little, Rosenblatt & Manson Manchester / (603) 621-7100
Daniel P. Luker Preti Flaherty Beliveau & Pachios Concord / (603) 410-1500
Colleen Lyons Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green Manchester / (603) 668-0300
J. Daniel Marr Hamblett & Kerrigan
Nashua / (603) 883-5501
Angela B. Martin Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Robert J. Lanney Sulloway & Hollis Concord Personal Injury Litigation — Defendants
Mark S. McCue Hinckley Allen
Manchester / (603) 225-4334
John R. Monson Primmer Piper Eggleston & Cramer Manchester / (603) 626-3300
I have been fortunate to practice law at Sulloway & Hollis for over 36 years. What I enjoy most is working with a team of talented professionals dedicated to providing our clients with the highest quality legal services. From attorneys to paralegals, legal assistants to firm administrators, librarians to receptionists, the Sulloway team has provided me the opportunity to serve my clients and community in a meaningful way. I am proud to call my Sulloway colleagues friends. 70
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Daniel J. Norris McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Lyndsee D. Paskalis Stebbins, Lazos & Van Der Beken Manchester / (603) 627-3700
• 2021 Scott E. Pueschel Pierce Atwood
Portsmouth / (603) 433-6300
Cathy J. Green Shaheen & Gordon
Alan L. Reische Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green
Timothy M. Harrington Shaheen & Gordon
Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Michael D. Ruedig Gallagher, Callahan & Gartrell Concord / (603) 228-1181
Richard A. Samuels McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Daniel W. Sklar Nixon Peabody
Manchester / (603) 628-4000
Jon B. Sparkman Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Henry B. Stebbins Stebbins, Lazos & Van Der Beken
Manchester / (603) 627-3700
John M. Sullivan Preti Flaherty Beliveau & Pachios
Concord / (603) 819-4231
Dover / (603) 871-4144
Michael J. Iacopino Brennan Lenehan Iacopino & Hickey
Manchester / (603) 734-5461
Christine C. List Primmer Piper Eggleston & Cramer
Manchester / (603) 626-3300
Jaye L. Rancourt Brennan Lenehan Iacopino & Hickey
Manchester / (603) 734-5461
James D. Rosenberg Shaheen & Gordon Concord / (603) 819-4231
Anthony Sculimbrene Gill and Sculimbrene Nashua / (855) 645-2971
Concord / (603) 410-1500
Mark L. Sisti Sisti Law Offices
Kara N. Sweeney Preti Flaherty Beliveau & Pachios
Criminal Defense — White-Collar
Concord / (603) 410-1500
Philip B. Taub Nixon Peabody
Manchester / (603) 628-4000
Michael B. Tule McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
David P. Van Der Beken Stebbins, Lazos & Van Der Beken Manchester / (603) 627-3700
Kenneth A. Viscarello Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green
Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Chichester / (603) 224-4220
Peter D. Anderson McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
William E. Brennan Brennan Lenehan Iacopino & Hickey
Manchester / (603) 734-5461
Donna J. Brown Wadleigh, Starr and Peters
Manchester / (603) 669-4140
Robert S. Carey Orr & Reno
Concord / (603) 224-2381
Alan J. Cronheim Sisti Law Offices
Criminal Defense — Portsmouth / (603) 433-7117 General Practice Steven M. Gordon William E. Brennan Brennan Lenehan Iacopino & Hickey
Shaheen & Gordon
Donna J. Brown Wadleigh, Starr and Peters
Concord / (603) 819-4231
Robert S. Carey Orr & Reno
Manchester / (603) 628-4000
Manchester / (603) 734-5461
Manchester / (603) 669-4140
Concord / (603) 224-2381
Alan J. Cronheim Sisti Law Offices
Portsmouth / (603) 433-7117
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Concord / (603) 819-4231
Cathy J. Green Shaheen & Gordon
W. Scott O’Connell Nixon Peabody
Patrick J. Queenan Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green
Manchester / (603) 668-0300
• 2021 Brian M. Quirk Preti Flaherty Beliveau & Pachios Concord / (603) 410-1500
James D. Rosenberg Shaheen & Gordon Concord / (603) 819-4231
Anthony Sculimbrene Gill and Sculimbrene Nashua / 855-645-2971
Mark L. Sisti Sisti Law Offices
Chichester / (603) 224-4220
Andru H. Volinsky Bernstein, Shur, Sawyer & Nelson Manchester / (603) 623-8700
Phil Waystack Waystack Frizzell
Colebrook / (603) 237-8322
DUI/DWI Defense George T. Campbell George Campbell, Attorney at Law Manchester / (603) 787-5364
Theodore Lothstein Lothstein Guerriero Concord / (603) 513-1919
James D. Rosenberg Shaheen & Gordon
Ryan Russman Russman Law
Elder Law
Exeter / (603) 772-3433
Christine S. Anderson Ansell & Anderson
Education Law
Bedford / (603) 644-8211
Dean B. Eggert Wadleigh, Starr and Peters
Tina L. Annis Annis & Zellers
Manchester / (603) 669-4140
Concord / (603) 224-5800
Linda S. Johnson McLane Middleton
Judith L. Bomster Butenhof & Bomster
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Manchester / (603) 296-0428
Kathleen C. Peahl Wadleigh, Starr and Peters
Ann N. Butenhof Butenhof & Bomster
Manchester / (603) 669-4140
Manchester / (603) 296-0428
John F. Teague Upton & Hatfield
David R. Craig David R. Craig & Associates
Concord / (603) 716-9777
Andru H. Volinsky Bernstein, Shur, Sawyer & Nelson
Manchester / (603) 623-8700
David Wolowitz McLane Middleton
Newington / (603) 436-2818
Gerald M. Zelin Drummond Woodsum
Portsmouth / (603) 433-3317
New Boston / (603) 487-3915
Ann Meissner Flood Flood, Sheehan & Tobin Concord / (603) 415-4200
Jan P. Myskowski Myskowski & Matthews Concord / (603) 227-6342
Andrea L. Sennott Robinson, Boesch, Sennott and Daly PA
Portsmouth / (603) 427-5380
Virginia Symmes Sheehan Flood, Sheehan & Tobin Concord / (603) 415-4200
Employee Benefits (ERISA) Law Patricia M. McGrath Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
John E. Rich McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Employment Law — Individuals
Concord / (603) 716-9777
Edward M. Kaplan Sulloway & Hollis
Concord / (603) 223-2800
C. Kevin Leonard Douglas, Leonard & Garvey Concord / (603) 224-1988
Jon Meyer Backus, Meyer & Branch
Manchester / (603) 244-3282
Richard E. Molan Molan Law Office
Manchester / (603) 206-5470
Francis G. Murphy Shaheen & Gordon
Heather M. Burns Upton & Hatfield
Manchester / (603) 635-4099
Christopher Cole Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green
Concord / (603) 369-4769
Concord / (603) 716-9777
Kathleen M. Robinson Robinson, Boesch, Sennott and Daly PA
Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Portsmouth / (603) 427-5380
Manchester / (603) 668-2222
Kathleen A. Davidson Hage Hodes
Concord / (603) 819-4231
Drummond Woodsum is proud to congratulate our outstanding attorneys for truly being among New Hampshire’s very best.
Lauren S. Irwin Upton & Hatfield
Terri Pastori Pastori Krans
Christopher J. Pyles Sulloway & Hollis
Concord / (603) 223-2800
Andru H. Volinsky Bernstein, Shur, Sawyer & Nelson
Manchester / (603) 623-8700
Mark T. Broth
Anna B. Cole
Employment Law
James A. O’Shaughnessy
Employment & Labor Law
Matthew R. Serge
Mona T. Movafaghi
Gerald M. Zelin Education Law
Municipal Litigation
Immigration Law
Employment Law
The Best Lawyers in America®
We practice law differently. Since 1965. 74
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dwmlaw.com | 800.727.1941 | Manchester, Portsmouth & Lebanon, NH
THE TEAM YOU WANT ON YOUR
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• 2021
“There is nothing like the death of a moneyed member of the family to show persons as they really are, virtuous or conniving, generous or grasping. ... Each case is a drama in human relationships.” — Jesse Dukeminier & Stanley Johanson “Family Wealth Transactions” (1972)
Employment Law — Management Elizabeth A. Bailey Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Mark T. Broth Drummond Woodsum
Manchester / (603) 716-2895
Andrea G. Chatfield Cook, Little, Rosenblatt & Manson
Manchester / (603) 621-7100
Thomas M. Closson Jackson Lewis
Portsmouth / (603) 559-2700
Anna B. Cole Drummond Woodsum
Manchester / (603) 716-2895
Christopher Cole Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green
Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Beth A. Deragon Pastori Krans
Concord / (603) 369-4769
Debra Weiss Ford Jackson Lewis
Portsmouth / (603) 559-2700
Lauren S. Irwin Upton & Hatfield
Concord / (603) 716-9777
Linda S. Johnson McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Edward M. Kaplan Sulloway & Hollis
Concord / (603) 223-2800
David W. McGrath Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green
Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Jennifer Shea Moeckel Cook, Little, Rosenblatt & Manson
Manchester / (603) 621-7100
Benjamin Siracusa Hillman Shaheen & Gordon Concord Litigation — Trusts and Estates Being an estate planner and probate litigator means that I am working with individual clients all day on some of their deepest felt and most fraught challenges. Clients rely on me for both emotional support in difficult times and knowledge in a variety of interrelated areas — estate planning, litigation, tax planning, guardianships, trust administration, and Medicaid, Social Security and other benefits — as we work together to create plans and resolve disputes when the plans have gone awry or were never created in the first place. The work is intellectually and emotionally challenging, and rarely easy, but there is no better reward than seeing the sense of fulfillment and relief clients have when they achieve resolution and can move on to the business of living.
Margaret A. O’Brien Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
James A. O’Shaughnessy Drummond Woodsum
Manchester / (603) 716-2895
Jennifer L. Parent McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Terri Pastori Pastori Krans
Concord / (603) 369-4769
Kathleen C. Peahl Wadleigh, Starr and Peters
Manchester / (603) 669-4140
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• 2021 Christopher J. Pyles Sulloway & Hollis
Concord / (603) 223-2800
Elizabeth K. Rattigan Downs Rachlin Martin Lebanon / (603) 448-2211
James P. Reidy Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green
Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Daniel P. Schwarz Jackson Lewis
Portsmouth / (603) 559-2700
Donald Lee Smith Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Energy Law Robert P. Cheney Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green
Energy Regulatory Law
Mark W. Dean Mark Dean
Thomas B. Getz McLane Middleton
Concord / (603) 230-9955
Susan S. Geiger Orr & Reno
Concord / (603) 224-2381
Thomas B. Getz McLane Middleton
Concord / (603) 226-0400
Barry Needleman McLane Middleton
Concord / (603) 226-0400
Martha Van Oot Jackson Lewis
Concord / (603) 223-2800
Portsmouth / (603) 559-2700
Andru H. Volinsky Bernstein, Shur, Sawyer & Nelson
Manchester / (603) 623-8700
David Wolowitz McLane Middleton
Newington / (603) 436-2818
Concord / (603) 226-2600
Concord / (603) 223-2020
Charla Bizios Stevens McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
M. Curtis Whittaker Rath Young Pignatelli
Margaret H. Nelson Sulloway & Hollis Douglas L. Patch Orr & Reno
Concord / (603) 224-2381
Donald J. Pfundstein Gallagher, Callahan & Gartrell Concord / (603) 228-1181
Richard A. Samuels McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Concord / (603) 226-0400
M. Curtis Whittaker Rath Young Pignatelli
Gregory H. Smith McLane Middleton
R. David Depuy McLane Middleton
Concord / (603) 226-0400
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Sherilyn Burnett Young Rath Young Pignatelli
Judith A. Fairclough Orr & Reno
Concord / (603) 226-2600
Ethics and Professional Responsibility Law
Concord / (603) 226-2600
Mitchell M. Simon Devine Millimet & Branch
Environmental Law
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Mark E. Beliveau Pierce Atwood
Family Law
Portsmouth / (603) 433-6300
Robert P. Cheney Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green Concord / (603) 223-2020
Barry Needleman McLane Middleton
Concord / (603) 226-0400
Michael J. Quinn McLane Middleton
Newington / (603) 436-2818
Stephen H. Roberts Hoefle, Phoenix, Gormley & Roberts
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Concord / (603) 225-5252
Carolyn S. Garvey Douglas, Leonard & Garvey Concord / (603) 224-1988
Jaime I. Gillis Integral Business Counsel
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Ronald J. Caron Devine Millimet & Branch
Sara B. Crisp The Crisp Law Firm
Manchester / (603) 836-5400
William F. Gramer Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 734-5461
Concord / (603) 819-4231
James V. Ferro Ferro Law & Mediation Group
Portsmouth / (603) 766-0408
William E. Brennan Brennan Lenehan Iacopino & Hickey
Tracey Goyette Cote Shaheen & Gordon
Concord / (603) 224-2381
Kathleen A. Hickey Brennan Lenehan Iacopino & Hickey
Manchester / (603) 734-5461
Ellen M. Joseph Ellen Joseph Law
Manchester / (603) 836-5200
Margaret R. Kerouac Orr & Reno Concord / (603) 224-2381
Portsmouth / (603) 436-0666
EXCELLENCE RECOGNIZED BY OUR PEERS Congratulations to our twelve colleagues for once again being listed among The Best Lawyers in America®. Additionally we would like to congratulate Robert S. Carey for being selected as “Lawyer of the Year”.
nhmagazine.com | November 2020
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• 2021 Heather E. Krans Pastori Krans
Catherine E. Shanelaris Shanelaris & Schirch
Concord / (603) 369-4769
Nashua / (603) 594-8300
Crystal M. Maldonado Devine Millimet & Branch
Patrick J. Sheehan Sheehan Law Office
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Concord / (603) 715-2560
Debbie Martin-Demers Rousseau Law and Mediation
Robert A. Stein The Stein Law Firm
Pembroke / (603) 715-2824
Concord / (603) 228-1109
Katherine Morneau Law Office of Katherine J. Morneau
James J. Tenn Tenn And Tenn
Nashua / (603) 943-5647
Manchester / (603) 624-3700
James F. Ogorchock Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green
Mary Elizabeth Tenn Tenn And Tenn
Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Pamela A. Peterson Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
William J. Quinn Brennan Lenehan Iacopino & Hickey
Manchester / (603) 734-5461
Kevin Rauseo Hamblett & Kerrigan
Nashua / (603) 883-5501
L. Jonathan Ross Primmer Piper Eggleston & Cramer
Manchester / (603) 624-3700
Stephen L. Tober Tober Law Offices
Portsmouth / (603) 431-1003
Kimberly Weibrecht Weibrecht Law Dover / (603) 842-5525
Ronna F. Wise Sulloway & Hollis
Concord / (603) 223-2800
Anna Goulet Zimmerman Law Office of Manning & Zimmerman Manchester / (603) 671-3156
Manchester / (603) 626-3300
Richard A. Samuels McLane Middleton
Donald J. Pfundstein Gallagher, Callahan & Gartrell
Henry B. Stebbins Stebbins, Lazos & Van Der Beken
Thomas D. Rath Rath Young Pignatelli
Manchester / (603) 627-3700
Concord / (603) 226-2600
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
David P. Van Der Beken Stebbins, Lazos & Van Der Beken
George W. Roussos Orr & Reno
James V. Ferro Ferro Law & Mediation Group
Manchester / (603) 627-3700
Concord / (603) 224-2381
First Amendment Law
Mark C. Rouvalis McLane Middleton
Family Law Arbitration James V. Ferro Ferro Law & Mediation Group Manchester / (603) 836-5400
R. David Depuy McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 836-5400
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
William L. Chapman Orr & Reno
Margaret R. Kerouac Orr & Reno
Concord / (603) 224-2381
Concord / (603) 224-2381
Jon Meyer Backus, Meyer & Branch
James J. Tenn Tenn And Tenn
Manchester / (603) 624-3700
Financial Services Regulation Law Denise J. Deschenes Primmer Piper Eggleston & Cramer
W. John Funk Gallagher, Callahan & Gartrell
Gregory H. Smith McLane Middleton
Concord / (603) 226-0400
Health Care Law
David Wolowitz McLane Middleton
Patrick C. Closson McLane Middleton
Newington / (603) 436-2818
Newington / (603) 436-2818
Franchise Law
Jason D. Gregoire Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green
Manchester / (603) 628-4000
Concord / (603) 228-1181
Government Relations Practice
Donald J. Pfundstein Gallagher, Callahan & Gartrell
James V. Hatem Nixon Peabody
Concord / (603) 228-1181
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Manchester / (603) 244-3282
Daniel Deane Nixon Peabody
Littleton / (603) 444-4008
Concord / (603) 228-1181
Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Katherine M. Hanna Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Lucy J. Karl Shaheen & Gordon
Concord / (603) 819-4231
Manchester / (603) 628-4000
Congratulations to our colleagues who were chosen by their peers to appear in The Best Lawyers in America 2021. ©
“Lawyers of the Year”
Recognized by Best Laywers®
Thomas D. Rath
Michael A. Pignatelli
Christopher J. Sullivan
Sherilyn Burnett Young
M. Curtis Whittaker
William F. J. Ardinger
Steven J. Lauwers
Adam B. Pignatelli
Kathryn H. Michaelis
Lawrence S. Smith
National Impact. Uniquely New Hampshire. www.rathlaw.com | Concord | Nashua | Boston | Montpelier 78
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• 2021 Jonathan A. Lax Devine Millimet & Branch
Robert C. Dewhirst Devine Millimet & Branch
Margaret H. Nelson Sulloway & Hollis
Jennifer L. Parent McLane Middleton
Mark S. McCue Hinckley Allen
Andrew D. Dunn Devine Millimet & Branch
Donald J. Pfundstein Gallagher, Callahan & Gartrell
Kathleen C. Peahl Wadleigh, Starr and Peters
Immigration Law
Gregory Eaton Primmer Piper Eggleston & Cramer
Stephen H. Roberts Hoefle, Phoenix, Gormley & Roberts
James P. Reidy Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green
George W. Roussos Orr & Reno
Cameron G. Shilling McLane Middleton
Labor Law — Management
Charla Bizios Stevens McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Manchester / (603) 225-4334
Susan T. Goff GoffWilson
Manchester / (603) 228-1277
Thomas W. Hildreth McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Mona T. Movafaghi Drummond Woodsum
Manchester / (603) 716-2895
John R. Wilson GoffWilson
Manchester / (603) 228-1277
Insurance Law
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Charles W. Grau Upton & Hatfield James V. Hatem Nixon Peabody
Manchester / (603) 628-4000
Manchester / (603) 716-2895
Gary M. Burt Primmer Piper Eggleston & Cramer Manchester / (603) 626-3300
Doreen F. Connor Primmer Piper Eggleston & Cramer Manchester / (603) 626-3300
Adam R. Mordecai Primmer Piper Eggleston & Cramer
Manchester / (603) 626-3300
Sarah S. Murdough Sulloway & Hollis
Concord / (603) 223-2800
Mark T. Broth Drummond Woodsum
Manchester / (603) 716-2895
Portsmouth / (603) 436-7046
Concord / (603) 226-2600
Mark T. Broth Drummond Woodsum
Concord / (603) 224-2381
Concord / (603) 716-9777
Steven J. Lauwers Rath Young Pignatelli
Concord / (603) 228-1181
Portsmouth / (603) 436-0666
Littleton / (603) 444-4008
Russell F. Hilliard Upton & Hatfield
Concord / (603) 223-2800
Christopher Cole Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Debra Weiss Ford Jackson Lewis
Portsmouth / (603) 559-2700
Edward M. Kaplan Sulloway & Hollis
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Manchester / (603) 669-4140
Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Martha Van Oot Jackson Lewis
Portsmouth / (603) 559-2700
Andru H. Volinsky Bernstein, Shur, Sawyer & Nelson Manchester / (603) 623-8700
Labor Law — Union Richard E. Molan Molan Law Office
Andrew Bauer Gottesman & Hollis
Nashua / (603) 889-5959
Mark E. Beliveau Pierce Atwood
Portsmouth / (603) 433-6300
Timothy E. Britain Cleveland, Waters and Bass Concord / (603) 224-7761
Suzanne Brunelle Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Raymond P. D’Amante D’Amante Couser Pellerin & Associates Concord / (603) 224-6777
Philip M. Hastings Cleveland, Waters and Bass Concord / (603) 224-7761
Thomas W. Hildreth McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Manchester / (603) 206-5470
Concord / (603) 223-2800
Land Use and Zoning Law
Morgan Hollis Gottesman & Hollis
Nashua / (603) 889-5959
David W. McGrath Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Morneau Law
M
30 Temple St., Suite 503, Nashua (603) 943-5647 • www.morneaulaw.com
orneau Law is a boutique law firm in southern New Hampshire helping individuals with estate planning, probate and family law. We are celebrating Kate Morneau’s selection as a 2020 Best Lawyer for family law. The Morneau Law team handles a variety of matters, including, divorces, estate planning, adoptions, stepparent and grandparent rights, Medicaid applications, estate administration and trust administration. Your privacy and integrity will be protected from the first moment you contact the firm. Your case will be handled professionally and in the most efficient manner possible. Come experience the Morneau Law difference, where you get the attention of a small firm, but the support of having a large experienced legal team. We are located in beautiful downtown Nashua representing individuals in southern New Hampshire and estate planning clients in both New Hampshire and Massachusetts.
nhmagazine.com | November 2020
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• 2021 Peter J. Loughlin Law Office of Peter J. Loughlin Portsmouth / (603) 431-6466
Gregory Michael Bernstein, Shur, Sawyer & Nelson Manchester / (603) 623-8700
Ari B. Pollack Gallagher, Callahan & Gartrell Concord / (603) 228-1181
John H. Sokul Jr. Hinckley Allen
Henry B. Stebbins Stebbins, Lazos & Van Der Beken Manchester / (603) 627-3700
William C. Tucker Wadleigh, Starr and Peters
Manchester / (603) 669-4140
Legal Malpractice Law — Defendants Richard C. Nelson Devine Millimet & Branch
William C. Saturley Preti Flaherty Beliveau & Pachios Concord / (603) 410-1500
Manchester / (603) 225-4334
Litigation — Environmental
Adam B. Pignatelli Rath Young Pignatelli
Daniel M. Deschenes Hinckley Allen
Michael J. Quinn McLane Middleton
Kevin M. Fitzgerald Nixon Peabody
Ronald D. Ciotti Hinckley Allen
W. Scott O’Connell Nixon Peabody
Manchester / (603) 628-4000
Manchester / (603) 669-4140
Manchester / (603) 628-4000
Manchester / (603) 225-4334
Arnold Rosenblatt Cook, Little, Rosenblatt & Manson
Kelly J. Gagliuso Bernstein, Shur, Sawyer & Nelson Manchester / (603) 623-8700
Jeremy T. Walker McLane Middleton
Christopher D. Hawkins Devine Millimet & Branch
Litigation Bankruptcy
Matthew R. Johnson Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
William S. Gannon William S. Gannon
Manchester / (603) 769-4756
Steven M. Notinger Notinger Law
Nashua / (603) 417-2158
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
W. Scott O’Connell Nixon Peabody
Litigation — Construction
Manchester / (603) 621-7100
Manchester / (603) 225-4334
James C. Wheat Wadleigh, Starr and Peters
Litigation — Banking and Finance
Thomas J. Pappas Primmer Piper Eggleston & Cramer Manchester / (603) 626-3300
Daniel W. Sklar Nixon Peabody
Manchester / (603) 628-4000
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Ovide M. Lamontagne Bernstein, Shur, Sawyer & Nelson Manchester / (603) 623-8700
Bruce J. Marshall Bruce Marshall Law
Lisa Snow Wade Orr & Reno
Sherilyn Burnett Young Rath Young Pignatelli
Litigation — Insurance
Manchester / (603) 669-4140
Jeremy T. Walker McLane Middleton
Concord / (603) 224-2381
Concord / (603) 226-2600
Mark T. Broth Drummond Woodsum
Litigation — First Amendment
Manchester / (603) 716-2895
Gary M. Burt Primmer Piper Eggleston & Cramer
William L. Chapman Orr & Reno
Manchester / (603) 626-3300
Concord / (603) 224-2381
Richard C. Gagliuso Bernstein, Shur, Sawyer & Nelson Manchester / (603) 623-8700
Steven M. Gordon Shaheen & Gordon
Litigation — Health Care
Frank P. Spinella Wadleigh, Starr and Peters
Concord / (603) 226-2600
Newington / (603) 436-2818
Concord / (603) 819-4231
Bow / (603) 715-8720
Manchester / (603) 628-4000
Mark D. Attori Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Doreen F. Connor Primmer Piper Eggleston & Cramer Manchester / (603) 626-3300
Robert C. Dewhirst Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Gregory Eaton Primmer Piper Eggleston & Cramer
Littleton / (603) 444-4008
Jonathan M. Eck Orr & Reno
Concord / (603) 224-2381
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Hinckley Allen attorneys recognized by Best Lawyers in America 2021®
Daniel M. Deschenes
John H. Sokul, Jr.
Lawyer of the Year
Lawyer of the Year
Litigation – Construction
Michael J. Connolly
Bet-the-Company Litigation, Commercial Litigation, Criminal Defense: White-Collar
Land Use and Zoning Law
Best Lawyer
Ronald D. Ciotti
Mark S. McCue
Best Lawyer
Best Lawyer
Litigation – Construction
ALBAN Y
BOS TON
CHIC AGO
HAR TFOR D
MANCHE S TER
NE W YORK
© 2020 Hinckley, Allen & Snyder LLP. All rights reserved. Attorney Advertising.
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Owen R. Graham
Commercial Litigation; Criminal Defense: White-Collar
Corporate and Health Care Law
Ones to Watch
PROVIDENCE
• 2021 Charles W. Grau Upton & Hatfield
Jamie N. Hage Hage Hodes
Debra Weiss Ford Jackson Lewis
Elizabeth K. Rattigan Downs Rachlin Martin
Morgan Hollis Gottesman & Hollis
Melissa M. Hanlon Sulloway & Hollis
Arnold Rosenblatt Cook, Little, Rosenblatt & Manson
Charles W. Grau Upton & Hatfield
Arnold Rosenblatt Cook, Little, Rosenblatt & Manson
Gregory Michael Bernstein, Shur, Sawyer & Nelson
Russell F. Hilliard Upton & Hatfield
Jonathan M. Shirley CullenCollimore
Lauren S. Irwin Upton & Hatfield
Nashua / (603) 881-5500
Concord / (603) 716-9777
Daniel P. Schwarz Jackson Lewis
Jack B. Middleton McLane Middleton
Adam R. Mordecai Primmer Piper Eggleston & Cramer
Mark A. Wright McLane Middleton
James F. Laboe Orr & Reno
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Concord / (603) 224-2381
Cameron G. Shilling McLane Middleton
Robert H. Miller Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green
Litigation — Labor and Employment
Jack B. Middleton McLane Middleton
Charla Bizios Stevens McLane Middleton
Jennifer L. Parent McLane Middleton
Martha Van Oot Jackson Lewis
Ari B. Pollack Gallagher, Callahan & Gartrell
David Wolowitz McLane Middleton
Thomas Quarles Devine Millimet & Branch
Litigation — Land Use and Zoning
John H. Sokul Hinckley Allen
Concord / (603) 716-9777
Manchester / (603) 668-2222
Concord / (603) 223-2800
Manchester / (603) 621-7100
Portsmouth / (603) 436-7046
Manchester / (603) 626-3300
Adam B. Pignatelli Rath Young Pignatelli
Concord / (603) 226-2600
Donald Lee Smith Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Litigation — Intellectual Property
Portsmouth / (603) 559-2700
Concord / (603) 716-9777
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Elizabeth A. Bailey Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green
Adam R. Mordecai Primmer Piper Eggleston & Cramer
Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Manchester / (603) 626-3300
Heather M. Burns Upton & Hatfield
Thomas J. Pappas Primmer Piper Eggleston & Cramer
Daniel J. Bourque Bourque & Associates
Concord / (603) 716-9777
Manchester / (603) 626-3300
Thomas M. Closson Jackson Lewis
Terri Pastori Pastori Krans
Michael J. Bujold Davis & Bujold
Portsmouth / (603) 559-2700
Concord / (603) 369-4769
Christopher Cole Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green
Christopher J. Pyles Sulloway & Hollis
Christopher Cole Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green
Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Manchester / (603) 623-5111
Concord / (603) 226-7490
Concord / (603) 223-2800
Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Lebanon / (603) 448-2211
Nashua / (603) 889-5959
Manchester / (603) 621-7100
Portsmouth / (603) 559-2700
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Portsmouth / (603) 559-2700
Newington / (603) 436-2818
Manchester / (603) 623-8700
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Concord / (603) 228-1181
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Robert S. Carey Orr & Reno
Manchester / (603) 225-4334
Henry B. Stebbins Stebbins, Lazos & Van Der Beken
Concord / (603) 224-2381
Christopher Cole Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green
Manchester / (603) 627-3700
Manchester / (603) 668-0300
We’re not superheroes, but we’ll be here when you need us. Steven M. Gordon
D. Michael Noonan
Bill Christie
Peter W. Schroeter
We’re proud of our attorneys named Super Lawyers® 2020, and the results they deliver every day to clients like you.
James D. Rosenberg
Lucy J. Karl
Fran Murphy
Tracey Goyette Cote
Timothy M. Harrington
Benjamin Siracusa Hillman
Cathy J. Green
Jeffrey Manganaro Rising Stars 2020
Concord • Dover • Manchester • Nashua • Portland
Anthony Carr
Rising Stars 2020
Nicholas Kline
Rising Stars 2020
Alexander Spadinger Rising Stars 2020
It’s different here shaheengordon.com nhmagazine.com | November 2020
81
• 2021 R. James Steiner Steiner Law
Concord / (603) 345-6440
Mass Tort Litigation Class Actions — Defendants
Lebanon / (603) 448-2211
David Wolowitz McLane Middleton
Kevin M. Fitzgerald Nixon Peabody
Gregory Michael Bernstein, Shur, Sawyer & Nelson
Andrea L. Daly Robinson, Boesch, Sennott and Daly PA
Litigation and Controversy — Tax
James E. Morris Orr & Reno
David P. Eby Devine Millimet & Branch
Thomas Quarles Devine Millimet & Branch
Ralph F. Holmes McLane Middleton
Roy W. Tilsley Bernstein, Shur, Sawyer & Nelson
Pamela J. Newkirk Barradale, O’Connell, Newkirk & Dwyer
Manchester / (603) 623-8700
Bedford / (603) 644-0275
Daniel J. Bourque Bourque & Associates
Litigation — Securities
Elise H. Salek Sulloway & Hollis
Jamie N. Hage Hage Hodes
Manchester / (603) 628-4000
Litigation — Mergers and Acquisitions Kevin M. Fitzgerald Nixon Peabody
Manchester / (603) 628-4000
Litigation — Municipal
Litigation — Real Estate
Litigation — Trusts and Estates
Timothy E. Britain Cleveland, Waters and Bass
Thomas C. Csatari Downs Rachlin Martin
Concord / (603) 224-7761
Manchester / (603) 623-8700
Barton L. Mayer Upton & Hatfield
Concord / (603) 716-9777
W. Scott O’Connell Nixon Peabody
Manchester / (603) 628-4000
Matthew R. Serge Drummond Woodsum
Manchester / (603) 716-2895
Litigation — Patent Manchester / (603) 623-5111
Manchester / (603) 668-2222
Arnold Rosenblatt Cook, Little, Rosenblatt & Manson
Concord / (603) 224-2381
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
W. Scott O’Connell Nixon Peabody
Arnold Rosenblatt Cook, Little, Rosenblatt & Manson Manchester / (603) 621-7100
Newington / (603) 436-2818
Portsmouth / (603) 427-5380
W. Scott O’Connell Nixon Peabody
Manchester / (603) 628-4000
William F. J. Ardinger Rath Young Pignatelli Concord / (603) 226-2600
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Peter T. Beach Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Kathryn H. Michaelis Rath Young Pignatelli
Dover / (603) 871-4144
D. Michael Noonan Shaheen & Gordon
Mediation
Concord / (603) 226-2600
Charles P. Bauer Gallagher, Callahan & Gartrell
Jack B. Middleton McLane Middleton
Benjamin Siracusa Hillman Shaheen & Gordon
Christine M. Craig Shaheen & Gordon
Dover / (603) 871-4144
Concord / (603) 224-4324
Concord / (603) 223-2800
Mass Tort Litigation Class Actions — Plaintiffs
David F. Conley David F. Conley
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Concord / (603) 819-4231
Concord / (603) 228-1181
Dennis T. Ducharme Ducharme Resolutions
Manchester / (603) 935-7292
Robert A. Stein The Stein Law Firm
James V. Ferro Ferro Law & Mediation Group
Concord / (603) 228-1109
Manchester / (603) 621-7100
Manchester / (603) 628-4000
Manchester / (603) 836-5400
Deb Ford Ford DebDeb Ford Deb Ford
Marty Van Oot MartyVan Van Oot Oot Marty Marty Van Oot
Kevin Sibbernsen
Tom Closson TomTom Closson Closson Tom Closson
Dan Schwarz Dan Schwarz Dan Schwarz Dan Schwarz
Nancy Oliver
Josh Scott
Sam Martin
Jackson Lewis isSibbernsen dedicated to representing management exclusively Josh inJosh workplace law. The firm’s of Kevin Sibbernsen Nancy Oliver Scott Samrange Martin Kevin Nancy Oliver Scott Sam Martin specialized areas of practice provides the resources to address every aspect of the employer/employee relationship. Kevin Sibbernsen Nancy Oliver Josh Scott Sam Martin Jackson Lewis is dedicated to representing management exclusively in workplace law. The firm’s range of Jackson Lewis is dedicated to representing management exclusively in workplace law. The firm’s range of Weiss Ford, Martha Van Daniel P. Schwarz, Thomas M.aspect Closson, Nancy E. Oliver and firm’s K. Joshua Scott Debra Jackson Lewis isofof dedicated toOot, representing management exclusively in workplace law. The range of specialized areas practice provides the resources resources to every of of the employer/employee relationship. specialized areas practice provides the toaddress address every aspect the employer/employee relationship. were recognized in the 2020Van Edition of Chambers USA. specialized areas of practice provides the resources to address every aspect of the employer/employee relationship. Weiss Ford, Martha Oot, Daniel P. Schwarz, Thomas M. Closson, Nancy E. Oliver and K. Joshua Scott Debra Debra Weiss Ford, Martha Van Oot, Daniel P. Schwarz, Thomas M. Closson, Nancy E. Oliver and K. Joshua Scott Weiss Ford, Martha Van Oot, Daniel P. Schwarz, Debra were recognized the2020 2020 Edition of Chambers Chambers USA. were recognized inin the Edition of USA. Thomas M. Closson, Nancy E. Oliver and K. Joshua Scott were recognized in the 2020 Edition of Chambers USA.
Jackson Lewis P.C.
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Jackson Lewis P.C. ● ● 100 100International International Drive Jackson Lewis P.C. Drive Jackson Lewis P.C. ● 100 International Drive 82
nhmagazine.com | November 2020
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●● Portsmouth, ● www.jacksonlewis.com Portsmouth,NH NH● ●603-559-2700 603-559-2700 ● www.jacksonlewis.com ● Portsmouth, NH ● 603-559-2700 ● www.jacksonlewis.com
• 2021 John Burwell Garvey University of New Hampshire School of Law Concord / (603) 228-1541
Melinda Gehris Hess Gehris Solutions
Concord / (603) 225-0477
Russell F. Hilliard Upton & Hatfield
Ronald J. Lajoie Wadleigh, Starr and Peters
Manchester / (603) 669-4140
Robert J. Lanney Sulloway & Hollis
Concord / (603) 223-2800
Michael P. Lehman Sulloway & Hollis
Concord / (603) 223-2800
Portsmouth / (603) 436-7046
William A. Mulvey Mulvey, Cornell & Mulvey
Portsmouth / (603) 431-1333
Medical Malpractice Law — Defendants Mark D. Attori Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Peter A. Meyer Sulloway & Hollis
Concord / (603) 223-2800
Pete W. Mosseau Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Gregory G. Peters Wadleigh, Starr and Peters
Manchester / (603) 669-4140
Beth G. Catenza Sulloway & Hollis
Michael A. Pignatelli Rath Young Pignatelli
Melissa M. Hanlon Sulloway & Hollis
William N. Smart Morrison Mahoney
Todd J. Hathaway Wadleigh, Starr and Peters
Lisa Snow Wade Orr & Reno
Concord / (603) 223-2800
Concord / (603) 223-2800
Manchester / (603) 669-4140
Nashua / (603) 889-9952
Manchester / (603) 622-3400
Concord / (603) 224-2381
Medical Malpractice Law — Plaintiffs Mark A. Abramson Abramson, Brown & Dugan
Manchester / (603) 627-1819
Eva H. Bleich Abramson, Brown & Dugan
Manchester / (603) 627-1819
Heather M. Burns Upton & Hatfield
Concord / (603) 716-9777
R. David Depuy McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Kevin F. Dugan Abramson, Brown & Dugan
Manchester / (603) 627-1819
Richard E. Fradette Beliveau, Fradette & Gallant
Manchester / (603) 623-1234
Holly B. Haines Abramson, Brown & Dugan
Manchester / (603) 627-1819
Ralph F. Holmes McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Maureen Raiche Manning Law Office of Manning & Zimmerman Manchester / (603) 671-3156
Dennis J. Haley McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Susan B. Hollinger Gallagher, Callahan & Gartrell
Michael P. Rainboth Coughlin, Rainboth, Murphy & Lown
Concord / (603) 228-1181
Portsmouth / (603) 431-1993
Curtis Little Cook, Little, Rosenblatt & Manson Manchester / (603) 621-7100
Mergers and Acquisitions Law Peter T. Beach Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Patrick C. Closson McLane Middleton
Colleen Lyons Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Angela B. Martin Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Newington / (603) 436-2818
Daniel J. Norris McLane Middleton
Steve Cohen Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
James G. Cook Cook, Little, Rosenblatt & Manson Manchester / (603) 621-7100
Michael J. Drooff Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Scott W. Ellison Cook, Little, Rosenblatt & Manson
Scott E. Pueschel Pierce Atwood
Portsmouth / (603) 433-6300
Richard A. Samuels McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Kara N. Sweeney Preti Flaherty Beliveau & Pachios Concord / (603) 410-1500
Manchester / (603) 621-7100
is pleased to congratulate William C. Tucker, James C. Wheat, Ronald J. Lajoie, Jeffrey H. Karlin, Marc R. Scheer, Gregory G. Peters, Frank P. Spinella, Jr., Dean B. Eggert, Kathleen C. Peahl, Charles F. Cleary, Todd J. Hathaway, and Donna J. Brown
for their continued recognized excellence and inclusion in
The Best Lawyers in America© 2021*
We also congratulate those who were named “Lawyer of the Year” James C. Wheat – Manchester Litigation - Bet-the-Company Todd J. Hathaway – Manchester Medical Malpractice Law - Defendants Donna J. Brown – Manchester Criminal Defense - White Collar 95 Market Street Manchester, NH 03101
(603) 669-4140 www.wadleighlaw.com
The �irm offers a full range of legal services
* Best Lawyers (Copyright 2020 by Woodward/White, Inc), the oldest and most respected peer-review publication in the legal profession, is based on an exhaustive annual peer-review survey and because lawyers are not required or allowed to pay a fee to be listed, inclusion in Best Lawyers is considered a singular honor. nhmagazine.com | November 2020
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• 2021 Philip B. Taub Nixon Peabody
Jeremy T. Walker McLane Middleton
Michael B. Tule McLane Middleton
Personal Injury Litigation — Defendants
Manchester / (603) 628-4000
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Primmer
David P. Van Der Beken Stebbins, Lazos & Van Der Beken Manchester / (603) 627-3700
SIX OFFICES, THREE STATES, ONE TEAM
Municipal Law
We are proud to share that 21 of our attorneys across 6 offices were named to the Best Lawyers® in America list.
Dean B. Eggert Wadleigh, Starr and Peters
An Important Message Regarding COVID-19 The COVID-19 outbreak has caused a wide range of business disruptions. Today, business owners and their employees are confronted with unprecedented challenges. Our attorneys in New Hampshire, Vermont, and D.C. are actively counseling clients regarding the legal and business issues associated with COVID-19. Resources & Legal Updates: www.primmer.com/covid-19
Manchester / (603) 669-4140
Peter J. Loughlin Law Office of Peter J. Loughlin
Portsmouth / (603) 431-6466
Barton L. Mayer Upton & Hatfield
Concord / (603) 716-9777
Mark H. Puffer Preti Flaherty Beliveau & Pachios
Concord / (603) 410-1500
Nonprofit/ Charities Law primmer.com | 603.626.3300
Hage Hodes, P.A.
Bradford E. Cook Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green
Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Benjamin F. Gayman Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Rolf E. Goodwin McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Roy S. McCandless Nicholson Law Firm
Concord / (603) 856-8441
Jon B. Sparkman Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Robert A. Wells McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Patent Law Daniel J. Bourque Bourque & Associates
Manchester / (603) 623-5111
H
age Hodes, P.A. is a full-service law firm dedicated to protecting your interests and solving your problems. Our practice areas include corporate/business, intellectual property, civil litigation, personal injury, professional malpractice and wills, trusts and estates. We offer many of the resources and benefits of a large firm, but we are small enough to give you the personal attention you deserve. Count on our experienced lawyers to work for you. YOU CAN TRUST SUCCESS.
1855 Elm St., Manchester • (603) 668-2222 • www.hagehodes.com 84
nhmagazine.com | November 2020
Michael J. Bujold Davis & Bujold
Concord / (603) 226-7490
Stephen R. Finch Finch & Maloney
Manchester / (603) 622-8456
Peter A. Nieves Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green
Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Gary M. Burt Primmer Piper Eggleston & Cramer
Manchester / (603) 626-3300
Robert S. Carey Orr & Reno
Concord / (603) 224-2381
Robert C. Dewhirst Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Dennis T. Ducharme Ducharme Resolutions
Manchester / (603) 935-7292
Daniel Duckett The Law Office of Daniel Duckett
Manchester / (603) 836-5800
Andrew D. Dunn Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
John Edward Durkin Burns, Bryant, Cox, Rockefeller & Durkin Dover / (603) 742-2332
Gregory Eaton Primmer Piper Eggleston & Cramer
Littleton / (603) 444-4008
John Burwell Garvey University of New Hampshire School of Law Concord / (603) 228-1541
Todd J. Hathaway Wadleigh, Starr and Peters
Manchester / (603) 669-4140
David W. Johnston Sulloway & Hollis
Concord / (603) 223-2800
Ronald J. Lajoie Wadleigh, Starr and Peters
Manchester / (603) 669-4140
Robert J. Lanney Sulloway & Hollis
Concord / (603) 223-2800
Michael P. Lehman Sulloway & Hollis
Concord / (603) 223-2800
Derek D. Lick Sulloway & Hollis
Concord / (603) 223-2800
Roy S. McCandless Nicholson Law Firm
Concord / (603) 856-8441
• 2021 Adam R. Mordecai Primmer Piper Eggleston & Cramer
Jared R. Green Abramson, Brown & Dugan
Donald Lee Smith Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Product Liability Litigation — Plaintiffs
Beth H. Davis Hamblett & Kerrigan
Pete W. Mosseau Devine Millimet & Branch
Holly B. Haines Abramson, Brown & Dugan
Robert A. Stein The Stein Law Firm
Jared R. Green Abramson, Brown & Dugan
Benjamin F. Gayman Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 627-1819
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Michael A. Pignatelli Rath Young Pignatelli
Scott H. Harris McLane Middleton
James J. Tenn Tenn And Tenn
Robert A. Stein The Stein Law Firm
Rolf E. Goodwin McLane Middleton
Concord / (603) 228-1109
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Professional Malpractice Law — Defendants
John F. Griffin Primmer Piper Eggleston & Cramer
Christopher D. Hawkins Devine Millimet & Branch
Philip M. Hastings Cleveland, Waters and Bass
Manchester / (603) 626-3300
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Nashua / (603) 889-9952
Gordon A. Rehnborg McDowell & Osburn
Manchester / (603) 623-9300
Marc R. Scheer Wadleigh, Starr and Peters
Manchester / (603) 669-4140
Lawrence S. Smith Rath Young Pignatelli
Concord / (603) 226-2600
Lisa Snow Wade Orr & Reno
Concord / (603) 224-2381
Personal Injury Litigation — Plaintiffs Mark A. Abramson Abramson, Brown & Dugan
Manchester / (603) 627-1819
Matthew B. Cox Burns, Bryant, Cox, Rockefeller & Durkin
Dover / (603) 742-2332
Christine M. Craig Shaheen & Gordon
Dover / (603) 871-4144
Thomas E. Craig Thomas Craig
Manchester / (603) 622-1900
Paul M. DeCarolis Gottesman & Hollis
Nashua / (603) 889-5959
R. David Depuy McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Charles G. Douglas Douglas, Leonard & Garvey Concord / (603) 224-1988
Kevin F. Dugan Abramson, Brown & Dugan
Manchester / (603) 627-1819
Manchester / (603) 627-1819
Manchester / (603) 627-1819
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Concord / (603) 228-1109
Manchester / (603) 624-3700
Ralph F. Holmes McLane Middleton
John J. Tenn Tenn And Tenn
Michael J. Iacopino Brennan Lenehan Iacopino & Hickey
Mary Elizabeth Tenn Tenn And Tenn
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Manchester / (603) 734-5461
Edward M. Kaplan Sulloway & Hollis
Concord / (603) 223-2800
Maureen Raiche Manning Law Office of Manning & Zimmerman Manchester / (603) 671-3156
Joseph F. McDowell McDowell & Osburn
Manchester / (603) 623-9300
Michael S. McGrath Upton & Hatfield
Concord / (603) 716-9777
Jack B. Middleton McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 624-3700
Manchester / (603) 624-3700
Phil Waystack Waystack Frizzell
Colebrook / (603) 237-8322
Peter G. Webb Winer and Bennett
Nashua / (603) 882-5157
Jack S. White Welts, White & Fontaine Nashua / (603) 883-0797
Nicholas Wright Bouchard, Kleinman & Wright
Concord / (603) 856-8441
D. Michael Noonan Shaheen & Gordon Dover / (603) 871-4144
Jennifer L. Parent McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Michael P. Rainboth Coughlin, Rainboth, Murphy & Lown
Cameron G. Shilling McLane Middleton Manchester / (603) 625-646
Private Funds/ Hedge Funds Law John P. Beals Nixon Peabody
Manchester / (603) 628-4000
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Portsmouth / (603) 431-1993
Richard E. Fradette Beliveau, Fradette & Gallant
Christine M. Rockefeller Burns, Bryant, Cox, Rockefeller & Durkin
Michael P. Lehman Sulloway & Hollis
Manchester / (603) 623-1234
Littleton / (603) 444-4008
Dover / (603) 742-2332
Concord / (603) 223-2800
William H. Shaheen Shaheen & Gordon
W. Scott O’Connell Nixon Peabody
Concord / (603) 228-1541
Dover / (603) 871-4144
Manchester / (603) 628-4000
David M. Gottesman Gottesman & Hollis
John P. Sherman Sherman Law
William A. Staar Morrison Mahoney
John Burwell Garvey University of New Hampshire School of Law
Nashua / (603) 889-5959
Portsmouth / (603) 570-4837
Concord / (603) 224-7761
Edmund S. Hibbard Wescott Law
Portsmouth / (603) 433-5385
Laconia / (603) 524-2166
Concord / (603) 410-1500
Morgan Hollis Gottesman & Hollis
Pete W. Mosseau Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Nashua / (603) 889-5959
Peter F. Imse Sulloway & Hollis
Concord / (603) 223-2800
Manchester / (603) 628-4000
Real Estate Law
James D. Kerouac Bernstein, Shur, Sawyer & Nelson
Manchester / (603) 623-8700
R. Carl Anderson Sulloway & Hollis
Simon C. Leeming Preti Flaherty Beliveau & Pachios
Concord / (603) 223-2800
Martin J. Baroff Baroff & Craven
Concord / (603) 410-1500
Manchester / (603) 647-4200
Andrew Bauer Gottesman & Hollis
Susan A. Manchester Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Gregory Michael Bernstein, Shur, Sawyer & Nelson
Nashua / (603) 889-5959
Alexandra T. Breed McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 623-8700
James E. Morris Orr & Reno
Product Liability Litigation — Defendants Timothy E. Britain Andrew D. Dunn Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 626-3300
Edmund S. Hibbard Wescott Law
Concord / (603) 226-0400
Gregory Eaton Primmer Piper Eggleston & Cramer
Bruce W. Felmly McLane Middleton
Gregory A. Moffett Preti Flaherty Beliveau & Pachios
Daniel W. Sklar Nixon Peabody
Privacy and Data Security Law
Neil Nicholson Nicholson Law Firm
Manchester / (603) 669-4140
Anna Goulet Zimmerman Law Office of Manning & Zimmerman
Richard C. Moquin Moquin & Daley
Manchester / (603) 623-9300
Jeffrey H. Karlin Wadleigh, Starr and Peters
Project Finance Law
Manchester / (603) 671-3156
Mark D. Morrissette McDowell & Osburn
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Manchester / (603) 623-7222
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Manchester / (603) 669-9400
Nashua / (603) 883-5501
Cleveland, Waters and Bass
Concord / (603) 224-2381
Suzanne Brunelle Devine Millimet & Branch
Lyndsee D. Paskalis Stebbins, Lazos & Van Der Beken
Concord / (603) 224-7761
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Manchester / (603) 627-3700
Peter F. Burger Orr & Reno
Bryan L. Pellerin D’Amante Couser Pellerin & Associates
Concord / (603) 224-2381
Charles F. Cleary Wadleigh, Starr and Peters
Concord / (603) 224-6777
Manchester / (603) 669-4140
Ari B. Pollack Gallagher, Callahan & Gartrell
Raymond P. D’Amante D’Amante Couser Pellerin & Associates
Denise A. Poulos Donahue, Tucker & Ciandella
Concord / (603) 224-6777
Concord / (603) 228-1181
Portsmouth / (603) 766-1686
Manchester / (603) 622-3400 nhmagazine.com | November 2020
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• 2021 Margaret E. Probish Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green
Manchester / (603) 668-0300
James F. Raymond Upton & Hatfield
Concord / (603) 716-9777
Denis O. Robinson Pierce Atwood
Portsmouth / (603) 433-6300
Peter B. Rotch McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Michael D. Ruedig Gallagher, Callahan & Gartrell Concord / (603) 228-1181
John H. Sokul Hinckley Allen
Manchester / (603) 225-4334
Henry B. Stebbins Stebbins, Lazos & Van Der Beken
Manchester / (603) 627-3700
William C. Tucker Wadleigh, Starr and Peters
Manchester / (603) 669-4140
Kenneth A. Viscarello Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green
Manchester / (603) 668-0300
J. Bradford Westgate Winer and Bennett Nashua / (603) 882-5157
Securities/ Capital Markets Law
Peter T. Beach Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green
James G. Cook Cook, Little, Rosenblatt & Manson
Mary Susan Leahy McLane Middleton
Cynthia L. Worthen Pierce Atwood
Steven M. Burke McLane Middleton
Mark A. Wright McLane Middleton
Thomas N. Masland Ransmeier & Spellman
Jeffrey J. Zellers Annis & Zellers
Trusts and Estates
Joseph F. McDonald McDonald & Kanyuk
William V.A. Zorn McLane Middleton
Willemien Dingemans Miller Downs Rachlin Martin
Venture Capital Law
Marcia Hennelly Moran Flood, Sheehan & Tobin
Manchester / (603) 621-7100
Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Steve Cohen Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Scott W. Ellison Cook, Little, Rosenblatt & Manson Manchester / (603) 621-7100
Amy K. Kanyuk McDonald & Kanyuk
Concord / (603) 228-9900
Kathryn H. Michaelis Rath Young Pignatelli
Concord / (603) 226-2600
Margaret H. Nelson Sulloway & Hollis
Concord / (603) 223-2800
Christopher R. Paul McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Elise H. Salek Sulloway & Hollis
Concord / (603) 223-2800
Jon B. Sparkman Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Christopher J. Sullivan Rath Young Pignatelli Concord / (603) 226-2600
Jeffrey J. Zellers Annis & Zellers
Curtis Little Cook, Little, Rosenblatt & Manson
Concord / (603) 224-5800
Scott E. Pueschel Pierce Atwood
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Manchester / (603) 621-7100
Portsmouth / (603) 433-6300
Richard A. Samuels McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Securities Regulation Richard A. Samuels McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Securitization and Structured Finance Law Curtis Little Cook, Little, Rosenblatt & Manson Manchester / (603) 621-7100
Tax Law William F. J. Ardinger Rath Young Pignatelli Concord / (603) 226-2600
86
William V.A. Zorn McLane Middleton
Technology Law Matthew H. Benson Cook, Little, Rosenblatt & Manson Manchester / (603) 621-7100
James G. Cook Cook, Little, Rosenblatt & Manson Manchester / (603) 621-7100
Trade Secrets Law Andru H. Volinsky Bernstein, Shur, Sawyer & Nelson Manchester / (603) 623-8700
Trademark Law Daniel J. Bourque Bourque & Associates
Manchester / (603) 623-5111
Michael J. Bujold Davis & Bujold
Concord / (603) 226-7490
nhmagazine.com | November 2020
Manchester / (603) 621-7100
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Christine S. Anderson Ansell & Anderson Bedford / (603) 644-8211
Tina L. Annis Annis & Zellers
Concord / (603) 224-5800
Michelle M. Arruda Devine Millimet & Branch
Concord / (603) 226-1000
William S. Boesch Robinson, Boesch, Sennott and Daly PA
Portsmouth / (603) 427-5380
Judith L. Bomster Butenhof & Bomster
Manchester / (603) 296-0428
Alexandra T. Breed McLane Middleton
Concord / (603) 226-0400
Timothy W. Caldwell Caldwell Law Lebanon / (603) 643-7577
Steve Cohen Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Bradford E. Cook Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green Manchester / (603) 668-0300
Thomas C. Csatari Downs Rachlin Martin
Lebanon / (603) 448-2211
Denis P. Dillon McLane Middleton
Newington / (603) 436-2818
Ann Meissner Flood Flood, Sheehan & Tobin
Concord / (603) 415-4200
Nicholas D.N. Harvey Stebbins Bradley Hanover / (603) 643-3737
John E. Hughes McLane Middleton
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Newington / (603) 436-2818
Concord / (603) 290-5104
Concord / (603) 228-9900
Lebanon / (603) 448-2211
Concord / (603) 415-4200
David Mulhern Mulhern & Scott
Portsmouth / (603) 436-1211
Sally Mulhern Mulhern & Scott
Portsmouth / (603) 436-1211
Anu R. Mullikin Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Jan P. Myskowski Myskowski & Matthews
Concord / (603) 227-6342
Colleen D. O’Connell Barradale, O’Connell, Newkirk & Dwyer
Bedford / (603) 644-0275
Michael P. Panebianco Sheehan Phinney Bass & Green Manchester / (603) 668-0300
John C. Ransmeier Ransmeier & Spellman
Concord / (603) 290-5104
Nelson A. Raust Ransmeier & Spellman
Concord / (603) 290-5104
Kathleen M. Robinson Robinson, Boesch, Sennott and Daly PA
Portsmouth / (603) 427-5380
Elise H. Salek Sulloway & Hollis
Concord / (603) 223-2800
Andrea L. Sennott Robinson, Boesch, Sennott and Daly PA
Portsmouth / (603) 427-5380
Amy K. Kanyuk McDonald & Kanyuk
Virginia Symmes Sheehan Flood, Sheehan & Tobin
John S. Kitchen John Kitchen Law Offices
Laura E. Tobin Flood, Sheehan & Tobin
Megan C. Knox McDonald & Kanyuk
Robert A. Wells McLane Middleton
Concord / (603) 228-9900
Auburn / (603) 669-6541
Concord / (603) 228-9900
Concord / (603) 415-4200
Concord / (603) 415-4200
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Portsmouth / (603) 433-6300
Concord / (603) 224-5800
Manchester / (603) 625-6464
Matthew H. Benson Cook, Little, Rosenblatt & Manson Philip B. Taub Nixon Peabody
Manchester / (603) 628-4000
Workers’ Compensation Law — Claimants Timothy Beaupre Beaupre Law
Dover / (877) 734-0777
Terrence J. Daley Moquin & Daley
Manchester / (603) 669-9400
Benjamin T. King Douglas, Leonard & Garvey Concord / (603) 224-1988
Maureen Raiche Manning Law Office of Manning & Zimmerman Manchester / (603) 671-3156
Richard C. Moquin Moquin & Daley
Manchester / (603) 669-9400
Francis G. Murphy Shaheen & Gordon
Manchester / (603) 635-4099
A. Gerard O’Neil Normandin, Cheney & O’Neil Laconia / (603) 524-4380
Mark D. Wiseman Cleveland, Waters and Bass Concord / (603) 224-7761
Workers’ Compensation Law — Employers Eric G. Falkenham Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Charles T. Giacopelli Devine Millimet & Branch
Manchester / (603) 669-1000
Paul R. Kfoury Trombley Kfoury
Bedford / (603) 935-7566
Paul L. Salafia Devine Millimet & Branch
Concord / (603) 226-1000
Attorney Ryan L. Russman
Driven in Defense of Those Who Drive
A
s Senior Counsel at Russman Law Offices, Ryan Russman has been fighting for his clients’ rights and winning cases in New Hampshire since his practice opened in 1999. A specialist in DWI law, Attorney Russman is board certified by the National College of DUI Defense (NCDD), the only ABA-accredited organization to boardcertify DUI attorneys. Attorney Russman is also an NCDD Sustaining Member as well as a member of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers and the National Trial Lawyers Association. Russman is one of the best-trained DWI Attorneys in
the state. For example, he is certified in practical gas chromatography, and is a field sobriety test instructor and practitioner, as well as an evidentiary breath alcohol technician, to name a few training highlights. A specialist in the field of NH DWI defense, he has authored two books on the topic, published informational videos and been featured in many news media programs. His training and experience explain why he was once again listed in “The Best Lawyers in America”© as well as SuperLawyers, and has earned the highest (Preeminent) rating level from LexisNexis and the highest (“Superb” 10.0) rating from AVVO.
Russman Law 155 Fleet Street, Portsmouth • (603) 373-1664 | 14 Center Street, Exeter • (603) 772-3433 36 Salmon Street, Manchester • (603) 373-1664 | 104 Washington Street, Dover • (603) 772-3433 www.russmanlaw.com
• 2021
About the List Methodology for Best Lawyers® This list is excerpted from the 2021 edition of “The Best
nominees. Each year, half of the voting pool receives fax or
Lawyers in America” , the preeminent referral guide to the
email ballots; the other half is polled by phone.
©
legal profession in the United States. Published since 1983,
Voting lawyers were provided this general guideline for
“Best Lawyers” lists attorneys in 148 specialties, representing
determining if a nominee should be listed among the best: “If
all 50 states, who have been chosen through an exhaustive
you had a close friend or relative who needed a real estate
survey, in which thousands of the nation’s top lawyers
lawyer (for example), and you could not handle the case
confidentially evaluate their professional peers. The 2021 Edition of “Best Lawyers” is based on over 13 million evaluations of lawyers by other lawyers. The method used to compile “Best Lawyers” remains unchanged since the first edition was compiled almost 40 years ago. Lawyers are chosen for inclusion based solely on the vote of their peers. Listings cannot be bought, and no purchase is required to be included. In this regard, “Best Lawyers” remains the gold standard of reliability and integrity in lawyer ratings. The nomination pool for the 2021 edition consisted of all lawyers whose names appeared in the previous edition of “Best Lawyers,” lawyers who were nominated since the previous survey and new nominees solicited from listed attorneys. In general, lawyers were asked to vote only on
yourself, to whom would you refer them?” All votes and comments were solicited with a guarantee of confidentiality — a critical factor in the viability and validity of Best Lawyers’ surveys. To ensure the rigor of the selection process, lawyers were urged to use only their highest standards when voting, and to evaluate nominees based only on their individual merits. The additional comments were used to make more accurate comparisons between voting patterns and weight votes accordingly. Best Lawyers uses various methodological tools to identify and correct for anomalies in both the nomination and voting process. Ultimately, of course, a lawyer’s inclusion is based on the subjective judgments of his or her fellow attorneys. While it is true that the lists may at times disproportionately reward
nominees in their own specialty in their own jurisdiction.
visibility or popularity, the breadth of the survey, the candor
Lawyers in closely related specialties were asked to vote across
of the respondents and the sophistication of the polling-
specialties, as were lawyers in smaller jurisdictions. Where
methodology largely correct for any biases.
specialties are national or international in nature, lawyers were
For all these reasons, “Best Lawyers” lists continue to
asked to vote nationally as well as locally. Voting lawyers were
represent the most reliable, accurate and useful guide to the
also given an opportunity to offer more detailed comments on
best lawyers in the United States available anywhere.
“The Best Lawyers in America”© is published by BL Rankings, LLC, Augusta, GA., and can be ordered directly from the publisher. For information call (803) 648-0300; write 801 Broad St., Suite 950, Augusta, GA 30901; email info@bestlawyers.com or visit bestlawyers.com. An online subscription to Best Lawyers® is available at bestlawyers.com. Disclaimer and Copyright BL Rankings, LLC has used its best efforts in assembling material for this list but does not warrant that the information contained herein is complete or accurate, and does not assume, and hereby disclaims, any liability to any person for any loss or damage caused by errors or omissions herein whether such errors or omissions result from negligence, accident or any other cause. All listed attorneys have been verified as being members in good standing with their respective state bar associations as of July 1, 2020, where that information is publicly available. Consumers should contact their state bar association for verification and additional information prior to securing legal services of any attorney. Copyright 2020 by BL Rankings, LLC, Augusta, GA. All rights reserved. This list, or parts thereof, must not be reproduced in any form without permission. No commercial use of this list may be made without permission of BL Rankings, LLC. No fees may be charged, directly or indirectly, for the use of this list without permission. “The Best Lawyers in America” and “Best Lawyers” are registered trademarks of BL Rankings, LLC.
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I NTRO DU C I N G
A recognition awarded to associates and other lawyers who are earlier in their careers for their outstanding professional excellence in private practice in the United States.
FOR ASSOCIATES The First Edition of Best Lawyers: Ones to Watch is now available!
w w w. b es t law yer s.com /ones - to - watch
603 Living “We rise by lifting others.” — Robert Ingersoll
Kosmas Smirnioudis (left) and his oldest brother George are continuing their father Louie’s 30-year tradition of giving out free Thanksgiving meals.
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Photos by Jared Charney
Health 94 Ayuh 96
30 Years of Stuffing and Service
Amid the pandemic, a local restaurant continues to serve free Thanksgiving meals By Emily Heidt
T
hanksgiving at the Windmill Family Restaurant in Concord may look different this year, but COVID-19 won’t stop owner Kosmas Smirnioudis and his restaurant family from serving turkey dinners to his community in need. “People won’t be able to come, sit down and enjoy a meal with us inside, but they can still pick up and take out a Thanksgiving dinner,” says Smirnioudis. “For us, this tradition has and always will be about the importance of giving back to the community, and I could think of no better time to safely adapt and continue that tradition than during a year like this.”
Louie Smirnioudis started serving free Thanksgiving meals in 1990 as a way to give back to those in need. nhmagazine.com | November 2020
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603 living / community Smirnioudis’ father, Louie, started the tradition when he opened the restaurant in 1990. The first year, he started with a couple of volunteers from the Friendly Kitchen and served about 30 meals. The tradition has now grown so large that Smirnioudis served 1,200 meals in 2019, and he isn’t planning on slowing down this year. “Last year, we did over 300 pounds of mashed potatoes and squash, 72 turkeys and pies ranging from pumpkin to blueberry to chocolate cream,” says Smirnioudis. “We didn’t have much left over after, which showed just how much people were in need. It was a tough decision, but we are looking forward to showing up and serving again this year.” While Smirnioudis is grateful to give back, he is just as grateful for the extra help from family and friends that makes the day possible. “I have a group of ladies who bake and donate homemade pies to us every year,
George and Kosmas Smirnioudis (right) outside The Windmill Family Restaurant in Concord
Other businesses looking for Thanksgiving volunteers, donations or donated meals: The Friendly Kitchen 2 South Commercial St., Concord (603) 224-7678 / thefriendlykitchen.org
New Horizons NH 199 Manchester St., Manchester (603) 641-9441 / newhorizonsnh.org
Nashua Soup Kitchen & Shelter 2 Quincy St., Nashua (603) 889-7770 / nsks.org
Sonshine Soup Kitchen 6 Crystal Ave., Derry (603) 437-2833 / sonshinesoupkitchen.org
The Community Kitchen 37 Mechanic St., Keene (603) 352-3200 / thecommunitykitchen.org
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families come with their kids to donate their time, and fellow members of my business community come help too,” says Smirnioudis. “We’re one team. They aren’t my community, they are my family. It’s all about being able to come together one day a year to think about someone else instead of yourself, and even though it will look different due to pandemic restrictions, the heart of it is still the same.” Meals will be offered between 11 a.m. and 3 p.m. on November 26, and all you need to do is show up if you need a meal. Depending on weather, there may be chairs outside, but expect tables at both entrances of the restaurant stocked high with hot turkey dinner togo containers with mashed potatoes, squash, turkey gravy, pies, rolls, cranberry sauce and
vegetables. Whether you are volunteering your pies, volunteering your time, donating rolls or making a cash donation, the day is all about making a difference in whatever way you can. “My dad started this so people would follow his generous lead in making a change,” says Smirnioudis. “He realized that they only way to inspire difference is to do different, which is what we are here to do every Thanksgiving.” NH
Find It Windmill Family Restaurant 172 Loudon Rd., Concord (603) 225-0600 windmillfamilyrestaurantinc.com
season
603 living / health
Delirium in Hospital Patients It’s more common than you might think by Karen A. Jamrog / illustration by gloria dilanni
A
nyone who has checked into a hospital for longer than a day or two can imagine how quickly
disorientation (or worse) might set in. Away from home, bed-ridden or close to it for a prolonged period, it can be difficult to distinguish one day from another. In fact, actual delirium in hospital patients is common, and it can be dangerous. Its cause is not as simple as being confined to bed or stuck in a hospital room day after day though. It can be triggered by an array of factors, such as a severe medical condition, dehydration, insufficient sleep, infection, medication, substance intoxication or withdrawal, or a combination of circumstances. 94
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“Delirium is a condition that’s basically a disturbance in attention and awareness,” says Dana Bisson, M.S.N., R.N., a delirium specialist who is also a process improvement specialist in Operational Excellence at Concord Hospital. In essence, she says, delirium is acute brain failure, the extent of which can vary in those who experience it.
There are three main classifications of delirium. Typically, patients who experience hypoactive delirium are sleepy and lethargic and might appear unmotivated. In contrast, those who develop hyperactive delirium often are agitated and might hallucinate. They might try to yank out their hospital tubes, refuse to stay in bed, or act aggressively toward hospital staff. Other patients who become delirious vacillate between hypoactive and hyperactive states. In all types, symptoms usually are not continuous but come and go. Delirium is most commonly seen in the elderly, “but severity of illness is certainly one of the biggest risk factors, and that is independent of age,” says Jennifer L. Duprey, D.O., M.P.H., medical director of the ICU at Elliot Hospital and Southern NH Medical Center. Other risk factors include the presence of underlying cognitive problems such as dementia, the length of the patient’s hospital stay, and whether the patient has surgery. For sure, although older adults are at higher risk for delirium, young adults and even children who are hospitalized can develop it too. “The thing that brings a young person in [to the hospital] can make them really susceptible” because younger people often are admitted to the hospital only if something fairly serious is wrong, Bisson explains, and “delirium can result from any acute medical injury or illness that is so severe to that person that it causes the brain to kind of go into failure mode. ... It really can affect everybody.” Delirium incidence numbers vary, but Bisson says that delirium affects about 20-30% of regular medical surgical patients, and up to 80% of intensive care patients, including patients in pediatric ICUs. That’s a lot of patients, and the implications of delirium can be serious. Delirium might last for hours, days, or weeks, but many patients experience cognitive defects
“Patients, when they’re delirious, are not aware of their behavior, and [later] have no recollection of it.” — Jennifer L. Duprey, D.O., M.P.H.
Dealing with delirium in hospitals Hospitals employ a variety of measures to try to prevent delirium in patients and to quickly detect it and minimize it when it does occur. For example, many hospitals screen patients every 12 hours to lessen the chance that delirium is overlooked. Although hospitals are 24/7 operations that care for and monitor patients around the clock, hospital staff members promote a normal sleep-wake cycle in patients by turning on lights in patient rooms during the day and keeping them off as much as possible during the night. “We know that when patients don’t sleep, that is a risk factor for delirium, so we try not to disturb patients during normal hours of sleep,” says Jennifer L. Duprey, D.O., M.P.H., medical director of the ICU at Elliot Hospital and Southern NH Medical Center. In addition, Duprey says, “if we know that patients are hard of hearing or need glasses, we try to make sure that they have those assistive devices.” Giving patients access to familiar things, such as their favorite music, can also help. One of the goals, Duprey says, is to try “to keep signs of normalcy around them.” For more information, see the website of the American Delirium Society, which offers guidance for patients and families: americandeliriumsociety.org/what-delirium for months, and in some, symptoms linger for a year or more. Typically, “most patients
regain their prior cognitive functioning. Delirium also affects families, possibly
eventually return to their former baseline
foisting post-hospital-discharge caregiving
cognitive state,” Duprey says. But some,
responsibilities on a family member, for
especially patients who had underlying
example, plus “delirium is very distressing
cognitive problems to begin with, never
to families,” Duprey says. “Patients, when
they’re delirious, are not aware of their behavior, and [later] have no recollection of it. But it is very distressing to families to see a loved one agitated, potentially violent at times, needing to be sedated, hallucinating. So there is some degree of emotional distress.” Delirious patients are five times more likely to fall in the hospital, Bisson says, and delirium has been linked with a poorer prognosis, a longer hospital stay, and medical complications. Delirious patients are also more likely to die in the hospital. Hospitals have implemented numerous strategies to prevent and minimize delirium in patients (see sidebar). “Anyone who interacts with the patient,” from doctors, nurses, physical therapists, and food service workers to visiting therapeutic musicians or artists, has a role to play, Bisson says. “It’s a real team effort. You use the resources you have to do anything you can.” Indeed, “delirium complicates a lot of hospital courses for a lot of patients,” Duprey says, “and there can be serious implications. It’s one of those things that we need to learn so much more about.” NH
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603 living
Thanksgiving on Mars
We are from here, so when we moved there, things got weird — especially around the holidays
I
n the late ’70s, our family was very much a New England unit — we lived and breathed the Boston Bruins, ate brown bread and baked beans on Saturday nights, and watched Uncle Gus on TV. Then we moved to Mars. My father worked as a cement finisher. The economy had turned sour for those who pursued the concrete arts, so following a job offer, my parents piled four kids and a dog into our light green AMC Hornet, scientifically proven to be the most ’70s of cars, and relocated us to a place called Sutherland in western Nebraska. Both I-80 and the Platte River snaked by just to the south of this (quite literally) one-road town, and the coal-burning plant under construction — and the reason for the town’s recent and ultimately temporary population increase — lay just beyond. There are romantic stories of the untamed, open prairie — a place of unlimited possibility and adventure. This was most definitely the prairie, but instead of wild horses and wagon trains, it was mostly full of sand spurs and prickers that embedded into the cuffs of our Toughskins
and kids from other parts of the country who thought we were speaking another language entirely. In my short life to that point, I had never thought any place so completely foreign could exist. The people from the land of the Pilgrims and tonic had been transplanted to the land of the Oglala and the Pony Express. One day my brother and I were skating on a pond near the road. It literally stopped traffic. When they opened the first McDonald’s in Omaha — more than three hours east — it made the nightly news. People were fascinated by our accents. One woman told me we sounded “just like the Kennedys,” which wasn’t true because no one really sounds like that. Everything normal felt very far away, especially since we were just sitting around not playing hockey, watching the Sha Na Na variety show because that’s all that was on, and waiting around for someone to invent the internet and cell phones. So when Thanksgiving arrived, the urge to go back home was never more intense. The move was meant to be temporary, so we only had what we could fit into the Hornet
and a tow-behind UHaul. We had to make the best with what we had — which, in retrospect, actually added to the charm of our situation. At the time, however, it was a scramble to assemble something resembling a traditional Thanksgiving dinner. That meant our first year out west, we’d be having ring-necked turkey. Pheasant sounds like an exotic alternative to a holiday gobbler. Only ours wasn’t served under glass. Or with crostini and goat cheese crumbles. Or good. Even now, with nearly four decades separating us from the arid poultry, my palate weeps. I don’t blame the chef, who was as much a frontier mom as Caroline Ingalls. Besides, it wasn’t so much about the meal, but the fact we were strangers in a strange land, together. Since then, the world has gotten a lot smaller, Bowzer has become a politician, and every year in late November we talk about Nebraska turkey. The bird was dusty, the potatoes were runny, and the Burkes were far, far from home, but it was a time none of us would trade for any canned brown bread. NH
By bill burke / illustration by brad fitzpatrick 96
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THE PINNACLE OF CANCER TREATMENT IS RIGHT HERE. Congratulations to the Hematology/Oncology department of the Dartmouth and Dartmouth-Hitchcock Norris Cotton Cancer Center, for receiving the 2020 Press Ganey Pinnacle of Excellence AwardÂŽ for Patient Experience. This honor is given to the top performing organizations on the basis of extraordinary achievement, as reported by the people who matter most: the patients.
Learn more at cancer.dartmouth.edu