Midterm Elections, Ernie Vose, Polling Station Chairman, leads members of the Counting Committee in taking the oath before counting votes. In daily life Vose is a poultry farmer who sells the eggs of 15.000 hens. Walpole, New Hampshire, USA. November 2010.
Drewsville Cemetery. Most of the grave markers are from the early to mid nineteenth century. Thomas Collins Drew (1762-1843), an American Revolutionary War Veteran, and later colonel of the Twentieth Regiment of the New Hampshire militia, bought the land that would become the village of Drewsville in 1810. The power of the Cold River and Blanchard Brook allowed the hamlet to become a center of cotton and wool manufacturing through the mid 1800’s. Colonel Drew is buried in the cemetery. His grave marker is the second one to the left of the large honey locust tree on the right. Drewsville, New Hampshire, USA. May 2021.
Reading aloud to a friend from the book "Why We Broke Up" in the library of Fall Mountain Regional High School. Langdon, New Hampshire, USA. November 2014.
Balloons, filled with helium, congratulating graduates, are floating against the ceiling of a Dollar Tree Store. They are for sale during the American graduation season. Laconia, New Hampshire, USA. June 2023.
Scott and his son Mitchell ice fishing in their self-build ice shanty at Hoyt's Landing, a cove of the Connecticut River. Springfield, Vermont, USA. January 2015.
Players of the rookies baseball team of Charlestown, NH, hanging out in the dugout while waiting for their turn on the field during an away game. Alstead, New Hampshire, USA. May 2023.
Racing tracks on the Old Cheshire Turnpike. Teenagers like to joy ride their cars here with bravado after sunset. This time the driver managed to avoid the edge of a wood and escape disaster. American youth can drive a car in the State of New Hampshire at the age of sixteen. I know at least four boys who crashed their cars soon after earning their license. One walked away unscathed, one was wounded and totaled his car, one was severely wounded but lived to tell the tale, and one had to bury his friend who was a passenger in his car. Drewsville, New Hampshire, USA. May 2021.
A Native American mother braids the hair of one of her daughters who will dance during the two-day Ko’asek Abenaki Powwow. A powwow is a gathering where Indigenous people socialize, dance, sing, and honor their culture. The family camps on the Powwow grounds. During the braiding session, mother and daughters watch cartoons on tablets. Alstead, New Hampshire, USA. June 2023.
Over 350 children came on a Saturday with their parents to the Allen Brothers Garden Center to be photographed with Santa. Westminster, Vermont, USA. December 2023.
The Stoddard Congregational Church, originally built in 1836, is having its original stone foundation replaced with a new concrete one. The building will also receive structural repairs to its timber-frame flooring, and an 8-foot basement will be dug beneath it. For all that, the 125-ton, 150-square-foot church needed to be lifted 40 inches from the ground. It also houses an organ that cannot be removed, adding a lot of weight. The work is being done by Granite State Building Movers from Atkinson, NH. This restoration project is made possible by a $200,000 matching grant from the Land and Community Heritage Investment Program that was awarded in 2022. Prior, the church had been fundraising for more than a year. Stoddard, New Hampshire, USA. December 2023.
A snow-covered forest trail between two walls of stacked stones. These were built when the land was cleared by the first European settlers in this part of New England. They felled the trees to create pasture and assembled the many ice age boulders on the land into walls, which followed the property lines and kept the animals in. These were usually sheep. When the wool market collapsed, the farms were abandoned. The woods have grown back, but the stone walls can still be found everywhere. Walpole, New Hampshire, USA. November 2021.
Several species of moss grow on the remnant of a wall of stacked stones. The stone walls were built when the land was cleared by the first European settlers in this part of New England. They felled the trees to create pasture, and assembled the many ice age boulders on the land into walls, which followed the property lines and kept the animals in. These were usually sheep. When the wool market collapsed, the farms were abandoned. The woods have grown back, but the stone walls can still be found everywhere. Later, barbed wire took over the task of keeping in livestock, often following the old stone wall but attached to newly grown trees. Drewsville, New Hampshire, USA. December 2023.
Shane relaxes, lying in between Brown Swiss cows, steer Moose (left) and his mother or dam Mouse, from the organic Miller Farm in Vernon, Vermont. The bovine will be judged during the Dairy Cattle Show of the annual 79th Guilford Fair, an agricultural exhibition and fair in rural Vermont. Showing cattle is an important part of family farm culture in the United States. Guilford, Vermont,USA. September 2024.
In 2010 I came to live in the hamlet of Drewsville, New Hampshire, USA, to finish my photo book The Other Farm, and stayed. This is my ongoing exploration of my personal connection to this specific place, the small town communities in the southern rural part of the state, and in neighboring Vermont, on both sides of the Connecticut River.