Concord. It's a nice town. How much do you expect you'd pay for a mortgage on an average two-bedroom cape in Concord? Well, that depends of course. Which Concord do you mean?
A strange phenomenon in the naming of some of New Hampshire's towns is what I call the 'mirror effect'. The simple story is that Massachusetts has been exporting people to New Hampshire for centuries, and these apparently unimaginative Puritans named the new towns they founded after the old Massachusetts ones they'd just left behind. This is why there is a Salem, Massachusetts -- where the primary industries are fishing and witch-toasting -- and Salem, New Hampshire (whose primary industry is providing retail outlets for over-taxed Massachusetts shoppers). Mind you, this phenomenon of naming newly-founded communities after the towns in Massachusetts they'd just left behind is not relegated to New Hampshire alone; New York has a Boston, NY which is next to Concord, NY, which itself is next to Lexington, NY. Very original. So when mentioning a town in New Hampshire, especially in southern New Hampshire, be careful to specify what state you mean.
Oh, and I suppose I should 'fess up that Concord, New Hampshire apparently gained its name after a border dispute with a neighboring town in the 18th century, and the name reflected the peaceful resolution reached by the towns. It has nothing to do with the Massachusetts Concord, made famous by an unannounced visit from the British army in 1775.
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