ah, one of my other hobbies...
Ridgewalker said:
White Mountain townships like Bean's or Cutt's Grant were land grants given or bought by people in the 1800's. Wikipedia gives some more background on it on here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Hampshire see very bottom page.
Under no circumstances accept this particular Wikipedia entry as fact; there are some
errors.
I do, however, concur with the rest of Ridgewalker's sources. The Julyan's book is a good one. See also Reminiscences of a Yankee Jurist by George F Morris, as I've mentioned in an earlier
thread.
The basic deal is that back in the day, there were two stages of becoming a "regular" town. Step 1: get a grant from the King (really through his agent, the royal governor) for a township, usually to a group of people that owned it in shares, with the King/governor reserving some of it & the right to all the white pines over a certain size for ships' masts. Step 2: stay there for a while, meet some terms and conditions (get X number of people, hold a fair annually, grow a bushel of Indian corn, start a church and a school, or something to show you're using the land), then petition the King to incorporate your grant as a Town.
Sometimes the two were done concurrently though I'm not sure why.
After we stopped having a King, the incorporation was done by the state legislature. The last time we had a new town incorporated was on April 1 1962 with Sugar Hill splitting off from Lisbon. There's been efforts to split off East Derry from Derry, and I'd be willing to bet that Hale's Location gets incorporated one of these days.
Incorporation gets you some control over what goes on in your town, otherwise the responsibility for municipal-type services goes to the counties. If you don't want to pay any property tax, move to the unincorporated township of Millsfield, they don't have any town services.
Ridgewalker has it right, there were basically 3 phases...
(a) in pre-revolutionary times we had colonial grants e.g. Kilkenny and Success. All other land was owned directly by the King. When he got kicked out, that other land was then owned by the state.
(b) afterwards, but prior to about 1830, the land was either purchased from the state, or, in a few instances where the state wanted to facilitate roads, it granted land for those who build through-roads (see Nash & Sawyer's Location and Pinkham's Grant in the Julyans' book), or granted it to educational institutions e.g. Dartmouth College or Atkinson Academy / Gilmanton Academy.
(c) in the 1830's, the state decided it had no use for the remaining acreage in the White Mountains, and sold it off.
Maine has a much larger & much more interesting set of townships, IMHO.