Historical Society's October Meeting - Rural Electrification in New Hampshire

Late in Arriving, How Electricity Changed Rural New Hampshire Life.
Event Date: 
Friday, October 20, 2023 - 7:00pm

The Stoddard Historical Society, in conjunction with the New Hampshire Humanities, will host an illuminating talk on how electricity changed rural New Hampshire.  Join the Historical Society at this free presentation by Stephen Taylor on Friday,October 20th at 7pm at the Stoddard Town Hall.

Imagine a New Hampshire town where some people enjoyed the benefits of electricity – lighting at the flick of a switch and reliable heating controlled by a thermostat – while others lived with smelly kerosene lamps and smoky box stoves. In New Hampshire, during the first half of the 20th century,  residents of developed communities enjoyed the transformative benefits of electric power while those in the sparsely populated regions lived and worked in conditions little changed from the 19th century.  

It took the coming of the New Deal's Rural Electrification Administration and a determined band of farmers to overcome opposition from the established private utilities to create the New Hampshire Electric Cooperative in 1939. Despite labor and material shortages during World War II, within a decade, power came to almost all of the previously unserved areas of the state. For thousands of households, this meant relief from the drudgery of the wood-fueled cookstove, the washboard and the kerosene lamp. Reliable electric power similarly brought new ways of life to farmers and artisans. This program will explore how these developments changed civic and social life in New Hampshire’s countryside, and touch the ways the disparity of broadband access in the state today echoes these earlier struggles.