Lake Sunapee is located within Sullivan County and Merrimack County in western New Hampshire. It is the fifth-largest lake located entirely in New Hampshire. The lake is approximately 8.1 miles long (north-south) and from 0.5 to 2.5 miles wide (east-west), covering 6.5 square miles, with a maximum depth of 105 feet. The lake contains three lighthouses on the National Register of Historic Places. The lake's outlet is in Sunapee Harbor, the headway for the Sugar River, which flows west through Newport and Claremont to the Connecticut River and then to the Atlantic Ocean.—Wikipedia
Ford U.S. had four models of tractors from 1955-56. The "600" and "700" both had around 30 HP on the drawbar with the "600" set up as a utility or plowing tractor while the "700" was a row crop version with high ground clearance. The "800" and "900" both had around 40 HP with the "900" as the row crop tractor.—livinghistoryfarm.org—This image was processed as an HDR (High Dynamic Range) composition.
The 1886 Cornish–Windsor Covered Bridge, two-span, timber King-truss, interstate, covered bridge that crosses the Connecticut River between Cornish, New Hampshire (on the east), and Windsor, Vermont (on the west). Until 2008, when the Smolen–Gulf Bridge opened in Ohio, it had been the longest covered bridge (still standing) in the United States.—Wikipedia