33: Perley Canal

Between 1800 and 1830, Stephen Perley built a canal to carry water from the river above the Avery Dam to power the mills.  Perley was a farmer who also managed a general store and several sawmills.  As the town grew, he established shops that made nails, starch, linseed oil and cotton cloth.  He was also involved in the Belknap Mill.  The Perley Canal connects the Winnipesaukee River, near the Church Street Bridge, to the complex once owned by the Laconia Car Company.  Today, the canal is a concrete tunnel that runs beneath the city.  

To trace the canal, begin at the building behind the Laconia Spa, continue parallel with Church Street to the parking lot behind the Post Office, go under the businesses on the south side of Canal Street, turning south under the stage of the Colonial Theater, then turn southwest and emerge under the front door of the Laconia Antique Center, proceed down Bank Square to Bootlegger’s and turn west again to the former Laconia Car Company/Allen-Rogers complex. The canal ends there at the former site of the water-driven turbine.

Elmhurst Public Art Tour
  1. SkyCube by David Wallace Haskins
  2. Bird City Saint by Sentrock
  3. Curl by Tom Waldron
  4. Figure in the Garden by Abbott Pattison
  5. Art from the Heart by John Nester
  6. You Are Beautiful by Matthew Hoffman
  7. Sistine Touch by Bob Emser
  8. Adelaide, The Keeper of the Garden. 2025, by Melina Scotte b. Argentina
  9. Once Upon a Time by Frank Eliscu
  10. Eric Carle Collection
  11. Crashing Waves by Eleanor King Hookham
  12. Be Bold. Be Elmhurst by Rafael Blanco & Andrew Sobel
  13. Color Rain
  14. There Was A Vision by George Melville Smith
  15. Elmhurst University Art Collection, A.C. Buehler Library
  16. Bicentennial Fountain
  17. Millennium Fountain
  18. Portal by Nicole Beck
  19. Steel Globe by Poblocki Sign Company
  20. Stargazers, Conrad Fischer School. 2024 by Jason Watts