In colonial times a gore was the name for a strip of land not large enough to create an entire township. This area was created by a surveyor's misjudgment, or re-adjustments of boundary lines. When discovered, New Hampshire's governor sometimes granted the "gore" to someone who had performed a personal service for him, or who was a friend.
Dame's Gore was the name given to the strip of land between Canaan and Dorchester, in Grafton County, New Hampshire. It was discovered in 1772 not to be owned by any person. Gov. John Wentworth had originally granted it to Capt. Theophilus Dame, then high sheriff of Strafford County, New Hampshire, for his services in the war. Theophilus Dame was sheriff under both the British, and post-Revolutionary government. His son George Dame was a loyalist.
By 1787 "Dame's Gore" had passed into the hands of Rev. Jonathan Homer of Newton MA. Starting in 1808 the town of Canaan tried to annex Dame's Gore, but it was refused each time by the legislature. Finally on 14 March 1846 the legislature approved of the annexation, and Dame's Gore became part of the town of Canaan.
Janice
*Genealogy of the Theophilus Dam/Dame Family*
ALSO SEE: History of Canaan NH, by William Allen Wallace; Concord NH: Rumford Press, 1910, page 153
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New Hampshire Missing Places: Dame's Gore
Comments
Re: New Hampshire Missing Places: Dame's Gore
by
Miriam Robbins Midkiff
on Sat 24 May 2008 12:15 AM EDT | Permanent Link
Fascinating, Janice! I'd not heard of a "gore" before in all my learning about land records. Thanks for the lesson!
Re: Re: New Hampshire Missing Places: Dame's Gore
by
Janice
on Sat 24 May 2008 10:26 PM EDT | Permanent Link
Miriam,
Thank you for the kind comment! I see the term gore used quite a bit in New England. Possibly they were making fewer surveying errors by the time land was being measured out in the states further west, because I don't hear the term used in later years (except in political and bull-fighting circles!) Janice Re: New Hampshire Missing Places: Dame's Gore
by
Bill West
on Sat 24 May 2008 01:23 AM EDT | Permanent Link
Hi Janice,
Good post. One of my ancestors, Asa Barrows, lived for a time in Hamlin's Gore (aka Hamlin's Grant) in Oxford County, Maine, but I never knew until I read your article exactly what the "Gore" meant! Bill Re: Re: New Hampshire Missing Places: Dame's Gore
by
Janice
on Sat 24 May 2008 10:28 PM EDT | Permanent Link
Bill,
It seems they hired the same error-producing surveyors Down East. But back then when a "big rock" and a "large maple tree" were landmarks, anything could and did happen. Janice Re: New Hampshire Missing Places: Dame's Gore
by
Chad Milliner
on Mon 02 Jun 2008 02:39 PM EDT | Permanent Link
The term "gore" is still used in this historic sense among highway engineers. "Gore" is the technical term for the strips of pavement that are outside painted lines as onramps and offramps come into and out of freeways. Thus, this pavement is usually not used, just as the strips of land overlooked by surveyors were not used because no one owned them. So you drive on the gore only in situations such as to get back on a freeway if you realize at the very last minute, as you were already exiting, that the exit is the wrong one -- a procedure NOT recommended, as so doing can easily result in an accident.
Re: Re: New Hampshire Missing Places: Dame's Gore
by
Janice Brown
on Mon 02 Jun 2008 02:54 PM EDT | Permanent Link
Chad,
Thank you for updating me on the use of the term "gore" in engineering. I can see that the current use has less to do with property ownership, and more to do with un-commonly used land. Best wishes, Janice Brown Trackbacks
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