Puneet Varma (Editor)

Halls Stream

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Length
  
41 km

Country
  
United States of America

Other name(s)
  
Rivière Hall (in Quebec)

Countries
  
Canada and United States

Province and States
  
Quebec, New Hampshire and Vermont

Administrative regions
  
Estrie (Quebec) Pittsburg (New Hampshire) Canaan (Vermont)

Main source
  
Canada-US border (Québec-New Hampshire 1,912 feet (583 m)

River mouth
  
Beecher Falls, Vermont 1,072 feet (327 m)

Halls Stream or Rivière Hall is a 25.2-mile-long (40.6 km) tributary of the Connecticut River in eastern North America. For most of its length, it forms the Canada–United States border, with the province of Quebec (Canada) to its west and the state of New Hampshire (United States) to its east.

Contents

Map of Halls Stream, Stewartstown, NH, USA

Geography

The stream flows from north to south, with a logging landscape on the New Hampshire side, and a mixture of woodland and farms on the Quebec side. Near the southern end of the stream, the international boundary diverges from Halls Stream and heads west (along a line which, when it was originally surveyed, was intended to be on the 45th parallel). South of this line, Halls Stream enters the state of Vermont, flowing through the town of Canaan in Essex County for a little over a half mile. In the village of Beecher Falls, Vermont, it empties into the Connecticut River (which forms the boundary between Vermont and New Hampshire).

Where Halls Stream forms the international border, it divides the following municipalities:

  • East side: Town of Pittsburg, Coos County, New Hampshire
  • West side: Municipality of East Hereford, in Coaticook Regional County Municipality, Estrie administrative region, Quebec
  • History

    Historically, Halls Stream factored into an international boundary dispute in this area, and it formed part of the border of the so-called Republic of Indian Stream.

    Toponymy

    The term "Halls" is a surname of English origin.

    The toponym "Rivière Hall" was officialized on December 5, 1968, at the Commission de toponymie du Québec (Quebec Geographical Names Board) and on October 29, 1980, in the United States Geographic Names Information System (GNIS).

    References

    Halls Stream Wikipedia