New Hampshire
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The New Hampshire Community is a dedicated repository for academic and research materials focused on the historical, cultural, and legal evolution of New Hampshire. This community encompasses collections that highlight local governance, historical events, and societal developments, providing valuable resources for researchers, students, and professionals.
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Item Open Access THE CHARTER, WITH ITS AMENDMENTS AND THE GENERAL ORDINANCES OF THE CITY OF DOVER 32, ch. 252, § 5 (1870)(General Publisher, 1870)Prohibited the discharge of any cannon, gun, pistol, or other fire-arm.Item Open Access A Municipal Register of the City of Concord, Containing the City Charter and Ordinances, the Rules of the City Council, and a List of the City Officers Page 74, Image 75 (1868) § 1(General Publisher, 1868)No person shall discharge any gun or fire-arms within, on, or at, any bridge or building belonging to the city, or in any way damage the same, or any fence or other property belonging to the city, or write upon, cut out, or make any obscene image or representationItem Open Access A Municipal Register of the City of Concord, Containing the City Charter and Ordinances, the Rules of the City Council, and a List of the City Officers Page 39, Image 40 (1857)(General Publisher, 1853)Prohibited the discharge of firearms in the city on the first day of the weekItem Open Access 1941 N.H. Laws 48-49, ch. 46, § 15.(General Publisher, 1941)No organization, society, club, post, order, league or other combination of persons, or civil group, or any members thereof, are authorized to assume any semblance of military organization or character by bearing or possessing rifles, pistols, sabres, clubs, or military weapons of any kind, or wearing a military uniform of any kind.Item Open Access 1923 N.H. Laws 138 § 14(General Publisher, 1923)Provided that sections 1-13 of the act should not apply to antique pistols or revolvers used as suchItem Open Access 1923 N.H. Laws 138 § 12(General Publisher, 1923)No person shall change, alter, remove, or obliterate the name of the maker, model, manufacturer's number, or other mark of identification on any pistol or revolver. Possession of any such firearms upon which the same shall have been changed, altered, removed, or obliterated, shall be presumptive evidence that such possessor has changed, altered, removed or obliterated the same. Violations of this section shall be punished by a fine of not more than two hundred dollars or by imprisonment for not moreItem Open Access 1923 N.H. Laws 138 § 11(General Publisher, 1923)If any person in purchasing or. otherwise securing delivery of a pistol or revolver shall give false information or offer false evidence of his identity he shall be punished by imprisonment punished, for not more than two years.Item Open Access 1923 N.H. Laws 138 § 9(General Publisher, 1923)Whoever, without being licensed as hereinafter provided, sells, advertises, or exposes for sale, or has in his possession with intent to sell, pistols or revolvers, shall be punished by imprisonment for not more than two years.Item Open Access 1923 N.H. Laws 138 § 8(General Publisher, 1923)No person shall sell, deliver, or otherwise transfer a pistol or revolver to a person who is an unnaturalized foreign-born person or has been convicted of a felony against the person property of another, except upon delivery of a written permit to purchase, signed by the selectmen of the town or the mayor or chief of police of the cityItem Open Access 1923 N.H. Laws 138 § 7(General Publisher, 1923)Any person or persons who shall sell, barter, hire, lend or give to any minor under the age of twenty-one years any pistol or revolver shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and shall upon conviction thereof be fined not more than one hundred dollars or be imprisoned not more than three months, or both.
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