Description and history
The area that is now Tilton was part of a colonial land grant made in 1748 and first settled in 1764 as part of Sanbornton. The first bridge in the area over the Winnipesaukee River was built near the site of Tilton's Bridge Street bridge in 1763, and the first sawmill and gristmill opened on the river in 1765-66. The area between the bridge and the mills became what is now Tilton's Main Street. A store was opened near the bridge in 1798, and it is home to Tilton's first church, the 1838 Greek and Gothic Revival Northfield-Tilton Congregational Church, which still stands and is the district's oldest building. The village's growing economic independence prompted its eventual separation from Sanbornton in 1869. The district includes a single block of Main Street, which runs roughly east–west, parallel to the Winnipesaukee River. Its eastern boundary is the junction with Bridge Street, where there are two memorials to the town's war dead. It extends westward on the north side of Main Street about 2/3 of the way to Prospect Street, and for a shorter distance on the south side. Prominent buildings include Tilton's town hall, built in 1879-80 as a gift by the town's major benefactor, Charles E. Tilton. It was probably designed by Edward Dow, who also designed the 1872-73 Trinity Episcopal Church, a fine example of stone Gothic architecture.See also
* National Register of Historic Places listings in Belknap County, New HampshireReferences
{{NRHP in Belknap County, New Hampshire Historic districts on the National Register of Historic Places in New Hampshire Victorian architecture in New Hampshire Historic districts in Belknap County, New Hampshire National Register of Historic Places in Belknap County, New Hampshire Tilton, New Hampshire