Massachusetts

America’s Stonehenge | A Historical Site Shrouded in Mystery

In the heart of the woods atop a granite-studded hill in Salem, New Hampshire, stands a site shrouded in legend – America’s Stonehenge.

America's Stonehenge | A Historical Site Shrouded in Mystery

Coffee By Design | Portland, Maine

Photo Credit : Katherine Keenan

Once known as the roadside attraction Mystery Hill, America’s Stonehenge in Salem, New Hampshire, includes mysterious rock formations, a warren of man-made caves and chambers, and stone walls that stretch across the hilltop. The origin and purpose of the structures have been hotly debated among scholars and amateur sleuths for years, raising far more questions than answers.

The sign provides some background information on America's Stonehenge.
The sign provides some background information on America’s Stonehenge.
Photo Credit : Alyson Horrocks

We visited America’s Stonehenge two days after their annual summer solstice celebration to explore the ancient mysteries locked deep within this site.

Several conflicting theories have been put forth about this mysterious site.
Several conflicting theories have been put forth about this mysterious site.
Photo Credit : Alyson Horrocks

Could this winding maze of stone structures have been built by an ancient culture for ceremonial purposes? There’s no doubt that a native civilization made use of this area, as fragments of bowls and stone tools have been uncovered during archeological excavations. Evidence of large fire pits, possibly used in the manufacture of pottery, have also been uncovered, and carbon dating suggests parts of the site may have been constructed 4000 years ago.

The watch house.
The watch house.
Photo Credit : Alyson Horrocks

Or perhaps pre-Columbian, migratory Europeans constructed this place for religious rituals and ceremonies. The Celts, Norsemen, Mediterraneans, and other European populations have all been considered as builders of this stone oddity. While no hard evidence has been found to support this assumption, it does spark one’s imagination.

And then there’s the sacrificial table. One of the most curious relics at America’s Stonehenge, this slab of granite, weighing over four tons, has a groove scored into its perimeter to collect liquid and drain it off the side. Did an ancient people perform sacrificial rites here? Or was this simply a colonial device, used to press fruit or make lye soap?

The main attraction -- the sacrificial table.
The main attraction — the sacrificial table.
Photo Credit : Alyson Horrocks

Just below the slab, a speaking tube – a narrow channel carved through stone – links to a cramped chamber. Could someone have once crouched there and used the tube to project his voice out from beneath the sacrificial table in a deity-like fashion?

The oracle chamber.
The oracle chamber.
Photo Credit : Alyson Horrocks

And what about the giant astronomical calendar made of standing monoliths? The stones appear to align with solar and lunar occurrences that could relate to either farming or ceremonial events. Some scholars have said the alignment is a coincidence, while others claim it truly is a calendar.

The astronomical chart at the site plots the stones.
The astronomical chart at the site plots the stones.
Photo Credit : Alyson Horrocks
The summer solstice sunset monolith.
The summer solstice sunset monolith.
Photo Credit : Alyson Horrocks
The summer solstice sunrise stone.
The summer solstice sunrise stone.
Photo Credit : Alyson Horrocks
The true north stone.
The true north stone.
Photo Credit : Alyson Horrocks

A peaceful, undemanding hike with panoramic views of lush forests and hills fading into the distance, the walk around the astronomical trail was my favorite part of the day. I paused to linger at each stone, consumed in thought about the generations of people who have passed over the rocky surface of this hill on which I stood. I pondered the lives of native people thousands of years ago, painstakingly forming vessels out of the clay deposits nearby. I wondered when Europeans first gazed out on this same view.

A goddess molded from clay lay near the summer solstice sunrise stone, her arms still cradling the spent blooms of floral offerings, remnants of the gathering.
A goddess molded from clay lay near the summer solstice sunrise stone, her arms still cradling the spent blooms of floral offerings, remnants of the gathering.
Photo Credit : Alyson Horrocks

The myths and legends surrounding this place are conflicting and fanciful. The enchantment of this hill is that certain answers will likely never come and our imaginations are free to conjure another new tale to add to those already existing. The magic is in the mystery.

America's Stonehenge | A Historical Site Shrouded in Mystery
The magic is in the mystery at America’s Stonehenge.
Photo Credit : Alyson Horrocks

So what is the true origin of America’s Stonehenge in Salem, New Hampshire? We can’t answer those questions, so you’ll have to decide for yourself. Be sure to share your favorite theory section in the comment section below!

Have you ever visited America’s Stonehenge?

This post was first published in 2014 and has been updated. 

SEE MORE:
Lake Winnipesaukee Mystery Stone
Legend of Purgatory Chasm
Madame Sherri’s Castle Ruins | A Legendary Site

Alyson Horrocks

More by Alyson Horrocks

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  1. This place will definitely be on my “bucket list”. I never even knew it was there. It seems almost magical.

  2. I once read that some of the most archeologically interesting formations will never be known because they were chopped up to make curbstones for Lowell, MA.

    Sigh.

  3. Visited for the first time a few months ago. Wear good walking shoes. We enjoyed our time walking around Stonehedge NH. Kids will love exploring. The pictuers are perfect. Hope to go back another time.

  4. This brings to mind another new england stone structure in Mass, Goshens Park stone caves & tunnels where they were hoping to find elements of giants, a race of people over 8 feet tall, maybe why the fire pits so big! More stories of the search for these people on History channel.

  5. Interesting! It resembles Skara Brae over here in Orkney. I am originally from MA/NH but live over here now with my Scottish husband. Someone should compare Skara Brae and this mystery place!

    1. I have been reading a lot about the highlanders who came to America and after watching outlander it was May e them or a higher power – who placed the ones in Scotland they don’t know either so no hoax to me just God’s telephone for those who know how to use it

  6. There is no mystery to this made-up site. It is the result of 18th and 19th century activities, and William Goodwin, who purchased the site in the 1930s because he believed the site was evidence that Irish monks had lived in the Americas hundreds of years before Columbus. The site has been modified and “re-created” by stone quarrying, Goodwin and others who have moved the stones to where they think were/are the stones original locations.

    The presence of prehistoric tools and signs of habitation only prove that Native Americans once lived at the site. There is no evidence that they or any other group used the stones.

  7. Having been born there, to me the rock walls look no different than the other thousands of miles of 17th century stone walls that crisscross the New Hampshire woods.

  8. First time I have heard of this,very interesting and filled with so much history.I’ll be researching more on this.

  9. I’ve been here at least twice and why wouldn’t there have been natives in this area 4000 years ago? There were people everywhere. I don’t believe the line up of so many stones to the lunar and sun solstices could be coincidence. I do believe there was at least the lunar and sun calendar. Don’t forget the firepits and other things WERE carbon dated, which means there is also accuracy to some of this information as well. At the very least we have evidence of a very old site of the native ancestors of North America. That in itself is extremely interesting and valuable history.

  10. I last visited there appx. 50 years ago. There has been a lot of work done there since that time. Some features are the same but many have changed, for better
    or worse. I think one will never be able to tell its true story.
    or worse

  11. Visited this many times as a child long before it became a “tourist attraction “., and always felt awed by who or what made the stone formations. This article brings back memories of my childhood., I’m now 81.

  12. This site is a total hoax. Two or more guys constructed it in the 19th century for whatever reason. No professional archaeologist or historian gives it the least credit. I went there. I remember particularly a “Guard House” into which even a large dog would have had trouble getting into. You need a huge imagination and a considerable degree of gullibility to believe in any of it. It also helps to be unaware of Native American culture and history. Sorry folks, it’s a ripoff.

  13. First: I don’t believe in coincidences!
    Second: Its to perfect to have stones that line up astronomically and NOT be purposely placed in this fashion, in fact, in such a way that occultly predates Native Americans, NO, it’s much older!
    Third: These lines seem to line up in such a way, that if taken out globally, may even triangulate with other such Stonehenge’s, such as the one in Lake Michigan, that is part of that lakes triangle, similar to Bermuda and the Dragon’s Triangle, and another Stonehenge in England?
    Forth: If these do connect? Then we are talking possibly pre-flood or soon after, after all the Vikings were hardly the first to visit America. Ancient Egyptians left names to places, statues, and cave drawings at the Grand Canyon!
    Fifth: This is very similar to the Dolmans in Israel, also a goddess that’s similar to Astarte aka Easter? Also this is reminiscent of Gobekli Tepe and the Nuragic civilization of Sardinia, Italy?
    Sixth: If these lines do in fact collide with other such Stonehenge’s or monoliths, then it was built by Highly-Advanced brings, as the math involved to connect them is difficult today without the use of a helicopter and/or airplane!
    Seventh: I would expect their is also a level of supernatural activity taking place, as these places all have Ancient Occult connections… to the old gods! I’ll leave it at that, read Genesis 6 for clues! Very interesting!

    1. Impressive. It’s refreshing to see someone that actually contemplates something from many different angles and is not afraid to speak those thoughts and ideas and theories. Mathematical indeed.

  14. Don’t waste your money or your time on this farce.
    Some farmer with a tractor put those stones there to line up with the sunrise and sunset. An early settlement made of fieldstone?,sure but the storyline is all guesswork.

  15. I remember reading about Mystery Hill in my dads Argosy magazine when I was about 10. I HAD to go so he took me to see it. I was enthralled!