New Listings
Notification




Become A Member

Quick Find

MLS Quick Search

Waterfront:

Quick Home Search

Windham Living

Windham at a Glance

  • Population: Approaching 13,000+/-
  • Government: Five Selectmen; Town Manager; Line Item Budget Ballot Vote.
  • Tax Rate: $15.35 per thousand. Assessed at 90-100% 2008 
  • Income: Median Family Income is $94,794
  • Shopping: Major shopping in Salem-Rockingham Mall; Londonderry.
  • Restaurants: The Common Man; The Windham Restaurant; Gourmet Grille.
  • Worship: Windham Presbyterian; St. Matthews, Catholic; Windham Bible Chapel; Church of the Nazarene.
  • Resale Homes: $225,000 - Over $1,000,000
  • New Homes: $450,000 - Over $1,000,000
  • Approximate Travel Distances: Boston - 35 Miles; 128 - 20 miles; Nashua - 10 Miles; Manchester Airport - 15 Miles; Seacoast - 35 Miles; Mountains - 110 miles.
Imagine finding a sought after community that offers a lifestyle that is both gracious and relaxed. More and more people are discovering all of the wonderful advantages that the town of Windham has to offer. As you get to know Windham, you'll come to savor our wooded countryside, lakes and ponds, and scenic vistas. And you'll enjoy a special place, with new friends and neighbors, that matches your distinctive lifestyle.
 
You'll love the convenience of living just over the Massachusetts border. Windham offers one of the best locations for commuting, with easy access to interstate 93, Boston Massachusetts, route 128, and both Nashua and Manchester, New Hampshire. You'll enjoy all the cultural, entertainment, educational and employment opportunities that metropolitan Boston has to offer. In under an hour you can be in town to enjoy as dinner in the North End, a Red Sox game or a new play. The seacoast is under an hour away. You'll come to enjoy the beautiful shoreline and beaches of New Hampshire and southern Maine. And if you're lucky, you'll happen upon a place like "Chauncey Creek" were you can enjoy a bottle of wine and a lobster in the rough overlooking the water. The mountains of New Hampshire and Vermont are under two hours away. Here you can enjoy some of the best skiing and most beautiful scenery in the east. And when you return home to Windham you'll enjoy your distinctive home in one of our beautiful neighborhoods.
 
Windham is an affluent community which has maintained its rural character by encouraging high quality development. The population of Windham is approaching 12,000 people. The United States census has just released reports showing that Windham residents have the highest median household income in the state of New Hampshire at $94,794. Windham is part of Rockingham County which is the wealthiest county in New Hampshire and which has the highest median family income of any county in either New Hampshire or Massachusetts.
Preservation
 
The people of Windham have worked hard to retain the natural beauty found around this town. They have made a commitment to maintain open space and natural areas for future generations. In the early 1980's, Windham acquired Foster's Pond Natural Area. This 163 acre tract of land features walking trails that wind along a tranquil pond which is surrounded by dense woodlands. In the later 1980's, "Dear Leap" was purchased. This 54 acre site features walking trails that meander among massive rock out-croppings which eventually lead to a precipitous rock ledge overlooking Moeckel Pond. The Andrew Town Forest borders Beaver Brook in West Windham and the Verrette Conservation Area allows for canoe access to Canobie Lake. In 2003, the town acquired over 80 acres of land to near it's southeast lands quadrant for preservation as open space. The town has an ongoing system of using current use taxes to acquire new open space for the benefit of the residents in town.
Windham is also in the process of preserving it's historic resources. Searles School and Chapel, is a building of important architectural significance that has just undergone restoration. The gorgeous building is available for social and cultural events.
Schools
 
Education is a major priority for residents of Windham. Parents are involved and want the best education possible for their children. The schools are well funded and class sizes are generally small. National test scores consistently show a high level of achievement for Windham students. Golden Brook School houses grades 1-2. Center School houses grades 3-5. And Windham Middle School houses grades 6-8. High School students currently attend Salem High School. A new Windham High School is scheduled to open in 2009. Major additions and remodeling have recently been completed at Windham Center and Windham Middle Schools in an effort to keep class sizes small and to offer a greater diversity of programs.
Lakeshore Living
 
Windham's natural beauty is enhanced by the many lakes and ponds located within its borders. Cobbett's Pond is a beautiful spring fed lake that is approximately two miles long. Neighborhoods are accessed by quaint, narrow roads winding their way to the shore. Elegant year round residences sit side by side with more modest seasonal and year round homes. This diversity adds the eclectic mix around the lake which makes it a unique and wonderful place to live. Whether you're taking a cocktail cruise at sunset, fishing early in the morning as the mist rises off the water, skimming across the waves on water-skis or just watching the peaceful flight of the Great Blue Heron, there is a certain enjoyment that just can't be found elsewhere.
 
Canobie Lake is located in both Windham and Salem. There are beautiful subdivisions with dramatic custom homes, some with values well over a million dollars, lining the shores.
Other lakes in Windham include Rock Pond and Shadow Lake. The Windham Town Beach is located on Cobbett's Pond and there is a boat ramp available to Windham residents on Canobie Lake.
 
The Center
 
Windham's new town center is rising on a hill overlooking the historic meeting-house, the Presbyterian Church and the former stone library. The town purchased thirty acres here for its new town center in the early 1990's. The new Nesmith Library, police station and fire station have been built. Small scale shops and businesses are also clustered in this area along Rt. 111. The Strawberry Festival is held in this location every June to raise funds for the "Friends of the Library."
 
Recreation
 
Windham offers a large range of recreational opportunities for all ages.
Griffin Park is a state of the art sports complex with new baseball fields, soccer fields, walking paths and with other recreational amenities. There are other ball fields and tennis courts located through out town.
There are well organized soccer, baseball, basketball and softball leagues. There is a large number of children who participate in Windham soccer and little leagues. Windham Wonderland is a large playground located off Ministerial Road.
 
The town beach is the center of summer activities. Open to all Windham residents, the town offers swimming lessons here in July.  The Windham Senior Citizens are an active group in town. The Windham senior center has just been expanded to meet the growing list of activities offered there.
 
Home-Styles
 
Windham offers many opportunities for home ownership. Many desirable neighborhoods with spacious lots and distinctive homes are located throughout town. There are many new home subdivisions and we represent several of the local builders. There are very unique properties with stunning custom designs and unsurpassed settings. There is also the option of waterfront living. Upscale condominium communities and active adult (over 55 years old) communities are also available in town.
Resale homes generally start at about $225,000 and run to well over a million dollars. New homes start at about $450,000. Condominiums run between $200,000 and $325,000.
When you call our office you'll find a sales professional who is familiar with all of the new home options available in Windham. They will listen the type of home and neighborhood you're looking for and help you find a fit that is right for you.
 
The Windham Rail Trail has just opened in Windham. This 4.2 mile long, paved biking and walking trail follows the old Boston and Maine rail line. The trail runs along the natural beauty of woodlands, rock ledges, ponds and wetlands all with an abundance of wildlife. The Rail Trail runs between the neighborhoods of Spruce Pond Estates, Mitchell Pond Estates and Castle Reach. Enjoy a wonderful breakfast or lunch at "The Kitchen" before you start or end your outing. Check out the Rail Trail today!
 
Windham High School News
 
For further information about the proposed Windham High School visit www.windhamsd.org/highschool/ www.windhamwise.  Full floorplans, site plans, and other information regarding courses to be offered and funding.
 
 
 
Principal hired for Windham High building set to open in fall 2009

Great News. The Eagle Tribune reports that the Windham School Board has hired the new principal for the Windham High School.  

By Margo Sullivan , Staff writer
Eagle-Tribune
 

"WINDHAM - The new high school is still 20 months away from completion, but the School Board has already hired a principal. Richard Manley, 51, of Hollis is expected to start his new job July 1, Superintendent Frank Bass said yesterday. He will be paid $99,500 annually, nearly $3,000 less than he earns in his position as the principal of North Middlesex Regional High School in Townsend, Mass.

Manley, a Danvers, Mass., native, is a former Fulbright Fellow who has studied and traveled all over the world. He said in a telephone interview yesterday that he was drawn here because Windham is a community eager to aspire and build a great high school, and because he shares the commitment to interdisciplinary studies.

"It's the most meaningful to the students," he said.

Windham High School is being built on London Bridge Road, behind Route 111. The school is expected to open its doors in the fall of 2009, but the goal all along was to have the principal on board by the end of January.
Bass said the principal will have daunting tasks to tackle even before the students arrive.

"Well, everything," he said, when asked to specify which tasks the principal would take over. The new principal also will have to convince the Windham students now at Salem High School to return to their own town to attend high school, he said. Under a special agreement between the two communities, Windham teens can attend Salem High because their own community does not have a public high school. That situation was supposed to end once Windham High is ready, but some parents and students have had second thoughts about leaving Salem.

Manley said the students shouldn't have any trouble making the transition from Salem to Windham. "That's a complicated process, but they'll be coming to one of the best schools in New Hampshire," he said. Asked about the challenges of starting a new school with a new curriculum and new teachers, Manley said he's not worried. "There's going to be an air of excitement that will transcend any kind of difficulty," he said.

Manley, who has lived in New Hampshire for all of his adult life and in Hollis for 12 years, is married and has two sons. He has been the principal at North Middlesex Regional High for two years. Previously, he was assistant principal at Hollis Brookline High School for five years. He also taught social studies at Hollis Brookline High from 1983 to 2001, said Bass, describing the principal as a lifelong learner.

Manley received a master's degree in history from Northeastern University and a law degree from Suffolk University, Bass said. He no longer practices law, but maintains his membership in the New Hampshire Bar Association. Besides the Fulbright, which he used to travel to India, he studied alternative education programs in the former Soviet Union. He was awarded a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities, which he used to study history at Harvard. He also was recently chosen to go to China and observe school principals there.

School Board member Barbara Coish anticipates Manley will be good at establishing the school's curriculum."And he certainly has varied interests in his past that will make him be a good principal, I believe," she said. Coish said the decision came down to Manley and one other finalist, who Bass declined to name. "We had two strong candidates," she said. "In the end, it was difficult to choose. We could easily work with either one of the finalists."

Coish would not say if the vote to hire Manley was unanimous because the meeting minutes are still sealed."

 

US Census Demographics 03087: Income, Population, Schools

Windham Links

Churches

Organizations

Dining and Functions

Things to do - Recreation

Shopping

Day Spas Yoga

Day Care - Kindergarten