Family Ownership
for 109 years
Ahern Dairy Farm turned Christmas Tree Farm

Omer & Mike Ahern
In 1773 the original 9 room farm house,
known as the Intervale House, was built down on the
floodplain next to the Pemigewasset River. The Ahern
family, made up of contractors and farmers purchased
the 300+ acre farm in 1897. Soon after the purchase,
they moved the farm house to higher ground along Rte.
3 where it is now located.
In 1912 an addition was built onto the
main house which provided extra rooms to rent to vacationers.
Tourists came from the city to experience life on
the farm, which was a trend at that time. Molly and
Ned the farm horses took the tourists on excursions
around the Squam Lakes. Ned with his sleigh was used
for a movie around 1928.
In the early 1900's the Aherns purchased
a 25 acre parcel of land on the North end of the farm.
Located on this site was a small pond, a waterfall
and a brook, which later became known as Glove Hollow
Brook. It was here on or before 1811, that Capt. James
Hobart, recognizing the potential of the waterfall
had built under one roof, both a grist and saw mill.
In 1856 Thomas Glynn purchased the water power and
introduced a circular saw there, an invention that
revolutionized the lumber industry.
Omer Ahern, the 3rd generation owner
and grandson of the original owner, along with his
father operated a dairy farm with milk routes in Plymouth
and Ashland. Omer also operated his own construction
business with one of the first tractor backhoes in
the area, which he continued until 1956 when he was
appointed the Assistant Administrator of the Sullivan
County Home in Claremont, NH. The next year he planted
the first Christmas trees mostly balsam fir and white
spruce and continued to operate the farm as a Christmas
tree plantation.
In 1971 he sold his first retail and
wholesale trees. It was the same year that they became
known as Glove Hollow Tree Farm, taking the name from
the low hollow area adjacent to the farm. It was here
in the early 1900s that some of the finest leather
gloves in the United States were manufactured by the
Draper-Maynard Co.
Both Omer and wife Rosa retired as Co-Administrators
of the Sullivan County Home in 1984 at which time
they started their choose and cut program, which they
carry on at the present time with their son Michael
and daughtor-in-law karen who are the 4th generation
Aherns to farm and own the property.
