New Hampshire may be known for its small communities, coastline, mills, and older housing stock, but those same features can intersect with asbestos risk in very real ways. Exposure in this state has often been connected to older schools and public buildings, paper and textile mill work, manufacturing facilities, power-related trades, commercial renovation, and maintenance on aging structures built when asbestos-containing materials were common. Along the Seacoast, maritime and naval-related work can also be part of a person’s exposure history, including work connected to ship repair, industrial insulation, or contractors serving marine facilities.
A major challenge in New Hampshire asbestos cases is that the exposure may not be obvious at first. Someone in Manchester, Nashua, Concord, Portsmouth, Rochester, Keene, or a smaller North Country town may have worked around insulation, boilers, pipe covering, gaskets, floor tiles, roofing materials, or industrial equipment without ever being warned of the danger. Others may have been exposed while doing maintenance in older apartment buildings, schools, hospitals, municipal properties, or inherited family homes. This is one reason legal help matters. A claim is often built by reconstructing a work and property history that spans many years and many locations.


