Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Squam Lakes Natural Science Center (SLNSC) is an environmental education center and zoo founded in 1966 and opened to the public on July 1, 1969. The science center is located in Holderness, New Hampshire, United States. The mission of the science center is to advance understanding of ecology by exploring New Hampshire's natural world.
Covering 6,791 acres (27.48 km 2), [1] Squam is the second-largest lake located entirely in New Hampshire. Squam Lake in 2006 Squam Lake from the Asquam House, Holderness, NH. Squam Lake was originally called Keeseenunknipee, [clarification needed] which meant "the goose lake in the highlands". The white settlers that followed shortened the ...
Squam Lakes Natural Science Center: Holderness: Grafton: Lakes: 180 acres (73 ha), environmental education center and accredited zoo Tin Mountain Conservation Center: Albany: Carroll: Lakes: website, programs at Nature Learning Center and at the 228-acre Tin Mountain Field Station in Jackson, NH
Holderness is a town in Grafton County, New Hampshire, United States. The population was 2,004 at the 2020 census. [2] An agricultural and resort area, Holderness is home to the Squam Lakes Natural Science Center and is located on Squam Lake. Holderness is also home to Holderness School, a co-educational college-preparatory boarding school.
The Rockywold–Deephaven Camps (RDC) is a historic family summer camp on Squam Lake in Holderness, New Hampshire. Now operated as a single facility, the camp began life as two adjacent camps. Rockywold Camp was established in 1901 by Mary Alice Armstrong and Deephaven in 1897 by Alice Mabel Bacon.
The Pratt Family Camps are a related collection of historic summer camps in Moultonborough, New Hampshire.The camps consist of three primary camp houses and a collection of outbuildings constructed by the Pratt family over an 85-year period on more than 80 acres (32 ha) of lakefront property on Squam Lake.
SQUAM LAKE, N.H. (AP) — As New England baked in a heat wave Thursday, guests at one campground were keeping their food and beer cold with blocks of ice harvested months earlier from a frozen ...
Watch Rock Camp is a historic summer camp in Holderness, New Hampshire. Located off New Hampshire Route 113 on the shore of Squam Lake, the camp was built in 1926 for Herbert and Elizabeth Gallaudet; he was a scion of the founders of Gallaudet College. The camp was designed by New York City architect Francis Y. Joannes. [3]