Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The park features camping, picnicking, swimming, fishing, and a boat-launch ramp. [2] Hiking trails connect the campground and the Kimball Wildlife Sanctuary. The campground's 3,100 acres (1,300 ha) include 713 campsites (including 20 cabins and one shelter), a camp store, freshwater beach, and canoe rentals. [7]
Fishermen's Memorial State Park is a public recreation area and campground encompassing 91 acres (37 ha) on Point Judith in the town of Narragansett, Rhode Island. [2] The state park occupies a portion of the former Fort Nathaniel Greene, named after Rhode Island native and Revolutionary War general Nathaniel Greene.
Camping, beach activities East Beach State Beach: Charlestown: Washington: 400 acres 160 ha: 1967: Expanded by 250 acres in 2006; small, seasonal campground East Matunuck State Beach: South Kingstown: Washington: 144 acres 58 ha: 1956: Modern beach pavilion opened in 2012 Misquamicut State Beach: Westerly: Washington: 51 acres 21 ha: 1959
It's summer in Rhode Island, which means the days are long and hot, and the kids – home for summer vacation – are bored. ... The beach is located at 140 South Shore Road in Little Compton ...
This page was last edited on 11 December 2023, at 18:20 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
The campground is managed by the Rhode Island Department of Parks and Recreation, and is located on Putnam Pike (Route 44). The site contains the George Washington Memorial State Forest covering 3,500 acres (1,400 ha) of protected forest land, and a 100-acre primitive camping area without electrical hookups. The area contains Bowdish Reservoir ...
Sakonnet Light, built in 1884, is a sparkplug lighthouse near Sakonnet Point, Little Compton, Rhode Island, on the eastern side of the state. [2] [3] [4]The light was deactivated in 1954 after Hurricane Carol and was going to be destroyed, but local citizens protested, and eventually Carl and Carolyn Haffenreffer bought the lighthouse in 1961.
Even after three decades, a beach in Little Compton will remind guests of the time a cargo barge dumped thousands of teddy bears on its shores. Reminder of the wreck: Thirty years later, teddy ...