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On New Hampshire’s Squam Lake, a historic summer house with a Titanic connection is looking for its first new owner in a century. The eight-bedroom, four-bathroom, 5,600-square-foot property is ...
The lake is located northwest of much larger Lake Winnipesaukee. It drains via a short natural channel into Little Squam Lake, and then through a dam at the head of the short Squam River into the Pemigewasset at Ashland. Covering 6,791 acres (27.48 km 2), [1] Squam is the second-largest lake located entirely in New Hampshire.
All lakes listed are man-made. Oklahoma's only natural lakes are oxbow and playa lakes. Oklahoma has sixty-two oxbow lakes at least 10 acres in size. The largest, near the Red River in McCurtain County, is 272 acres. Playa lakes are found in saucer-shaped depressions in the high plains region. They are usually intermittent, holding water only ...
Located near Carns Cove on Squam Lake off New Hampshire Route 113, the estate belongs to the locally prominent Webster family. It includes a number of houses: the Homestead, which was built for the family patriarch, Frank Webster, in 1899, and the 1903 Laurence Webster House. [2] It was one of the largest summer estates on Squam Lake at the time.
Holderness is in central New Hampshire along the southeastern border of Grafton County. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the town has a total area of 35.7 square miles (92.5 km 2), of which 30.3 square miles (78.6 km 2) are land and 5.4 square miles (13.9 km 2) are water, comprising 15.05% of the town. [1]
212 acres (86 ha) Four miles west of Taloga: Drummond Flats WMA [31] Garfield: 4,653 acres (1,883 ha) West of Drummond; eight miles southwest of Enid and in the western part of the county Has a WDU section Ellis County WMA [32] Ellis: 4,800 acres (1,900 ha) 8 miles west and 3.5 miles south of Arnett: 160 acres (65 ha) Lake Lloyd Vincent created ...
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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] The camp was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2013. [1]