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Cape Cod Fourth of July fireworks, festivals and parades Friday, June 28. Mashpee: The town’s annual community picnic and fireworks are set to take place from 5 to 9 p.m. on June 28 at Mashpee ...
Cape Cod Coliseum was a multi-purpose arena located off White's Path in South Yarmouth, Massachusetts. In addition to sporting events, the coliseum hosted rock concerts. [ 1 ] The 46,000-square foot concrete arena opened in 1972 and sat between 5,000–6,500 people.
In 1981 the field was renamed in honor of Merrill "Red" Wilson, a beloved teacher, administrator, coach and athletic director at Dennis-Yarmouth High School. Wilson was a seven-time CCBL all-star catcher for Yarmouth in the late 1950s and early 1960s.
Stretching along Massachusetts Route 6A from the Barnstable line in the west to White Brook in the east, the district includes almost 300 buildings on 50 acres (20 ha). It includes the two villages of Yarmouth Center and Yarmouthport, which were important 18th and 19th century centers of civic and economic activity. [2]
There's a small parking area off Route 6A, located next to the Yarmouth Port post office — but don't park in the post office lot! Along the scenic Pond Trail at the Historical Society of Old ...
Maritime industry began a decline in the second half of the 19th century, but the arrival of the railroads heralded the beginning of the area's conversion to a summer resort destination, and the area around Main Street and the bridge across the Bass River took shape as the main village center of South Yarmouth with the construction of a number ...
On the national level, Yarmouth is a part of Massachusetts's 9th congressional district, and is currently represented by William R. Keating. Yarmouth is governed by the open town meeting form of government, and is led by a town administrator and a board of selectmen. There is a central police station, and one firehouse, post office and library ...
The Yarmouth Camp Ground Historic District is a historic district encompassing a religious summer camp meeting ground in Yarmouth and Barnstable, Massachusetts. The core of the camp ground was purchased in 1863 by the Sandwich District Camp Meeting Association, a Methodist Episcopal organization, and was operated until 1939.