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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 ...
Fore Point is a historic private summer lakefront estate on the shore of Squam Lake in Sandwich, New Hampshire.The 17-acre (6.9 ha) property includes a main house, guest house, bunkhouse, and boathouse, designed and built by Julius Smith, a local builder, in 1953.
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. Squam Lake in 2006 Squam Lake from the Asquam House, Holderness, NH
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.
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.
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.
Camp Carnes is a historic private summer camp in Holderness, New Hampshire.Located on an island in Squam Lake's Carnes Cove off New Hampshire Route 113, the 1894 camp is one of the first to be established on an island in Squam Lake, and forms part of the extensive set of properties owned by the locally prominent Webster family.
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]