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The new book is the work of local photographer Bob Dennis and Tom Bradbury, the executive director of the Kennebunkport Conservation Trust. Dennis picked up photography in the 1980s.
Located on Mill Lane in Kennebunkport, Maine, it was built in 1749 and operated until 1939. It was destroyed by an arsonist in 1994. It was destroyed by an arsonist in 1994. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973, the property's present owners, the Kennebunkport Conservation Trust, are contemplating construction of a replica.
The Trustees are the oldest regional land trust in the world. The Trustees of Reservations own title to over 100 properties on 25,000 acres (10,000 ha) in Massachusetts, all of which are open to the public; it maintains conservation restrictions on 200 more properties.
Goat Island Light is a lighthouse located off Cape Porpoise near Kennebunkport in southern Maine. [2] [3] [4] Goat Island Light was established in 1835 to guard the entrance to Cape Porpoise Harbor. The original station was upgraded in 1859 to the current brick tower with a fifth order Fresnel lens. Keeper's quarters were added to the island in ...
Dennis is a town in Barnstable County, Massachusetts, United States, located near the center of the Cape Cod peninsula.It is a seaside resort town with colonial mansions along the northern Cape Cod Bay coastline and beaches along the southern Nantucket Sound. [1]
The Grey Gull Cottage, a 1929 oceanfront home in Kennebunkport, Maine, that sold for $9 million in 2023, is now demolished. ... The historic five-bedroom home covered 4,108 square feet, with land ...
The Trustees of Reservations (also referred to as Trustees or The Trustees after a 2021 rebranding [6]) is a non-profit land conservation and historic preservation organization dedicated to preserving natural and historical places in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. It is the oldest land conservation nonprofit organization of its kind in the ...
Archeological evidence exists of activity in the area now known as Cape Porpoise 7000 years ago. [2] In 1602, the time of contact with Europeans, it was occupied by communities of the Almouchiquois people, who referred to the area as Nampscoscocke and had settlements at Gooch's Beach and Great Hill in Kennebunk 3 miles south of Cape Porpoise. [3]