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Moose Brook State Park is a New Hampshire state park in Coos County, New Hampshire in the United States. The park occupies 755 acres (306 ha) [2] and sits at an elevation of 1,070 feet (330 m). [1] The park, which was built by the Civilian Conservation Corps during the Great Depression, was opened to the public in 1936. [2]
Dixville Notch State Park: Coös: Dixville: 127 acres (51 ha) Echo Lake State Park: Carroll: Conway: 118 acres (48 ha) Eisenhower Memorial Wayside Park: Coös: Crawford's Purchase: 7 acres (2.8 ha) 1979: Ellacoya State Park: Belknap: Gilford: 82 acres (33 ha) 1956: Forest Lake State Park: Coös: Dalton: 397 acres (161 ha) 1935: Franconia Notch ...
Moose Brook is a 4.7-mile-long (7.6 km) [1] stream in northern New Hampshire in the United States. It is a tributary of the Androscoggin River , which flows south and east into Maine , joining the Kennebec River near the Atlantic Ocean .
Franconia Notch State Park, featuring the site of the natural rock outcropping known as the Old Man of the Mountain, which crumbled and fell in early May 2003; Forest Lake State Park, Crawford Notch State Park, Moose Brook State Park, Pinkham Notch Scenic Area
Bear Brook State Park is a 10,000-acre (4,000 ha) preserve in Allenstown, New Hampshire, and neighboring towns. It is one of New Hampshire's largest state parks. [4]
At the bottom of the hill, the route crosses the state-owned Presidential Rail Trail, [9] passes a truck escape ramp, and meets the east end of Jimtown Road, which leads to Moose Brook State Park. The highway follows the low ridge between Moose Brook and the Moose River and intersects the St. Lawrence and Atlantic Railroad at grade before ...
It is located in the western part of Maine, near the border with the state of New Hampshire and the Canadian province of Quebec. The lake is just a few miles from the Appalachian Trail . There are two islands in the southern portion of Mooselookmeguntic Lake called "Toothaker Island" and "Students Island".
The Bureau of State Parks and Recreation division of Department of Conservation and Recreation (Massachusetts) (DCR) is responsible for the maintenance and management of over 450,000 acres (1,820 sq km) of privately and state-owned forests and parks, nearly 10% of the Commonwealth's total land mass. Within the lands managed by the Bureau of ...