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Wentworth State Park is a 50-acre (20 ha) public recreation area on the north shore of Lake Wentworth in Wolfeboro, New Hampshire. Activities include swimming, picnicking, non-motorized boating, and fishing. Amenities include picnic tables, grills, flush toilets and a group use area. [2] [4]
The Wentworth-Crescent watershed is a sub-watershed of the Lake Winnipesaukee watershed and the greater Merrimack River watershed. The three major water bodies, Sargents Pond, Crescent Lake, and Lake Wentworth, and 11 year-round tributaries are included in the 37-square-mile (96 km 2) sub-watershed, containing over 4,000 acres (16 km 2) of surface water, 617 acres (2.50 km 2) of wetlands, and ...
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 ...
Wentworth State Park; Wentworth–Coolidge Mansion; White Island State Historic Site; White Lake State Park; Winslow State Park This page was last edited on 11 ...
Park name Location (of main entrance) Area Abbott State Forest: Concord: 35 acres (14 ha) Agnew State Forest: Jefferson: 109 acres (44 ha) Allen State Forest: Concord: 30 acres (12 ha) Alton Bay State Forest: Alton: 210 acres (85 ha) Ames State Forest: Henniker: 13 acres (5.3 ha) Ammonoosuc State Forest: Stark: 8 acres (3.2 ha) Annett State ...
Port Wentworth received a $1.26 million grant to provide energy to the new Anchor Park Development, which will hold the Ghost Pirates Training Facility.
Governor Wentworth Historic Site is a 96-acre (0.39 km 2) protected area in Wolfeboro, New Hampshire. [4] The undeveloped property features a plaque and the stone remains of an extensive northern country estate built just before the outbreak of the American Revolution by New Hampshire's second Royal Governor, John Wentworth .
The site is a New Hampshire state park, declared a National Historic Landmark in 1968. [2] [3] Today, the New Hampshire Bureau of Historic Sites manages the site with the assistance of the Wentworth-Coolidge Commission, a group of volunteer civic and business leaders appointed by the Governor. [4]