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Eastham is a quintessential
paradise where Outer Cape Cod begins - a narrow strip of rural country
with marshes, ponds, bogs, ocean, and forests that are unharmed
by time.
It is bordered on the east with miles of the majestic Atlantic
Ocean, and on its west by Cape Cod Bay. Eastham's First Encounter
Beach is the site of the first meeting between the Pilgrims and
the American Indians in 1620. Eastham is now known for its pristine
beaches and conservation areas.
Today visitors enjoy this conservancy
with miles of walking and bike trails through woods, fields, marshes,
and several sites that are in the National
Historic Register of Places. Experience glorious sunsets, fish,
swim and kayak from bay beaches. Experience Eastham's past at its
museums, working windmill, and lighthouses. Explore Eastham's
restaurants, shops and art galleries for a taste of local
culture.
Jump to a section:
Cape Cod Attractions/Things To Do
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Martha's Vineyard - Each of the Island's six
towns provides access to spectacular beaches, outdoor activities,
and a selection of shops, restaurants, performing arts and attractions.
Named for a local whaling captain, Owen Park overlooks Vineyard
Haven Harbor, home to hundreds of wooden boats in the summertime.
A peaceful spot located near the ferry and Main Street, Owen
Park and Owen Park Beach are great places to enjoy a picnic
or wait for the ferry. Local town bands as well as visiting
bands hold concerts here in the summer. Take a journey down
the rural roads of Martha's Vineyard, past fields and farms,
to the simple fishing hamlet of Menemsha. The town beach at
Menemsha, overlooking Vineyard Sound, offers views of the Elizabeth
Islands and is considered the premier spot to watch the sunset
on the island.
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Audubon Sanctuary - Wellfleet Bay's 1,100
acres of salt marsh, sandy beach, pine woodland, freshwater
pond, and rare heath land attract a wide array of wildlife,
especially songbirds and shorebirds. Discover the true nature
of Cape Cod as you amble along the five miles of trails that
traverse these habitats. The Nature Center's green architecture,
friendly volunteers, and a beautiful butterfly and hummingbird
garden complement these scenic trails.
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Cape Cod Whale Watch - Watching the majestic
whales rise from the deep is an awe-inspiring experience. Whale
watching crews leave regularly from Plymouth, Barnstable and
Provincetown Harbors, and most guarantee a sighting. No matter
where you embark, your cruise will take you to Stellwagen Bank
National Marine Sanctuary, the Atlantic whales' favorite feeding
grounds. Each year, beginning in late winter, whales return
to the Sanctuary, which encompasses over 600 square nautical
miles. Since the water is shallow here, plankton upon which
whales feed rises closer to the surface. During your excursion,
naturalists will help you spot, identify and learn more about
humpback, finback, minke whales, and the endangered right whale.
You'll see whales breaching (leaping straight out of the water
into the air), spyhopping (holding their heads high out of the
water as if having a look around) or sounding (executing a dive).
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Plimoth Plantation - Become part of the living
history experience at Plimoth Plantation in Plymouth, MA. Through
its primary living history exhibits, the 1627 Pilgrim Village
and Hobbamock's (Wampanoag) Homesite, Plimoth Plantation seeks
to re-create the people, time and place of 17th-century Plymouth.
Period costumes and dialect, authentically reproduced buildings
and artifacts are some of the vital components of this unique
experience. On the Mayflower II - a full-scale reproduction
of a 17th-century vessel - visitors learn about the Pilgrims'
1620 ocean crossing, as well as about construction techniques
of both 17th-century and 21st-century ships. As you enter, you'll
see an exhibit on New England's Native Peoples, an explanation
of why the colonists left England and Holland, and a hands-on
exhibit explaining 17th-century navigation. In the 1627 Pilgrim
Village, each day corresponds to a day in the year 1627. As
colonists talk to you in 17th-century dialects you'll hear about
issues of land ownership and payment of debt, or even the colony's
latest gossip. In the Crafts Center, artisans demonstrate the
making of goods that the colonists either brought with them
or imported from Europe. The Nye Barn is a contemporary exhibit
created to give visitors a more in-depth look at the museum's
rare breeds program. The Plantation's newest indoor exhibit,
Thanksgiving: Memory, Myth & Meaning, leads visitors from
present day celebrations and traditions backward through time,
ending with the 1621 harvest celebration from the perspectives
of the participants, the Wampanoag and the English.
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Cape Cod National Seashore - The Cape Cod
National Seashore offers ranger-led activities, hour-long programs
for children ages 6 to 12, including environmental games, explorations
and activities, and beach browsing on the Outer Cape to find
clues to the marine life offshore and the forces that shape
the land during an hour-long walk. Take an hour-long tour of
the Province Lands dunes to see what plants and animals call
this changing land home and how they need to be protected and
a two-hour open house, including information about the shipwrecks
of Cape Cod and the heroic work of the life savers inside the
historic Old Harbor Life Saving Station.
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Cape Cod Scenic Railroad - The Cape Cod Scenic
Railroad offers four scenic and exciting excursions. The award-winning
Elegant Dinner Train was featured among the top three dinner
trains nationwide by TV Food Network's Dining on the Train.
Recapture the romance of a by-gone era while you enjoy a five-course
gourmet meal served on crisp white linen by a friendly and attentive
staff as you journey through scenic Cape Cod. You may prefer
the Luncheon Train or our Family Supper Train. For a less formal
train ride, try the Scenic Excursion Train. Named one of the
top ten scenic train rides in the country by USA Today, the
two-hour scenic excursions are perfect for all ages. Climb aboard
the Cape Cod Central and feel the thrill as the whistle blows
and your fun-filled adventure begins. The rhythm of the train
and the spirit of the crew will whisk you away on an exhilarating
two-hour journey by rail. You'll pass beautiful cranberry bogs,
natural woodlands, and lush marshes as you make your way between
Hyannis and the Cape Cod Canal.
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Cape Cod Melody Tent - Located in Hyannis,
the Cape Cod Melody Tent features concerts, music, plays, events
and shows, For more than 50 years, it's one of the Cape's best
places to see a concert.
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Cape Playhouse - Located in nearby Dennis,
the Cape Playhouse is America's Oldest Professional Summer Theatre,
offering a variety of Broadway plays, comedies, mysteries and
musicals with matinee and evening performances. Children's Theatre
is a must!
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Eastham Landmarks
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Nauset Light - Located within the Cape Cod
National Seashore, Nauset Light is one of the most famous lighthouses
on the east coast. Originally built in 1887, it was moved to
Eastham from Chatham in 1923 to replace the Three Sisters. The
upper portion of the beacon was painted red in 1940 to distinguish
it from Highland and Chatham lights. Nauset Light was in danger
of being lost to erosion, and in 1993 the Coast Guard proposed
decommissioning the light. The light was saved, however, by
the Nauset Light Preservation Society, which financed a project
to move the light further inland, which was finally completed
in 1996. This working lighthouse is visible 15 ½ miles
out to sea.
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Old Eastham Windmill - Located on the Town
Green at Route 6 and Samoset Road (across from Town Hall), Thomas
Paine in Plymouth originally constructed The Eastham Windmill
in 1680. Moved to Eastham in 1793, this windmill is the oldest
working historical windmill on Cape Cod, and is still occasionally
used to grind corn.
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Three Sisters Lighthouses - This lighthouse
is located 1/2 mile from Nauset Light Beach on Cable Road. In
1837, a lighthouse station was established at Nauset Beach -
halfway between the single light at Highland, and the twins
at Chatham. To distinguish the Nauset Station, a keeper's house
and three small towers of brick were constructed 150 feet apart.
Two towers were taken out of service in 1911 and the third was
replaced in 1923 with the "New Nauset Light." In 1975,
the National Park Service purchased all of the Three Sisters
Lights and conducted a $510,000 restoration that was completed
in 1989. The Three Sisters now rest together and can be viewed
with a short walk from Nauset Light Beach.
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Cape Cod Beaches
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Cape Cod National Seashore - Approximately
27,000 acres of uplands from the Southern tip of Monomoy Island
off Chatham to Provincetown comprise the Cape Cod National Seashore.
A bill, signed by President John F. Kennedy in 1961 ensured
the conservation and preservation of some of the area's most
beautiful natural surroundings as well as approximately 30 miles
of the finest seashore on the Atlantic Coast. Eastham is considered
the "Gateway to the National Seashore" with the Salt
Pond Visitors Center, the Nauset Marsh Hiking Trails and two
beaches, Coast Guard and Nauset Light.
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Coast Guard Beach - Coast Guard Beach is a
prime swimming beach during the summer season. From mid-June
to Labor Day, the parking lot at this location is closed, and
access is provided by shuttle bus from the Little Creek parking
area (across from the Doane Area). Although the parking lot
at Coast Guard Beach is open the remainder of the year, parking
is limited. There are seasonal restrooms and a wheelchair accessible
ramp way to the beach. This area is the site of the discovery
of a 4,000 year old Native American habitation exposed by shoreline
retreat. It is also a good area to hike along the outer beach,
and observe long-shore transport of sand (through wind and wave
action), coastal erosion, and dune building barrier beach processes.
Wayside exhibits outside the former Coast Guard Station help
to tell these stories. Coast Guard Beach is located 1 ½
miles East on Nauset and Doane Roads (on road to beach from
Salt Pond Visitor Center). Look for brown and white signs.
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Nauset Beach - Located one mile north of
Coast Guard Beach on Ocean View Drive in Eastham, this area
is the first visible portion of the glacial scarp (cliff) that
drains from east to west between Eastham and Truro. This is
a good place to conduct studies on marine communications - French
cable operation and lighthouses - and coastal erosion. Watch
out for bicyclists and walkers. Restrooms open seasonally.
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Cape Cod Bay Beaches - The western border
of Eastham is lined with six miles of beautiful beaches overlooking
Cape Cod Bay. Just as magical as the National Seashore, Cape
Cod Bay offers calmer and warmer waters, amazing flats at low
tide and breathtaking sunsets. The most notable and largest
Eastham bay beach is First Encounter, the location where the
native Indians first encountered the pilgrims in 1620.
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Rock Harbor - Rock Harbor is a small beach
and marina on Orleans' Cape Cod Bay shore, known for the best
sunsets on the Cape. Extensive low tide sand flat exposure,
up to a half-mile offshore in some areas, and acres of sand
bars are a veritable playground for everyone. Rock Harbor is
home to the largest charter fishing boat fleet on Cape Cod.
Dozens of anglers set out daily for the rich catches of bluefish,
striped bass, flounder and other species available in the bay
and on the ocean side around Provincetown. Rock Hrabor conjures
images of magical sunsets, romance, beauty, nature, good memories,
kids making sand castles at low tide, and deep thoughts.
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Cape Cod Hiking
- Nauset Marsh Trail - Nauset Marsh Trail
is a half-mile loop that skirts Salt Pond and Nauset Marsh
and returns through transitional forest and fields. The area
is well suited for studies of salt marsh ecosystems and upland
succession. It also offers excellent bird watching opportunities.
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Cape Cod Wineries
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Truro Vineyard - Located in nearby Truro,
Mass., Truro Vineyards is Cape Cod's first vinifera
vineyard on a historic 18th-century farmstead. Truro Vineyards
features beautiful grounds with picnic areas, antique winemaking
displays and a museum. Winery tours are available of their
newly restored barn that houses the winery.
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Eastham Cape Cod Events
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Windmill Weekend - Every year, the weekend
after Labor Day - residents
and visitors of Eastham come together for a weekend of fun
activities centered around the village green with its famous
windmill. The popular 3-day event includes a parade with
floats and marching bands, as well as live musical performances,
an arts and crafts fair, antique auto parade and much more.
There is no cost to enter the fair, but lots to purchase.
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Cape Cod Events
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The Nantucket Daffodil Festival - Step
ashore, onto the cobblestone main street of Nantucket. Here
you'll view the antique classic cars and decorated storefront
windows for the annual Nantucket Daffodil Festival contest
and parade. An island sightseeing tour highlights the day
which journeys the Daffodil-lined back roads offering breathtaking
views of the salt marshes and coastline.
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Cape Cod Museums/History
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John F. Kennedy Hyannis Museum - The JFK
Hyannis Museum is a multimedia exhibit designed to open a
window on the days JFK spent on Cape Cod; days relaxing with
family, days playing football with PT109 buddies, days spent
sailing on the ocean to which he was so constantly drawn.
The exhibit features over 80 photographs spanning the years
1934 to 1963 and is arranged in thematic groupings to reflect
John F. Kennedy, his family, his friends and the Cape Cod
he so dearly loved. In addition to photography, a video narrated
by Walter Cronkite depicts the president's experiences on
the Cape. Several themed areas include charged oral histories
of JFK's friends.
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Cape Cod Museum of Natural History - The
Cape Cod Museum of Natural History in Brewster, Massachusetts,
was founded in 1954 to encourage and advance understanding
of the natural environment through discovery and learning.
The museum is housed in a 17,000 square foot building on
its own 80-acre site, abutted by 300 acres of town-owned
conservation land. There are two floors of exhibits about
the flora and fauna of Cape Cod, including exhibits on whales,
indigenous birds, coastal change, and several aquaria holding
different species of crustaceans, mollusks, fish, frogs,
turtles and snakes. Several displays are interactive and
geared to children. Special, temporary exhibits enhance the
permanent collection. The Museum has a library and Museum
Store. Three nature trails meander through woodland, salt
marsh or on the shore of Cape Cod Bay and guided field walks
are offered year round, daily in summer.
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Cahoon Museum of Art - The Cahoon Museum
of American Art resides in a beautifully restored 1775 Georgian
Colonial that was once an overnight stop on the stagecoach
line between Hyannis and Sandwich. Wide floorboards, stenciled
walls and floors, fireplaces and antique furnishings give
the cheerful galleries a homey intimacy. The heart of the
collection is the fanciful primitive paintings of the late
Ralph and Martha Cahoon, local legends who had their home,
studio and gallery in the old house for 37 years. Using a
palette of jewel-like colors, Ralph Cahoon created a world
populated by innocently flirtatious mermaids and admiring
sailors. Their exploits often unfold in old-fashioned seaside
settings adorned with lighthouses, clipper ships and hot-air
balloons. Martha Cahoon used softer colors to paint scenes
celebrating her love of fantasy, children, animals, the changing
seasons and the country way of life. The Cahoon Museum also
features a choice collection of 19th- and early 20th-century
American marine paintings, landscapes, still lifes and portraits
by esteemed artists.
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Heritage Museum and Gardens - Heritage
Museums and Gardens is situated in Sandwich, the oldest town
on Cape Cod, Massachusetts. The Museum preserves a permanent
collection of American art, history, industry and horticulture.
Once the former Charles O. Dexter estate, the 76 acres of
gently rolling hills is home to a magnificent horticultural
labyrinth with thousands of rhododendrons and now includes
125 of the known 145 Dexter cultivars. For information, visit: info@heritagemuseums.org.
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Cape Cod Children's Museum - The Cape Cod
Children's Museum - located in nearby Mashpee - is a place
where families can learn and play together. Familes can explore
the hands-on exhibits, a pirate ship, an indoor planetarium,
a puppet theater, toddler play area, gift shop and daily
programs. Make new friends and learn about their many programs
while your children are free to explore, touch and discover.
Color Me Mine and the Museum invite you to help create a
new tile wall that will become a permanent part of their
future home.
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Cape Museum of Fine Art - The Cape Museum
of Fine Arts was founded in 1981 to focus on the prominent
artists of Cape Cod and preserve their work on the Cape.
Experience the beauty in exhibits in 7 galleries, stroll
and relax in the delightful sculpture garden, treat the kids
to special summer classes, or catch a movie in the Screening
Room. The Cape continues to beckon and inspire fine artists
with its brilliant light, its enhanced colors, its scenes
of simple natural beauty, and its people.
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Cape Cod Biking
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National Seashore Bike Trails - The Cape Cod National Seashore maintains three bicycle trails ranging from 1.6 to 7.3 miles long. Roller-skating, skateboarding, and the use of motorized vehicles, including mopeds, on these paved trails are prohibited. Bicycles may be rented within the towns. The Province Lands Bike Trail is a five-mile loop, offering hilly trail winds among beech and oak forests, sand dunes and freshwater ponds. Head of the Meadow Bike Trail is a level trail that skirts the edge of a freshwater marsh and provides glimpses of the marsh and dunes - two miles each way. Nauset Bike Trail connects Salt Pond with Coast Guard Beach, and leads through pine and oak forest with vistas of Nauset Marsh along the way - 1 1/2 miles each way.
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Nauset Bike Trail - The Nauset Bike Trail starts at the National Seashore Visitor Center and only two and one quarter miles later ends at Coast Guard Beach. Magnificent vistas of the salt marsh and the great Atlantic Ocean are not to be missed. This trail is wheelchair accessible, and can be shortened by starting at the Doane Rock picnic area.
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The Cape Cod Rail Trail - The Cape Cod Rail Trail ("the Bike Path") is a twenty-four mile path that starts on Route 134 in Dennis and ends at Lucuont Hollow in Wellfleet, having traveled the entire length of Eastham. A level, state maintained trail on an old railroad bed, the trail follows the old Penn Central Railway tracks. Today the tracks are gone, but the convenience to all of Eastham is easily accessible. Just off the path side trips offer ocean beaches and fishing piers, country stores and quaint villages; parks, picnic areas, places to lodge and places to dine. This trail passes through pine and oaks, occasionally skirting a pond or marsh. Ride through woodlands, past sparkling lakes, mysterious kettle ponds and expansive salt marshes. You can park near Nickerson State Park in Brewster or at LeCount Hollow Road in Wellfleet.
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