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Eliot, Maine
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Amusement
Amusement
Aquarium
Aquarium
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Beach
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Bowling
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Casino
Golf
Golf
Historic
Historic
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Lighthouse
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Mountain
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Museum
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Space
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Vineyard
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Zoo
The Ledges Golf Club image
(Range: 3 miles)
The Ledges Golf Club located in York Maine offers the most memorable public golf experience in the seacoast where you are surrounded by ledge outcroppings, championship greens and wild life. (Curated content from ledgesgolf.com)
Woodman Museum image
(Range: 4 miles)
The Woodman Museum was founded in 1916 from a trust established by Annie E. Woodman to: “To advance and develop passion for History, Nature, and the Arts. To educate, excite, and inspire current and future generations about . . . a changing nation by preserving and exhibiting objects of historic significance, decorative and fine art, and natural science that connect Dover and its citizens to . . . the world.” (Curated content from woodmanmuseum.org)
Tokens Taproom image
(Range: 4 miles)
Tokens Taproom, an arcade bar located in downtown Dover, is the first of its kind in New Hampshire. The vast variety of classic arcade and pinball machines were meticulously collected throughout the years by owner and arcade game connoisseur, Josh Hynes. (Curated content from www.tokenstaproom.com)
Hamilton House image
(Range: 4 miles)
In a picturesque setting overlooking the Salmon Falls River, this striking Georgian mansion, a National Landmark c. 1785, and its landscape share a history that mirrors that of its Southern Maine region. Hamilton House is located on the homeland of the Wabanaki. After European colonists took ownership of the area known as South Berwick, Maine, the site was purchased by merchant Jonathan Hamilton for his shipping business in the eighteenth century, farmed by the Goodwin family in the nineteenth century, and restored as the summer retreat of Emily Tyson and her stepdaughter Elise at the turn of the twentieth. (Curated content from www.historicnewengland.org)
Warner House image
(Range: 5 miles)
The earliest, urban brick house in northern New England, the Warner House is considered a fine example of early-Georgian architecture with its sumptuous moldings and richly-paneled interiors.  (Curated content from www.warnerhouse.org)
Strawbery Banke Museum image
(Range: 5 miles)
Strawbery Banke Museum, in the heart of historic downtown Portsmouth, New Hampshire, is an authentic nearly 10-acre outdoor history museum dedicated to bringing 300+ years of American history in the same waterfront neighborhood to life.  (Curated content from www.strawberybanke.org)
Jackson House image
(Range: 5 miles)
A National Historic Landmark, Jackson House is the oldest surviving wood-frame house in New Hampshire. It was built by Richard Jackson, a woodworker, farmer, and mariner. It resembles English post-Medieval prototypes, but is notably American in its extravagant use of wood. Succeeding generations added a lean-to by 1715, along with more additions in the 1700s and 1800s to accommodate different family groups sharing the house at once. (Curated content from www.historicnewengland.org)
Albacore Park image
(Range: 5 miles)
The USS Albacore is a research submarine, designed by the U.S. Navy to test experimental features used in modern submarines. The Navy tested top-secret features that led to the high-speed silent operation used on modern U.S. submarines. Today, Albacore has been preserved and is opened to the public (Curated content from www.ussalbacore.org)
Monkey Mind Escape Rooms image
(Range: 5 miles)
Voted #1 TripAdvisor 2022 Escape Rooms in downtown Portsmouth. Interactive entertainment perfect for a night out with friends, a unique date night, or a team building activity. (Curated content from www.monkeymindescape.com)
Sarah Orne Jewett House image
(Range: 5 miles)
Iconic Maine author Sarah Orne Jewett was born in her grandparents’ eighteenth-century house in 1849. She lived there with her family until she was five years old, when the family built a Greek Revival house next door. As Sarah gained attention as a writer, she and her family lived in the two Portland Street homes in the center of town, but it was her grandparent’s house that Jewett so loved, she used it as the setting for her first novel, Deephaven (1877). (Curated content from www.historicnewengland.org)