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North Berwick, Maine
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Sanford Country Club image
(Range: 5 miles)
Located in Sanford, Maine, Sanford Country Club, a Public Course with Memberships available, is conveniently located near Kennebunkport, Wells and Portsmouth. Its historic 18-hole golf course, which played host to the 2012 US Amateur Qualifying Round, has welcomed golfers such as Byron Nelson, Lloyd Mangnum, Francis Ouimet, Ben Hogan, Sam Snead and Gene Sarazen.  (Curated content from sanfordcountryclub.com)
Mount Agamenticus Conservation Region image
(Range: 5 miles)
The Mount Agamenticus Conservation Region consists of more than 10,000 acres and is located within an additional 30,000 acre expanse of conservation land in southern Maine. This land is comprised of a rich and unique coastal forest that supports the highest diversity of animal and plant species in all of Maine. The mountain and the surrounding area provide residents with an ideal location for hiking, biking and sightseeing. While most of Southern Maine is heavily developed, this stretch of conservation land is a natural treasure that will be preserved for the enjoyment of generations to come. (Curated content from agamenticus.org)
Links at Outlook Golf Course image
(Range: 5 miles)
Enjoy our undulating bent grass fairways and greens, which are surrounded by rolling dunes and scattered sand bunkers that come into play throughout this 140-acre course. Golfers will enjoy many spectacular and breathtaking views that will captivate them while playing our Par 71/6,500 yard championship course. (Curated content from www.outlookgolf.com)
Powderhouse Hill image
(Range: 5 miles)
Owned by the Town of South Berwick, Maine. Operated and maintained by volunteers of Powderhouse Hill "Open to the public" (Curated content from www.powderhousehill.com)
Sarah Orne Jewett House image
(Range: 6 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)
Ogunquit Heritage Museum image
(Range: 7 miles)
The Ogunquit Heritage Museum is an institution that collects, preserves and exhibits items and documents related to Ogunquit’s heritage. Its home is the Captain James Winn House which is an 18th century cape nestled in the Dorothea Jacob Grant Common, a lovely park with large open areas and winding paths and wooded areas. (Curated content from www.ogunquitheritagemuseum.com)
The Ledges Golf Club image
(Range: 7 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)
Wonder Mountain Fun Park image
(Range: 7 miles)
Best Family Fun in Maine! (Curated content from www.wondermountainfunpark.com)
Smitty's Game Lab image
(Range: 7 miles)
The ultimate family entertainment experience with the hottest arcade games, ten-pin bowling, delicious food and drinks, and multiple TVs for the game. (Curated content from www.smittysgamelab.com)
Hamilton House image
(Range: 7 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)