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John H. Chafee National Wildlife Refuge

1988 establishments in Rhode IslandIUCN Category IVLandforms of Washington County, Rhode IslandNarragansett, Rhode IslandNational Wildlife Refuges in Rhode Island
Protected areas established in 1988Protected areas of Washington County, Rhode IslandSouth Kingstown, Rhode IslandWetlands of Rhode Island

The John H. Chafee National Wildlife Refuge is a national wildlife refuge of the United States, located along the Narrow River on the southern coast of Rhode Island.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article John H. Chafee National Wildlife Refuge (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

John H. Chafee National Wildlife Refuge
Old Boston Neck Road,

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Wikipedia: John H. Chafee National Wildlife RefugeContinue reading on Wikipedia

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Latitude Longitude
N 41.50121 ° E -71.42727 °
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Old Boston Neck Road

Old Boston Neck Road
02874
Rhode Island, United States
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Hannah Robinson Tower
Hannah Robinson Tower

The Hannah Robinson Tower is a 40 feet (12 m) tall wooden tower at the interchange between U.S. Route 1 (Tower Hill Road) and Route 138 (Bridgetown Road) in the community of South Kingstown, South County, Rhode Island. The tower was built in 1938 by the Civilian Conservation Corps and was rebuilt in 1988 using the same pillars. The structure is named after Hannah Robinson (1746–1773), a colonial Rhode Island resident and daughter of a wealthy Narragansett society man, Rowland Robinson. Hannah fell in love with a local teacher, Peter Simon, but the relationship was deemed unsuitable by her father. Despite her father's disapproval, Hannah Robinson married her suitor and lived in Providence, Rhode Island. The family became estranged from Robinson, who was enveloped in poverty, leading to a fatal decline. Robinson's father ended his opposition and left his community of Boston Neck to bring Hannah home. As Rowland Robinson brought his daughter home, she requested a chance to visit nearby McSparran Hill, where she considered a view of her homeland. Robinson died soon after. In 1966, the owner of the land along McSparran Hill, sold off the 1.52-acre (0.62 ha) of land along with the rock to Preserve Rhode Island. Although owned by Preserve Rhode Island, the property is managed independently by Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management. The state maintains the area as public open space as a memorial to Hannah Robinson.