place

Eastham station

Eastham, MassachusettsFormer Old Colony Railroad stationsFormer railway stations in MassachusettsRailway stations in Barnstable County, MassachusettsRailway stations in the United States closed in 1941
Railway stations in the United States opened in 1870
Railroad Station, Eastham, Mass
Railroad Station, Eastham, Mass

Eastham station was a train station in Eastham, Massachusetts. It was built by the Old Colony Railroad around 1870 when the rail line was extended from Orleans to Wellfleet. Passenger service to this station ended in 1941 when the New Haven Railroad discontinued scheduled service between Yarmouth and Provincetown.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Eastham station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Eastham station
Samoset Road,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Eastham stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 41.829722222222 ° E -69.981666666667 °
placeShow on map

Address

Samoset Road 320
02642
Massachusetts, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

Railroad Station, Eastham, Mass
Railroad Station, Eastham, Mass
Share experience

Nearby Places

Nauset Archeological District
Nauset Archeological District

The Nauset Archaeological District (or "Coast Guard Beach Site,19BN374" or "North Salt Pond Site,19BN390") is a National Historic Landmark District in Eastham, Massachusetts. Located within the southern portion of the Cape Cod National Seashore, this area was the location of substantial ancient settlements since at least 4,000 BC.The first written account of this area was by Samuel de Champlain in 1605, in which he described sailing into a bay surrounded by the wigwams of the Nauset tribe (see map, right). The account detailed the settlement's crops (e.g. corn, beans, squash, tobacco), housing (round wigwams covered with thatched reeds), and clothing (woven from grasses, hemp, and animal skins). De Champlain's map also depicts one of their fishing methods, using a conical weir constructed of saplings and grass rope, designed to capture fish swimming from the marsh into a pond. To farm the land, they used stone hoes and fire-hardened wood tools. About 150 people were living at the site around Nauset Harbor, and about 500-600 were living around Stage Harbor to the south in the area of present-day Chatham. Archaeological studies have since shown that these settlements were occupied year-round.After 1620, English colonists from the settlement at Plymouth visited Nauset many times to buy food and trade. In addition to goods for trade, however, the Europeans also unwittingly introduced diseases. Many of them died as a result, and their population declined drastically. In 1639 about half of the English from Plymouth relocated to the Nauset area, settling the town that is now Eastham. The district was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1993. The area can be visited via the Fort Hill area of the Cape Cod National Seashore, off U. S. Route 6, where the Fort Hill and Red Maple Swamp trails wind from the top of the hill to the marsh and beyond.