<<< - Rhode Island
Recreation and Places of Interest
An extensive shoreline and mild summer
climate contribute to Rhode Island’s renown as a
vacation state. Resorts along the coast and offshore islands
are major centers for people interested in boating, fishing,
swimming, and other water sports. Notable resorts in the
state include Block Island, which lies 16 km (10 mi) offshore,
and Newport, one of the nations most popular resorts.
Rhode Island is also noted for its numerous
places of historic interest, some of which are designated
as state historic sites. Among the best-known tourist attractions
of historic interest is Touro Synagogue National Historic
Site, in Newport. It preserves the oldest synagogue in
the United States. Rhode Island’s only national park
is Roger Williams National Memorial, in Providence, commemorating
the first government to declare religious freedom for all.
State Parks
There are about 25 state parks, beaches,
and management areas in Rhode Island. The largest, Beach
Pond State Park, is in the hilly western part of the state
and has facilities for swimming, boating, camping, and
nature study. Also in the west is Dawley State Park, which
has picnicking, hiking, and riding facilities. Diamond
Hill State Park, in the northeast, has picnic facilities
and wooded terrain. Located in the south is Fishermen’s
Memorial State Park, a camping facility along Point Judith
Pond, an inlet of the Atlantic Ocean.
Burlingame State Park lies on Watchaug
Pond in southwestern Rhode Island. The park includes a
bird sanctuary, picnic sites and campsites, hiking trails,
and facilities for boating, swimming, and fishing.
State Historic Sites
World War I Memorial State Historic Site,
located in Providence, includes a granite shaft 35 m (115
ft) tall that supports a heroic figure representing peace.
Noted for its excellent acoustics, Rhode Island’s
Veterans Memorial Auditorium in Providence is the state’s
World War II memorial. General Stanton State Historic Site,
in Charlestown, is a granite shaft erected in honor of
Joseph Stanton, Jr., a prominent soldier in the French
and Indian wars and one of the first two U.S. senators
from Rhode Island. Also in Charlestown is Indian Burial
Ground State Historic Site, an 8-hectare (20-acre) plot
that contains the graves of Narragansett Native Americans.
Fort Ninigret State Historic Site in Charlestown holds
the original outline of a fort supposedly built by Dutch
traders before the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth in 1620.
On the boundary between the towns of Exeter and North Kingstown
is Queen’s Fort State Historic Site, which includes
the ruins of an ancient Native American fort abandoned
in 1676. Other state historic sites are Great Swamp Fight
State Historic Site in South Kingstown, Jireh Bull Garrison
State Historic Site in South Kingstown, and Bell Schoolhouse
State Historic Site in Exeter.
Museums
Among the fine art museums in Rhode Island
are those maintained by the Rhode Island School of Design,
at Providence, and the Newport Art Museum. There are historical
museums in the state, including the museums maintained
by the Rhode Island Historical Society, at Providence,
and by the Newport Historical Society. Rhode Island is
also rich in historic sites and structures. The Slater
Mill Historic Site, commonly known as Old Slater Mill,
in Pawtucket, is a museum of textile history and arts.
An outstanding group of buildings, which date from colonial
times and later periods, is found in Newport, where the
Preservation Society of Newport County aids in restoring
and preserving important structures. One of these, a palatial
mansion called The Breakers, was built in 1895 as a summer
residence for Cornelius Vanderbilt. Other museums in Rhode
Island include Brown University’s Haffenreffer Museum
of Anthropology, in Bristol, which contains outstanding
anthropological and archaeological collections.
Other Places to Visit
Among the many other places to visit
in Rhode Island is the State House in Providence. A beautiful
domed building of white marble, it stands on a hill overlooking
the city. The First Baptist Church in Providence is the
oldest Baptist church in the United States. The city’s
Roger Williams Park includes lakes, gardens, rolling
wooded hills, and recreation areas. Also within the park
are a planetarium, extensive zoo, natural history museum,
and aviary. The main United States post office in Providence
was the first fully automated post office in the United
States. With its 66 carved figures and baroque-style
organ, the Crescent Park Carousel, located in East Providence,
is one of the finest examples of carousels left in North
America. The Green Animals topiary gardens were started
by Thomas Brayton in the late 1800s. There are 80 sculptured
trees and shrubs, formal flower beds, fruit and vegetable
gardens at the Portsmouth gardens.
At Block Island the bluffs rise abruptly
to a height of about 60 m (200 ft) above the sea and stretch
for nearly 5 km (3 mi) along the southern shore, offering
spectacular scenery. The lighthouse has the most powerful
beacon on the United States East Coast.
In Newport, long a fashionable summer
resort, some of the city’s palatial summer mansions
and estates are open to the public. Many of the estates
can be seen from Bellevue Avenue and Ocean Drive. The Breakers,
considered the most beautiful summer residence in Newport,
was built in 1895 in Italian renaissance style. A 70-room
mansion, it is adorned with mosaics and carved stonework,
and contains the original furnishings. Among the numerous
historic buildings to visit in Newport is the Old Colony
House, or Old State House, which was erected in 1739 and
housed the general assembly of Rhode Island from 1790 to
1900. The Wanton-Lyman-Hazard House dates from 1675 and
is the oldest existing and restored house in Newport.
Also in the city is the Old Stone Tower,
a structure once believed to have been built by the Norse.
However, excavations carried out on the site in 1948 and
1949 showed that the structure is probably the ruin of
a windmill dating from about 1670. Old Slater Mill in Pawtucket,
now preserved as a museum, was built in 1793. Visitors
there can view demonstrations of early methods of producing
textiles. In North Kingstown is the Gilbert Stuart Memorial,
built in 1751, which preserves the birthplace of the famous
American portrait painter. On the grounds is an 18th-century
snuff mill, which is still in operation. The National Lawn
Tennis Hall of Fame and Tennis Museum, in Newport, houses
exhibits relating to the history of lawn tennis in the
United States.
Source: MSN
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