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  1. Scituate (/ ˈ s ɪ tʃ u ɪ t / ⓘ) [1] is a seacoast town in Plymouth County, Massachusetts, United States, on the South Shore, midway between Boston and Plymouth. The population was 19,063 at the 2020 census.

    • Scituate Lighthouse
    • Scituate Harbor
    • Lawson Tower
    • Seafood
    • Driftway Park
    • Kathleen Laidlaw Center
    • Maritime and Irish Mossing Museum
    • Bates Lane Conservation Area
    • Peggotty Beach
    • Old Stockbridge Grist Mill

    At Cedar Point on the northern edge of Scituate Harbor stands the 11th lighthouse to be built in the United States. Completed in 1810, the Old Scituate Light soon gained renown in 1814 during the War of 1812 when Rebecca and Abigail Bates (The Lighthouse Army of Two) averted an attack by British soldiers by playing their fife and drum, making them ...

    Now designated a Cultural District, Scituate’s award-winning town center is a quaint seaside village with lots of restaurants, shops, maritime businesses and other local amenities behind lovely old storefronts. The waterfront is accessible and you can bask in the views of the harbor, First Cliff and the many yachts and sailboats anchored in the pro...

    Designed like a fairytale castle turret, the 153-foot Lawson Tower was erected in 1902 to conceal a steel water tank. The driving force behind the construction was the rich investor Thomas W. Lawson (1857-1925), who had recently established his Dreamworld farm nearby and wanted the water tower to be more pleasing to the eye. Lawson is also responsi...

    One of the joys of being on the coast in Massachusetts is the chance to treat yourself to some world-class seafood, straight from the ocean. Scituate will never let you down for time-honored New England dishes, like lobster rolls, baked haddock, swordfish, clam chowder, lobster stew, clam strips, crab cakes and fried scallops. In a prime location o...

    A place of exceptional natural beauty, Driftway Park protects some 330-acres of salt marsh on the estuary of the Herring River. You can spot migratory birds in spring and fall, and take in the wide open scenery here from Lookout Hill, while these lower reaches of the Herring River are a beloved paddling location in the summer. There are also clues ...

    The headquarters for the Scituate Historical Society are found in this handsome schoolhouse, completed in 1893 as Scituate’s high school. At that time the building was next to the old Town Hall, but was moved to its current location at 43 Cudworth Rd in 1919, shortly after a new school building had been constructed. The schoolhouse was bought from ...

    You can discover Scituate’s centuries-long connection with the sea at this museum in one of the many fine old houses in the care of the Scituate Historical Society. This is the First Period Capt. Benjamin James, built around 1700. Exhibits deal with topics as diverse as lifesaving, the historic shipbuilding trade on the North River, fishing and the...

    In the very west of Scituate the town owns almost 350 acres of woods, on what was farmland some 200 years ago. This was taken over by pine and hardwood forest around the mid-19th century, but the only stone walls delineating the farmland remains. Also compelling is the quantity of glacial erratic boulders, deposited around 10,000 years ago and visi...

    Half a mile long, this public beach is a short but scenic walk from Scituate Harbor, passing the sweeping expanse of the Kent Street Marshes on the way. Angled quite steeply into the ocean, Peggotty Beach is laid with coarse, hard-packed sand on a relatively protected bay. In the winter the beach bears the full force of coastal storms, and the pair...

    Where First Herring Brook drains the Old Oaken Bucket Pond stands one of the oldest surviving mills in the country. The Old Stockbridge Grist Mill dates around 1650, and was erected by one John Stockbridge, next to a sawmill for which the brook was dammed in the late 1630s. The Stockbridge family ran this pair of mills for more than 160 years until...

  2. 4 days ago · Scituate, MA is a town full of over 300 years of American history. Learn more about the beginnings of the town, the immigrants who helped it grow, and what keeps it so vibrant today through historic sites, trails, and museums.

  3. Scituate is a historic seaside community on Massachusetts’s South Shore located about 30 miles south of Boston, 30 miles north of Plymouth, and 40 miles north of the Bourne Bridge and Cape Cod. The town was originally settled in 1636 by colonists from Plymouth and new immigrants from the County of Kent England.

    • Walk the Scituate Harbor Cultural District. The Scituate Harbor Cultural District extends along the harbor from Cole Parkway and Front Street at St. Mary’s Church to the historic Scituate Lighthouse.
    • Visit a historic lighthouse. The beautiful Scituate Lighthouse, also known as Old Scituate Light, draws plenty of visitors each year, Maye said. Established in 1811, it is the 11th oldest lighthouse in the nation.
    • Hit the beach. A popular summertime hangout in Scituate is the Spit, a barrier beach with an large salt marsh located at the mouth of the North and South rivers that is accessible by boat or by walking the trail and boardwalk from the Preble Property.
    • Dine out. Whether visitors are in the mood for fresh seafood, pizza, traditional Irish food, or food served with a spectacular harbor view, Scituate can deliver, Maye said.
  4. Scituate, MA is a town full of over 300 years of American history. Learn more about the beginnings of the town, the immigrants who helped it grow, and what keeps it so vibrant today through historic sites, trails, and museums.

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  6. Jan 30, 2017 · Scituate, Massachusetts, is an appealing, attractive South Shore seaside community that looks every bit as nice as many of the quaint Cape Cod communities farther down the coastline in Massachusetts.