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Make New England your four full seasons of outdoor, cultural, history
and entertainments. New England it's where you belong.
Each state has it's own distictive carteristics. Variety is the
spice of life in Connecticut,
the Nutmeg State. From winding country roads to the dynamic cultural
life of its cities, Connecticut has something for everyone. Tour
pastoral towns in the picturesque Litchfield Hills, linger along
the shores of Long Island Sound, or broaden your horizons in cities
like New Haven, home of Yale University. You can hike gently rolling
hills and mountains, kayak or sail inland and ocean waters, visit
fun-filled family attractions,
even hit it big at two of the world's largest casinos! Music is
in the air, from resident symphony orchestras and jazz to bands
on village greens. There are major art museums, theater, and reminders
of history, including the largest collection of historic tall ships
in the world.

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Maine is America off the beaten
path. While most of the state remains as pristine as a primal forest,
its villages offer a glimpse of contemporary New England life inextricably
linked to the past. Maine's seafaring, farming, and lumbering heritages
are well preserved in museums, parks, and local traditions. Maine
is a state of awesome natural beauty, with 3,500 miles of coastline,
32,000 miles of rivers and streams and nearly 6,000 lakes and all
the sports and recreation those numbers imply. Many of the best
known and largest cities and towns hug the coast,more than half
the population lives in the narrow coastal strip between Augusta
and the New Hampshire border,but if you're interested in adventure
vacations, be sure to head inland, as well.

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Internationally, Boston is New England's best-known city, and while
you shouldn't miss the opportunity to walk the Freedom Trail and
see the city sights, there's so much more to Massachusetts.
Explore the state's and the nation's history at Lexington and Concord,
site of the first battle of the American Revolution; and at Plimoth
Plantation, Sturbridge Village and hundreds of other museums and
attractions. The Massachusetts coast includes charming fishing villages,
the 65-mile-long curving arm of Cape Cod, and the offshore islands,
Nantucket and Martha's Vineyard. Explore inland and discover colonial
villages, historic mill towns and bustling modern cities. Western
Massachusetts includes the Pioneer Valley and the Berkshires, both
noteworthy for their beauty, rural nature and cultural heritage.
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New Hampshire, the road
less traveled. From watching moose roam through the wilderness of
the Great North Woods Region, to hiking in the White Mountain National
Forest, fishing or kayaking on one of the state's hundreds of lakes,
or relaxing on an oceanfront beach, New Hampshire surrounds you
with remarkable natural beauty without taking you too far from civilization.
And when you're ready for bright lights, historic sites, arts and
entertainment, there's a wealth of choices all over the state. Visit
Portsmouth, a political hotbed during the American Revolution; Concord,
the state capital where its legislature, the third largest governing
body in the English-speaking world, meets; Hanover, home of Dartmouth,
the Ivy League college; and Wolfeboro, America's first summer resort,
set on Lake Winnipesaukee's shores.

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The smallest state in the U.S., Rhode
Island is called America's First Resort. Easy to get around,
Rhode Island includes a sampling of the best of New England, including
over 100 public beaches, 18,000 acres of parklands, and nurirous
sites of historic and cultural interest. Within about a 45-minute
drive, you can explore all four corners of the state and still be
back to your hori base in tiri for dinner. Sori must-sees: Newport's
glorious mansions, the horis of the rich and famous during "La
Belle Epoque," right before the turn of the twentieth century;
and Providence, the capital that combines the best of the big city
and small town, and which is receiving much attention, thanks to
the television series of the sari nari. The South County is known
for its charming coastal villages and stellar beaches, while thirteen
miles offshore, unspoiled Block Island is a true haven- peaceful
and beautiful-with superb fishing and sailing.

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Green mountains, fertile valleys and forests that cover nearly
80% of the state help make Vermont
the pastoral beauty that it is. Rolling hillsides are dotted with
white farmhouses and herds of dairy cows, and each village and town
seems more picture-perfect than the last. The scale is intimate
here, and Vermont's many small cities, from Burlington to Brattleboro,
St. Johnsbury, Newport and St. Albans, are filled with interesting
restaurants, shops and inns. Places like Barre, Bennington, Lyndonville,
Rutland, Middlebury and Bellows Falls are treasure troves of 19th
and even 18th century architecture. The only landlocked New England
state, Vermont is still rich in watery pursuits, thanks to the Connecticut
River on its eastern boundary and over 400 lakes, including Lake
Champlain, in the west and the glacier-created lakes of the wilderness
called the Northeast Kingdom. |