Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Bare Cove Park

Park in Hingham, Massachusetts, United States From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bare Cove Parkmap
Remove ads

Bare Cove Park is a 484 acre park designated for wildlife and public recreation.[1] It is located in Hingham, Massachusetts, on the Weymouth Back River across from Great Esker Park.

Thumb
Pilings from former Navy pier

History

Thumb
Navy aerial photo of Hingham Naval Ammunition Depot circa 1942 - Colorized by Steve Gill 2015.

Until 1906, the land now established as Bare Cove Park was privately owned. The U.S. Navy then established the Hingham Naval Ammunition Depot, also known as Hockley Hollow at the time, because of its close proximity to Boston Harbor.[2] The depot stored munitions for aircraft and ships until it was decommissioned in 1961,[3] and the land was given to the towns of Hingham and Weymouth in the early seventies. Hingham's portion of the land was transformed into Bare Cove Park and opened its gates to the public in 1974.[2] The town of Weymouth created Great Esker Park with their land.

Remove ads

Park features

Bare Cove Park Features multiple paved paths and trails that are often used for walking, jogging, and biking.[1] The park consists of acres of woods, marshes, wetlands, fields, and river shoreline and is also scattered with retired naval bunkers. Many of the bunkers which have been demolished since the depot was decommissioned, leaving wide and open fields in their place.

Dog walking

Bare Cove Park is very popular for dog walkers. Dogs must be leashed unless the dog owner has an Off-Leash Dog Walking Permit for the park. There is signage around the park designating where dogs may be off-leash.[4]

USS YF-415 Memorial

There is a memorial stone and flagpole located in the park,[5] memorializing the crew of the USS YF-415, who were lost in an accident on May 10, 1944.[6][7][8]

Remove ads

Wildlife

The park provides a sanctuary for diverse wildlife including minks, foxes, raccoons, and rabbits. Birds, including ospreys, double-crested cormorants, snowy egrets, and great blue herons, are seen significantly more by park-goers.[2]

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads