There’s no way around it. Summer is here. If you’re a driver, you’re well aware that the roads are very busy. Stores have lines once again and ...
For Chatham native Marcellus Eldredge, a Gilded Age era business tycoon and town benefactor who lived most of the year in ...
ORLEANS – The inside of the Orleans Historical Society meetinghouse tells a story. Not just one of a revolution that gave birth to the American experiment, but the Lower Cape’s role in the storied ...
Get outside and enjoy Cape Cod’s scenic rail trails this summer while helping keep them safe and welcoming for everyone. The Harwich Bikeways Committee encourages residents and visitors alike to share ...
HARWICH – The first steps of a potential journey to Augusta National hit the grass at Cranberry Valley Golf Course on Monday with the annual Drive, Chip and Putt event, the Cape’s only qualifier for ...
BREWSTER – It may be the lowest level of medal in the Olympians, but Brewster is officially targeting bronze when it comes to the Charging Smart program. “The energy and climate action committee has ...
CHATHAM – If those who fought British troops in Lexington and Concord were called the Minutemen, their peers in Chatham might have been labeled the Four-Day Men. Not because they were sloths who would ...
The Harwich Zoning Board last week approved the 60-unit, 90-bedroom Pennrose affordable housing development at 124 Queen Anne Rd., aka 456 Queen Anne Rd. Although this project did not receive as much ...
CHATHAM – The select board voted Tuesday to terminate the $5 million federally-funded state project to upgrade the Route 28-Crowell Road intersection. Technically, the vote was to remove the project ...
A purchase and sale agreement has been signed to convert property on Finlay Road into a regional food distribution warehouse. Lower ...
HARWICH – The appeals board has approved the comprehensive permit for the Pennrose LLC/Affordable Housing Trust 60-unit development on the former Marceline property at 456 Queen Anne Rd. In a ...
HARWICH – History tells us that Crispus Attucks was the first Black man killed in the Revolutionary War. He died during the Boston Massacre on March 5, 1770. His legacy highlights the contribution of ...