Battling coastal storms and protecting both piping plovers and access to the beach
Wicked Local
DUXBURY I discovered Duxbury Beach in the summer of 1966 when I moved to Boston and one of my roommates took a group there for the weekend at her late grandmother s house near the ocean.
We walked across Powder Point Bridge and I was captivated by the expansive, incredibly beautiful and dramatic vista of oncoming waves, clouds moving across the horizon, shore birds soaring and calling.
The six-mile barrier beach became one of my go-to places when I wanted to get away.
In 2009, I received a surprise in the mail: The Duxbury Beach Book, sent by one of the co-editors, Margaret Maggie Kearney. She mentioned an article I had written about the beach and offered to give me the grand tour, including a trip up into the Gurnet Lighthouse. It was a gift she gave to others; in 2016, Chris and Lynn Cadigan, of Rockland, marked their 19th wedding anniversary with a Kearney-guided t
DUXBURY I discovered Duxbury Beach in the summer of 1966 when I moved to Boston and one of my roommates took a group there for the weekend at her late grandmother s house near the ocean.
We walked across Powder Point Bridge and I was captivated by the expansive, incredibly beautiful and dramatic vista of oncoming waves, clouds moving across the horizon, shore birds soaring and calling.
The six-mile barrier beach became one of my go-to places when I wanted to get away.
In 2009, I received a surprise in the mail: The Duxbury Beach Book, sent by one of the co-editors, Margaret Maggie Kearney. She mentioned an article I had written about the beach and offered to give me the grand tour, including a trip up into the Gurnet Lighthouse. It was a gift she gave to others; in 2016, Chris and Lynn Cadigan, of Rockland, marked their 19th wedding anniversary with a Kearney-guided trip to Gurnet.
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BISBEE â A tentative agreement has been reached between attorneys in a child abuse case that investigators say involved the systematic mistreatment of four adopted children over the course of several years.
Lawyers for defendants Brian, Monica and Jade Campbell, prosecutors, and the attorney representing the children who have said they were abused hope the issues discussed in a settlement conference Wednesday in Cochise County Superior Court Judge James Conlogueâs courtroom will lead to a plea agreement later this month.