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Cape Henlopen State Park is a popular fishing destination. Anglers may fish from the beach or from the fishing pier on Delaware Bay. A concessionaire operates the Cape Henlopen Fishing Center, a bait and tackle shop at the pier. It is open seven days a week May 15 - October 1.
Cape Henlopen State Park has a 24-hour and year-round fishing pier as well as campgrounds. The remainder of the park is only open from sunrise to sunset, and includes a bathhouse on the Atlantic Ocean , an area for surf-fishing, a disc golf course, and bicycle lanes, walking paths, and a World War II -era watchtower which is open to the public.
March 27, 1989 [1] The National Harbor of Refuge and Delaware Breakwater Historic District encompasses a series of seacoast breakwaters behind Cape Henlopen, Delaware, built between 1828 and 1898 to establish a shipping haven on a coastline that lacked safe harbors. The Harbor of Refuge is at the mouth of the Delaware Bay estuary where it opens ...
The Cape Henlopen Region, or the Cape Region, is a region in Sussex County, in southern Delaware, on the Delmarva Peninsula. The region is part of the Salisbury, Maryland-Delaware Metropolitan Statistical Area. The region takes its name from Cape Henlopen, as does the Cape Henlopen School District and Cape Henlopen State Park.
Delaware Seashore State Park. / 38.65000°N 75.06639°W / 38.65000; -75.06639. Delaware Seashore State Park is located near Dewey Beach, in Delaware, United States. It is bounded on the east by the Atlantic Ocean and on the west by Rehoboth Bay and Indian River Bay. The park covers 2,825 acres (1,143 ha).
Website. destateparks .com /Trails. The Junction and Breakwater Trail is a 6-mile (9.7 km) long rail trail located on the southwestern side of Cape Henlopen State Park connecting Lewes and Rehoboth Beach, Delaware, United States. It is the third rail trail built in Delaware and it is the longest in the state. [1]
The park adjoins First State National Historical Park. Cape Henlopen: Sussex: 5,320 acres (2,150 ha) 1964 Delaware's largest state park includes the remains of World War II-era Fort Miles and its iconic observation towers which dot the cape's beaches on both the Atlantic Ocean and Delaware Bay.
Fort Miles, Lewes, Delaware (1942–1950) Mascot (s) Oozlefinch. Delaware River estuary. The Harbor Defenses of the Delaware was a United States Army Coast Artillery Corps harbor defense command. [1] It coordinated the coast defenses of the Delaware River estuary from 1897 to 1950, beginning with the Endicott program.