Bauercrest builds well-rounded boys through sportsmanship, teamwork, responsibility, and achievement.
Exeter, Hookset, Nashua & Plymouth NH are home to Pro Ambitions Hockey Camps in New Hampshire, "one of the top camps in the country -Sports Illustrated for Kids Magazine. We are innovators and leader
Camp Bauercrest is an overnight camp for Jewish boys located in Amesbury, MA, about 40 miles north of Boston on the shores of Lake Attitash. We are a non-profit camp, run by an independent board of directors.
Great Boar's Head c. 1920 First called the Plantation of Winnacunnet, Hampton was one of four original New Hampshire townships chartered by the General Court of Massachusetts, which then held authority over the colony. "Winnacunnet" is an Algonquian Abenaki word meaning "pleasant pines" and is the name of the town's high school, serving students from Hampton and surrounding towns. In March 1635, Richard Dummer and John Spencer of the Byfield section in Newbury, came round in their shallop, came ashore at the landing and were much impressed by the location. Dummer, who was a member of the General Court, got that body to lay its claim to the section and plan a plantation here. The Massachusetts General Court of March 3, 1636 ordered that Dummer and Spencer be given power to "To presse men to build there a Bound house". The town was settled in 1638 by a group of parishioners led by Reverend Stephen Bachiler, who had formerly preached at the settlement's namesake: Hampton, England. Incorporated in 1639, the township once included Seabrook, Kensington, Danville, Kingston, East Kingston, Sandown, North Hampton and Hampton Falls. Among Hampton's earliest settlers was Thomas Leavitt, who previously had been among the first settlers at Exeter. His descendant Thomas Leavitt Esq.