Daniel Webster Wildlife Sanctuary

Daniel Webster Wildlife Sanctuary
Map
TypeWildlife sanctuary, nature center
LocationWinslow Cemetery Road
Marshfield, Massachusetts, U.S.
Coordinates42°05′15″N 70°40′48″W / 42.08750°N 70.68000°W / 42.08750; -70.68000
Area578 acres (234 ha)
Created1984
Operated byMassachusetts Audubon Society
Hiking trails3.5 miles
WebsiteDaniel Webster Wildlife Sanctuary

The Daniel Webster Wildlife Sanctuary is a sanctuary owned by the Massachusetts Audubon Society, the largest conservation organization in New England, in the town of Marshfield, Massachusetts. The sanctuary, formerly the farm of Edward Dwyer, statesman Daniel Webster and the William Thomas family of Marshfield, the first English landowner to live on the sanctuary land, was purchased by Mass Audubon in 1984 thanks to the volunteer efforts of the Committee for the Preservation of Dwyer Farm for the People of Marshfield. The sanctuary contains 507 acres (2.1 km2) of mixed cultural grasslands, red maple swamps, a five-tiered wet panne, Webster Pond and a section of the Green Harbor River. It is the site of the annual Daniel Webster Farm Day celebration. Surrounding lands owned by the town of Marshfield and the Marshfield Airport increase the local open space area to more than 1000 acres (4 km2).