Town of Truro Information
The Town of Truro offers vacationers a wide range of outdoor activities
such as golf, tennis, bicycling, horseback riding on the National Seashore
Trails, sportfishing, windsurfing, sailing and swimming. For cultural
entertainment, there are theatres, art galleries, a library and the
Truro Historical Museum. Major points of interest include Highland Light
and the Old North Cemetery.

Heading to the beach in Truro, Mass!
Truro is a small, rural community of Lower Cape Cod where the quaint
and unique character of "Old Cape Cod" is preserved. Truro
is rich in history and strongly tied to the sea. It is in Truro where
the Pilgrims from the Mayflower found a spring from which they drew
their first drink of water in the new land, and where they found a cache
of Indian corn, at a place named Corn Hill, that saved them from starvation
after their first year.
Truro
possesses beautiful beaches on Cape Cod Bay and some of the most magnificent
beaches on the Atlantic Ocean. A source of inspiration to artists and
beachcombers alike, Truro's beaches, dunes and landscape of rolling
hills are an attraction to tourists and vacationers. Home to a diverse
year-round population, Truro's permanent population includes fishermen,
tradesmen and an ever-growing number of retirees.
The
town is home of the famous Cape Cod Light, Cape Cod's oldest lighthouse,
which was first erected in 1797 and replaced by the current structure
in 1857. The national landmark is in danger of falling into the ocean
due to erosion, unless the town and area citizens receive support and
cooperation from the federal and state governments. With over half of
its land area within the Cape Cod National Seashore District, the residents
of Truro are dedicated to preserving the special character of this seashore
community.

The Beach!
It
is located in southeastern Massachusetts, at the "wrist" of
Cape Cod. Bordered by the Atlantic Ocean on the north and east, Wellfleet
on the south, and Cape Cod Bay and Provincetown on the west. Truro is
37 miles north of Hyannis; 106 miles southeast of Boston; 117 miles
east of Providence, Rhode Island; and 284 miles from New York City.
Narrative
compiled by the Massachusetts Department of Housing and Community Development
(DHCD).