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Yarmouth was home to many generations of Native Americans before being settled by the English in
the 1630s and incorporated in 1639. It is located in the mid-Cape area,
about 65 miles southwest of Provincetown and 23 miles east of the
Cape Cod Canal. It is one of those Cape towns that extend from Cape Cod
Bay on the north across the peninsula south to Nantucket Sound. The most
striking physical features of the town are the result of glaciation;
the low round hills on the north side of town were created by the leading
edge of the glacier as it pushed the land before it. The flat sandy terrain
of the southern part of town is the apron of material that was washed out
from the glacial ice.
Yarmouth is a member of the Dennis-Yarmouth Regional
School District and has five public schools located in the town. At a college
level, the Cape Cod Community College offers enrollment in its full-time two year programs
as well as in its continuing education program. There are three libraries within the town.
Keeping pace with the growth on Cape Cod is the growth of professional and community music, art, dance and theater groups,
some of them located in Yarmouth.
The community enjoys a variety of recreational programs as well as the town's fifteen public saltwater beaches,
five freshwater beaches and two municipal golf courses.
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