King's Sandy Beach

Sandy Beach: A North Pond Landmark During the mid-1800s through the early 1900s, much of the development around Congamond Lake — then known as Southwick Ponds — centered on picnic groves along Middle Pond. The eastern shore boasted Hatheway’s Log Cabin Grove, the western shore offered the first-class Railroad Pavilion Hotel , and the south end drew crowds to the Lake House and Saunders Grove. By contrast, North Pond — particularly its northern shoreline — remained undeveloped. Formerly King's Sandy Beach (Courtesy of Richard Cowles Photography) In 1914, on the sandy northeastern shore of North Pond, a small lakeside cottage appeared. Its owners named it "Sandy Beach" — a private retreat set against one of the lake’s most inviting stretches of shoreline. The cottage’s name was inspired by the gentle curve of light-colored sand meeting the clear water, a feature rare enough on Congamond to become a landmark for boaters who often picnicked there. Two years later, in 1916, N...