Cumberland (Rhode Island)

Cumberland is a town in Providence County, Rhode Island. It includes the villages of Cumberland Hill and Valley Falls.

Get in
Located off Interstate 295, exits 10 and 11, Cumberland is in the northeast corner of the state. There are bus routes running from Providence, but Cumberland is best accessed by car.

See

 * In addition to a sight of relaxation during the day, the night holds fast to a site called Nine Men's Misery. On March 26, 1776, ten colonists were confronted by the Narragansett Indian Tribe where nine men were captured during the King Philip's War.  These nine men were brutally tortured, skinned, and left to rot on each of their own respected wood polls.  The surviving colonist returned to his folk, and informed them what had happened.  Promptly the men were buried, but many say that their spirits still haunt the site where they were tortured.  On occasion, to this day, skinned squirrels and other small animals can be found at this site; a work that is done in the dead of night by the cults, ritualist, and people of the like.
 * In addition to a sight of relaxation during the day, the night holds fast to a site called Nine Men's Misery. On March 26, 1776, ten colonists were confronted by the Narragansett Indian Tribe where nine men were captured during the King Philip's War.  These nine men were brutally tortured, skinned, and left to rot on each of their own respected wood polls.  The surviving colonist returned to his folk, and informed them what had happened.  Promptly the men were buried, but many say that their spirits still haunt the site where they were tortured.  On occasion, to this day, skinned squirrels and other small animals can be found at this site; a work that is done in the dead of night by the cults, ritualist, and people of the like.
 * In addition to a sight of relaxation during the day, the night holds fast to a site called Nine Men's Misery. On March 26, 1776, ten colonists were confronted by the Narragansett Indian Tribe where nine men were captured during the King Philip's War.  These nine men were brutally tortured, skinned, and left to rot on each of their own respected wood polls.  The surviving colonist returned to his folk, and informed them what had happened.  Promptly the men were buried, but many say that their spirits still haunt the site where they were tortured.  On occasion, to this day, skinned squirrels and other small animals can be found at this site; a work that is done in the dead of night by the cults, ritualist, and people of the like.

Eat