Frances A. Crane WMA

Tips for Birding

When submitting eBird observations at Frances A. Crane Wildlife Management Area, it is most helpful to start a new checklist for each hotspot in the wildlife area. Use the general hotspot when you have a checklist that includes multiple locations or if no other hotspot or personal location is appropriate for your sightings.

Birds of Interest

Blue Grosbeak, Orchard Oriole, Meadowlarks, Savannah and Grashopper Sparrows, occasionally Bobwhites, and many more.

About Frances A. Crane Wildlife Management Area

See all hotspots at Frances A. Crane Wildlife Management Area

Operated by the State Division of Fisheries and Game, the Frances A. Crane Wildlife Management Area in Hatchville was purchased by the state in 1958 with funds provided by hunting and fishing licenses and sporting goods taxes. The major reason for acquiring more than 1,800 acres from the family of Charles Crane was to promote wildlife management and hunting access.

The state took on the ambitious task of developing an intricate trail system, clearing meadows, and planting some 5,000 conifers, and 30 acres of millet, buckwheat, and rye to restore wildlife habitat. As a result, birds, foxes, and other wildlife returned. Buildings that were part of the extensive Coonamessett Ranch Company, owned by the Cranes, were eventually razed.

The Crane Wildlife Management Area is stocked each year with quail and pheasants. The property is popular not just with hunters, but also with mountain bikers, horseback riders, nature walkers, and model plane enthusiasts.

The reservation also contains a rare expanse of meadowland. A late-summer stroll attests to this when the meadow wildflowers bloom and attract throngs of butterflies and birds. The largest open area used to be a grass airstrip for the former Falmouth airport; it is mowed regularly to keep the grassland from reverting to the forest. The grasslands provide habitat for a wide variety of birds and wildlife and support more than 15 threatened plant species, including sandplain blue-eyed grass, New England blazing star, and sandplain flax.

Small parking areas are scattered along the north side of MA-151, from the MA-28 access east to the former Nickelodeon Theater (Now Hamilton Tree). There is also ample parking on the road that lies between the parking lot of the old theater and the Joe Allietta softball field. Access to the quail-stocked woods is off Hayway Road near the entrance to Far Out Farm.

The conservation area is named for Charles Crane’s daughter, who was killed in an automobile accident in 1954 after attending an opening at Falmouth Playhouse. It was her sons who sold the land to the state and asked that it be named for their mother, Frances Crane.

Notable Trails

The AllTrails website has descriptions and maps of hikes at Frances A. Crane Wildlife Management Area.

Features

  • Restrooms on site

  • Wheelchair accessible trail

  • Entrance fee

Content from Frances A. Crane Wildlife Management Area Official Website and Noah Henkenius

Last updated March 7, 2024