Free New England Covered Bridges Coloring Pages and Printables

Lisa Stevens
Fall in New England is a prefect time for visiting and exploring the many covered bridges the area is famous for. You can also visit the fall foliage and see the leaves change colors as the seasons change from Summer to Fall. But if you are not able to make it to New England to visit covered bridges the best way to allow young children and students a chance to enjoy the beauty of the New England covered bridges is with these free coloring pages found online. Whether you are letting your child, young students or home school children color these coloring pages of New England covered bridges these vivid pictures will bring hours of coloring fun to your home or school and allow you to share the beauty of the season with a child.

These covered bridge's will include detailed images and fall settings you can color to the season. Whether it's pictures of covered bridges in Maine, Vermont, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Connecticut and Rhode Island you will love these websites that include not only coloring pages, but games and activities that are associated with New England covered bridges.

Go New England Covered Bridges

This page from About.com shows six different covered bridge's in New England in quality high resolution and detail. Your children or students will have a lot of fun coloring these covered bridge's of New England and displaying them for the Fall and Winter seasons. Each covered bridge is an actual bridge in different parts of New England including Sunday River Covered Bridge in Maine, Paper Mill Village Bridge in Vermont and Woodstock Middle Bridge also in Vermont, among others.

Free Printable Coloring Pages

This site offers a children's version of a covered bridge and church in a New England Fall scene.

Christmas Printable Covered Bridge

This small picture of a New England covered bridge in a Christmas scene is perfect for the coming holiday season. You can either print this out and color it as a coloring page, or use the extra paper when it prints out to fold and make a Christmas card with.

Published by Lisa Stevens - Featured Contributor in Travel

Lisa Stevens is a full time freelance writer, wife and mother. Lisa enjoys crafts, knitting and traveling anywhere that allows her to discover new and interesting places to write about. She also likes findin...  View profile

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