New England lays claim to some of the oldest, continuously operating camps in the United States today. Since the advent of organized camping in 1861, summer camp in New England has been an integral part of the lives of millions of children from the United States and around the world!
Some camps have offered brief histories of their first 100 years; click on the links below to find out more about them.
| Camp Name | Year Established |
| Alford Lake Camp | 1907 |
| Aloha Camp | 1905 |
| Androscoggin | 1907 |
| Awosting Chinqueka | 1900 |
| Brantwood Camp | 1904 |
| Camp Becket YMCA | 1903 |
| Camp Billings | 1906 |
| Camp Farnsworth | 1909 |
| Camp Jewell YMCA | 1901 |
| Camp O-AT-KA | 1906 |
| Camp Runoia | 1907 |
| Camp Tecumseh | 1903 |
| Center Church Camp Asto Wamah | 1910 |
| Cobbossee | 1902 |
| Farwell for Girls | 1906 |
| Incarnation Center | 1886 |
| Kamp Kohut | 1907 |
| Keewaydin Dunmore | 1894 |
| Merrimack Valley YMCA Camps | 1908 |
| Moosilauke | 1904 |
| Morgan Memorial Fresh Air Camp | 1906 |
| Pemigewassett | 1908 |
| Wigwam | 1910 |
| Winona Camps | 1908 |
| Wohelo Luther Gulick Camps | 1907 |
| Wyonegonic Camps | 1902 |
| YMCA Camp Abnaki | 1901 |
| YMCA Camp Belknap | 1903 |
| YMCA Camp Fuller | 1887 |