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Provincetown Harbor

Provincetown Harbor is a large natural harbor located in the town of Provincetown, Massachusetts. The harbor is mostly 30 to 90 feet (9 to 27 m) deep and stretches roughly 1 mile (1.6 km) from northwest to southeast and 2 miles (3.2 km) from northeast to southwest – one large, deep basin with no dredged channel necessary for boats to enter and exit.

Provincetown Harbor
Provincetown Harbor, looking south-east from Pilgrim Monument
Location
CountryUnited States
LocationProvincetown, Massachusetts
Coordinates42°02′41″N 70°10′13″W / 42.044593°N 70.170244°W / 42.044593; -70.170244 (Provincetown Harbor)

A tall green buoy east of Long Point (i.e., the tip of Cape Cod) marks the entrance to Provincetown Harbor from Cape Cod Bay.

Geology Edit

 
Glacial erosion provided source material for the Provincetown Spit.

Most of Cape Cod was created by the Laurentide Glacier between 18,000 and 15,000 years ago. However, the Provincetown Spit, i.e., the land surrounding Provincetown Harbor from High Head in North Truro through all of Provincetown, consists largely of marine deposits transported from farther up the shore during the last 6,000 years.[1]

History Edit

 
 
Provincetown Harbor
class=notpageimage|
Provincetown Harbor is encircled by the Provincetown Spit

A stone wall[2] discovered in Provincetown in 1805 is thought to have been built by Viking Thorvald Eiriksson about AD 1007,[3] when according to Norse sagas, the keel of Ericson's ship was repaired in the harbor.[4]

Bartholomew Gosnold explored the harbor in 1602, and his mate Gabriel Archer wrote:

"The fifteenth day of May we had again sight of the land, which made ahead, being as we thought an island, by reason of a large sound that appeared westward between it and the main, for coming to the west end thereof, we did perceive a large opening, we called it Shoal Hope. Near this cape we came to anchor in fifteen fathoms, where we took great store of codfish, for which we altered the name, and called it Cape Cod. Here we saw sculls of herring, mackerel, and other small fish, in great abundance. This is a low sandy shoal, but without danger..."[5]

John Smith explored the harbor in 1614 and wrote:

"Cape Cod... is only a headland of high hills of sand, overgrown with shrubby pines, hurts, and such trash, but an excellent harbor for all weathers. This Cape is made by the main sea on the one side, and a great bay on the other, in form of a sickle..."[6]

Pilgrims' first landing Edit

 
An 1882 painting of the Mayflower at anchor by William Halsall

Provincetown Harbor was the initial anchoring place of the Pilgrims traveling on the Mayflower in 1620, before they proceeded to Plymouth, Massachusetts. Thoreau later observed[7] that Smith's description of the harbor may have been less colored by the hardships of transoceanic troubles than the Pilgrims'. Mourt's Relation describes the harbor as:

"a good harbor and pleasant bay, circled round, except in the entrance, which is about four miles (6 km) over from land to land, compassed about to the very sea with oaks, pines, juniper, sassafras, and other sweet wood; it is a harbor wherein 1000 sail of ships may safely ride, there we relieved ourselves with wood and water, and refreshed our people, while our shallop was fitted to coast the bay, to search for an habitation: there was the greatest store of fowl we ever saw."[8]

The Mayflower held several different passengers in addition to the Pilgrims on its first transoceanic voyage. Before coming ashore at the extreme northwest corner of the harbor, the Pilgrims and other settlers signed the Mayflower Compact in the harbor on November 11, 1620.[9] Dorothy Bradford, the first wife of William Bradford, was one of the first adult Pilgrims to die in the New World. According to the only known written description of her death[10] from close to when it actually occurred, she fell overboard from the Mayflower in Provincetown Harbor on December 17, 1620 and drowned.[11] Peregrine White, the first child born to the Pilgrims in New England, was born while they were in Provincetown Harbor.

Village of Long Point Edit

 
Long Point Light at the tip of Cape Cod

From 1818 until the 1850s a fishing village existed at Long Point, complete with a post office, schoolhouse, 6 windmills for saltworks, and 38 homes for about 200 adults and 60 children. When the families left in the 1850s, they floated their homes a mile across the harbor, where many still stand today.[12][13]

During the American Civil War, the military established defensive artillery battery positions at this location. The Long Point Battery[14] would come to be known as "Fort Useless" and "Fort Ridiculous" by the local residents.[15]

Today, Long Point is a ghost village, and nothing remains save for the Long Point Light, which had been replaced by a new light in 1875.

 
Until the late 19th century, the East Harbor was open to Provincetown Harbor.[16] In 1868, it was closed off to make way for the railroad and the automobile.[17] Compare these two maps from 1835 (top) and 1889 (bottom).

East Harbor Edit

For the better part of modern history, the eastern part of Provincetown harbor was connected to yet another harbor, historically known as East Harbor. East Harbor was the most protected mooring place in the outer Cape for boats using Cape Cod Bay and the Gulf of Maine. East Harbor had a 1,000-foot-wide (305 m) inlet from Provincetown Harbor, as shown in the adjacent map from 1836.[16]

Until the late 19th century, there was not a single road leading in or out of Provincetown – the only land route connecting Provincetown to points beyond was along a thin stretch of beach along the shore to the north (locally called the "backshore"). A wooden bridge was erected over the East Harbor in 1854, only to be destroyed by a winter storm and ice two years later.[18] Although the bridge was replaced the following year, a traveler using it still had to traverse several miles over a sand route, which, along with the backshore route, would occasionally be washed out by storms. This made Provincetown much like an island, in that it relied almost entirely upon its harbor for its communication, travel, and commerce needs.[19]

In 1868 the mouth of the East Harbor was diked, to facilitate the laying of track for the arrival of the railroad; the wooden bridge and sand road were finally replaced by a formal roadway in 1877, as shown in the accompanying map from 1887.[18][17] The East Harbor thus became a lake, connected to Provincetown Harbor only through a culvert in the dike, and in 1910, the U.S. Geologic Survey (USGS) officially renamed it Pilgrim Lake.[20]

In the ensuing years, the dike became clogged with vegetation, beginning a trend of desalination and oxygen-depletion that resulted in the demise of native wildlife populations, occasionally in the form of fish kills. In 2004, tidal flow was successfully restored by the National Park Service, working together with other local, state, and federal agencies.[21] In the following year, for the first time since Abraham Lincoln was president, legal-size clams were found in East Harbor.[22] In 2008, the USGS officially renamed Pilgrim Lake, restoring the original appellation of East Harbor.[20]

Other history Edit

The Portland gale of 1898 destroyed several wharves and fishing vessels within the harbor.

In 2002, Provincetown Harbor Beach was selected by the US Environmental Protection Agency as one of three for the state of Massachusetts that serve as models for beach managers in water quality monitoring and pollution assessments and because of its health.

The harbor is the southern boundary of the Provincetown historic district, which is on the National Register of Historic Places.

Landmarks Edit

Two main parallel wharves dominated the center of the harbor in the late 19th century: Railroad Wharf and Steamboat Wharf. President Grant visited Provincetown for the opening of the railroad in 1874.[23] Today, the wharves have been replaced by piers. Although rail and steamboat service to Provincetown both ended long ago, ferry service continues.

 
The Pilgrim Monument, designed by Willard T. Sears after the Torre del Mangia in Siena, Italy; built 1907–1910.
 
Marlon Brando in A Streetcar Named Desire, photographed by Carl Van Vechten, 1948
 
They Also Faced the Sea by Ewa Nogiec and Norma Holt. Coast Guard pier with motor life boat are at left in the higher-resolution version.

MacMillan Pier, the town pier of Provincetown, was significantly renovated and expanded during 2003-2005 with the help of a $1.95 million low interest loan from the Rural Development program of the U.S. Department of Agriculture.[24] The pier primarily serves tourists and high-speed ferries to Boston and Plymouth that charge their passengers up to $44 per one-way trip.[25][26] The Provincetown Public Pier Corporation [27] (PPPC) entered into a 20-year lease agreement for MacMillan Pier operations in 2005.[28] The pier is named after arctic explorer Donald B. MacMillan, a Provincetown native who retired to Provincetown and died there in 1970.

Immediately parallel to MacMillan Pier is Fisherman's Wharf, also known to locals as Cabral's Pier.[29] They Also Faced the Sea is an outdoor art installation of five large portraits of local Portuguese-American women photographed by Norma Holt hanging since 2003 on one side and one end of the old fish-packing plant on Cabral Pier.[30]

In both 1907 and 1910, when the Pilgrim Monument began construction and when it was dedicated, the entire Atlantic fleet of the U.S. Navy was inside the harbor for large ceremonies led by Presidents Theodore Roosevelt and William Howard Taft, respectively.

In addition to a panoramic view of the whole town, the harbor affords views of three working lighthouses: Long Point Light, Wood End Light, and Highland (or Cape Cod) Light. All three are on land within the Cape Cod National Seashore. The harbor serves as the southern boundary of the nationally registered Provincetown historic district, which consists of some 3,000 acres (12 km2), 1127 buildings, three structures, and five objects.

On the East End of Provincetown, Lewis Wharf was purchased by Mary Heaton Vorse, and its old fish shack converted into a theater which became the home of the Provincetown Players. Eugene O'Neill debuted his first play, Bound East for Cardiff, there in 1916.[31]

Captain Jack's Wharf is on the West End of Provincetown. At another theater on that wharf, Tennessee Williams debuted A Streetcar Named Desire with Marlon Brando as Stanley Kowalski before the play appeared on Broadway.[citation needed]

U.S. Coast Guard has administrative buildings and barracks at the base of a concrete pier on the harbor.[32] The current station opened in 1979 and is responsible for safety and law enforcement in over 1,200 square miles (3,100 km2) of Cape Cod Bay and the Atlantic Ocean. Noteworthy past disasters within this station's area include the wreck of the submarine S-4 in 1927. This station includes the first federal building to receive solar power. A frequent sight in the harbor is the station's 47-foot Motor Lifeboat.[33]

The West End Breakwater, built in 1911 by the US Army Corps of Engineers, is open to the public for walking and exploring.[34] Technically speaking, it is more of a dike than a breakwater. The harbor also has a "true" breakwater built between 1970 and 1972 and located 835 feet (255 m) from the end of MacMillan Pier.[35]

Marine life Edit

Provincetown Harbor supports a wide variety of marine life from algae, seagrasses and plankton through bryozoa, hydroids, echinoderms, crustaceans, mollusks, fish, birds, marine mammals, and other animals.

The harbor is an amazingly diverse and productive habitat. The following tables list in no particular order 94 examples of marine life that are regularly observed within the harbor. A few landbirds are included that are common around MacMillan Pier, on the beaches, and on the breakwater.

 
dead man's fingers
 
bladder wrack
Seaweeds
Ulva (sea lettuce)
Irish moss (Chondrus crispus)
Pylaiella (mung)
bladder wrack
knotted wrack
codium fragile (dead man's fingers)
 
American lobster
 
Atlantic horseshoe crab
Crustaceans, chelicerates, molluscs Other invertebrates
American lobster orange-footed sea cucumber
rock crab Forbes' sea star
jonah crab Atlantic purple sea urchin
portly spider crab ctenophore (comb jelly)
calico crab (lady crab) moon jelly
green crab various sea sponges
Japanese shore crab clam worm
long-clawed hermit crab northern red anemone
flat-clawed hermit crab stalked sea squirt
copepod sea grape
gammarid amphipod (sideswimmer) Didemnum sp.
isopod chain tunicates
barnacle golden star tunicates
skeleton shrimp lacy crusted bryozoa
Atlantic horseshoe crab tubeworm
longfin inshore squid brittle-star
common slipper shell salp
quahog (hard clam) spiral tufted bryozoa
soft-shell clam (steamer) snail fur
Atlantic bay scallop tubularian hydroids
Eastern oyster (American oyster) sinistral spiral tubeworm
common periwinkle featherduster worm
northern moon snail ice cream cone worm
oyster drill
Eastern mudsnail
blue mussel
 
North Atlantic right whales
 
Atlantic mackerel
 
moon jelly
Fish Birds Marine mammals
flounder (fluke) American herring gull Atlantic white-sided dolphin
striped bass great black-backed gull harbor porpoise
bluefish double-crested cormorant harbor seal
Atlantic mackerel great cormorant grey seal
spiny dogfish common eider North Atlantic right whale
tautog rock pigeon humpback whale
cunner (bergall) house sparrow Minke whale
pipefish black-crowned night-heron fin whale
lumpfish (lumpsucker) great blue heron
American eel green heron
cusk eel ruddy turnstone
Atlantic herring northern gannet
three-spined stickleback Wilson's storm-petrel
black sea bass laughing gull
little skate ring-billed gull
basking shark common tern
Atlantic bluefin tuna least tern
sculpin American crow
sand lance sanderling
scup (porgy) great shearwater
ling cod
ocean sunfish[dubious ]

Historic annual events Edit

The Great Provincetown Schooner Regatta each September preserves the harbor's history as a great sailing port.

A Blessing of the Fleet ceremony is held at the end of MacMillan Pier in late June, when all the boats operating in the harbor are blessed by a visiting bishop as part of the Provincetown Portuguese Festival.

The Swim for Life occurs each September since 1988, which is a swim across the harbor to raise funds and awareness of HIV/AIDS, women's health and community health.

Commercial use Edit

 
Dorothy Bradford, steamship ferry service to Boston, 1922 postcard.

Roughly a dozen fishing trawlers (locally known as "draggers"), ferries to Boston and Plymouth, Massachusetts, several different sportfishing boats, boat rentals, and other commercial boats also use the harbor today.

East Coast whale watching on Stellwagen Bank originated as a joint effort of the Dolphin Fleet and the Center for Coastal Studies leaving from MacMillan Pier in 1975.[citation needed] In addition, other tour boat operators offer a variety of tours of and from the harbor, including historical sightseeing tours, harbor marine life tours, sunset cruises and more.

Further reading and other information Edit

  • Wikipedia List of Nationally Registered Historic Places in Provincetown
  • Oldale, R. N., 1992, Cape Cod and the Islands, the geologic story: Parnassus Imprints, East Orleans, Massachusetts, 208 p. see Geologic History of Cape Cod, Massachusetts
  • Carl Christian Rafn, 1837. Antiquitates Americanæ. referred to by
  • Strahler, A. N., 1966, A Geologist's View of Cape Cod: Doubleday. Reprinted Parnassus Imprints (1988), Orleans, Massachusetts, 115 p.
  • Vorse, M.H. Time and the Town: A Provincetown Chronicle. 1942. Dial Press, New York, 372 p.
  • "Shutterbug" 1999 interview with Norma Holt
  • Provincetown Chamber of Commerce has information about annual events, plus tourist information such as cruises and tours of the harbor.
  • old postcard of Captain Jack's wharf in West End

External links Edit

  • WikiMapia aerial view showing several landmarks

References Edit

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 2007-02-09. Retrieved 2007-02-13.
  2. ^ "The Visiting Vikings". Retrieved 2007-02-13.
  3. ^ Archer, Gabriel (1912). Ed. Frances Healey (ed.). GREAT EPOCHS IN AMERICAN HISTORY: The Relation of Captain Gosnold's Voyage. Funk & Wagnalls Co. p. 38.
  4. ^ Smith, John; Paul Royster (2006). A Description of New England: An Online Electronic Text Edition. University of Nebraska - Lincoln: Digital Commons. p. 23.
  5. ^ Thoreau, Henry David (1865). Cape Cod. Thoreau Society. ISBN 0-940450-27-5.
  6. ^ Winslow, Edward; William Bradford (1622). (PDF). London, England: John Bellamie. p. 6. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-10-29.
  7. ^ Rich, Shebnah (1883). Truro-Cape Cod or Land Marks and Sea Marks. Boston: D. Lothrop & Co. pp. 53. ISBN 0-8048-7024-1. shebnah rich history of truro.
  8. ^ Mather, Cotton (1853). Magnalia Christi Americana. Silus Andrus & Son. p. 111. ISBN 0-665-44870-8.
  9. ^ However, for the Nickerson family's oral history version of her death, see Carpenter, Dolores Bird (1994). Early Encounters: Native Americans and Europeans in New England. From the Papers of Warren Sears Nickerson. Lansing: Michigan State University Press. ISBN 0-87013-411-6.
  10. ^ Provincetown Historical Association. . Pilgrim Monument and Provincetown Museum. Archived from the original on 2006-12-09. Retrieved 2007-02-10.
  11. ^ Jennings, Herman A. (1890). Provincetown or Odds and Ends From the Tip End. Peaked Hill Press. pp. 78–79.
  12. ^ (PDF). Defense Environmental Restoration Program for Formerly Used Defense Sites Ordnance and Explosive Waste. US Army Corps of Engineers. January 1997. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 March 2004. Retrieved 25 May 2012.
  13. ^ Cunningham, Michael (2002). Land's end: a walk through Provincetown (1st ed.). New York: Crown journeys. p. 37. ISBN 9780609609071. Retrieved 15 May 2012. ... as volunteers stood guard day after day and night after night over an uncontested stretch of salt water, the fortresses came to be known as Fort Useless and Fort Ridiculous.
  14. ^ a b A map of the extremity Of Cape Cod including the Townships of Provincetown & Truro: with a chart of their sea coast and of Cape Cod Harbour, State of Massachusetts (Map). 1 : 10,560. Cartography by U.S. Topographical Engineers, under direction of Maj. J.D. Graham; Reduced from orig. by Washington Hood. Bureau of U.S. Topographical Engineers. 1836. Retrieved 2 June 2012.
  15. ^ a b (Map). 1 : 62,500. Cartography by Henry Gannett (Chief Geographer) and Marcus Baker (Geographer-in-Charge). United States Geological Survey. July 1889 [Surveyed 1887]. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 April 2013. Retrieved 23 May 2012.
  16. ^ a b Jennings (1890), p. 197.
  17. ^ Theriault, Wor. James J. . King Hirams's Lodge of Ancient Free and Accepted Masons. Archived from the original on 4 April 2016. Retrieved 2 May 2012.
  18. ^ a b Lum, Kaimi Rose (20 June 2008). "East Harbor gets its name back". Provincetown Banner.
  19. ^ Peter Schworm (August 9, 2004). "In Truro, a dying lake now overflows with life". Boston Globe.
  20. ^ John Portnoy; et al. (2006). (PDF). Cape Cod National Seashore. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-06-27. Retrieved 2007-02-12.
  21. ^ Deyo, Simeon L. (1890). History of Barnstable County. New York: H. W. Blake & Co. p. 971.
  22. ^ Gaul, Gilbert M.; Cohen, Sarah (2007-04-06). "Rural Aid Goes to Urban Areas: USDA Development Program Helps Suburbs, Resort Cities". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2010-05-22.
  23. ^ Boston-Provincetown ferry Retrieved on April 5, 2007
  24. ^ Plymouth-Provincetown ferry 2007-04-12 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on April 5, 2007
  25. ^ Provincetown Public Pier Corporation
  26. ^ "MacMillan Pier Lease Agreement". Town of Provincetown. 2005. Retrieved 2007-02-13.
  27. ^ Sowers, Pru (2005). "Town backs Cabral Pier parking & mooring". Provincetown Banner. Aug. 25.
  28. ^ Nogiec, Ewa. ""They Also Faced the Sea" - Art Installation". iamprovincetown.com. Retrieved 2007-03-02.
  29. ^ Bound East for Cardiff, there in 1916
  30. ^ Station Provincetown
  31. ^ "USCG Sta Provincetown History page". USCG. Retrieved 2007-02-26.
  32. ^ West End Breakwater
  33. ^ Laurel Guadazno (2006). . Pilgrim Monument and Provincetown Museum. Archived from the original on December 9, 2006. Retrieved 2007-02-12.

provincetown, harbor, large, natural, harbor, located, town, provincetown, massachusetts, harbor, mostly, feet, deep, stretches, roughly, mile, from, northwest, southeast, miles, from, northeast, southwest, large, deep, basin, with, dredged, channel, necessary. Provincetown Harbor is a large natural harbor located in the town of Provincetown Massachusetts The harbor is mostly 30 to 90 feet 9 to 27 m deep and stretches roughly 1 mile 1 6 km from northwest to southeast and 2 miles 3 2 km from northeast to southwest one large deep basin with no dredged channel necessary for boats to enter and exit Provincetown HarborProvincetown Harbor looking south east from Pilgrim MonumentLocationCountryUnited StatesLocationProvincetown MassachusettsCoordinates42 02 41 N 70 10 13 W 42 044593 N 70 170244 W 42 044593 70 170244 Provincetown Harbor A tall green buoy east of Long Point i e the tip of Cape Cod marks the entrance to Provincetown Harbor from Cape Cod Bay Contents 1 Geology 2 History 2 1 Pilgrims first landing 2 2 Village of Long Point 2 3 East Harbor 2 4 Other history 3 Landmarks 4 Marine life 5 Historic annual events 6 Commercial use 7 Further reading and other information 8 External links 9 ReferencesGeology Edit nbsp Glacial erosion provided source material for the Provincetown Spit Most of Cape Cod was created by the Laurentide Glacier between 18 000 and 15 000 years ago However the Provincetown Spit i e the land surrounding Provincetown Harbor from High Head in North Truro through all of Provincetown consists largely of marine deposits transported from farther up the shore during the last 6 000 years 1 History Edit nbsp nbsp Provincetown Harborclass notpageimage Provincetown Harbor is encircled by the Provincetown Spit A stone wall 2 discovered in Provincetown in 1805 is thought to have been built by Viking Thorvald Eiriksson about AD 1007 3 when according to Norse sagas the keel of Ericson s ship was repaired in the harbor 4 Bartholomew Gosnold explored the harbor in 1602 and his mate Gabriel Archer wrote The fifteenth day of May we had again sight of the land which made ahead being as we thought an island by reason of a large sound that appeared westward between it and the main for coming to the west end thereof we did perceive a large opening we called it Shoal Hope Near this cape we came to anchor in fifteen fathoms where we took great store of codfish for which we altered the name and called it Cape Cod Here we saw sculls of herring mackerel and other small fish in great abundance This is a low sandy shoal but without danger 5 John Smith explored the harbor in 1614 and wrote Cape Cod is only a headland of high hills of sand overgrown with shrubby pines hurts and such trash but an excellent harbor for all weathers This Cape is made by the main sea on the one side and a great bay on the other in form of a sickle 6 Pilgrims first landing Edit nbsp An 1882 painting of the Mayflower at anchor by William HalsallProvincetown Harbor was the initial anchoring place of the Pilgrims traveling on the Mayflower in 1620 before they proceeded to Plymouth Massachusetts Thoreau later observed 7 that Smith s description of the harbor may have been less colored by the hardships of transoceanic troubles than the Pilgrims Mourt s Relation describes the harbor as a good harbor and pleasant bay circled round except in the entrance which is about four miles 6 km over from land to land compassed about to the very sea with oaks pines juniper sassafras and other sweet wood it is a harbor wherein 1000 sail of ships may safely ride there we relieved ourselves with wood and water and refreshed our people while our shallop was fitted to coast the bay to search for an habitation there was the greatest store of fowl we ever saw 8 The Mayflower held several different passengers in addition to the Pilgrims on its first transoceanic voyage Before coming ashore at the extreme northwest corner of the harbor the Pilgrims and other settlers signed the Mayflower Compact in the harbor on November 11 1620 9 Dorothy Bradford the first wife of William Bradford was one of the first adult Pilgrims to die in the New World According to the only known written description of her death 10 from close to when it actually occurred she fell overboard from the Mayflower in Provincetown Harbor on December 17 1620 and drowned 11 Peregrine White the first child born to the Pilgrims in New England was born while they were in Provincetown Harbor Village of Long Point Edit Main article Long Point Cape Cod nbsp Long Point Light at the tip of Cape CodFrom 1818 until the 1850s a fishing village existed at Long Point complete with a post office schoolhouse 6 windmills for saltworks and 38 homes for about 200 adults and 60 children When the families left in the 1850s they floated their homes a mile across the harbor where many still stand today 12 13 During the American Civil War the military established defensive artillery battery positions at this location The Long Point Battery 14 would come to be known as Fort Useless and Fort Ridiculous by the local residents 15 Today Long Point is a ghost village and nothing remains save for the Long Point Light which had been replaced by a new light in 1875 nbsp Until the late 19th century the East Harbor was open to Provincetown Harbor 16 In 1868 it was closed off to make way for the railroad and the automobile 17 Compare these two maps from 1835 top and 1889 bottom East Harbor Edit For the better part of modern history the eastern part of Provincetown harbor was connected to yet another harbor historically known as East Harbor East Harbor was the most protected mooring place in the outer Cape for boats using Cape Cod Bay and the Gulf of Maine East Harbor had a 1 000 foot wide 305 m inlet from Provincetown Harbor as shown in the adjacent map from 1836 16 Until the late 19th century there was not a single road leading in or out of Provincetown the only land route connecting Provincetown to points beyond was along a thin stretch of beach along the shore to the north locally called the backshore A wooden bridge was erected over the East Harbor in 1854 only to be destroyed by a winter storm and ice two years later 18 Although the bridge was replaced the following year a traveler using it still had to traverse several miles over a sand route which along with the backshore route would occasionally be washed out by storms This made Provincetown much like an island in that it relied almost entirely upon its harbor for its communication travel and commerce needs 19 In 1868 the mouth of the East Harbor was diked to facilitate the laying of track for the arrival of the railroad the wooden bridge and sand road were finally replaced by a formal roadway in 1877 as shown in the accompanying map from 1887 18 17 The East Harbor thus became a lake connected to Provincetown Harbor only through a culvert in the dike and in 1910 the U S Geologic Survey USGS officially renamed it Pilgrim Lake 20 In the ensuing years the dike became clogged with vegetation beginning a trend of desalination and oxygen depletion that resulted in the demise of native wildlife populations occasionally in the form of fish kills In 2004 tidal flow was successfully restored by the National Park Service working together with other local state and federal agencies 21 In the following year for the first time since Abraham Lincoln was president legal size clams were found in East Harbor 22 In 2008 the USGS officially renamed Pilgrim Lake restoring the original appellation of East Harbor 20 Other history Edit The Portland gale of 1898 destroyed several wharves and fishing vessels within the harbor In 2002 Provincetown Harbor Beach was selected by the US Environmental Protection Agency as one of three Flagship beaches for the state of Massachusetts that serve as models for beach managers in water quality monitoring and pollution assessments and because of its health The harbor is the southern boundary of the Provincetown historic district which is on the National Register of Historic Places Landmarks EditTwo main parallel wharves dominated the center of the harbor in the late 19th century Railroad Wharf and Steamboat Wharf President Grant visited Provincetown for the opening of the railroad in 1874 23 Today the wharves have been replaced by piers Although rail and steamboat service to Provincetown both ended long ago ferry service continues nbsp The Pilgrim Monument designed by Willard T Sears after the Torre del Mangia in Siena Italy built 1907 1910 nbsp Marlon Brando in A Streetcar Named Desire photographed by Carl Van Vechten 1948 nbsp They Also Faced the Sea by Ewa Nogiec and Norma Holt Coast Guard pier with motor life boat are at left in the higher resolution version MacMillan Pier the town pier of Provincetown was significantly renovated and expanded during 2003 2005 with the help of a 1 95 million low interest loan from the Rural Development program of the U S Department of Agriculture 24 The pier primarily serves tourists and high speed ferries to Boston and Plymouth that charge their passengers up to 44 per one way trip 25 26 The Provincetown Public Pier Corporation 27 PPPC entered into a 20 year lease agreement for MacMillan Pier operations in 2005 28 The pier is named after arctic explorer Donald B MacMillan a Provincetown native who retired to Provincetown and died there in 1970 Immediately parallel to MacMillan Pier is Fisherman s Wharf also known to locals as Cabral s Pier 29 They Also Faced the Sea is an outdoor art installation of five large portraits of local Portuguese American women photographed by Norma Holt hanging since 2003 on one side and one end of the old fish packing plant on Cabral Pier 30 In both 1907 and 1910 when the Pilgrim Monument began construction and when it was dedicated the entire Atlantic fleet of the U S Navy was inside the harbor for large ceremonies led by Presidents Theodore Roosevelt and William Howard Taft respectively In addition to a panoramic view of the whole town the harbor affords views of three working lighthouses Long Point Light Wood End Light and Highland or Cape Cod Light All three are on land within the Cape Cod National Seashore The harbor serves as the southern boundary of the nationally registered Provincetown historic district which consists of some 3 000 acres 12 km2 1127 buildings three structures and five objects On the East End of Provincetown Lewis Wharf was purchased by Mary Heaton Vorse and its old fish shack converted into a theater which became the home of the Provincetown Players Eugene O Neill debuted his first play Bound East for Cardiff there in 1916 31 Captain Jack s Wharf is on the West End of Provincetown At another theater on that wharf Tennessee Williams debuted A Streetcar Named Desire with Marlon Brando as Stanley Kowalski before the play appeared on Broadway citation needed U S Coast Guard has administrative buildings and barracks at the base of a concrete pier on the harbor 32 The current station opened in 1979 and is responsible for safety and law enforcement in over 1 200 square miles 3 100 km2 of Cape Cod Bay and the Atlantic Ocean Noteworthy past disasters within this station s area include the wreck of the submarine S 4 in 1927 This station includes the first federal building to receive solar power A frequent sight in the harbor is the station s 47 foot Motor Lifeboat 33 The West End Breakwater built in 1911 by the US Army Corps of Engineers is open to the public for walking and exploring 34 Technically speaking it is more of a dike than a breakwater The harbor also has a true breakwater built between 1970 and 1972 and located 835 feet 255 m from the end of MacMillan Pier 35 Marine life EditProvincetown Harbor supports a wide variety of marine life from algae seagrasses and plankton through bryozoa hydroids echinoderms crustaceans mollusks fish birds marine mammals and other animals The harbor is an amazingly diverse and productive habitat The following tables list in no particular order 94 examples of marine life that are regularly observed within the harbor A few landbirds are included that are common around MacMillan Pier on the beaches and on the breakwater nbsp dead man s fingers nbsp bladder wrackSeaweedsUlva sea lettuce Irish moss Chondrus crispus Pylaiella mung bladder wrackknotted wrackcodium fragile dead man s fingers nbsp American lobster nbsp Atlantic horseshoe crabCrustaceans chelicerates molluscs Other invertebratesAmerican lobster orange footed sea cucumberrock crab Forbes sea starjonah crab Atlantic purple sea urchinportly spider crab ctenophore comb jelly calico crab lady crab moon jellygreen crab various sea spongesJapanese shore crab clam wormlong clawed hermit crab northern red anemoneflat clawed hermit crab stalked sea squirtcopepod sea grapegammarid amphipod sideswimmer Didemnum sp isopod chain tunicatesbarnacle golden star tunicatesskeleton shrimp lacy crusted bryozoaAtlantic horseshoe crab tubewormlongfin inshore squid brittle starcommon slipper shell salpquahog hard clam spiral tufted bryozoasoft shell clam steamer snail furAtlantic bay scallop tubularian hydroidsEastern oyster American oyster sinistral spiral tubewormcommon periwinkle featherduster wormnorthern moon snail ice cream cone wormoyster drillEastern mudsnailblue mussel nbsp North Atlantic right whales nbsp Atlantic mackerel nbsp moon jellyFish Birds Marine mammalsflounder fluke American herring gull Atlantic white sided dolphinstriped bass great black backed gull harbor porpoisebluefish double crested cormorant harbor sealAtlantic mackerel great cormorant grey sealspiny dogfish common eider North Atlantic right whaletautog rock pigeon humpback whalecunner bergall house sparrow Minke whalepipefish black crowned night heron fin whalelumpfish lumpsucker great blue heronAmerican eel green heroncusk eel ruddy turnstoneAtlantic herring northern gannetthree spined stickleback Wilson s storm petrelblack sea bass laughing gulllittle skate ring billed gullbasking shark common ternAtlantic bluefin tuna least ternsculpin American crowsand lance sanderlingscup porgy great shearwaterling codocean sunfish dubious discuss Historic annual events EditThe Great Provincetown Schooner Regatta each September preserves the harbor s history as a great sailing port A Blessing of the Fleet ceremony is held at the end of MacMillan Pier in late June when all the boats operating in the harbor are blessed by a visiting bishop as part of the Provincetown Portuguese Festival The Swim for Life occurs each September since 1988 which is a swim across the harbor to raise funds and awareness of HIV AIDS women s health and community health Commercial use Edit nbsp Dorothy Bradford steamship ferry service to Boston 1922 postcard Roughly a dozen fishing trawlers locally known as draggers ferries to Boston and Plymouth Massachusetts several different sportfishing boats boat rentals and other commercial boats also use the harbor today East Coast whale watching on Stellwagen Bank originated as a joint effort of the Dolphin Fleet and the Center for Coastal Studies leaving from MacMillan Pier in 1975 citation needed In addition other tour boat operators offer a variety of tours of and from the harbor including historical sightseeing tours harbor marine life tours sunset cruises and more Further reading and other information EditWikipedia List of Nationally Registered Historic Places in Provincetown Oldale R N 1992 Cape Cod and the Islands the geologic story Parnassus Imprints East Orleans Massachusetts 208 p see Geologic History of Cape Cod Massachusetts Carl Christian Rafn 1837 Antiquitates Americanae referred to by The Norse Wall House Strahler A N 1966 A Geologist s View of Cape Cod Doubleday Reprinted Parnassus Imprints 1988 Orleans Massachusetts 115 p Vorse M H Time and the Town A Provincetown Chronicle 1942 Dial Press New York 372 p a Norma Holt exhibit in Faces amp Places Shutterbug 1999 interview with Norma Holt Things to Do compiled by Provincetown Public Pier Corporation Provincetown Chamber of Commerce has information about annual events plus tourist information such as cruises and tours of the harbor old postcard of Captain Jack s wharf in West EndExternal links EditWikiMapia aerial view showing several landmarksReferences Edit NPS Nature amp Science Geology Resources Division Archived from the original on 2007 02 09 Retrieved 2007 02 13 The Norse Wall House on Wikimapia Retrieved 2007 02 13 The Norse Wall capelinks com Retrieved 2007 02 13 The Visiting Vikings Retrieved 2007 02 13 Archer Gabriel 1912 Ed Frances Healey ed GREAT EPOCHS IN AMERICAN HISTORY The Relation of Captain Gosnold s Voyage Funk amp Wagnalls Co p 38 Smith John Paul Royster 2006 A Description of New England An Online Electronic Text Edition University of Nebraska Lincoln Digital Commons p 23 Thoreau Henry David 1865 Cape Cod Thoreau Society ISBN 0 940450 27 5 Winslow Edward William Bradford 1622 A Relation or Journal of the Beginning and Proceeding of the English Plantation Settled at Plymouth PDF London England John Bellamie p 6 Archived from the original PDF on 2008 10 29 Rich Shebnah 1883 Truro Cape Cod or Land Marks and Sea Marks Boston D Lothrop amp Co pp 53 ISBN 0 8048 7024 1 shebnah rich history of truro Mather Cotton 1853 Magnalia Christi Americana Silus Andrus amp Son p 111 ISBN 0 665 44870 8 However for the Nickerson family s oral history version of her death see Carpenter Dolores Bird 1994 Early Encounters Native Americans and Europeans in New England From the Papers of Warren Sears Nickerson Lansing Michigan State University Press ISBN 0 87013 411 6 Provincetown Historical Association Walking Tour 1 The Center of Provincetown Pilgrim Monument and Provincetown Museum Archived from the original on 2006 12 09 Retrieved 2007 02 10 Jennings Herman A 1890 Provincetown or Odds and Ends From the Tip End Peaked Hill Press pp 78 79 Conclusions and Recommendations for the former Long Point Battery Provincetown MA Project Number D01MA054901 PDF Defense Environmental Restoration Program for Formerly Used Defense Sites Ordnance and Explosive Waste US Army Corps of Engineers January 1997 Archived from the original PDF on 8 March 2004 Retrieved 25 May 2012 Cunningham Michael 2002 Land s end a walk through Provincetown 1st ed New York Crown journeys p 37 ISBN 9780609609071 Retrieved 15 May 2012 as volunteers stood guard day after day and night after night over an uncontested stretch of salt water the fortresses came to be known as Fort Useless and Fort Ridiculous a b A map of the extremity Of Cape Cod including the Townships of Provincetown amp Truro with a chart of their sea coast and of Cape Cod Harbour State of Massachusetts Map 1 10 560 Cartography by U S Topographical Engineers under direction of Maj J D Graham Reduced from orig by Washington Hood Bureau of U S Topographical Engineers 1836 Retrieved 2 June 2012 a b Massachusetts Provincetown Sheet Map 1 62 500 Cartography by Henry Gannett Chief Geographer and Marcus Baker Geographer in Charge United States Geological Survey July 1889 Surveyed 1887 Archived from the original PDF on 8 April 2013 Retrieved 23 May 2012 a b Jennings 1890 p 197 Theriault Wor James J The Railroad Comes To Provincetown King Hirams s Lodge of Ancient Free and Accepted Masons Archived from the original on 4 April 2016 Retrieved 2 May 2012 a b Lum Kaimi Rose 20 June 2008 East Harbor gets its name back Provincetown Banner Peter Schworm August 9 2004 In Truro a dying lake now overflows with life Boston Globe John Portnoy et al 2006 East Harbor 2006 Annual Report PDF Cape Cod National Seashore Archived from the original PDF on 2007 06 27 Retrieved 2007 02 12 Deyo Simeon L 1890 History of Barnstable County New York H W Blake amp Co p 971 Gaul Gilbert M Cohen Sarah 2007 04 06 Rural Aid Goes to Urban Areas USDA Development Program Helps Suburbs Resort Cities The Washington Post Retrieved 2010 05 22 Boston Provincetown ferry Retrieved on April 5 2007 Plymouth Provincetown ferry Archived 2007 04 12 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on April 5 2007 Provincetown Public Pier Corporation MacMillan Pier Lease Agreement Town of Provincetown 2005 Retrieved 2007 02 13 Sowers Pru 2005 Town backs Cabral Pier parking amp mooring Provincetown Banner Aug 25 Nogiec Ewa They Also Faced the Sea Art Installation iamprovincetown com Retrieved 2007 03 02 Bound East for Cardiff there in 1916 Station Provincetown USCG Sta Provincetown History page USCG Retrieved 2007 02 26 West End Breakwater Laurel Guadazno 2006 History Highlights Dikes and Breakwaters Pilgrim Monument and Provincetown Museum Archived from the original on December 9 2006 Retrieved 2007 02 12 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Provincetown Harbor amp oldid 1146702687, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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