Falmouth
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About this ebook
Ann Sears
Ann Sears is the executive director of the Falmouth Historical Society, and Nancy Kougeas is an archivist and vice-chairman of the Falmouth Historical Commission. With the help of the Falmouth Historical Society collection, they have compiled this enchanting history for all to enjoy.
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Falmouth - Ann Sears
century.
INTRODUCTION
Towns change. Industries come and go, land is plowed under, and buildings are renovated or torn down. Would those who lived in Falmouth 300 years ago recognize the Falmouth of today? We would like to think that if Elijah Swift came back, he would recognize the village green, still the town’s centerpiece. We would hope, too, that a summer visitor from the 1890s would recognize Falmouth Heights or the Quissett Harbor House and that Gertrude Stein, once a student at the Marine Biological Laboratory, would still feel at home in Woods Hole.
History is about memory, and one way to preserve memory is to preserve tangible reminders of the past. Buildings, landscapes, photographs, letters, whaling journals, even a teacup or writing implement—all have something to tell us. Since history, as someone once said, is what happened a moment ago, the work of a historical society is multifaceted and never-ending. Luckily for us, Falmouth citizens took an early interest in their past. The Falmouth Historical Society was established in 1900 and began to collect manuscripts and photographs. In 1932, the society acquired the Julia Wood House and, in the 1970s, the Conant House, where its office, archives, and library are located. The Dudley Hallett barn was rebuilt in 2001.
In looking through the society’s photographs, we came to appreciate anew how varied and rich the history of Falmouth is. The problem before us was how to choose and arrange the approximately 200 photographs that best show this town of eight villages and many eras. We decided to arrange the book chronologically, rather than by subject or village, to give an idea of what Falmouth looked liked during these different periods. There are no photographs of Falmouth’s early history, so we have used paintings, sketches, and modern-day photographs of historic buildings to tell the story. Our chapters are not equal in length because there are no neat dividing times in history, but we have summarized them below.
Jonathan Hatch and Isaac Robinson arrived from Barnstable as the first settlers of Falmouth in 1660. They were unusually tolerant men—Quaker sympathizers at a time when Quakers were persecuted in Massachusetts. Robinson operated an inn before moving on to Martha’s Vineyard. Hatch ran a farm. What is today Falmouth’s greatest attraction—its spectacular coastline—held little interest for them. The earliest sketch of Falmouth village, by John Warner Barber, gives no hint of Vineyard Sound less than a mile south or of Buzzards Bay two miles west.
Other colonists soon settled in Woods Hole. The first Quakers arrived in West Falmouth in 1673. At about the same time, members of the Nye family began moving from Sandwich to North Falmouth. By 1795, the selectmen’s map shows that the town boundaries included East Falmouth and part of Waquoit. Sandy roads isolated Falmouth from other Cape communities that were clustered around Cape Cod Bay to the north. Falmouth residents, therefore, turned to the sea for their connections with the outside world, trading with towns and cities to the south. For many years, Falmouth men wintered in Charleston, South Carolina, working as carpenters and mechanics.
The town’s location and dependence on coastal trade made it particularly vulnerable to the British blockades of the American Revolution and the War of 1812. The Falmouth Militia proved its worth in both wars as it battled British forces to protect the town and its supply lines. After the War of 1812, Elijah Swift rose to prominence. He was a larger-than-life figure during this period, establishing the whaling and live oak lumbering industries to employ townspeople.
In the next major era, Falmouth men and many of their wives traveled the world in their search for whale oil. As maritime industries and commerce died, however, the town looked anxiously to a railroad connection to the rest of the country.
When the railroad finally arrived in 1872, it brought the town new life as a summer resort, and summer tourism has been a mainstay of the economy ever since. The era also saw scientists discovering Woods Hole and the first Portuguese immigrants establishing family farms in East Falmouth and Teaticket.
The new summer residents needed services, and the town responded with graceful architecture in new municipal buildings, including a town hall, a library, and schools. The automobile increased the ease with which visitors could arrive. A new harbor was created to add to the town’s attractiveness as a resort center. Large hotels were built.
World War I ended the golden years of summer. Although Falmouth remained at heart a small country town, it began experimenting with modern technology. The town was electrified. School buses transported students, and Main Street was rebuilt. Large-scale farming was attempted. Nurses worked to improve community health.