
Located some seventy-five miles out
into the Atlantic Ocean
on the outer end of Cape Cod, the Town of Wellfleet offers
an abundance of quaint rural seaside character and
charm and spectacular natural resources.
About Wellfleet
(from Mass Department of Housing
and Community Development
community profile and Wellfleet Chamber of Commerce)
Located some seventy-five miles out into the Atlantic Ocean
on the outer end of Cape Cod, the Town of Wellfleet offers an
abundance of quaint rural seaside character and charm and spectacular
natural resources. Bounded on the east by the Atlantic Ocean
and the west by Cape Cod Bay, 61% of the land area of Wellfleet
is in the Cape Cod National Seashore Park. Wellfleet has a total
upland area of approximately 13,100 acres (20.47 square miles).
Of this total, about 8,000 acres (12.5 square miles) are within
the Seashore boundaries, leaving 5,100 acres (8 square miles)
outside.
During the summer, the population swells from 3,500 year-round
residents to an estimated 17,000 persons enjoying the Town's
miles of ocean and bay-side beaches; numerous beautiful, clear,
spring-fed, ponds; many fine art galleries, shops and restaurants;
and the magnificent Wellfleet Harbor offering a constantly changing
panorama of sail boats, motor yachts, sport fishing boats and
trawlers.
An extremely diverse community with an intriguing history of
an extraordinary nautical atmosphere, the friendly charm of the
Central Village provides the pedestrian with a vast array of
browsing, dining, picture-taking and sightseeing opportunities
within a relatively short walk. The Central Village is also the
focus of Wellfleet’s year-round civic life and commercial
activity.
The town is home of the Cape Cod National Seashore Headquarters
as well as the 1,000 acre Massachusetts Audubon Society Wildlife
Sanctuary. Some of Cape Cod's finest ocean surfcasting, fresh
water pond and Cape Cod Bay boat fishing possibilities are found
in Wellfleet, and the town is well known for its plentiful supply
of shellfish, including the famous "Wellfleet Oysters".
The fresh water ponds are a particular delight in Wellfleet.
Their tranquil surfaces shimmer in early sunlight, and their
small sandy beaches echo with happiness in late afternoon as
the shadows from the surrounding pines darken the water. The
combination of a day on a stimulating and expansive backshore
beach and a leisurely swim in the warm water of one of the kettle
ponds is a special luxury that Wellfleet offers.
Wellfleet History
(from "Setting A Course for the Future",
the 1995 Local Comprehensive Plan)
The area now within the limits of Wellfleet was originally part
of the grant by the Court of New Plymouth to "those that
goe to dwell at Nossett" (Eastham) made in 1644 and later
extended in 1654 and 1674 to include virtually all of the Outer
Cape. Sometime before 1644, the colonists of Plymouth and Duxbury
apparently discovered rich fishing grounds in what is now Wellfleet
Harbor, and began to refer to the entire area surround these
waters as Billingsgate, after the famous London fish market.
The first permanent settlement in this area was made in the 1650’s
and the number of dispersed dwellings slowly increased.
By the second decade of the eighteenth century, the inhabitants
of the "hamlet of Billingsgate" began to think of establishing
themselves as a separate town. A petition for incorporation was
denied in 1723, but in that same year, the area between Hatches
Creek and the Truro line was established as the North Precinct
of Eastham. In 1763 the General Court established the North Precinct
as a separate district to be known as Wellfleet. Although there
is no Wellfleet in England, the leaders of the new community
had hopes that the sales of local shellfish might profit by association
or confusion with the then famous Wellfleet oysters produced
in the eastern waters of England.
The economy of Wellfleet during the three hundred and forty years
of its history has passed through three successive and overlapping
stages: farming, fishing and commerce and services fueled largely
by retirees, non-resident homeowners and tourists.
In the 1650’s, the first settlers began to clear the land
for subsistence farming and mowing salt hay on the meadows surrounding
the harbor. However, the outer Cape could support only a small
population by agriculture alone and the narrow strip of forest
between the bay and the backshore could not supply the necessary
firewood and lumber for construction and shipbuilding. The sandy
soil, when stripped of vegetation, was eroded by the wind into
sterile dunes; this was realized in the eighteenth century when
excessive deforestation was followed by overgrazing. Some agriculture
continued, however, with modest prodcution of rye, corn, livestock,
asparagus and cranberries, but in declining amounts.
Even before the first settlers arrived, Wellfleet Harbor was
known for it abundance of fish and oysters, and by 1707, whaling
had become a thriving industry with a fleet of ships which cruised
as far as the coats of Africa. This brought great wealth to the
Town. All of this prosperity was brought to a sudden halt during
the Revolution when the British blockade condemned ships of the
fleet to rot at their moorings. After the war, lack of capital
to replace the great whaling fleet ended Wellfleet’s glory
as a whaling port.
However, fishing began to flourish and by the nineteenth century
Wellfleet became one of the leading fishing ports in Massachusetts.
At the same time the local shell fishermen were shipping in oysters
from Buzzards Bay, Connecticut and the Chesapeake, planting them
in the harbor to pick up the famous Wellfleet flavor and re-harvesting
them for the Boston market.
The mackerel fishery began to decline around 1880, and by 1900
not a single schooner was sailing from Wellfleet Harbor. The
shellfish industry remained active, however, and although it
was no longer profitable to transplant oysters in large quantities,
the production of native oysters gradually increased. The harvests
of oyster, quahogs, soft-shelled clams, bay scallops and sea
calms have fluctuated widely from year to year but on the average
have remained an important part of the Town’s economy.
Although a certain number of people from the Boston area had
summer homes in Wellfleet in the nineteenth century, the first
significant development of the tourist industry began after the
turn of the century when L.D. Baker constructed the Chequesset
Inn on the pilings of the abandoned Mercantile Wharf. The decline
in prosperity and population that had begun in the last quarter
of the nineteenth century was reversed. However, this growth
was slowed by the depression and was modest until after World
War II and the construction of the Mid-Cape Highway.
An event that has had a dramatic impact on the preservation of
Wellfleet’s character in the face of burgeoning growth
elsewhere on Cape Cod was the establishment in 1961 of the Cape
Cod National Seashore. The Seashore’s designated boundary
includes about 8,000 acres in the Tow of Wellfleet, representing
61 percent of the Town’s 13,100 acre total area. Large
areas of important Wellfleet ecosystems like the kettle ponds
and Herring River basin, are at least partially under the land
management policies and guidelines of the National Park Service,
and therefore benefit from the resource protection objectives
of the National Seashore.
A corollary of this situation is that almost all new development
that has occurred in the past thirty years has taken place in
areas close to the Town’s traditional concentrations of
residential and commercial development. The existence of the
National Seashore has thereby helped Wellfleet to reinforce its
traditional settlement patterns even as it has absorbed increased
growth.
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