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Links to Olde Dartmouth Area History Pages
What did a founder of Standard-Oil, Franklin Delano
Roosevelt, Joshua Slocum, Frederick Douglass, Herman Melville, and
ten pilgrims all have in common? All of them lived at least for
a time in a part of the territory known as "Olde Dartmouth."
Olde Dartmouth Sotheby's International Realty takes its name from the historic area hugging
the south coast of Massachusetts from Tiverton, Rhode Island on
the west to Plymouth County on the east. Settlers from Plimouth
Colony bought the territory of Olde Dartmouth from the Wampanoag
Indians in 1652. Although 36 names were on the deed, including William
Bradford, Myles Standish, and John Alden, only ten of these original
purchasers actually moved to the territory known as Dartmouth. These
families had the names of Cooke, Delano, Francis, Hicks, Howland,
Jenny, Kempton, Morton, Samson, and Soule. Many of these Pilgrims
are remembered by street names and plaques on historical homes in
our area.
In time, other settlers came to Dartmouth to avoid
the edicts of the Puritans in Plimouth and the Massachusetts Bay
Colony in Boston. Many were Quakers, originally hailing from towns
close to Dartmouth, England, which, like Olde Dartmouth, was on
the mouth of a river.
Olde Dartmouth covered an area of 104 square miles,
including several riverbeds and the present-day municipalities of
Dartmouth, New Bedford, Fairhaven, Acushnet, Westport, Tiverton
and Little Compton. The local Indians also had names for the settlements
of the territory. New Bedford and Acushnet were called "Cushnea,"
which means "as far as the river." Dartmouth was known
as "Ponagansett", and Fairhaven was called "Sconticut",
which means "Summer Place." Westport was known as "Coakset."
These Indian names are still used in parts of these towns.
The village of Padanaram
was named by Laban Thacher who moved there from Cape Cod. Laban
had fathered a large family of daughters like the prolific Laban
of Genesis 28:1,2,3, who had lived in the northwest corner of Mesopotamia,
in the plain of Aram---Padanaram. Laban Thacher settled on the Apponegansett
River and was one of the founders of the ship building industry
in the area. He later st arted
a salt works business. Seeing parallels in his own life, Laban named
his community "Padanaram" after the place in the Bible
where the original Laban lived, prospered and "begat a multitude".
The section of Olde Dartmouth now known as Fairhaven
was settled by John Cooke and Thomas Delano. Poverty Point, a federal
period village, directly on the Acushnet River, is the oldest part
of town. This village gets it name from the fact that many husbands
were lost at sea, giving the area a relatively high population of
widows. Many of these women had to take in laundry and find other
ways to support their children, which caused the area bounded by
the streets of Oxford and Lafayette (where the Revolutionary War
hero had once stayed) to become known as "Poverty Point."
During the Revolutionary War, it was the ship "Dartmouth",
built in Padanaram by Bedford Village resident Joseph Rotch that
was emptied of its precious tea cargo by patriots dressed as Indians
in protest of the British tax on tea. This episode became known
as the "Boston Tea Party." Olde Dartmouth was also the
site of the first naval battle with the British at what is now Fort
Phoenix in present day Fairhaven. The patriots at Fort Phoenix,
where the British were successfully turned away, protected Fairhaven
from being burned, unlike the neighboring Olde Dartmouth village
of Bedford.
Bedford, on the west side of the Acushnet River,
settled in large part by three families, the Russells, Rotches and
Rodmans, who like other Quakers were opposed to active aggression
against the British, did not have an artillery. On September 5,
1778, the British landed at Clark's Cove, marched up County Street
and set fire to all homes, ships and wharves. (This is why the historical,
architectural stock of Fairhaven is older than that of New Bedford.)
Bedford Village took several years to recover from the devastation
caused by the British, while vessels continued to use the Fairhaven
side of the harbor. In 1787, Bedford Village separated itself from
the rest of Dartmouth, calling itself "New Bedford" to
distinguish itself from the township of Bedford, north of Boston,
and to symbolize its rising from the ashes.
The young city of New Bedford prospered and became
the whaling capital of the world, outranking Nantucket, and was
in fact considered the wealthiest city in the world in 1857. Herman
Melville walked the streets and stayed at the Mariners' Home next
to the Seaman's Bethel while researching his famous novel, Moby
Dick. These two buildings, in particular, are well preserved for
present day tourists and are situated across the street from the
nationally acclaimed New Bedford Whaling Museum on Johnny Cake Hill.
This waterfront historic area has been designated a National Park
by the U.S. Congress and is the centerpiece of New Bedford's new
Renaissance. Utilities have been moved underground, streets are
cobblestoned, and upscale restaurants in elegant buildings lure
visitors. The University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth has recently
moved its College of Fine Arts to this area, taking up residence
in a grand, historic, commercial building, once the site of New
Bedford's most elegant department store.
In
the late 1800s, after the Whaling Industry weakened due to the discovery
of petroleum, New Bedford turned from the sea to cotton textile manufacturing,
opening up many mills and factories. These efforts served the local
economy well until the 1920s and brought a wave of immigrants to the
area to work in these textile plants.
Once these factories began to age, many of the textile
companies moved south for warmer climates or abroad for cheaper
labor, and New Bedford turned again to the sea. With the construction
of fish processing plants, cold storage facilities, rehabilitated
wharves, and an oceanography campus, New Bedford is again known
as the "fishing capital of the world", not for whales
this time, but for scallops, cod, and other species, outranking
Gloucester, MA and Alaskan ports in yearly fish tonnage.
South Dartmouth and Fairhaven are also known for
their outstanding shipbuilding and ship repair facilities and offer
resort waterfront areas for recreational boaters. The Town of Fairhaven,
which separated from Dartmouth in 1812, has several summer communities
with seasonal residents who are atrracted by the warm south coast
water and sandy beaches. The rural areas of Acushnet and Rochester,
land-locked neighboring towns north of the coastal communities,
are magnets for horse farmers and apple and peach growers. Westport,
rural, yet with access to the ocean from its deep-reaching rivers,
combines the seacoast with the farm, and through land preservation
efforts will remain largely rural into the future. Mattapoisett
and Marion, picturesque coastal towns with village housing stock
dating back to the early 1800s, lie just east of Fairhaven, connecting
the Olde Dartmouth area to Wareham and the Cape Cod bridges. Marion
and Mattapoisett offer some subdivisions of new housing, and like
Dartmouth and Fairhaven, have struggled with land-use issues in
recent years.
The original Olde Dartmouth area benefits from a diversity of residents
and industries; proximity to the coast for livelihood, recreation
and temperate weather conditions; and a rich history symbolic of
the American spirit. An active and growing community of artists
and academics is attracted by the natural beauty of the area and
the evolving prestige of the local University. Now better long-term
planning by government leaders and non-profit organizations is helping
to protect of its future. Nowhere is there more proof of a prosperous
economic outlook for these south coast communities than in review
of real estate transactions over the past few years. Property values
are increasing here by as much as 30 percent annually and housing
stock on the open market is at an all-time low. There are more buyers
than homes to purchase and many new purchasers are migrating into
the area from elsewhere. If you want more information about a particular
town please contact us at Olde Dartmouth Sotheby's International Realty.
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