| A village tied to the ocean
Woods Hole is an ocean-going village. In the past two
centuries, the little village at the tip of Cape Cod has hosted ships
bearing whale oil for candle making, bat guano for the local fertilizer
factory, fish for market, and one of the worlds most active marine
research fleets.
As a fishing port, Woods Hole never rivaled cities
such as New Bedford, Boston, Gloucester, or Portland, but fishing did
play a central role in the life of the village. In the 1700s and 1800s
Woods Hole natives fished mostly with weirs (nets) along shore. In the
1900s the village hosted a fleet of draggers that landed their catch
at Sam Cahoons, a thriving fish market that was the largest business
in town in the 1940s.
Landings in Woods Hole declined in the 1960s, and
by the time Cahoons market closed in 1966, the village was no
longer a bustling fishing port. Some commercial fishermen still keep
vessels at the town pier next door to the aquarium, but they mostly
land their catch elsewhere.
Science is a relatively new activity in Woods Hole,
having come to the village in 1871. At first Woods Hole-based scientists
explored local waters in a flotilla of borrowed or rented rowboats,
sailing yachts, and steam-powered tugs and launches. By the 1880s, the
scientists were exploring offshore waters aboard larger, ocean-going
vessels such as the Albatross.
Unlike whaling, the fertilizer trade, and fishing,
marine science in the village shows no signs of winding down. Woods
Hole scientists in the 21st century are still going to sea to study
marine animals and the marine environment, and the little village is
firmly established as a world-renowned center for fisheries science,
marine biology, oceanography, and marine ecology. |