Provincetown Information
Provincetown welcomes all visitors with a journey through huge sand
dunes as you enter town. This area is known for its vast beaches, including
Herring Cove Beach and Race Point. P-town's rich history of individualism
come to life in the many shops and businesses lining Commercial Street,
along with the patrons who visit them. The Province Lands Visitor Center
provides local information and also features paved bike trails running
through its large dunes. For ocean adventurers, whalewatching excursions
leave on a daily basis from the wharf area.
Provincetown
was incorporated in 1727, but its history begins much earlier since
its well protected harbor offered excellent protection from storms.
The European explorer Gosnold recorded a stop in Provincetown as early
as 1602 and the harbor was the site of the first landing of the Mayflower.
The Pilgrims signed the Mayflower compact in the harbor, to codify the
way in which they were going to administer the new colony they intended
to establish. Although rich fishing grounds resulted in the seasonal
leasing of fisheries with licenses granted for bass, mackerel and cod
fishing, the first permanent settlement didn't take place until 1700.
Provincetown
grew very slowly during the 18th century and its population fluctuated
with the price of fish. Farming was of secondary importance and aside
from the fishing industry, there were only some salt works and one mill.
After the Revolution, the town boomed and its population rose 276.6%
between 1790 and 1830. Despite its relative lack of good farm land,
by the middle of the 19th century, Provincetown had developed as the
prime maritime, fishing and commercial center of the Cape. The Civil
War, which destroyed so much New England business, only provided more
markets for Provincetown's fish. Portuguese sailors, picked up by American
ships in the Azores and Cape Verde Islands to fill out their crews,
came to Provincetown to live and additional Portuguese immigrants had
moved to town by the 19th century to work on the whaling boats and coastal
fishing vessels. In 1875, there were 25 coastwise and 36 ocean vessels
operating in town, more than any community in the state including Boston.
Provincetown
was a bustling place with all of the ancillary maritime businesses operating,
such as ship chandlers, shipwrights, sail makers, caulkers, riggers
and blacksmiths.
The
picturesque setting and salt air also began attracting artists and writers
by the end of the 19th century. This contingent grew and poets, novelists,
journalists, socialists, radicals and dilettantes formed a colony which
in 1915 opened the Provincetown Players in a converted fish house on
the wharf. Among the writers whose works were performed there was Eugene
O'Neill. When the fishing industry faltered from competition with cheaper
Nova Scotia cod, and the Portland Gale of 1898 swept away half of the
town's wharves, the resort population of the town provided jobs to take
the place of those lost. In the 1920's the artistic and literary productions
of the town were of international repute and the abandoned sites of
maritime businesses became the new homes of the seasonal visitor as
sail lofts, warehouses and barns became studios, galleries and shops.
Today, the wealth of preserved historic buildings combines with the
lure of the sea to support a huge tourist and summer home industry.
Situated
on the northern tip of Cape Cod, Provincetown is bordered by Truro on
the east and surrounded by the Atlantic Ocean on all other sides. It
is 49 miles north of Hyannis, 78 miles east of Plymouth, 114 miles southeast
of Boston, and 290 miles from New York City.
Narrative
compiled by the Massachusetts Department of Housing and Community Development
(DHCD).