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This
article first appeared In the Winter 2000 issue
of Historic Nantucket
Nantucket in a Nutshell
By Elizabeth Oldham
From the bluff at Sankaty Head in Siasconset, looking
eastward straight across the Atlantic Ocean to Spain,
it is not difficult to imagine a late summer's day
in the year 1602 and in the mind's eye sight the
bark Concord, under the command of Bartholomew
Gosnold, tacking alongshore. The vessel had embarked
at Falmouth, England, and having passed around Cape
Cod was bound for the Virginia colony; Gosnold did
not go ashore, but was the first to chart the island's
location.a remote remnant of "the glacier's
gift."
For the next several decades Nantucket would continue
to be populated solely by some 3000 natives of the
Wampanoag tribe whose subsistence depended on what
they could grow, hunt down, or take from the ponds
and shorelines. There would be no incursion of Englishmen
until 1641, when the island was deeded by the authorities
then in control of all lands between Cape
Cod and the Hudson River to Thomas Mayhew
and his son, also Thomas, merchants of Watertown
and Martha's Vineyard. From their base on Martha's
Vineyard, the Mayhews not only grazed sheep on Nantucket
but had zealously "Christianized" much
of the native population, who would come to be known
as "praying Indians." Now the Mayhews
owned the island and would hold onto it until 1659,
when they sold it to nine solid citizens from the
Merrimack Valley who were seeking to improve their
circumstances; among them were Tristram Coffin,
Thomas Macy, Christopher Hussey, and Richard Swain,
names that would resonate throughout Nantucket.s
history. The Nantucket Historical Association's
contemporary "true copy" of the purchase
agreement suggests that it may have been Thomas
Macy's occupation as a merchant and clothier that
prompted Mayhew senior to include in the purchase
price of thirty pounds sterling "also two beaver
hatts one for myself and one for my wife."
Although the purchase of Nantucket from the Mayhews
was primarily a business venture, the "first
settlers," especially Thomas Macy, who had
had a doctrinal run-in with the town fathers in
Salisbury, wished to extricate themselves
from the increasingly repressive conditions being
imposed by the Puritans of the Massachusetts Bay
Colony. Thus, in the late fall of 1659, the Macy
family, with several neighbors and friends, twelve
people in all, sailed in a small boat bound for
Nantucket, rounding the hook of Cape Cod - where
even today sailors keep a weather eye for shifting
winds and rough water - at last coming ashore at
the west end of the island. Fortunately for the
settlers, the Wampanoags were friendly, and had
it not been for their hospitable succour during
the long cold winter at Madaket the newcomers might
have starved or frozen to death. It would be a long
time before those hardy souls would be followed
in sufficient numbers to form a community. By 1700,
only about 300 white people and 800 Indians were
living peacefully with one another, the native population
having been decimated by diseases introduced by
the Europeans.
Nantucket - along with Martha'.s Vineyard and the
Elizabeth Islands - was attached to the New York
colony until 1692, when by act of Parliament it
became a part of the Bay Colony of Massachusetts.
The first town, established around a natural harbor
on the north shore, was called Sherburne, but that
harbor silted up and by the end of the eighteenth
century the houses, businesses, and most of the
citizenry had moved eastward to the Great Harbor,
where it stands today. In 1795 the town was named
Nantucket.
Conquering the "Watery World"
Beginning with the English settlement, the "faraway
land," as Nantucket is translated in the Wampanoag
language, developed into a community of small farmers
and sheep herders (the manufacture of wool was a
vital industry in colonial New England). In addition
to farming the land and hunting small game, the
natives and the newcomers took sustenance from the
waters surrounding Nantucket, in which varieties
of finfish, particularly cod, and shellfish abounded.
Species of small whales occasionally washed ashore
and were prized for their oil, but by the 1690s
the Nantucketers had begun to organize expeditions
in small boats to pursue the "right" whales
- so-called because they were of moderate size and
slow moving and therefore easy to catch - that passed
close to shore on their annual migrations. Whale
houses with elevated platforms were established
along the south shore, and when the spouting whales
were spotted the boats set off through the pounding
surf to capture them. They were towed to shore and
the carcasses stripped of the blubber that would
be "tried out" to extract the valuable
oil.
Deep-sea whaling began around 1715, a few years
after the first sperm whale had been taken by a
sloop blown out to sea in a gale. Oil from the "head
matter" of this gigantic creature was found
to be of a quantity and quality unmatched by any
natural or manmade product then available. But the
great sperm whale inhabited the deepest parts of
the oceans, so Nantucket men began to make offshore
voyages of fifty miles and more, but needed to be
within reach of shore to off-load their catch and
have it processed. By the mid-eighteenth century
larger whaleships were being built and became seagoing
factories, with all the equipment needed to extract
and store huge quantities of oil. For the next hundred
years Nantucket whaleships would traverse the oceans
of the world on their legendary three-, four-, and
five-year voyages in search of "greasy luck."
Back on the island, the economy was centered on
the whale fishery, with ropewalks, cooperages, blacksmith
and boatbuilding shops, ship chandleries, sail lofts,
and warehouses. Supporting businesses such as seamen.s
boarding houses, grog shops, clothing shops, purveyors
of groceries and dry goods sprang up. When the whaleships
came back to port, their precious cargo was sold
at great profit to mainland refineries for use in
domestic lamps and street lights and for myriad
industrial uses. Candles made from the solid spermaceti
wax derived from the head matter were the finest
household illuminants yet known and were produced
in enormous quantities on the island, accounting
for some of the impressive fortunes amassed in the
industry. The town was a bustling, vital, commercial
center, the sleek vessels of the China trade bringing
home porcelains and silks and exotic artifacts .
items that found a ready market among the island.s
prosperous families. For almost a century and a
half . from the early 1700s to the late 1830s .Nantucket
was the whaling capital of the world. As Melville
wrote in Moby-Dick: "Thus have these
. . . Nantucketers overrun and conquered the watery
world like so many Alexanders."
Throughout that period the island.s political, economic,
and religious leadership was dominated by the Religious
Society of Friends - the Quakers. Their experience
of persecution, in England to begin with and subsequently
in the New World, led them to Nantucket.s shores,
where although they were not welcomed with open
arms they were at least tolerated. By the turn of
the eighteenth century the Friends, according to
one historian, "had secured a hold upon the
islanders such as no other religious denomination
had ever acquired." Their rejection of worldliness,
their spurning of adornment, and their "lack
of sympathy for anything calculated to make earthly
life happy or even pleasant" did not prevent
them from having an astute business sense; many
of Nantucket.s first families.the Starbucks, Barneys,
Coffins, Macys, Folgers, Gardners, Husseys, Colemans,
Worths - Quakers all - would be pre-eminent in the
conduct of the whaling industry.
Greasy Luck Runs Out
The palmy days would not last. A series of events
over a period of about thirty years would see the
"Nation of Nantucket," as it was dubbed
by Ralph Waldo Emerson, brought to its knees. In
the 1830s the petroleum fields of Pennsylvania were
producing kerosene, cheaper and more easily obtainable
than the liquid gold the whalers pursued. A devastating
fire - the Great Fire of 1846 - roared through the
night, leaving the town a smouldering ruin and a
hundred families homeless and destitute. The years-long
whaling voyages were horrendously costly and the
whaling grounds had been overfished. A sandbar at
the entrance to Nantucket's magnificent harbor prevented
the much larger and heavily loaded whaleships from
approaching the wharves, and they had to be off-loaded
outside the bar or carried over it in an ingenious
floating drydock called the "camels"
a device that was short-lived because it was too
costly to operate. The mainland ports of New Bedford
and Salem had access to the burgeoning railroads.
Gold was discovered in California and hundreds of
Nantucket men went there to seek their fortunes
in the earth as they had been sought in the sea.
The Civil War would strike the final blow: almost
400 Nantucket men took up the Union cause, seventy-three
of them losing their lives. Their families on Nantucket,
with no economic infrastructure in place, would
have hard times. The once bustling waterfront was
filled with rotting hulks; there was no industry
that could succeed or replace the whale fishery.
Between 1840 and 1870 the population of Nantucket
decreased from almost ten thousand to a little more
than four thousand.
The demise of whaling coincided almost exactly with
the dwindling influence of the Society of Friends.
Torn apart by decades of factionalism, the Quakers
faded out of the picture, leaving as heritage the
pristine little town - and, of course, two centuries
of dynamic history.
Nantucket Redux
The summer visitor would be the catalyst for Nantucket's
recovery. As early as 1828 island entrepreneurs
were touting "the necessary, invigorating,
and delightful indulgence of Sea Bathing."
By 1845 several large hostelries had been established,
and that summer the editor of the Nantucket Inquirer
wrote "We see by the papers that Nantucket
is becoming quite a fashionable place . . . and
that a larger number than usual have resorted to
the island the present season, in quest of health
or pleasure. . . . If suitable accommodations were
provided, both in town and at Siasconset, [the island]
would take a prominent station among the watering
places, which collect their crowds during the summer
months."
The selling of Nantucket began in a big way in the
1870s. Mainland newspapers carried advertisements
for the big hotels, several of them still here today.
Respected monthly magazines of the day - Scribner's,
Harper's, Lippincott's - sang the praises of
the faraway island in lengthy feature articles.
The war behind them, Nantucket women opened their
homes to summer boarders, providing "large
airy rooms" and "nicely cooked bluefish"
as attractions. The town got behind the effort,
advertising "two boats a day" and printing
a flyer titled "Nantucket Island, An Ideal
Health and Vacation Resort." The Season was
created, and Nantucket has never looked back.
Now one of the most popular and attractive destinations
in the world, Melville's little "elbow of sand"
has become a new Nation of Nantucket, unparelleled
in the distinction of its architecture and its historical
ambience.
