Buzzards Bay was first named Gosnold's Hope by Captain
Bartholomew Gosnold. The modern name was presumably given by
colonists who saw a large bird that they called a
buzzard near its shores. The bird was actually an
osprey. After a downturn caused by
DDT, today increasing numbers of osprey breed along the shores of the bay thanks to restoration efforts led by the Buzzards Bay Coalition and longtime Westport residents Gil and Josephine Fernandez. The first naval engagement of the
American Revolution, the
Battle off Fairhaven, occurred in Buzzards Bay when
patriots retrieved two vessels that were captured by the British sloop of war
Falcon. On 14 May 1775, American Captain Daniel Egery and Capt. Nathaniel Pope of
Fairhaven in the sloop
Success (40 tons, 30 men) retrieved two vessels captured by the British crew of Captain John Linzee (Lindsey), Royal Navy commander of HMS
Falcon (14 guns, 110 men). Crew member
Noah Stoddard and the others took the first naval prisoners of the war, 13 British crew; two were wounded and one died. The bay was the location, in 1936, of one of only five documented fatal shark attacks in the commonwealth's history. In 1987, researchers from the
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution experimented with a new growth structure allowing
Blue mussels to grow above the
Benthic Turbidity Zone leading to a new commercial scale
mariculture technique. In 1991, towns located on Buzzards Bay suffered the worst effects from the
storm surge of
Hurricane Bob. The Buzzards Bay disaster happened on April 27, 2003. An
oil spill of 98,000 gallons of oil leaked from a
barge, destroying much of the
shellfish business and killing many
birds.
Ra Ra Riot's John Pike's body was found in Buzzard's Bay. He had disappeared from a party in Fairhaven, Massachusetts in June 2007, and was found several weeks later in the bay. On January 7, 2018, due to the
2017–18 North American cold wave, part of the bay froze over. ==Islands==