Wampanoag peoples Cape Cod has been the home of the
indigenous Wampanoag for centuries prior to
European colonization. They lived from the sea and were accomplished farmers. They understood the principles of
sustainable forest management, and were known to light
controlled fires to keep the underbrush in check. They helped the
Pilgrims, who arrived in the fall of 1620, survive at their new
Plymouth Colony. The Wampanoag gradually lost their lands during the period of European incursion through land cessions and violent conflict with white settlers. The 1993 documentary
Natives of the Narrowland shows the history of the Wampanoag people through Cape Cod archaeological sites. In 1974, the Mashpee Wampanoag Tribal Council was formed to articulate the concerns of those with Native American ancestry. They petitioned the federal government in 1975 and again in 1990 for official recognition of the Mashpee Wampanoag as a tribe. In May 2007, the Wampanoag tribe was federally recognized.
European exploration Cape Cod was a landmark for early explorers. It may have been the "Promontory of
Vinland" mentioned by the
Norse voyagers (985–1025), although this is disputed. The Manomet River area (taken up by the western end of the Cape Cod Canal in the early 20th century) is claimed by some to have been visited by
Leif Eiriksson, and a stone wall discovered in Provincetown in 1805 is also claimed to have been built by his younger brother
Thorvald Eiriksson around AD 1007, when the keel of his ship was repaired in the harbor, according to
Norse sagas. He was killed later in the same journey and is said to have been returned to this spot for burial. However, there is no tangible support of the presence of Norse voyagers on Cape Cod, and the view is not generally accepted by archaeologists or historians.
Giovanni da Verrazzano approached it from the south in 1524. He named
Martha's Vineyard Claudia, after
Claude of France, the wife of
Francis I of France. In 1525, Portuguese explorer
Estêvão Gomes called it
Cabo de las Arenas while sailing under the Spanish crown. In 1602,
Bartholomew Gosnold named the tip Cape Cod, the surviving term and the ninth oldest English place-name in the U.S.
Samuel de Champlain charted its sand-silted harbors in 1606, and
Henry Hudson landed there in 1609. Captain
John Smith noted it on his map of 1614, and at last the
Pilgrims entered the "Cape Harbor" and made their first landing near
Provincetown on November 11, 1620. They had their first encounter with the native inhabitants in nearby
Eastham.
European settlement Cape Cod was among the first places settled by
Puritan colonists in North America. The Cape's fifteen towns developed slowly, aside from
Barnstable (1639),
Sandwich (1637), and
Yarmouth (1639). The final town to be established on the Cape was
Bourne in 1884, breaking off from Sandwich. Provincetown was a group of huts until the 18th century. A channel from
Massachusetts Bay to
Buzzards Bay is shown on Southack's map of 1717. The present Cape Cod Canal was slowly developed from 1870 to 1914. The federal government purchased it in 1928. Because of early colonial settlement and intensive land use, the Cape's vegetation was
depauperate and trees were scarce by the time that
Henry Thoreau saw Cape Cod during his four visits over 1849 to 1857. The settlers heated by fires, and it took 10 to 20 cords (40 to 80 m3) of wood to heat a home, so they cleared most of Cape Cod of timber early on. They planted familiar crops, but these were unsuited to Cape Cod's thin, glacially derived soils. For instance, much of Eastham was planted with wheat. The settlers practiced the burning of woodlands to release nutrients into the soil. Improper and
intensive farming led to erosion and the loss of topsoil. Farmers grazed their cattle on the grassy dunes of coastal Massachusetts, only to watch "in horror as the denuded sands 'walked' over richer lands, burying cultivated fields and fences." Dunes on the outer Cape became more common, and many harbors filled in with eroded soils. By 1800, much of Cape Cod's firewood had to be transported by boat from
Maine. The paucity of vegetation was worsened by the raising of
merino sheep that reached its peak in New England around 1840. The early
Industrial Revolution occurred through much of Massachusetts and
Rhode Island, but it mostly bypassed Cape Cod due to a lack of significant waterpower in the area. The Cape developed as a large fishing and
whaling center as a result, and also because of its geographic position. After 1860 and the opening of the
American West, farmers abandoned agriculture on the Cape. By 1950, forests had recovered to an extent not seen since the 18th century.
Modern era picking in 1906 Cape Cod became a summer haven for city dwellers beginning at the end of the 19th century. Improved rail transportation made the towns of the Upper Cape, such as
Bourne and
Falmouth, accessible to
Bostonians. At the beginning of the twentieth century, the Northeastern mercantile elite built many large, shingled "cottages" along
Buzzards Bay. The relaxed summer environment offered by Cape Cod was highlighted by writers including
Joseph C. Lincoln, who published novels and countless short stories about Cape Cod folks in popular magazines such as
The Saturday Evening Post and the
Delineator.
Guglielmo Marconi made the first transatlantic
wireless transmission originating in the United States from Cape Cod, at
Wellfleet. The beach below the bluffs where his station was located is now called
Marconi Beach. In 1914, he began construction of a new transatlantic wireless receiver station in
Chatham and a companion transmitter station in
Marion. In 1920, the stations were acquired by RCA and, in 1921, Chatham began operations as a maritime radio station communicating to ships at sea using the callsign
WCC. WCC supported the communications of
Amelia Earhart,
Howard Hughes,
Admiral Byrd, and the
Hindenburg. Marconi chose Chatham due to its vantage point on the Atlantic Ocean, surrounded on three sides by water.
Walter Cronkite narrated a 17-minute documentary in 2005 about the history of the Chatham Station. Much of the east-facing Atlantic seacoast of Cape Cod consists of wide, sandy beaches. In 1961, a significant portion of this coastline, already slated for housing subdivisions, was made a part of the Cape Cod National Seashore by President
John F. Kennedy. It was protected from private development and preserved for public use. Large portions are open to the public, including the Marconi Site in
Wellfleet. This is a park encompassing the site of the first two-way transoceanic radio transmission from the United States. (
Theodore Roosevelt used Marconi's equipment for this transmission.) The
Kennedy Compound in
Hyannis Port was President Kennedy's
summer White House during his presidency, and the Kennedy family continues to maintain residences on the compound. President
Grover Cleveland maintained a summer home in the Gray Gables section of Bourne. Other notable residents of Cape Cod have included actress
Julie Harris, US Supreme Court justice
Louis Brandeis, figure skater
Todd Eldredge, composer and radio personality
Canary Burton, and novelists
Norman Mailer and
Kurt Vonnegut. Influential natives included patriot
James Otis, historian and writer
Mercy Otis Warren, jurist
Lemuel Shaw, and naval officer
John Percival. ==Lighthouses==