The area around Nahant was inhabited for thousands of years prior to
European colonization of the Americas, but little is known of this period until European records began to document the area in the early 1600s. In 1605,
Samuel de Champlain interacted briefly with native people in Nahant and remarked that "all along this coast there is much cleared land sewn with Indian corn." By the 1630s at the time of English colonization, the seat of "Sagamore James" of the
Naumkeag, known in his own tongue as
Montowampate, was at the outlet of the Saugus River overlooking Nahant, though the island itself may have been controlled by a sachem Poquanum, known to English settlers as Blacke William or Duke William, who around 1632 gave permission to Thomas Dexter to use the island in exchange for an English suit. The word Nahant may mean "at the point," or "twin islands," or it may refer to an important local person named Nahantum. The peninsula was first settled by English colonists in 1630, in the second year of the
Puritan coming: the servants of
Isaac Johnson grazed his cattle on the land, and it was also often used by citizens of
Lynn for grazing
cattle,
sheep and
goats. Although not a separate town until 1853, Nahant was listed as one of thirty "noted Habitations" in New England by William Wood in 1633, and Nahant Poynt appears labeled on a map of the Massachusetts coastline from 1639. During
World War II, East Point was the site of a
coastal artillery battery. It is now a town park, and location of the Marine Science Center for
Northeastern University.
Development The old
Nahant Life-Saving Station (NLSS) on Nahant Road and the new War Memorial erected across the street from the NLSS were renovated in 2004. In 2003, the dilapidated Valley Road School was refurbished and re-commissioned as the Nahant Community Center, which is now home to many local activities and banquets, including the local
Boy Scout Troop 50. On September 25, 2005, the Town of Nahant officially commemorated the completely rebuilt Bailey's Hill Gazebo as the Calantha Sears Gazebo. The original was built for the
bicentennial in 1976, and over the years had fallen into disrepair. With funding from the Woman's Club of Nahant and collaboration with the town of Nahant, local residents contributed to its reconstruction. Besides the cement base, the only remaining piece of the original is the wooden cylinder in the center of the roof, which still bears the "1976" emblem—repainted by Nahant resident Octavia Randolph. ==Geography and transportation==