A Brief History of Cohasset
Oliver H. Howe
From Savor of Salt, edited by Jacqueline
M. Dormitzer (Town of Cohasset, Mass., 2006), pp. 1-7.
Oliver H. Howe (1860-1948) was a physician and local historian.
Born in Dedham, he earned his medical degree at Harvard and began
his practice in Cohasset in 1887. He was a member of the first Committee
on Town History, which published Bigelow’s Narrative History
of Cohasset in 1898, and a trustee of the Cohasset Free Public Library.
Howe wrote this overview of Cohasset history in 1941, at the age of
81.
Every town has a certain individuality owing to its site, its occupations,
and the traditions of its people . . .
Cohasset was originally a part of Hingham, which was settled and
incorporated in 1635. The area of Cohasset was common land in the
early years; but the salt marshes, being clear of forest and with
hay ready to be cut, were of particular value and began to be divided
as early as 1647.
In 1670 it was desired to divide all the land which is now Cohasset
among the Hingham proprietors. Lieutenant Joshua Fisher, a noted surveyor
of Dedham, was engaged for the purpose. Previous to this, travel was
probably along the shore and by Indian trails. Fisher laid out a road
system; each road straight with intersections at right angles. The
whole tract was divided into 700 shares; individuals were granted
shares in number corresponding to their prominence and rank. Lots
were generally a mile long and varied in width according to the number
of shares the individual had. All boundaries were straight and usually
parallel to the intersecting roads. The narrower lots were only two
or three rods wide. Each lot from its length contained salt marsh,
hillside, forest, and swamp; like corned beef, “a streak of
fat and a streak of lean.” Four divisions were made and every
man had a lot in each division, so that every proprietor’s land
was widely scattered. Some old stone walls in the woods stand on the
original lines of this survey.
Fisher evidently had a strong agricultural motive in mind, for he
laid out the main street [King Street], twice as wide as any of the
others, a mile from the harbor. Cohasset is a town of rugged rocks
and it is evident that Nature did not intend it for agricultural territory.
This does not imply a lack of fertility in the soil, but is mainly
due to its rocky character and the fact that the ledges do not allow
for large fields. On the other hand, the rocks increase the romantic
beauty of the town and also of many gardens.
The early Cohasset deeds contained the phrase: So many “acres,
more or less, of land and rocks.” In recent times, however,
the rocks have become more valuable than the land, as they form picturesque
sites for summer cottages.
The transition from farming to the more profitable fishing industry
was emphasized by a sudden occurrence. When Hingham reluctantly granted
the privilege of a separate meetinghouse for Cohasset, the farmers
living on Lieutenant Fisher’s main street, a mile from the shore
and now known as King Street, said: “If we are going to have
a meetinghouse, the place to put it is up here on the hill.”
So they prepared the timbers and spread them on the ground, ready
for framing; but some active men from the harbor came in the night,
took the timbers, and by morning had the church all framed together
on the lower level of the Town Common.
There it stands today (a newer and larger building, however), and
their bold adventure proved to be manifest destiny, for Cohasset’s
chief activity has been its fishing industry.
Up to 1840, cod fishing was the main business and was carried on
in the Grand Banks of Newfoundland. Since then, the mackerel fisheries
were more attractive, with the advantage of shorter voyages. At one
time sixty Cohasset vessels were engaged in this trade, and in the
1840s, ‘50s, and ‘60s [Cohasset] was one of the leading
fishing ports of Massachusetts.
Boys looked eagerly toward the far horizon and began a life on the
sea in early years. One of them later testified that he went to sea
at the age of six years! Many of them became captains at the age of
twenty-one years or younger.
In the spring the schools of mackerel made a regular progress up
the coast. They were first found as far south as Cape May and during
the season had to be followed north as far as the coast of Maine.
The early fishing was by hand lines from the decks of vessels, each
man using two lines. Later, seining was used, the seine being carried
by a small boat around the school, and the bottom of the seine was
closed by a “purse line.” This was a more rapid method
of fishing but required more equipment and a good deal of skill. Cohasset
wharves, now deserted, were in the first period covered with flakes
for drying codfish and later with men and boys salting down the mackerel
in barrels.
Many of the vessels were built of timber grown in Cohasset forests
and launched into our harbor. Sailmaking, blacksmithing, coopering,
and other accessory trades were busily carried on, and salt for the
fish was provided by several extensive plants in which sea water was
evaporated. Stores for outfitting vessels for new voyages occupied
several large buildings. The experiences of fishing voyages produced
a race of deep-sea captains sailing for foreign ports and around the
world.
These are now favorite waters for yachting, and Cohasset has had
an active yacht club since 1894. Captain Aubrey Crocker of Cohasset
sailed the yacht Puritan in the 1885 races defending the America’s
Cup. He also sailed the Navahoe against the Britannia from the Isle
of Wight to Cherbourg in 1893, winning back the Brenton Reef Cup to
American possession. Boat building and repair work has been well cared
for in Cohasset, and although types of craft have shifted, the harbor
still has a nautical atmosphere.
Land travel and transportation in the old days, on account of poor
roads, was difficult, and packets took all the freight between Cohasset
and Boston. No charge was made for passengers, but if the skipper
needed help in managing sails, he was free to call on them . . .
The Cohasset Historical Society has the seat of the first four-wheeled
wagon used in the town—a primitive affair supported by a buckboard
. . .
The South Shore Railroad was opened in 1849 and ran two trains to
Boston and two returning, changing at Braintree. Cohasset was the
terminus.
Aside from the marine trades, Cohasset, unlike its parent town,
Hingham, has not aspired to manufacturing. Nevertheless, Mordecai
Lincoln, ancestor of Abraham Lincoln, had ironworks here in 1704.
He smelted iron from bog iron ore and made hinges, andirons, and other
domestic articles. He had three dams on the same stream and besides
the ironworks had a sawmill and a gristmill.
Like Mexico, Cohasset has a gulf, and the entrance of this gulf
furnished waterpower from the tides. In 1792 a notable mill was erected
which ground all sorts of grain and rice and was in operation for
seventy years until it was burned in 1862.
For many years wrecks were common upon the savage rocks off the
Cohasset shore, and Cohasset men displayed great heroism in saving
lives and vessels. The most important wreck was that of the emigrant
ship St. John from Galway, Ireland, in 1849. The number of lives lost
was ninety-nine and only twenty-two were saved. It is well described
by Henry D. Thoreau in his book entitled Cape Cod. Every winter storm
had its full toll of wrecks, and even in November 1888 there were
fifteen vessels wrecked between Scituate and Boston. With the more
general use of steam navigation, wrecks are much less frequent. In
old times a northeast gale too often drove sailing craft upon our
lee shore. The Massachusetts Humane Society, which established its
first lifeboat in Cohasset, relied upon these same sturdy men. The
United States Coast Guard, with permanent stations, crews, and more
elaborate equipment, has superseded earlier methods of life saving,
but the valor of the hardy Cohasset fishermen has not been surpassed.
The most disastrous storm within my recollection was that of November
1898, when the steamer Portland was lost. It was quite as damaging
to shore structures and roads as to vessels. I went down to our harbor
at high tide and found the roads flooded and boats traversing the
streets. The water was up to the windowsills of a small store. The
next morning I went down again, and the proprietor of the store was
sweeping off his platform. I said: “Mr. Nichols, did the storm
damage your goods very much?” “Not a bit.” I then
told him how I found the water the day before and he said: “You
know I have lived round here quite a while. I have been expecting
this.” “Well,” I said, “we have not had such
a storm for fifty years, have you been expecting it all that time?”
“Well,” he said, “when I go home at night, I put
the goods on the counter.” How is that for an example of prudence?
Going inside the store, I saw the wet mark all around the wallpaper,
and he showed me the old mark on the same wallpaper made by the water
level in 1851, which was thirteen inches lower than that in 1898.
A very accurate record and very durable wallpaper!
The building of Minot’s Lighthouse fulfilled a pressing need.
The first lighthouse, a skeleton iron structure, was destroyed in
the great gale of 1851. After several years of difficult planning,
the new lighthouse was begun. The ledge on which it stands was under
water at most stages of the tide, and work was only possible for very
brief periods during the first year and those were often prevented
by rough water. The uneven surface of the rock had to be cut into
several levels and the first course of stone fitted into it with great
nicety. The stones of later courses were all dovetailed together and
the different courses secured with iron dowels. The tower is thirty
feet in diameter at the base and 114 feet high. The first forty-four
feet is solid, with the exception of a well three feet in diameter
in the center, which contains enough drinking water for the keepers
for six months. Minot’s was completed in 1860 and now shows
distinctive flashes 1-4-3. The stone is Quincy granite, and it was
cut and fitted on the Cohasset shore, at a place called Government
Island. Two circular stone pavements are still to be seen upon which
the different courses were set up and fitted before being taken to
the ledge. In severe storms the lighthouse is at intervals enveloped
in a column of spray rising to 150 feet, so that it entirely disappears
from sight for a few seconds.
The keepers’ families live on Government Island, so called.
Two men must always be on the light, and changes are made, “weather
permitting,” every three weeks.
A large tract of 700 acres of unbroken forest known as the Whitney
Woods is held by the Trustees of Public Reservations, who have maintained
bridle paths, foot trails, and picnic privileges that are enjoyed
by the public, and it is visited each year by several thousand people.
The town has also Wheelwright Park, a forest area of eighty acres,
and Sandy Beach is held by a board of trustees for bathing of Cohasset
residents.
The central feature of Cohasset town life is the old Common, more
than a quarter mile in length, well shaded by elms and with an attractive
natural pond. Two old churches dating from 1747 and 1824, together
with the town hall, form a nucleus of public buildings, and the dignified
stone tower of St. Stephen’s Church commands it from the adjoining
rocky hill. The surroundings of the Common consist of dwelling houses
of the old type; six of them bear dates in the 1700s, and several
were built by old sea captains. The aspect of the whole scene is one
of quiet dignity and beauty unsurpassed in Massachusetts.
The first homes in Cohasset were those of the sons and daughters
of the Hingham proprietors and were upon the lots that had been granted
to their parents. The houses must have been very simple and primitive.
The people were noted for industry and frugality. Whether supported
by agriculture or by fishing, they lived only by hard work. The frugal
type of mind persisted through later generations and is even now recognized.
Records of old-time frugality are shown by an old town report of
1849—almost a century ago. The total expenditures of the town
in that year were $4,979.84. For schools, $1,261.50—Roads, $800.
Wages for a man, yoke of oxen, and a cart, one day, were $1.50. For
a man, horse, and plow for one and a half days, also $1.50. The combined
offices of selectman, assessor, and overseer of the poor commanded
a salary of $28 for each member.
There was no town hall, but the rent of Cohasset Academy for town
meetings, high school, and town offices was $69.80 per year! The first
fire engine (undoubtedly a “hand-tub”) cost $986.75, and
the South Shore Railroad was paid one dollar for transporting it from
Boston. Town frugality persisted long after this, for in 1887 the
tax rate was $3.60—the lowest in Massachusetts . . .
As the fishing industry became absorbed by large centers like Gloucester
and Boston, the romantic and beautiful scenery, the cool ocean breezes,
and the quiet and restful life attracted many people to this shore.
Jerusalem Road and other localities on the shore were sought by summer
residents, and some such families have been here for several generations.
Cohasset has never had any hotels of large size. Peter Kimball was
the pioneer with his Pleasant Beach House in 1846. The old Black Rock
House and several quiet and select boardinghouses followed. There
have always been dining places where excellent seafood could be obtained,
and the charm of Cohasset has led many people, who came here in a
transient way, to build houses, join the summer colony, or make permanent
homes. Active yacht and golf clubs add to the attraction. The appreciation
of Nature has transformed the quaint and primitive fishing town into
a scene of rare picturesque beauty, while the old-time flavor has
been in a measure preserved, and Cohasset has been a delight to all
who have been able to enjoy it.
From Oliver H. Howe, “A Brief Sketch of the History of
Cohasset,” Cohasset Historical Society pamphlet, 1941.