Gloucester, Massachusetts: Difference between revisions
Spatrick99 (talk | contribs) changed IPA pronounciation from local accent to American English . |
Undid revision 1263883559 by 2603:6012:1F0:B9A0:8021:73:435A:FC88 (talk) |
||
(628 intermediate revisions by more than 100 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Use mdy dates|date=August 2022}} |
|||
{{other uses2|Gloucester}} |
|||
{{Infobox settlement |
{{Infobox settlement |
||
|official_name = Gloucester, Massachusetts |
| official_name = Gloucester, Massachusetts |
||
|nickname = "The Place To Be In The Summer" |
| nickname = "The Place To Be In The Summer" |
||
|motto = "America's Oldest Seaport" |
| motto = "America's Oldest Seaport" |
||
|image_skyline = Gloucester MA - Fisherman's Memorial.jpg |
| image_skyline = Gloucester MA - Fisherman's Memorial.jpg |
||
|imagesize = 250px |
| imagesize = 250px |
||
|image_caption = ''[[Gloucester Fisherman's Memorial|Man at the Wheel]]'', Fisherman's Memorial Cenotaph |
| image_caption = ''[[Gloucester Fisherman's Memorial|Man at the Wheel]]'', Fisherman's Memorial Cenotaph |
||
|image_seal = Gloucester, |
| image_seal = Seal of Gloucester, Massachusetts (1882).png |
||
|image_flag = |
| image_flag = |
||
|image_map = |
| image_map = Essex County Massachusetts incorporated and unincorporated areas Gloucester highlighted.svg |
||
|mapsize = |
| mapsize = 260px |
||
|map_caption = Location in Essex County |
| map_caption = Location in [[Essex County, Massachusetts|Essex County]] and [[Massachusetts]]. |
||
| |
| pushpin_map = Massachusetts#USA |
||
| |
| pushpin_label = Gloucester |
||
| pushpin_map_caption = Location in the United States |
|||
|map_caption1 = |
|||
|subdivision_type = Country |
| subdivision_type = [[List of sovereign states|Country]] |
||
|subdivision_name = United States |
| subdivision_name = United States |
||
|subdivision_type1 = [[ |
| subdivision_type1 = [[U.S. state|State]] |
||
|subdivision_name1 = [[Massachusetts]] |
| subdivision_name1 = [[Massachusetts]] |
||
|subdivision_type2 = [[List of counties in Massachusetts|County]] |
| subdivision_type2 = [[List of counties in Massachusetts|County]] |
||
|subdivision_name2 = [[Essex County, Massachusetts|Essex]] |
| subdivision_name2 = [[Essex County, Massachusetts|Essex]] |
||
|established_title = Settled |
| established_title = Settled |
||
|established_date = 1623 |
| established_date = 1623 |
||
|established_title2 = Incorporated |
| established_title2 = Incorporated (town) |
||
|established_date2 = 1642 |
| established_date2 = 1642 |
||
|established_title3 = |
| established_title3 = Incorporated (city) |
||
|established_date3 = |
| established_date3 = 1873 |
||
|government_type = [[Mayor-council government|Mayor-council city]] |
| government_type = [[Mayor-council government|Mayor-council city]] |
||
|leader_title = [[Mayor]] |
| leader_title = [[List of mayors of Gloucester, Massachusetts|Mayor]] |
||
|leader_name = |
| leader_name = Gregory P. Verga |
||
|leader_title1 = <!--Board of <br> Selectmen--> |
| leader_title1 = <!--Board of <br> Selectmen--> |
||
|leader_name1 = |
| leader_name1 = |
||
|area_magnitude = |
| area_magnitude = |
||
|area_total_km2 = 107. |
| area_total_km2 = 107.51 |
||
|area_total_sq_mi = 41. |
| area_total_sq_mi = 41.51 |
||
|area_land_km2 = 67. |
| area_land_km2 = 67.84 |
||
|area_land_sq_mi = 26. |
| area_land_sq_mi = 26.19 |
||
|area_water_km2 = |
| area_water_km2 = 39.68 |
||
|area_water_sq_mi = 15. |
| area_water_sq_mi = 15.32 |
||
|population_as_of = |
| population_as_of = [[2020 United States Census|2020]] |
||
|settlement_type = [[City]] |
| settlement_type = [[City]] |
||
|population_total = |
| population_total = 29729 |
||
|population_density_km2 = |
| population_density_km2 = 438.23 |
||
|population_density_sq_mi = |
| population_density_sq_mi = 1135.00 |
||
|elevation_m = 15 |
| elevation_m = 15 |
||
|elevation_ft = 50 |
| elevation_ft = 50 |
||
|timezone = [[Eastern Standard Time Zone|Eastern]] |
| timezone = [[Eastern Standard Time Zone|Eastern]] |
||
|utc_offset = |
| utc_offset = −5 |
||
|timezone_DST = [[Eastern Standard Time Zone|Eastern]] |
| timezone_DST = [[Eastern Standard Time Zone|Eastern]] |
||
|utc_offset_DST = |
| utc_offset_DST = −4 |
||
| |
| coordinates = {{coord|42|36|57|N|70|39|45|W|region:US-MA_type:city|display=inline,title}} |
||
| |
| website = {{url|gloucester-ma.gov}} |
||
| postal_code_type = ZIP code |
|||
|latd = 42 |latm = 36 |lats = 57 |latNS = N |
|||
| postal_code = 01930 |
|||
|longd = 70 |longm = 39 |longs = 45 |longEW = W |
|||
| |
| area_code = [[Area code 351|351]] / [[Area code 978|978]] |
||
| |
| blank_name = [[Federal Information Processing Standard|FIPS code]] |
||
| |
| blank_info = 25-26150 |
||
| |
| blank1_name = [[Geographic Names Information System|GNIS]] feature ID |
||
| blank1_info = 0615084 |
|||
|blank_name = [[Federal Information Processing Standard|FIPS code]] |
|||
| |
| footnotes = |
||
| unit_pref = Imperial |
|||
|blank1_name = [[Geographic Names Information System|GNIS]] feature ID |
|||
| area_footnotes = <ref name="CenPopGazetteer2020">{{cite web|title=2020 U.S. Gazetteer Files|url=https://www2.census.gov/geo/docs/maps-data/data/gazetteer/2020_Gazetteer/2020_gaz_place_25.txt|publisher=United States Census Bureau|accessdate=May 21, 2022}}</ref> |
|||
|blank1_info = 0615084 |
|||
| |
| pop_est_as_of = |
||
| pop_est_footnotes = |
|||
| population_est = |
|||
| population_footnotes = |
|||
| named_for = [[Gloucester]], England |
|||
}} |
}} |
||
'''Gloucester''' {{IPAc-en |
'''Gloucester''' ({{IPAc-en|ˈ|ɡ|l|ɒ|s|t|ər}} {{respell|GLOST|ər}}) is a city in [[Essex County, Massachusetts]], United States. It sits on [[Cape Ann]] and is a part of [[North Shore (Massachusetts)|Massachusetts's North Shore]]. The population was 29,729 at the [[2020 United States census|2020 U.S. Census]].<ref name="Census 2020">{{Cite web| url=https://data.census.gov/cedsci/profile?g=1600000US2526150| title=Census - Geography Profile: Gloucester city, Massachusetts| publisher=[[United States Census Bureau]]| access-date=September 18, 2021}}</ref> An important center of the [[fishing industry]] and a popular summer destination, Gloucester consists of an urban core on the north side of the harbor and the outlying neighborhoods of [[Annisquam, Massachusetts|Annisquam]], Bay View, Lanesville, Folly Cove, [[Magnolia, Massachusetts|Magnolia]], Riverdale, East Gloucester, and West Gloucester. |
||
==History== |
==History== |
||
{{For timeline}} |
|||
{{see also|Timeline of Gloucester, Massachusetts, history}} |
|||
The boundaries of Gloucester originally included the town of [[Rockport, Massachusetts|Rockport]], in an area dubbed "Sandy Bay |
The boundaries of Gloucester originally included the town of [[Rockport, Massachusetts|Rockport]], in an area dubbed "Sandy Bay". The village separated formally from Gloucester on February 27, 1840. In 1873, Gloucester was reincorporated as a city. |
||
=== |
=== Contact period === |
||
[[Native Americans in the United States|Native Americans]] inhabited what would become northeastern Massachusetts for thousands of years prior to the [[European colonization of the Americas]]. At the time of contact, the area was inhabited by [[Agawam people]] under [[sachem]] [[Chief Masconomet|Masconomet]].<ref name=":0">{{Cite book|last=Perley|first=Sidney|url=http://archive.org/details/indianlandtitles00perl|title=The Indian land titles of Essex County, Massachusetts|date=1912|publisher=Salem, Mass. : Essex Book and Print Club|others=The Library of Congress}}</ref> Evidence of a village exists on Pole's Hill in the current Riverdale neighborhood.<ref>{{cite news |title=Native Americans of Cape Ann |url=https://www.capeannmuseum.org/native-americans-cape-ann/ |website=Cape Ann Museum |publisher=Cape Ann Museum |access-date=March 24, 2021}}</ref> |
|||
Gloucester was founded at [[Cape Ann]] by an expedition called the "[[Dorchester Company#Cape Ann settlement|Dorchester Company]]" of men from [[Dorchester, Dorset|Dorchester]] (in the county of [[Dorset]], England) chartered by [[James I of England|James I]] in 1623. It was one of the first [[English colonial empire|English settlements]] in what would become the [[Massachusetts Bay Colony]], and predates both [[Salem, Massachusetts|Salem]] in 1626 and [[Boston]] in 1630. The first company of [[Settler|pioneers]] made landing at Half Moon Beach, and settled nearby, setting up fishing stages in a field in what is now [[Stage Fort Park]]. This settlement's existence is proclaimed today by a memorial tablet, affixed to a 50' boulder in that park. |
|||
In 1606, [[Samuel de Champlain]] explored the harbor, and produced the first known map of Gloucester harbor titling it ''le Beau port''. This map suggests substantial Native American settlement on the shores of the harbor. In 1614 [[John Smith (explorer)|John Smith]] again explored the area, identifying the indigenous inhabitants as ''Aggawom''.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Smith|first=John|url=https://catalog.hathitrust.org/Record/100693021|title=A description of New England; or, The observations, and discoveries of Captain Iohn Smith (admirall of that country) in the north of America, in the year of our Lord 1614; with the successe of sixe ships, that went the next yeare 1615; and the accidents befell him among the French men of warre: with the proofe of the present benefit this countrey affoords; whither this present yeare, 1616, eight voluntary ships are gone to make further tryall.|date=1837|publisher=P. Force|location=Washington}}</ref> In 1623 men from the [[Dorchester Company#Cape Ann settlement|Dorchester Company]] established a permanent fishing outpost in the area.<ref>{{cite web |title=History of Cape Ann |url=https://www.capeannmuseum.org/about/history-cape-ann/ |website=Cape Ann Museum |access-date=March 24, 2021}}</ref> |
|||
Life in this first settlement was harsh and it was short-lived. Around 1626 the place was abandoned, and the people removed themselves to Naumkeag (what is now called [[Salem, Massachusetts]]), where more fertile soil for planting was to be found. The meetinghouse was even disassembled and relocated to the new place of settlement. At some point in the following years - though no record exists - the area was slowly resettled. The town was formally incorporated in 1642. It is at this time that the name "Gloucester" first appears on tax rolls, although in various spellings. The town took its name from the city of [[Gloucester]] in South-West England, perhaps from where many of its new occupants originated but more likely because Gloucester, England was a Parliamentarian stronghold, successfully defended with the aid of [[Robert Devereux, 3rd Earl of Essex|the Earl of Essex]] against the King in the [[Siege of Gloucester]] of 1643. |
|||
At the Cape Ann settlement, a legal form of government was established, and from that [[Massachusetts Bay Colony]] sprung. [[Roger Conant (colonist)|Roger Conant]] was the governor under the Cape Ann patent, and as such, has been called the first governor of Massachusetts.<ref>Shipton, Clifford K. ''Roger Conant: A Founder of Massachusetts,'' pp. 53-4, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1944.</ref><ref>Bartlett, Sarah S. ''Roger Conant in America: Governor and Citizen,'' An Historical Address Delivered at the Conant Family Reunion, Hotel Vendome, Boston, June 13, 1901, p. 8.</ref> |
|||
This new permanent settlement focused on the Town Green area, an inlet in the marshes at a bend in the [[Annisquam River]]. This area is now the site of Grant Circle, a large traffic-rotary at which MA [[Massachusetts Route 128|Route 128]] mingles with a major city street (Washington Street/ [[Massachusetts Route 127|Rt 127]]). Here the first permanent settlers built a meeting house and therefore focused the nexus of their settlement on the 'Island' for nearly 100 years. Unlike other early coastal towns in [[New England]], development in Gloucester was not focused around the harbor as it is today, rather it was inland that people settled first. This is evidenced by the placement of the Town Green nearly two miles from the harbor-front. |
|||
Life in this first settlement was harsh and it was short-lived. The area was abandoned around 1626, and the people removed themselves to Naumkeag (in what is now called [[Salem, Massachusetts]]), where more fertile soil for planting was to be found. The meetinghouse and [[Great House (Cape Ann)|governor's house]] were even disassembled and relocated to the new place of settlement. |
|||
The Town Green is also where the settlers built the first school. By [[Massachusetts Bay Colony]] Law, any town boasting 100 families or more had to provide a public schoolhouse. This requirement was met in 1698, with Thomas Riggs standing as the town's first School-Master. |
|||
=== Second English Settlement === |
|||
Early industry included subsistence farming and logging. Because of the poor soil and rocky hills, Cape Ann was not well suited for farming on a large scale. Small family farms and livestock provided the bulk of the sustenance to the population. Fishing, for which the town is known today, was limited to close-to-shore, with families subsisting on small catches as opposed to the great bounties yielded in later years. The fisherman of Gloucester did not yet command the [[Grand Banks]] until the mid-18th century. |
|||
At some point in the following years (though no record exists), the area was slowly resettled by English colonists. The town was formally incorporated in 1642. It is at this time that the name "Gloucester" first appears on tax rolls, although in various spellings. The town took its name from the city of [[Gloucester]] in southwest England, perhaps from where many of its new occupants originated but more likely because Gloucester, England, was a Parliamentarian stronghold, successfully defended with the aid of [[Robert Devereux, 3rd Earl of Essex|the Earl of Essex]] against the King in the [[Siege of Gloucester]] of 1643. |
|||
Early Gloucestermen cleared great swaths of the forest of Cape Ann for farm and pasture land, using the timber to build structures as far away as Boston. The rocky moors of Gloucester remained clear for two centuries until the forest reclaimed the land in the 20th century. The inland part of the island became known as the 'Commons' the 'Common Village' or "[[Dogtown, Massachusetts|Dogtown]]". Here small dwellings lay scattered amongst the boulders and swamps, along roads that meandered through the hills. These dwellings were at times little more than shanties, only one was even two-stories tall. Despite their size, several generations of families were raised in such houses. One feature of the construction of these houses was that under one side of the floor was dug a cellar hole (for the keeping of food), supported by a foundation of laid-stone (without mortar). These cellar holes are still visible today along the trails throughout the inland part of Gloucester; they, and some walls, are all that remain of the village there. |
|||
[[File:Gloucester Harbor William Morris Hunt.jpeg|thumb|left|275px|''Gloucester Harbor'', ca. 1877, [[William Morris Hunt]]]] |
|||
This new permanent settlement focused on the Town Green area, an inlet in the marshes at a bend in the [[Annisquam River]]. This area is now the site of Grant Circle, a large [[traffic rotary]] at which [[Massachusetts Route 128]] mingles with a major city street (Washington Street/[[Massachusetts Route 127|Rt 127]]). Here the first permanent settlers built a meeting house and therefore focused the nexus of their settlement on the "Island" for nearly 100 years. Unlike other early coastal towns in [[New England]], development in Gloucester was not focused around the harbor as it is today, rather it was inland that people settled first. This is evidenced by the placement of the Town Green nearly two miles from the harbor-front. |
|||
The Town Green is also where the settlers built the first school. By [[Massachusetts Bay Colony]] Law, any town with 100 families or more had to provide a public schoolhouse. This requirement was met in 1698, with Thomas Riggs standing as the town's first schoolmaster. |
|||
In 1700, the selectmen of Gloucester recognized the claim of Samuel English, grandson of Agawam sachem Masconomet, to the land of the town, and paid him seven pounds (equal to £{{Inflation|UK|7|1700|fmt=c}} today) for the quitclaim.<ref name=":0" /> |
|||
The [[White-Ellery House]] was erected in 1710 upon the Town Green. It was built at the edge of a marsh for Gloucester's first settled minister, the Reverend John White (1677–1760).<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.capeannmuseum.org/collections/white-ellery-house-1710/|title=White–Ellery House (1710)|publisher=Cape Ann Museum|access-date=May 5, 2013}}</ref> |
|||
Early industry included subsistence farming and logging. Because of the poor soil and rocky hills, Cape Ann was not well suited for farming on a large scale. Small family farms and livestock provided the bulk of the sustenance to the population. Fishing, for which the town is known today, was limited to close-to-shore, with families subsisting on small catches as opposed to the great bounties yielded in later years. The fishermen of Gloucester did not command the [[Grand Banks]] until the mid-18th century. Historian Christine Heyrman, examining the town's society between 1690 and 1750, finds that at the beginning community sensibility was weak in a town that was a loose agglomeration of individuals. Commerce and capitalism transformed the society, making it much more closely knit with extended families interlocking in business relationships.<ref>Christine Heyrman, ''Commerce and Culture: The Maritime Communities of Colonial Massachusetts, 1690–1750'' (1986)</ref> |
|||
Early Gloucestermen cleared great swaths of the forest of Cape Ann for farm and pasture land, using the timber to build structures as far away as Boston. The rocky moors of Gloucester remained clear for two centuries until the forest reclaimed the land in the 20th century. The inland part of the island became known as the "Commons", the "Common Village", or "[[Dogtown, Massachusetts|Dogtown]]". Small dwellings lay scattered here amongst the boulders and swamps, along roads that meandered through the hills. These dwellings were at times little more than shanties; only one was even two stories tall. Despite their size, several generations of families were raised in such houses. One feature of the construction of these houses was that under one side of the floor was dug a cellar hole (for the keeping of food), supported by a foundation of laid-stone (without mortar). These cellar holes are still visible today along the trails throughout the inland part of Gloucester; they, and some walls, are all that remain of the village there. |
|||
[[File:Gloucester Harbor William Morris Hunt.jpeg|thumb|left|275px|[[Gloucester Harbor (William Morris Hunt)|''Gloucester Harbor'']] {{circa|1877}}, [[William Morris Hunt]]]] |
|||
===Growth=== |
===Growth=== |
||
[[Image:Annisquam River (Massachusetts) map.jpg|thumb|right|upright|1893 map of Gloucester]] |
[[Image:Annisquam River (Massachusetts) map.jpg|thumb|right|upright|1893 map of Gloucester]] |
||
The town grew, and eventually colonists lived on the opposite side of the Annisquam River. This, in a time of legally mandated church attendance, was a long way to walk - or row - on a Sunday morning. In 1718 the settlers on the opposite shore of the river split off from the First Parish community at the Green and formed 'Second Parish.' While still part of the Town of Gloucester, the people of Second, or 'West', Parish now constructed their own Meetinghouse and designated their own place of burial, both of which were in the hills near the marshes behind Wingaersheek Beach. The Meeting house is gone now, but deep in the woods on the Second Parish Road trail one can still find the scattered stones of the abandoned Burial Ground. |
|||
The town grew, and eventually colonists lived on the opposite side of the Annisquam River. In a time of legally mandated [[church attendance]] this was a long way to walk—or row—on a Sunday morning. In 1718 the settlers on the opposite shore of the river split off from the First Parish community at the Green and formed "Second Parish". While still part of the town of Gloucester, the people of Second, or "West", Parish now constructed their own meetinghouse and designated their own place of burial, both of which were in the hills near the marshes behind Wingaersheek Beach. The meetinghouse is gone now, but deep in the woods on the Second Parish Road, Old Thompson road, one can still find the stone foundation and memorial altar, as well as scattered stones of the abandoned burial ground. |
|||
Other parts of town later followed suit. Third Parish, in Northern Gloucester, was founded in 1728. Fourth Parish split off from First Parish in 1742. Finally, in 1754, the people of Sandy Bay (what would later be called Rockport) split off from First Parish to found Fifth Parish. The Sandy Bay church founding was the last religious re-ordering of the Colonial Period. All of these congregations still exist in some form with the exception of Fourth Parish, the site of whose meeting house is now a highway. |
|||
Other parts of town later followed suit. Third Parish, in northern Gloucester, was founded in 1728. Fourth Parish split off from First Parish in 1742. Finally, in 1754, the people of Sandy Bay (what would later be called Rockport) split off from First Parish to found Fifth Parish. The Sandy Bay church founding was the last religious re-ordering of the colonial period. All of these congregations still exist in some form, with the exception of Fourth Parish, the site of whose meeting house is now a highway. |
|||
At one time, there was a thriving granite industry in Gloucester. |
|||
At one time, there was a thriving [[granite]] industry in Gloucester. English writer [[Harriet Martineau]], who visited Gloucester during her travels in the United States in the mid-1830s, commented on the ubiquity of granite there:<blockquote>It has great wealth of granite and fish. It is composed of granite; and almost its only visitors are fish. **** The houses look as if they were squeezed in among the rocks. The granite rises straight behind a house, encroaches on each side, and overhangs the roof, leaving space only for a sprinkling of grass about the door, for a red shrub or two to wave from a crevice, and a drip of water to flow down among gay weeds. Room for these dwellings is obtained by blasting the rocks. Formerly, people were frightened at fragments falling through the roof after a blasting: but now, it has become too common an occurrence to alarm any body.<ref name=Martineau>[https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/52621/pg52621-images.html#Page_207 Martineau, Harriet, ''Society in America'', Vol.II, p.207 New York, 1837) (retrieved Jan. 2, 2023).]</ref></blockquote> |
|||
==Geography and transportation== |
==Geography and transportation== |
||
[[File:Good Harbor Beach Gloucester, Mass 1.jpg|thumb|right|Good Harbor Beach, a beach in Gloucester]] |
|||
Gloucester is located at {{coord|42|37|26|N|70|40|32|W|type:city}} (42.624015, -70.675521).{{GR|1}} According to the [[United States Census Bureau]], the city has a total area of {{convert|41.5|sqmi|km2}}, of which, {{convert|26.0|sqmi|km2}} of it is land and {{convert|15.5|sqmi|km2}} of it (37.42%) is water. |
|||
Gloucester is located at {{coord|42|37|26|N|70|40|32|W|type:city}} (42.624015, −70.675521).<ref name="GR1">{{cite web|url=https://www.census.gov/geographies/reference-files/time-series/geo/gazetteer-files.html|publisher=[[United States Census Bureau]]|access-date=April 23, 2011|date=February 12, 2011|title=US Gazetteer files: 2010, 2000, and 1990}}</ref> According to the [[United States Census Bureau]], the city has a total area of {{convert|107.5|km2|order=flip}}, of which {{convert|67.8|km2|order=flip}} is land and {{convert|39.6|km2|order=flip}}, or 36.88%, is water.<ref>{{Cite web| url=https://www.census.gov| title=Geographic Identifiers: 2010 Demographic Profile Data (G001): Gloucester city, Massachusetts| publisher=[[United States Census Bureau]]| access-date=August 30, 2012}}</ref> |
|||
Gloucester occupies most of the eastern end of Cape Ann, except for the far tip, which is the town of Rockport. |
Gloucester occupies most of the eastern end of Cape Ann, except for the far tip, which is the town of Rockport. The city is split in half by the [[Annisquam River]], which flows northward through the middle of the city into Ipswich Bay. At its southern end, it is connected to Gloucester Harbor by the Blynman Canal. The land along the northwestern shore of the river is marshy, creating several small islands. Gloucester Harbor is divided into several smaller coves, including the Western Harbor (site of the Fisherman's Memorial) and the Inner Harbor (home to the Gloucester fishing fleet). The eastern side of Gloucester Harbor is divided from the rest of [[Massachusetts Bay]] by Eastern Point, extending some {{convert|2|mi|0}} outward from the mainland. There are several parks in the city, the largest of which are [[Ravenswood Park]], [[Stage Fort Park]] and Mount Ann Park. |
||
Gloucester lies between Ipswich Bay to the north and Massachusetts Bay to the south. |
Gloucester lies between Ipswich Bay to the north and Massachusetts Bay to the south. The city is bordered on the east by [[Rockport, Massachusetts|Rockport]], and on the west by [[Ipswich, Massachusetts|Ipswich]], [[Essex, Massachusetts|Essex]] and [[Manchester-by-the-Sea, Massachusetts|Manchester-by-the-Sea]] to the west. (The town line with Ipswich is located across Essex Harbor, and as such there is no land connection between the towns.) Gloucester lies {{convert|16|mi}} east-northeast of [[Salem, Massachusetts|Salem]] and {{convert|31|mi}} northeast of [[Boston]]. Gloucester lies at the eastern terminus of [[Massachusetts Route 128|Route 128]], which ends at [[Massachusetts Route 127A|Route 127A]]. Route 127A begins at [[Massachusetts Route 127|Route 127]] just east of the Route 128 terminus, heading into Rockport before terminating there. Route 127 enters from Manchester-by-the-Sea before crossing the Blynman Canal and passing through downtown towards Rockport. It then re-enters Gloucester near Folly Cove, running opposite of its usual north–south orientation towards its terminus at Route 128. [[Massachusetts Route 133|Route 133]] also terminates within the city, entering from Essex and terminating just west of the Blynman Canal at Route 127. Besides the bridge over the Blynman Canal, there are only two other connections between the eastern and western halves of town, the A. Piatt Andrew Memorial Bridge, carrying Route 128, and the Boston & Maine Railroad Bridge, just north of the Blynman Canal. |
||
Gloucester is home to the [[Cape Ann Transportation Authority]], which serves the city and surrounding towns. |
Gloucester is home to the [[Cape Ann Transportation Authority]], which serves the city and surrounding towns. Two stops (in [[West Gloucester (MBTA station)|West Gloucester]] and in downtown [[Gloucester (MBTA station)|Gloucester]]) provide access to the [[Newburyport/Rockport Line]] of the [[MBTA Commuter Rail]], which extends from Rockport along the [[North Shore (Massachusetts)|North Shore]] to Boston's [[North Station]]. The nearest airport is the [[Beverly Municipal Airport]], with the nearest national and international air service being at Boston's [[Logan International Airport]]. |
||
{{Weather box |
|||
| location = Gloucester, Massachusetts |
|||
| width = 50% |
|||
| single line = Y |
|||
| Jan high F = 35.3 |
|||
| Feb high F = 38.0 |
|||
| Mar high F = 45.0 |
|||
| Apr high F = 55.4 |
|||
| May high F = 65.4 |
|||
| Jun high F = 74.4 |
|||
| Jul high F = 79.9 |
|||
| Aug high F = 78.6 |
|||
| Sep high F = 71.2 |
|||
| Oct high F = 60.5 |
|||
| Nov high F = 50.7 |
|||
| Dec high F = 40.3 |
|||
| Jan record high F = 68 |
|||
| Feb record high F = 65 |
|||
| Mar record high F = 86 |
|||
| Apr record high F = 88 |
|||
| May record high F = 95 |
|||
| Jun record high F = 98 |
|||
| Jul record high F = 100 |
|||
| Aug record high F = 100 |
|||
| Sep record high F = 97 |
|||
| Oct record high F = 87 |
|||
| Nov record high F = 76 |
|||
| Dec record high F = 74 |
|||
| year record high F = 100 |
|||
| year high F = 57.9 |
|||
| Jan low F = 18.1 |
|||
| Feb low F = 20.3 |
|||
| Mar low F = 27.0 |
|||
| Apr low F = 35.9 |
|||
| May low F = 45.5 |
|||
| Jun low F = 55.1 |
|||
| Jul low F = 60.6 |
|||
| Aug low F = 59.8 |
|||
| Sep low F = 52.3 |
|||
| Oct low F = 41.0 |
|||
| Nov low F = 33.2 |
|||
| Dec low F = 23.7 |
|||
| Jan record low F = -12 |
|||
| Feb record low F = -12 |
|||
| Mar record low F = -2 |
|||
| Apr record low F = 12 |
|||
| May record low F = 30 |
|||
| Jun record low F = 31 |
|||
| Jul record low F = 46 |
|||
| Aug record low F = 43 |
|||
| Sep record low F = 33 |
|||
| Oct record low F = 20 |
|||
| Nov record low F = 10 |
|||
| Dec record low F = -15 |
|||
| year record low F = -15 |
|||
| year low F = 39.4 |
|||
| precipitation colour = green |
|||
| Jan precipitation inch = 4.22 |
|||
| Feb precipitation inch = 3.54 |
|||
| Mar precipitation inch = 4.25 |
|||
| Apr precipitation inch = 4.34 |
|||
| May precipitation inch = 3.55 |
|||
| Jun precipitation inch = 3.63 |
|||
| Jul precipitation inch = 3.46 |
|||
| Aug precipitation inch = 3.40 |
|||
| Sep precipitation inch = 3.87 |
|||
| Oct precipitation inch = 4.22 |
|||
| Nov precipitation inch = 4.69 |
|||
| Dec precipitation inch = 4.27 |
|||
| year precipitation inch = 47.44 |
|||
| Jan snow inch = 12.6 |
|||
| Feb snow inch = 12.7 |
|||
| Mar snow inch = 7.7 |
|||
| Apr snow inch = 1.4 |
|||
| May snow inch = 0 |
|||
| Jun snow inch = 0 |
|||
| Jul snow inch = 0 |
|||
| Aug snow inch = 0 |
|||
| Sep snow inch = 0 |
|||
| Oct snow inch = 0 |
|||
| Nov snow inch = 0.6 |
|||
| Dec snow inch = 7.2 |
|||
| year snow inch = 42.2 |
|||
| source 1 = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://plantmaps.com/01930|title=Zipcode 01930|website=www.plantmaps.com|access-date=October 28, 2022}}</ref> |
|||
| source 2 = <ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.bestplaces.net/climate/zip-code/massachusetts/gloucester/01930|title=Climate in Zip 01930 (Gloucester, MA)|website=BestPlaces.net|access-date=October 28, 2022}}</ref>}} |
|||
<div style="width:65%"> |
|||
{|class="wikitable" |
|||
|+Average sea temperature:<ref>[https://seatemperature.info/gloucester-water-temperature.html Gloucester ocean water temperature by month]</ref> |
|||
|- |
|||
!'''Jan''' |
|||
!'''Feb''' |
|||
!'''Mar''' |
|||
!'''Apr''' |
|||
!'''May''' |
|||
!'''Jun''' |
|||
!'''Jul''' |
|||
!'''Aug''' |
|||
!'''Sep''' |
|||
!'''Oct''' |
|||
!'''Nov''' |
|||
!'''Dec''' |
|||
!'''Year''' |
|||
|- |
|||
|{{convert|42.3|°F|°C|abbr=on}} |
|||
|{{convert|39.4|°F|°C|abbr=on}} |
|||
|{{convert|39.4|°F|°C|abbr=on}} |
|||
|{{convert|42.8|°F|°C|abbr=on}} |
|||
|{{convert|50.4|°F|°C|abbr=on}} |
|||
|{{convert|57.9|°F|°C|abbr=on}} |
|||
|{{convert|65.5|°F|°C|abbr=on}} |
|||
|{{convert|66.9|°F|°C|abbr=on}} |
|||
|{{convert|63.5|°F|°C|abbr=on}} |
|||
|{{convert|57.4|°F|°C|abbr=on}} |
|||
|{{convert|50.7|°F|°C|abbr=on}} |
|||
|{{convert|46.0|°F|°C|abbr=on}} |
|||
|{{convert|51.9|°F|°C|abbr=on}} |
|||
|} |
|||
</div> |
|||
==Demographics== |
==Demographics== |
||
{{Historical populations | type=USA | state=collapsed |
|||
{{See also|List of Massachusetts locations by per capita income}} |
|||
| 1790|5317 |
|||
{{Historical populations |
|||
| 1800|5313 |
|||
|type= USA |
|||
| 1810|5943 |
|||
|state= collapsed |
|||
| 1820|6384 |
|||
|1790|5317 |
|||
| 1830|7510 |
|||
|1800|5313 |
|||
| 1840|6350 |
|||
|1810|5943 |
|||
| 1850|7786 |
|||
|1820|6384 |
|||
| 1860|10904 |
|||
|1830|7510 |
|||
| 1870|15389 |
|||
|1840|6350 |
|||
| 1880|19329 |
|||
|1850|7786 |
|||
| 1890|24651 |
|||
|1860|10904 |
|||
| 1900|26121 |
|||
|1870|15389 |
|||
| 1910|24398 |
|||
|1880|19329 |
|||
| 1920|22947 |
|||
|1890|24651 |
|||
| 1930|24204 |
|||
|1900|26121 |
|||
| 1940|24046 |
|||
|1910|24398 |
|||
| 1950|25167 |
|||
|1920|22947 |
|||
| 1960|25789 |
|||
|1930|24204 |
|||
| 1970|27941 |
|||
|1940|24046 |
|||
| 1980|27768 |
|||
|1950|25167 |
|||
| 1990|28716 |
|||
|1960|25789 |
|||
| 2000|30273 |
|||
|1970|27941 |
|||
| 2001*|30580 |
|||
|1980|27768 |
|||
| 2002*|30610 |
|||
|1990|28716 |
|||
| 2003*|30550 |
|||
|2000|30273 |
|||
| 2004*|30342 |
|||
|2010|28789 |
|||
| 2005*|30209 |
|||
|2020|29729 |
|||
| 2006*|30123 |
|||
|2023|29959 |
|||
| 2007*|30148 |
|||
|source={{center|U.S. Decennial Census<ref name="DecennialCensus">{{cite web|url=https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/decennial-census.html|title=Census of Population and Housing|publisher=Census.gov|access-date=June 4, 2015}}{{cbignore}}</ref>}}|footnote=* = population estimate. {{Historical populations/Massachusetts municipalities references}}<ref name="1950_Census_Urban_populations_since_1790">{{cite web|title=1950 Census of Population|volume=1: Number of Inhabitants|at=Section 6, Pages 21–7 through 21-09, Massachusetts Table 4. Population of Urban Places of 10,000 or more from Earliest Census to 1920|publisher=Bureau of the Census|access-date=July 12, 2011|year=1952|url=http://www2.census.gov/prod2/decennial/documents/23761117v1ch06.pdf}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | title=City and Town Population Totals: 2020–2023| publisher=[[United States Census Bureau]] | access-date=June 5, 2024| url=https://www.census.gov/data/tables/time-series/demo/popest/2020s-total-cities-and-towns.html}}</ref> |
|||
| 2008*|30326 |
|||
| 2009*|30530 |
|||
| 2010|28789 |
|||
| footnote=* = population estimate. {{Historical populations/Massachusetts municipalities references}}<ref name="1950_Census_Urban_populations_since_1790">{{cite journal | title=1950 Census of Population | volume=1: Number of Inhabitants | at=Section 6, Pages 21-7 through 21-09, Massachusetts Table 4. Population of Urban Places of 10,000 or more from Earliest Census to 1920 | publisher=Bureau of the Census | accessdate=July 12, 2011 | year=1952 | url=http://www2.census.gov/prod2/decennial/documents/23761117v1ch06.pdf}}</ref> |
|||
}} |
}} |
||
[[Image:Fish Dressing Wharf, Gloucester, MA.jpg|thumb|left| |
[[Image:Fish Dressing Wharf, Gloucester, MA.jpg|thumb|left|Fish Dressing Wharf {{circa|1908}}]] |
||
As of the [[2000 United States Census|2000 census]]{{ |
As of the [[2000 United States Census|2000 census]],<ref name="GR2">{{cite web|url=https://www.census.gov|publisher=[[United States Census Bureau]]|access-date=January 31, 2008|title=U.S. Census website}}</ref> there were 30,273 people, 12,592 households, and 7,895 families residing in the city. The population density was {{convert|1,166.0|PD/sqmi|PD/km2|sp=us|adj=off}}. There were 13,958 housing units at an average density of {{convert|537.6|/sqmi|/km2|sp=us|adj=off}}. The racial makeup of the city was 96.99% [[White (U.S. Census)|White]], 0.61% [[African American (U.S. Census)|African American]], 0.72% [[Asian (U.S. Census)|Asian]], 0.12% [[Native American (U.S. Census)|Native American]], 0.02% [[Pacific Islander (U.S. Census)|Pacific Islander]], 0.50% from [[Race (United States Census)|other races]], and 1.03% from two or more races. [[Hispanic (U.S. Census)|Hispanic]] or [[Latino (U.S. Census)|Latino]] of any race were 1.48% of the population. 22.6% were of [[Italian Americans|Italian]], 16.2% [[Irish Americans|Irish]], 11.1% [[English Americans|English]], 8.5% [[Portuguese Americans|Portuguese]] and 7.1% [[American ancestry]] according to [[Census 2000]]. |
||
There were 12,592 households out of which 27.6% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 48.8% were married couples living together, 10.6% had a female householder with no husband present, and 37.3% were non-families. 30.7% of all households were made up of individuals and 11.4% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.38 and the average family size was 3.00. |
There were 12,592 households, out of which 27.6% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 48.8% were married couples living together, 10.6% had a female householder with no husband present, and 37.3% were non-families. 30.7% of all households were made up of individuals, and 11.4% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.38 and the average family size was 3.00. |
||
[[Image:Drying Fish, Gloucester, MA.jpg|thumb|right|''Drying Fish'' |
[[Image:Drying Fish, Gloucester, MA.jpg|thumb|right|''Drying Fish'' {{circa|1915}}]] |
||
In the city the population was spread out with 22.0% under the age of 18, 6.5% from 18 to 24, 29.9% from 25 to 44, 26.1% from 45 to 64, and 15.6% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 40 years. For every 100 females there were 92.0 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 88.8 males. |
In the city, the population was spread out, with 22.0% under the age of 18, 6.5% from 18 to 24, 29.9% from 25 to 44, 26.1% from 45 to 64, and 15.6% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 40 years. For every 100 females, there were 92.0 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 88.8 males. |
||
The median income for a household in the city was $58,568, and the median income for a family was $80,970 from a 2007 estimate.<ref>[http://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/ACSSAFFFacts?_event=Search&geo_id=16000US2525485&_geoContext=01000US%7C04000US25%7C16000US2525485&_street=&_county=gloucester&_cityTown=gloucester&_state=04000US25&_zip=&_lang=en&_sse=on&ActiveGeoDiv=geoSelect&_useEV=&pctxt=fph&pgsl=160&_submenuId=factsheet_1&ds_name=ACS_2007_3YR_SAFF&_ci_nbr=null&qr_name=null®=null |
The median income for a household in the city was $58,568, and the median income for a family was $80,970 from a 2007 estimate.<ref>[https://archive.today/20200211181527/http://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/ACSSAFFFacts?_event=Search&geo_id=16000US2525485&_geoContext=01000US%7C04000US25%7C16000US2525485&_street=&_county=gloucester&_cityTown=gloucester&_state=04000US25&_zip=&_lang=en&_sse=on&ActiveGeoDiv=geoSelect&_useEV=&pctxt=fph&pgsl=160&_submenuId=factsheet_1&ds_name=ACS_2007_3YR_SAFF&_ci_nbr=null&qr_name=null®=null:null&_keyword=&_industry= US Census Fact Finder]</ref> Males had a median income of $41,465 versus $30,566 for females. The [[per capita income]] for the city was $25,595. About 7.1% of families and 8.8% of the population were below the [[poverty line]], including 11.8% of those under age 18 and 11.2% of those age 65 or over. |
||
==Politics== |
==Politics== |
||
[[File:Gloucester City Hall.JPG|thumb|left|upright|[[Gloucester City Hall]], built in 1871]] Gloucester is a city, with a Strong-Mayor-Council System. The current mayor of Gloucester is Carolyn Kirk as of March 25, 2012. The [[Mayor]] is also reserved a seat on the [[School Committee]]. City offices are elected every two years (those ending with odd numbers). In 2007 over 40 people ran for the 15 elected seats in the city's government. |
|||
{{see also|List of mayors of Gloucester, Massachusetts}} |
|||
[[File:Gloucester City Hall.JPG|thumb|upright|[[Gloucester City Hall]], built in 1871]] |
|||
Gloucester is a city, with a strong mayor-council system. The current mayor of Gloucester is Gregory P. Verga as of January 2022. The [[Mayor]] is also reserved a seat on the [[School Committee]]. City offices are elected every two years (those ending with odd numbers). In 2007, over 40 people ran for the 15 elected seats in the city's government. |
|||
The city is divided into five Wards, each split into two precincts: |
The city is divided into five Wards, each split into two precincts: |
||
* Ward 1 |
* Ward 1: East Gloucester – includes Eastern Point and Rocky Neck |
||
* Ward 2 |
* Ward 2: Downtown and the Harbor area |
||
* Ward 3 |
* Ward 3: The western edge of the "island" from Stacy Boulevard to Wheeler's Point – includes the Heights at Cape Ann and Pond View Village. |
||
* Ward 4 |
* Ward 4: North Gloucester – includes Riverdale, Annisquam, Bay View, and Lanesville. |
||
* Ward 5 |
* Ward 5: The entirety of West Gloucester west of the Annisquam River and Blynman Canal to Manchester-by-the-Sea and Essex – includes the Wingaersheek area and village of Magnolia. |
||
As late as the mid 20th Century Gloucester had as many as eight wards, but they have been since reorganized into current number. |
|||
As late as the mid-20th century, Gloucester had as many as eight wards, but they have been since reorganized into the current number. |
|||
On November 7, 2005, incumbent Mayor John Bell was re-elected to a third term in office. He stated his intention not to run for reelection and stepped down in January 2008. |
|||
On November 7, 2005, incumbent Mayor John Bell was re-elected to a third term in office. He stated his intention not to run for reelection and stepped down in January 2008. |
|||
On November 6, 2007, Carolyn Kirk was elected as the Mayor of Gloucester. Kirk resigned in December 2014 to take a position in the administration of Massachusetts governor [[Charlie Baker]]. Sefatia Theken was then voted to be the interim mayor of Gloucester by the City Council. Theken was elected to serve a full two-year term on November 2, 2015, and re-elected again in 2017 and 2019. She was defeated for re-election in 2021 by Gregory P. Verga. |
|||
{| class="wikitable mw-collapsible" style="float:center; margin:1em; font-size:95%;" |
|||
|+ Gloucester presidential election results<ref>{{cite web|url=https://electionstats.state.ma.us/elections/search/year_from:1970/year_to:1970/|title=Election Results}}</ref> |
|||
|- style="background:lightgrey;" |
|||
! Year |
|||
! [[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]] |
|||
! [[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]] |
|||
! [[Third party (United States)|Third parties]] |
|||
! Total Votes |
|||
! Margin |
|||
|- |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|[[2020 United States presidential election in Massachusetts|2020]] |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|'''66.84%''' ''12,138'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|30.81% ''5,595'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Independent}}|2.35% ''426'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|18,159 |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|36.03% |
|||
|- |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|[[2016 United States presidential election in Massachusetts|2016]] |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|'''60.70%''' ''9,808'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|33.14% ''5,355'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Independent}}|6.16% ''995'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|16,158 |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|27.56% |
|||
|- |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|[[2012 United States presidential election in Massachusetts|2012]] |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|'''62.63%''' ''9,780'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|35.44% ''5,535'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Independent}}|1.93% ''301'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|15,616 |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|27.18% |
|||
|- |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|[[2008 United States presidential election in Massachusetts|2008]] |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|'''64.54%''' ''9,967'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|33.11% ''5,113'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Independent}}|2.36% ''364'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|15,444 |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|31.43% |
|||
|- |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|[[2004 United States presidential election in Massachusetts|2004]] |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|'''63.79%''' ''9,536'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|34.69% ''5,185'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Independent}}|1.52% ''227'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|14,948 |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|29.11% |
|||
|- |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|[[2000 United States presidential election in Massachusetts|2000]] |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|'''61.11%''' ''8,352'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|30.41% ''4,156'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Independent}}|8.48% ''1,159'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|13,667 |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|30.70% |
|||
|- |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|[[1996 United States presidential election in Massachusetts|1996]] |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|'''62.78%''' ''7,966'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|25.95% ''3,293'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Independent}}|11.26% ''1,429'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|12,688 |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|36.83% |
|||
|- |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|[[1992 United States presidential election in Massachusetts|1992]] |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|'''48.55%''' ''6,808'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|28.40% ''3,982'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Independent}}|23.05% ''3,232'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|14,022 |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|20.15% |
|||
|- |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|[[1988 United States presidential election in Massachusetts|1988]] |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|'''56.16%''' ''7,440'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|42.81% ''5,671'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Independent}}|1.03% ''137'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|13,248 |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|13.35% |
|||
|- |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|[[1984 United States presidential election in Massachusetts|1984]] |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|45.12% ''5,768'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|'''54.58%''' ''6,978'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Independent}}|0.31% ''39'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|12,785 |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|9.46% |
|||
|- |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|[[1980 United States presidential election in Massachusetts|1980]] |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|38.81% ''4,928'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|'''43.55%''' ''5,530'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Independent}}|17.63% ''2,239'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|12,697 |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|4.74% |
|||
|- |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|[[1976 United States presidential election in Massachusetts|1976]] |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|'''53.00%''' ''6,795'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|43.54% ''5,582'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Independent}}|3.46% ''443'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|12,820 |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|9.46% |
|||
|- |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|[[1972 United States presidential election in Massachusetts|1972]] |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|'''50.09%''' ''6,150'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|49.48% ''6,076'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Independent}}|0.43% ''53'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|12,279 |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|0.60% |
|||
|- |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|[[1968 United States presidential election in Massachusetts|1968]] |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|'''58.39%''' ''6,900'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|38.36% ''4,533'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Independent}}|3.26% ''385'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|11,818 |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|20.03% |
|||
|- |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|[[1964 United States presidential election in Massachusetts|1964]] |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|'''72.96%''' ''8,749'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|26.74% ''3,207'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Independent}}|0.30% ''36'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|11,992 |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|46.21% |
|||
|- |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|[[1960 United States presidential election in Massachusetts|1960]] |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|'''52.75%''' ''6,719'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|47.14% ''6,005'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Independent}}|0.11% ''14'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|12,738 |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|5.61% |
|||
|- |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|[[1956 United States presidential election in Massachusetts|1956]] |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|30.55% ''3,497'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|'''69.25%''' ''7,926'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Independent}}|0.19% ''22'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|11,445 |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|38.70% |
|||
|- |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|[[1952 United States presidential election in Massachusetts|1952]] |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|36.47% ''4,390'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|'''63.34%''' ''7,624'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Independent}}|0.18% ''22'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|12,036 |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|26.87% |
|||
|- |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|[[1948 United States presidential election in Massachusetts|1948]] |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|44.97% ''4,448'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|'''53.53%''' ''5,295'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Independent}}|1.51% ''149'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|9,892 |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|8.56% |
|||
|- |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|[[1944 United States presidential election in Massachusetts|1944]] |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|46.88% ''4,445'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|'''53.01%''' ''5,026'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Independent}}|0.11% ''10'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|9,481 |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|6.13% |
|||
|- |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|[[1940 United States presidential election in Massachusetts|1940]] |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Democratic}}|41.86% ''4,270'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|'''57.70%''' ''5,885'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Independent}}|0.44% ''45'' |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|10,200 |
|||
|align="center" {{Party shading/Republican}}|15.83% |
|||
|} |
|||
On November 6, 2007 Carolyn Kirk was elected as the Mayor of Gloucester. |
|||
{| class=wikitable |
{| class=wikitable |
||
! colspan = 6 | Voter registration and party enrollment as of October 15, 2008<ref>{{cite web|title = Registration and party enrollment statistics as of October 15, 2008 | publisher = Massachusetts Elections Division | |
! colspan = 6 | Voter registration and party enrollment as of October 15, 2008<ref>{{cite web|title = Registration and party enrollment statistics as of October 15, 2008 | publisher = Massachusetts Elections Division | access-date = May 8, 2010 | url = http://www.sec.state.ma.us/ele/elepdf/st_county_town_enroll_breakdown_08.pdf}}</ref> |
||
|- |
|- |
||
! colspan = 2 | Party |
! colspan = 2 | Party |
||
! Number of voters |
! Number of voters |
||
! Percentage |
! Percentage |
||
|- |
|||
{{American politics/party colors/Democratic/row}} |
|||
| {{party color cell|Independent Party (United States)}} |
|||
| Unaffiliated |
|||
| align = center | 12,563 |
|||
| align = center | 59.89% |
|||
|- |
|||
| {{party color cell|Democratic Party (United States)}} |
|||
| [[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]] |
| [[Democratic Party (United States)|Democratic]] |
||
| align = center | 6,056 |
| align = center | 6,056 |
||
| align = center | 28.87% |
| align = center | 28.87% |
||
|- |
|||
{{American politics/party colors/Republican/row}} |
|||
| {{party color cell|Republican Party (United States)}} |
|||
| [[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]] |
| [[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]] |
||
| align = center | 2,208 |
| align = center | 2,208 |
||
| align = center | 10.53% |
| align = center | 10.53% |
||
|- |
|||
{{American politics/party colors/Independent/row}} |
|||
| {{party color cell|Libertarian Party (United States)}} |
|||
| Unaffiliated |
|||
| [[Libertarian Party (United States)|Libertarian]] |
|||
| align = center | 12,563 |
|||
| align = center | 59.89% |
|||
{{American politics/party colors/Libertarian/row}} |
|||
| Minor parties |
|||
| align = center | 149 |
| align = center | 149 |
||
| align = center | 0.71% |
| align = center | 0.71% |
||
Line 193: | Line 494: | ||
==Education== |
==Education== |
||
The following schools are located within the Gloucester Public Schools District: |
The following schools are located within the Gloucester Public Schools District: |
||
* [[Gloucester High School (Massachusetts)|Gloucester High School]] ( |
* [[Gloucester High School (Massachusetts)|Gloucester High School]] (9–12) |
||
* |
* O'Maley Innovation Middle School (6–8) |
||
* East Veterans Elementary School (K-5) (Formerly East Gloucester Elementary School; the former Veteran's Memorial School (which has been demloished) was merged into it) |
|||
*Gloucester Community Arts Charter School (K-8) |
|||
* |
* Plum Cove Elementary School (K–5) |
||
* |
* Beeman Elementary School (K–5) |
||
* |
* West Parish Elementary School (K–5) (site of the [[West Parish Elementary School Science Park]]) |
||
* Gloucester Preschool |
|||
* Veteran's Memorial School (K-5) |
|||
* West Parish Elementary School (K-5) |
|||
==Economy== |
==Economy== |
||
[[Gorton's of Gloucester]] and [[Varian Semiconductor]] are among the companies based in Gloucester. |
[[Gorton's of Gloucester]], Mighty Mac, Gloucester Engineering, Good Harbor Consulting, Para Research, Aid-Pack, Cyrk, and [[Varian Semiconductor]] are among the companies based in Gloucester. |
||
==Gloucester and the sea== |
==Gloucester and the sea== |
||
The town was an important [[shipbuilding]] center, and the first [[schooner]] was reputedly built there in 1713. The community developed into an important fishing port, largely due to its proximity to [[Georges Bank]] and other [[fishing bank]]s off the east coast of [[Nova Scotia]] and [[Newfoundland (island)|Newfoundland]]. Gloucester's most famous{{fact|date=March 2024}} (and nationally recognized) seafood business was founded in 1849 as John Pew & Sons. It became Gorton-Pew Fisheries in 1906, and in 1957 changed its name to [[Gorton's of Gloucester]]. The iconic image of the "Gorton's Fisherman", and the products he represents, are known throughout the country and beyond. Besides catching and processing seafood, Gloucester is also a center for research on marine life and conservation; [[Ocean Alliance]] is headquartered in the city. |
|||
[[Image:Harbor View & Ten Pound Island Light.jpg|thumb|right|''Harbor View & Ten Pound Island Light'' in c. 1915]] |
|||
The town was an important [[shipbuilding]] center, and the first [[schooner]] was reputedly built there in 1713. The community developed into an important fishing [[port]], largely due to its proximity to [[Georges Bank]] and other [[fishing bank]]s off the east coast of [[Nova Scotia]] and [[Newfoundland and Labrador|Newfoundland]]. Gloucester's most famous (and nationally recognized) seafood business was founded in 1849 -- ''John Pew & Sons''. It became ''Gorton-Pew Fisheries'' in 1906, and in 1957 changed its name to [[Gorton's of Gloucester]]. The [[iconic]] image of the "[[Gorton's of Gloucester|Gorton's Fisherman]]", and the products he represents, are known throughout the country and beyond. Besides catching and processing seafood, Gloucester is also a center for fish research. |
|||
In the late 19th century Gloucester |
In the late 19th century, Gloucester saw an influx of [[Portuguese people|Portuguese]] and [[Italians|Italian]] immigrants; they were seeking work in the town's flourishing fishing industry, and a better life in America. Some present-day fishermen of Gloucester are descendants of these early immigrants. The strong Portuguese and Italian influence is evident in the many festivals celebrated throughout the year. During the Catholic celebration, St Peter's Fiesta, relatives of fishermen past and present carry oars representing many of the fishing vessels which call Gloucester their home. [[Saint Peter]] is the [[patron saint]] of the fishermen. Gloucester remains an active fishing port, and in 2013 ranked 21st in the United States with respect to fish landings. In that year, 62 million pounds of fish were caught bringing in an estimated $42 million.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.greateratlantic.fisheries.noaa.gov/educational_resources/seafood/ports/gloucester__ma.html|title=Gloucester, MA|work=NOAA|access-date=May 25, 2017}}</ref> |
||
[[Image:Harbor View & Ten Pound Island Light.jpg|thumb|right|''Harbor View & Ten Pound Island Light'' {{circa|1915}}]] |
|||
Seafaring and fishing have been, and still are, very dangerous undertakings. In its over 350-year history, Gloucester has lost over 10,000 men to the Atlantic Ocean. The names of each of the known lost are painted on a huge mural in the main staircase at City Hall, and also on a new memorial cenotaph on Stacy Boulevard. The list has continued to lengthen despite increased safety requirements. |
|||
==Arts== |
==Arts== |
||
===Painting and printmaking=== |
===Painting and printmaking=== |
||
[[Image:LaneFitzHughBracesRockEasternPointGloucester.jpg|thumb|left|'''''Brace's Rock, Eastern Point, Gloucester, c. 1864 by [[Fitz Henry Lane]]''''']] |
|||
[[Image: |
[[Image:LaneFitzHughBracesRockEasternPointGloucester.jpg|thumb|''Brace's Rock, Eastern Point, Gloucester'', {{circa|1864}} by [[Fitz Henry Lane]]]] |
||
[[Image:Breakwater & Lighthouse, Gloucester, MA.jpg|thumb|right|''Eastern Point Breakwater & Lighthouse'' {{circa|1915}}]] |
|||
Gloucester's scenic beauty, active fishing industry, and renowned arts community have attracted and inspired painters since the early 19th century, as they do today. The first Gloucester painter of note was native-born [[Fitz Henry Lane]], whose home still exists on the waterfront. The premier collection of his works is in the Cape Ann Historical Museum, which holds 40 of his paintings and 100 of his drawings. Other painters subsequently attracted to Gloucester include [[Edward Hopper]], [[William Morris Hunt]], [[Winslow Homer]], [[Childe Hassam]], [[John Twachtman]], Frederick Mulhaupt, [[Frank Duveneck]], [[Cecilia Beaux]], [[Jane Peterson]], Gordon Grant, Harry DeMaine, [[Emil Gruppe|Emile Gruppe]], [[Stuart Davis (painter)|Stuart Davis]], [[Joseph Solman]], [[Mark Rothko]], [[Milton Avery]], [[Barnett Newman]], William Meyerowitz, Joan Lockhart, Theresa Bernstein, and [[Marsden Hartley]] and artists from the [[Ashcan School]] such as [[Edward Hopper]], [[John French Sloan|John Sloan]], [[Robert Henri]], [[William Glackens]], and [[Maurice Prendergast]]. |
|||
Gloucester's scenery, active fishing industry, and arts community have attracted and inspired painters since the early 19th century. The first Gloucester painter of note was native-born [[Fitz Henry Lane]], whose home still exists on the waterfront. The premier collection of his works is in the [[Cape Ann Museum]], which holds 40 of his paintings and 100 of his drawings. Other painters subsequently attracted to Gloucester include [[William Morris Hunt]], [[Winslow Homer]], [[Childe Hassam]], [[John Twachtman]], Frederick Mulhaupt, [[Frank Duveneck]], [[Cecilia Beaux]], [[Jane Peterson]], Gordon Grant, Harry DeMaine, [[Emile Gruppe]], [[Stuart Davis (painter)|Stuart Davis]], [[Joseph Solman]], [[Mark Rothko]], [[Milton Avery]], [[Barnett Newman]], [[William Meyerowitz]], Joan Lockhart, [[Theresa Bernstein]], and [[Marsden Hartley]], and artists from the [[Ashcan School]] such as [[Edward Hopper]], [[John French Sloan|John Sloan]], [[Robert Henri]], [[William Glackens]], Emile Gruppe, Carl W. Illig, and [[Maurice Prendergast]]. |
|||
[[File:Gloucester Harbor Winslow Homer 1873.jpeg|thumb|right|''Gloucester Harbor'', oil on canvas, [[Winslow Homer]], 1873. [[Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art]]]] |
[[File:Gloucester Harbor Winslow Homer 1873.jpeg|thumb|right|''Gloucester Harbor'', oil on canvas, [[Winslow Homer]], 1873. [[Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art]]]] |
||
Smith Cove is home to the |
Smith Cove is home to the Rocky Neck Art Colony, the oldest [[art colony]] in the country. Folly Cove was the home of the [[Folly Cove Designers]], influential to this day in print design and technique. |
||
===Sculpture=== |
===Sculpture=== |
||
Several important sculptors have lived and worked in East Gloucester, [[Annisquam]], Lanesville and Folly Cove. They include George Aarons, [[Anna Hyatt Huntington]], [[Charles Grafly]], [[Paul Manship]] and his daughter-in-law Margaret Cassidy Manship, [[Walker Hancock]], and George Demetrios. In addition, [[Aristides Demetrios]] grew up in Folly Cove. |
Several important sculptors have lived and worked in East Gloucester, [[Annisquam]], Lanesville and Folly Cove. They include George Aarons, [[Anna Hyatt Huntington]], [[Charles Grafly]], [[Paul Manship]] and his daughter-in-law Margaret Cassidy Manship, [[Walker Hancock]], and George Demetrios. In addition, [[Aristides Demetrios]] grew up in Folly Cove. |
||
===Literature=== |
===Literature=== |
||
Perhaps the most famous story based in Gloucester is ''[[Captains Courageous]]'' by [[Rudyard Kipling]], written in 1897, and made into a movie starring [[Spencer Tracy]] in 1937. |
|||
*''[[Captains Courageous]]'' (1897) by [[Rudyard Kipling]] was set in Gloucester, and adapted as a 1937 movie starring [[Spencer Tracy]]. |
|||
[[Charles Olson]] (1910–1970), a poet and teacher at [[Black Mountain College]], composed a 635 page poem known as "[[Charles Olson#The Maximus Poems|The Maximus Poems]]" which centered on the city of Gloucester. |
|||
*[[T. S. Eliot]] (1888–1965) summered at the family house near Eastern Point in his early years. This house is now owned by the TS Eliot Foundation and used as a writer's retreat. Eliot drew great inspiration from Gloucester, and his early poems were collected in a notebook purchased from Procters on Main Street, and now part of the Berg Collection at the [[New York City Public Library]].<ref>T.S. Eliot, Inventions of the March Hare, Poems 1909-1917, (ed.) Christopher Ricks (London, 1996)</ref> One of his ''[[Four Quartets]]'' is entitled ''[[The Dry Salvages]]'', the rocks off the N.E. coast of Gloucester. |
|||
*[[Charles Olson]] (1910–1970), a poet and teacher at [[Black Mountain College]] in North Carolina, composed a 635-page poem known as ''[[Charles Olson#The Maximus Poems|The Maximus Poems]],'' which centered on Gloucester. |
|||
Gloucester is often referred to in the works of horror writer [[H. P. Lovecraft]]. It is believed that the fictional town of [[Innsmouth]] in Lovecraft's famous ''[[The Shadow Over Innsmouth]]'' is partially based on Cape Ann as a whole and Gloucester in particular.<ref><!--...FOOTNOTE BEGINS....--> |
|||
*Gloucester is often referred to in the works of horror writer [[H. P. Lovecraft]]. The fictional town of [[Innsmouth]] in Lovecraft's ''[[The Shadow Over Innsmouth]]'' is believed partially based on Cape Ann as a whole and Gloucester in particular. |
|||
In 1987, Will Murrray took a field trip to Newburyport and Gloucester to research locales from Lovecraft's "The Shadow Over Innsmouth". In Newburyport there is a State Street (the street where the narrator of the story boards a bus to Innsmouth) and a State Street [[YMCA]] (where the protagonist roomed and where Lovecraft himself may have stayed during his visit to the town). When he visited Gloucester, Murray found a Gilman House — more formally, the Sargeant-Murray-Gilman-Hough House — a hotel in the story but in real life a [[Georgian architecture|Georgian]]-era mansion turned into a public museum. He also found other landmarks mentioned in the story, including streets named Adams Church, Babson, Main, and Fish, and a building adorned with large, white wooden pillars on its front and side — the Legion Memorial Building — that looks remarkably like the story's [[freemasonry|Masonic]] Lodge (the meeting place for the Esoteric Order of Dagon). The Legion Building, built in 1844–45, served as the Gloucester Town Hall until 1867 when it became the Forbes School. Saving it from demolition, the [[American Legion]] took over the building in 1919 and, a year later, added a columned [[portico]] to the Middle Street side to match the Washington Street frontage. It has never been a Masonic Lodge, however. (Murray, "I Found Innsmouth!", ''Crypt of Cthulhu #57''.) |
|||
*The book ''[[The Perfect Storm (book)|The Perfect Storm]]'', which recounted a massive [[1991 Perfect Storm|storm of 1991]], had figures based in the town. Scenes from the [[The Perfect Storm (film)|film adaptation]] by the same name were filmed there. |
|||
<!--....FOOTNOTE ENDS....--></ref><br> |
|||
*Gloucester and its coast guard station are the center of the land action in [[Michael J. Tougias]]' 2005 book ''[[Ten Hours Until Dawn]]'', recounting the loss of the pilot boat ''[[Can Do]]'' and its crew during the [[Northeastern United States blizzard of 1978|blizzard of 1978]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.michaeltougias.com/|title=Inspirational speaker | Author Michael Tougias | survival leadership|website=michaeltougias}}</ref> |
|||
* ''Gloucesterbook'', ''Gloucestertide'', and ''Gloucestermas'' are three novels in the ''Gloucesterman'' series by Gloucester novelist [[Jonathan Bayliss]] set in Gloucester, fictionalized as "Dogtown" on "Cape Gloucester". |
|||
Featuring heavily as the on-shore location of the book ''[[The Perfect Storm (book)|The Perfect Storm]]'', which described the [[1991 Perfect Storm|storm of 1991]], the town was also used as the on-location setting for the [[The Perfect Storm (film)|film adaptation]] of the book. |
|||
* ''Hersenschimmen'' (''Out of Mind''), a 1984 novel by [[J. Bernlef]], is set in Gloucester. |
|||
* [[Anita Diamant]] has set two novels in Gloucester, ''The Last Days of Dogtown'' and ''Good Harbor''. |
|||
Gloucester and its coast guard station are the center of the land action in Michael J. Tougias' 2005 book ''[[Ten Hours Until Dawn]]'', recounting the loss of the pilot boat ''[[Can Do]]'' and its crew during the [[Northeastern United States blizzard of 1978|blizzard of 1978]].<ref>[http://www.michaeltougias.com Welcome to the Michael Tougias Web<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> |
|||
===Comics=== |
===Comics=== |
||
Gloucester is the birthplace of Marvel character Dane Whitman whose superhero alter ego is the [[Black Knight (Dane Whitman)|Black Knight]]. |
Gloucester is the birthplace of Marvel character Dane Whitman whose superhero alter ego is the [[Black Knight (Dane Whitman)|Black Knight]]. |
||
===Film=== |
===Film=== |
||
* ''[[The Bostonians (film)|The Bostonians]]'' – ocean front scenes were filmed on rocks at Rafes Chasm Park, off Herperus Avenue. |
|||
* ''[[Author! Author! (film)|Author! Author!]]'' had scenes shot on Good Harbor Beach in Gloucester. |
|||
* Eastern Point Yacht Club in Gloucester was the starting line of the ''[[Amazing Race 17]]''. |
|||
* In ''[[The Bostonians (film)|The Bostonians]]'', oceanfront scenes were filmed on rocks at Rafes Chasm Park, off Hesperus Avenue. |
|||
* ''[[Captains Courageous]]'' was set in Gloucester. |
* ''[[Captains Courageous]]'' was set in Gloucester. |
||
* ''[http://www.gloucester18.com The Gloucester 18]'' is a documentary film that investigates the Gloucester pregnancy pact, and was filmed entirely in Gloucester. |
|||
* ''[[The Perfect Storm (film)|The Perfect Storm]]'' was filmed and set in Gloucester. |
|||
* ''[[The Good Son (film)|The Good Son]]'' was filmed in Gloucester and other [[Cape Ann]] communities. |
|||
*''[[Grown Ups (film)|Grown Ups]]'' |
|||
*''[[Manchester by the Sea (film)|Manchester by the Sea]]'' much of which was filmed in Gloucester. |
|||
* ''[[Mermaids (1990 film)|Mermaids]]'' had scenes shot in the Magnolia area of Gloucester. |
|||
* ''[[Moonlight Mile (film)|Moonlight Mile]]'' was filmed almost entirely in Gloucester, with some shots in [[Marblehead, Massachusetts|Marblehead]]. |
* ''[[Moonlight Mile (film)|Moonlight Mile]]'' was filmed almost entirely in Gloucester, with some shots in [[Marblehead, Massachusetts|Marblehead]]. |
||
* ''[[The Perfect Storm (film)|The Perfect Storm]]'' was filmed and set in Gloucester. |
|||
* ''[[Polis is This: Charles Olson and the Persistence of Place]]'' is a one-hour documentary about the poet [[Charles Olson]] which the ''[[Boston Phoenix]]'' called "the best film about an American poet ever made." |
|||
* Portions of ''[[Stuck on You (2003 film)|Stuck on You]]'' were filmed in Gloucester and in neighboring Rockport. (The rink scenes were filmed at the O'Maley School.) |
* Portions of ''[[Stuck on You (2003 film)|Stuck on You]]'' were filmed in Gloucester and in neighboring Rockport. (The rink scenes were filmed at the O'Maley School.) |
||
* |
*''[[The Women (2008 film)|The Women]]'' was partly filmed in Annisquam. |
||
* ''[[The Russians Are Coming, |
* ''[[The Russians Are Coming, the Russians Are Coming]]'' takes place on a fictional Gloucester island but was filmed in [[Mendocino, California]]. |
||
* ''[[ |
* ''[[Alcoa Presents: One Step Beyond|One Step Beyond]]'' Episode 19, "The Captain's Guests", takes place on "Cape Ann Road" set in Gloucester. |
||
* ''[[ |
* ''[[Clear History]]'' takes place on an island in New England, and was filmed in Gloucester and around Cape Ann. |
||
* The miniseries ''[[Olive Kitteridge (miniseries)|Olive Kitteridge]]'': Though set in Maine, it was filmed in Gloucester and around Cape Ann. |
|||
* ''[[Polis is This: Charles Olson and the Persistence of Place]]'' is a one hour documentary about the poet [[Charles Olson]] which the ''[[Boston Phoenix]]'' called ''the best film about an American poet ever made.'' |
|||
* ''[ |
*The 2021 film ''[[CODA (2021 film)|CODA]]'' is based and was shot in Gloucester. |
||
*''[[The Women (2008 film)|The Women]]'' was partly filmed in Annisquam |
|||
*''[[Grown Ups (2010 film)|Grown Ups]]'' |
|||
===Television=== |
|||
==Points of interest== |
|||
[[National Geographic Channel]] films its reality television series ''[[Wicked Tuna]]'', documenting and chronicling the lives of commercial tuna fishermen, and the lucrative bluefin tuna industry, in Gloucester. |
|||
''[[Route 66 (TV series)|Route 66]]'' season 2, episode 6, "Once To Every Man" (October 27, 1961) was set and filmed in Gloucester. |
|||
''[[Bewitched]]'' season 7, episode 5, "Darrin On A Pedestal" (October 22, 1970) was set and partially filmed on Gloucester. |
|||
''[[Spenser: For Hire]]'', season 2, episode 1, "Widow's Walk" (October 4, 1986) was set and filmed in Gloucester. |
|||
===Theater === |
|||
The Gloucester Stage Company stages five to eight plays each season, primarily in the summer months. Located in East Gloucester, the theatre sits at water's edge overlooking Smith's Cove. It was founded in 1979 by local arts and business leaders to encourage [[playwright]]s and their new works. [[Israel Horovitz]], who founded the GSC, was also its artistic director from 1979 to 2006. Over the years, plays developed at the Gloucester Stage Company have gone on to critical acclaim, on and off [[Broadway theatre|Broadway]], nationally and internationally.{{fact|date=March 2024}} The group draws theatre-goers from Gloucester, neighboring [[North Shore (Massachusetts)|North Shore]] districts, and the greater Boston area, as well as seasonal residents and tourists.{{fact|date=March 2024}} |
|||
===Architecture=== |
|||
The city has much significant [[architecture]], from pre-Revolutionary houses to the hilltop 1870 City Hall, which dominates the town and harbor. It also has exotic waterfront homes now converted to museums, including [[Beauport, Sleeper-McCann House|Beauport]], built 1907–1934 by designer Henry Davis Sleeper in collaboration with local architect Halfdan Hanson, said to raise [[Eclecticism in art|eclecticism]] to the level of genius. In addition, it has [[Hammond Castle]], built 1926–1929 by inventor [[John Hays Hammond, Jr.]], as a setting for his collection of [[Ancient Rome|Roman]], [[Middle Ages|medieval]] and [[Renaissance]] [[Artifact (archaeology)|artifacts]]. Gloucester was also the home of feminist writer [[Judith Sargent Murray]] and [[John Murray (minister)|John Murray]], the founder of the first [[Universalist Church]] in America. Their house still exists as the [[Sargent House Museum]]. Many museums are located in the main downtown area, such as the Cape Ann Museum, and the museum/aquarium Maritime Gloucester. |
|||
==Points of interest== |
|||
{{see also|List of Registered Historic Places in Essex County, Massachusetts}} |
{{see also|List of Registered Historic Places in Essex County, Massachusetts}} |
||
[[File:Tour Boat Gloucester.ogv|thumb|Tour Boat Gloucester]] |
|||
[[Image:dogtownentry.jpg|thumb|right|The entrance to [[Dogtown, Massachusetts|Dogtown Commons]], on Cherry Street]] |
|||
[[File:Universalist Church (Edward Hopper, 1926).jpg|thumb|300px|[[Edward Hopper]], ''Universalist Church'', 1926, [[Princeton University Art Museum]]]] |
|||
* The schooner ''[[Adventure (schooner)|Adventure]]'' |
|||
* [[Annisquam, Massachusetts|Annisquam]] |
|||
* [[Cape Ann Museum]] |
|||
* [[Dogtown, Massachusetts|Dogtown Common]] |
* [[Dogtown, Massachusetts|Dogtown Common]] |
||
* [[Norman's Woe]], known for several shipwrecks, including [[The Wreck of the Hesperus]] |
|||
* [[Ravenswood Park]] |
* [[Ravenswood Park]] |
||
* [[Annisquam, Massachusetts|Annisquam]] |
|||
* [[Norman's Woe]], known for several shipwrecks, including the [[The Wreck of the Hesperus]] |
|||
* The schooner ''[[Adventure (schooner)|Adventure]]'' |
|||
* Rocky Neck Art Colony, America's oldest working art colony |
* Rocky Neck Art Colony, America's oldest working art colony |
||
* [[Sargent House Museum]] |
|||
* [[Stage Fort Park]] |
|||
* [[White-Ellery House]] |
|||
Gloucester's most noted landmark is the harborside ''Man at the Wheel'' statue (also known as the "[[Gloucester Fisherman's Memorial]] [[Cenotaph]]"), dedicated to "They that go down to the sea in ships", which is a quote from Psalm 107:23–32. |
|||
Gloucester's largest annual event is [http://www.stpetersfiesta.org/ St. Peter's Fiesta], sponsored by the local [[Italian-American]] community. It is held the last weekend in June, which is typically the weekend closest to the [[St. Peter|saint's]] [[feast day]]. Preceded by a nine-day [[novena]] of prayers, the festival highlights include the blessing of the [[Fishing fleet|fleet]] and the [[greasy pole]] contest. |
|||
Gloucester's most noted landmark is the harborside "[[Gloucester Fisherman's Memorial|Man at the Wheel]]" statue (also known as the "[[Gloucester Fisherman's Memorial]] [[Cenotaph]]"), dedicated to "They that go down to the sea in ships", which is a quote from {{bibleverse||Psalm|107:23-32|KJV}}. |
|||
==Notable people== |
|||
Gloucester has a professional theatre company known as ''Gloucester Stage Company'', which stages five to eight plays each season, primarily in the summer months. Located in East Gloucester, the theatre sits at water's edge overlooking Smith's Cove. It was founded in 1979 by local arts and business leaders to encourage [[playwright]]s and their new works. [[Israel Horovitz]], who founded the GSC, was also its artistic director from 1979 to 2006. Over the years, plays developed at ''Gloucester Stage Company'' have gone on to critical acclaim and popular success, on and off [[Broadway (theatre)|Broadway]], nationally and internationally. The group draws theatre-goers from Gloucester, neighboring [[North Shore (Massachusetts)|North Shore]] districts, greater Boston area, as well as seasonal residents and tourists. |
|||
* [[Sylvester Ahola]], jazz trumpeter and cornetist |
|||
Gloucester's largest annual event is [http://www.stpetersfiesta.com/ St. Peter's Fiesta], sponsored by the local [[Italian-American]] community. It is held the weekend closest to the [[St. Peter|saint's]] [[feast day]]. Highlights include the [[blessing]] of the [[Fishing fleet|fleet]], and the [[Greasy pole|greasy]] [[Telegraph post|pole]] contest. |
|||
* [[Willie Alexander]], singer and keyboard player, formerly of the Lost, the Bagatelle, the Grass Menagerie and the Boom Boom Band, before briefly becoming a member of The Velvet Underground, was raised and is based in Gloucester; much of his later work involves collaborations in various media with area's rich arts community |
|||
* [[A. Piatt Andrew]], congressman, Assistant Treasury Secretary, and [[Harvard University|Harvard]] professor;<ref>{{cite dictionary|url= http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=A000240|title=ANDREW, Abram Piatt, Jr., (1873–1936) |
|||
The city has much significant [[architecture]], from pre-revolutionary houses to the hilltop 1870 City Hall, which dominates the town and harbor. It also has exotic waterfront homes now converted to museums, including [[Beauport, Sleeper-McCann House|Beauport]], built 1907–1934 by designer Henry Davis Sleeper in collaboration with local architect Halfdan Hanson, said to raise [[Eclecticism in art|eclecticism]] to the level of genius. In addition, it has [[Hammond Castle]], built 1926–1929 by inventor [[John Hays Hammond, Jr.]] as a setting for his collection of [[Ancient Rome|Roman]], [[Medieval]] and [[Renaissance]] [[Artifact (archaeology)|artifacts]]. Gloucester was also the home of feminist writer [[Judith Sargent Murray]] and [[John Murray (minister)|John Murray]], the founder of the first [[Universalist Church]] in America. Their house still exists as the [http://www.sargenthouse.org/ Sargent House Museum]. Many museums are located in the main downtown area, such as the Cape Ann Historical Association, and the Gloucester Maritime Heritage Center. |
|||
|dictionary= Biographical Directory of the United States Congress|access-date= October 24, 2012}}</ref> The Route 128 bridge connecting the island and mainland portions of Gloucester was named after him |
|||
* [[Roger Babson]], founder of [[Babson College]] and presidential candidate for [[Prohibition Party]] in 1940 |
|||
==Notable residents== |
|||
* [[Walworth Barbour]], diplomat, lived for many years in Gloucester |
|||
{{expand list|date=January 2012}} |
|||
* [[Thomas P. Barnett]], painter |
|||
* [[A. Piatt Andrew]], congressman, Assistant Treasury Secretary, and [[Harvard]] professor |
|||
* [[Jonathan Bayliss]], novelist and playwright |
|||
* The [[Ashcan School]] artists such as [[Robert Henri]], [[John French Sloan|John Sloan]], [[Edward Hopper]], and [[William Glackens]] spent their summers painting in Gloucester |
|||
* [[Roger Babson]], founder of [[Babson College]] and presidential candidate for the [[Prohibition Party]] in 1940 |
|||
* [[Cecilia Beaux]], painter and society portraitist |
* [[Cecilia Beaux]], painter and society portraitist |
||
* [[Howard Blackburn]], fisherman and adventurer |
* [[Howard Blackburn]], fisherman and adventurer |
||
* [[Nell Blaine]], painter |
|||
* [[Clarence Birdseye]], founder of modern [[frozen food]] industry |
|||
* [[Kyle Bochniak]], MMA Fighter |
|||
* [[Phil Bolger]], prolific 20th-century boat designer with 668 designs to his credit, designed Canadian-built tall ship HMS ''Rose'' later renamed {{HMS|Surprise}} for use in ''[[Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World]]'' |
|||
* [[Hugo Burnham]], drummer and founding member of British post-punk band [[Gang of Four (band)|Gang of Four]] |
* [[Hugo Burnham]], drummer and founding member of British post-punk band [[Gang of Four (band)|Gang of Four]] |
||
* [[Virginia Lee Burton]] (1909–1968), children's book author and illustrator (''[[The Little House (picture book)|The Little House]]'' and ''[[Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel]]''), founder of the [[Folly Cove Designers]] group |
|||
* [[Clarence Birdseye]], founder of the modern [[frozen food]] industry |
|||
* [[Roger Conant (colonist)|Roger Conant]], first governor of the Cape Ann colony, moved the colony's center from the Gloucester area to Salem |
|||
* [[Phil Bolger]], Prolific 20th century boat designer with 668 designs to his credit, designed the Canadian-built tall ship HMS ''Rose'' later renamed {{HMS|Surprise}} for use in ''[[Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World]]'' |
|||
* [[Carleton S. Coon]], physical anthropologist and president of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists |
|||
* [[Virginia Lee Burton]] (1909–1968) children's book author and illustrator (''[[The Little House]]'' and ''[[Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel]]''), founder of the [[Folly Cove Designers]] group. |
|||
* [[Roger Cressey]], former member of [[United States National Security Council]], terrorism analyst for [[NBC News]], president of Good Harbor Consulting, and adjunct professor at [[Georgetown University]] |
|||
*[[Bo Burnham]] – Actor,Comedian, Grew up in Gloucester |
|||
* [[Thomas Dalton (abolitionist)|Thomas Dalton]], abolitionist leader |
|||
* [[Roger Cressey]], former member of the [[United States National Security Council]], terrorism analyst for [[NBC News]], president of Good Harbor Consulting, and adjunct professor at [[Georgetown University]] |
|||
* [[Aristides Demetrios]], sculptor, grew up in Gloucester as son of Virginia Lee Burton |
|||
*[[Russel Crouse]], playwright, spent his summers in Annisquam |
|||
* [[James Elliot (politician)|James Elliot]], author and [[United States Representative]] from [[Vermont]]<ref>{{cite dictionary|url= http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=E000122|title=ELLIOT, James, (1775–1839)|dictionary= Biographical Directory of the United States Congress|access-date= October 24, 2012}}</ref> |
|||
* [[Henry Ferrini]], critically acclaimed independent filmmaker, nephew of Vincent Ferrini |
|||
* [[Vincent Ferrini]], poet, first Poet Laureate of Gloucester |
* [[Vincent Ferrini]], poet, first Poet Laureate of Gloucester |
||
* [[Thomas Gardner (planter)|Thomas Gardner]], landed in 1624 at Cape Ann to form colony at what is now known as Gloucester |
|||
* [[Henry Ferrini]], critically acclaimed independent filmmaker, nephew of [[Vincent Ferrini]] |
|||
* [[Josh Gates]], American adventurer, explorer, photographer, and television personality and the host of ''[[Destination Truth]]''. |
|||
* [[Gregory Gibson]], author of ''Goneboy: a Walkabout'', ''Demon of the Waters'' and ''Hubert's Freaks'' |
* [[Gregory Gibson]], author of ''Goneboy: a Walkabout'', ''Demon of the Waters'' and ''Hubert's Freaks'' |
||
* [[Raymond Greenleaf]], actor |
|||
* [[Whoopi Goldberg]], actress and comedian, summers in Gloucester |
|||
* [[Emil Gruppe]], painter |
* [[Emil Gruppe]], painter |
||
*[[Helen Hayes]], actor, sepnt her summers in Annisquam |
|||
Howard Crouse |
|||
* [[John Hays Hammond, Jr.]], inventor known as "The Father of Radio Control", built [[Hammond Castle]] as his home and laboratory |
* [[John Hays Hammond, Jr.]], inventor known as "The Father of Radio Control", built [[Hammond Castle]] as his home and laboratory |
||
* [[Halfdan M. Hanson]], architect, most noted for collaboration with [[Henry Davis Sleeper]] on [[Beauport, Sleeper-McCann House]] |
|||
* [[Walker Hancock]], sculptor |
* [[Walker Hancock]], sculptor |
||
*[[Sterling Hayden]], actor and writer<ref>{{cite book | last = Hayden | first = Sterling | title = Wanderer | publisher = Norton | location = New York | year = 1977 | isbn = 0-393-07521-4}}</ref>{{page needed|date=February 2015}} |
|||
* [[Israel Horovitz]] playwright |
|||
* [[Helen Hayes]], actor, spent her summers in Annisquam |
|||
* [[Alpheus Hyatt]], American naturalist and paleontologist |
|||
* [[Winslow Homer]], landscape painter and printmaker, lived and painted in Gloucester in 1870s |
|||
* [[Alfred "Centennial" Johnson]], first recorded single-handed crossing of the Atlantic Ocean |
|||
* [[Israel Horovitz]], playwright and father of [[Ad-Rock|Adam Horovitz]] of [[Beastie Boys]] |
|||
* [[Fitz Henry Lane]], [[Luminism (American art style)|Luminist]] painter, was born and lived in Gloucester |
|||
* [[Alpheus Hyatt]], naturalist and paleontologist |
|||
* [[Tony Millionaire]], artist and animator best known for his comic strip ''[[Maakies]]'' and [[Cartoon Network]]'s ''[[Drinky Crow Show]]'', grew up in Gloucester. [http://thephoenix.com/article_ektid8861.aspx] |
|||
* [[Anna Hyatt Huntington]], animalier sculptor and daughter of Alpheus Hyatt |
|||
* [[William Monahan]], Academy Award–winning American screenwriter. |
|||
* [[Elliott Jaques]], psychoanalyst, social scientist, known for coining term "mid-life crisis"; moved to Gloucester in 1991 and lived there until death in 2003 |
|||
* The [[Rev. Sun Myung Moon]], leader of the [[Unification Church]], spent a great deal of time in Gloucester and the Unification Church at one time held a large amount of waterfront property. [http://theologytoday.ptsem.edu/jan1981/v37-4-article5.htm] |
|||
* [[Alfred "Centennial" Johnson]], first recorded single-handed crossing of Atlantic Ocean |
|||
* [[John Murray (minister)|John Murray]], founder of the [[Universalist]] denomination in the United States |
|||
* [[Hilton Kramer]], art critic and essayist, was born in, and grew up in, Gloucester |
|||
* [[Fitz Henry Lane]], [[Luminism (American art style)|Luminist]] painter, born and lived in Gloucester |
|||
* [[Paul Manship]], sculptor |
|||
* [[Stuffy McInnis]], Major League Baseball player and manager, Harvard baseball coach |
|||
* [[Tony Millionaire]], artist and animator best known for comic strip ''[[Maakies]]'' and [[Cartoon Network]]'s ''[[Drinky Crow Show]]''<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://thephoenix.com/article_ektid8861.aspx|title = Who wants to be Tony Millionaire? - Life - the Phoenix}}</ref> |
|||
* [[Shawn Milne]], Cyclist |
|||
* [[William Monahan]], Academy Award-winning screenwriter |
|||
* [[Sun Myung Moon]], leader of the [[Unification Church]], spent a great deal of time in Gloucester, and the Unification Church at one time owned a large amount of waterfront property<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://theologytoday.ptsem.edu/jan1981/v37-4-article5.htm |title=Theology Today - Vol 37, No. 4 - January 1981 - ARTICLE - the Unification Church and the City of Gloucester |access-date=December 5, 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090611124332/http://theologytoday.ptsem.edu/jan1981/v37-4-article5.htm |archive-date=June 11, 2009 |url-status=dead }}</ref> |
|||
* [[Richard Murphy (Captain)|Richard Murphy]], schooner captain |
|||
* [[John Murray (minister)|John Murray]], founder of [[Universalist Church|Universalist]] denomination in the United States |
|||
* [[Judith Sargent Murray]], feminist, essayist, playwright, and poet |
* [[Judith Sargent Murray]], feminist, essayist, playwright, and poet |
||
* [[Laura Nyro]], singer and songwriter, lived in Gloucester for a number of years |
|||
* [[Charles Olson]], [[Black Mountain College]] poet |
* [[Charles Olson]], [[Black Mountain College]] poet |
||
* [[Kris Osborn]], former CNN commentator and current columnist for various military industry blogs |
|||
* [[Herb Pomeroy]], influential [[jazz]] musician, was born in Gloucester |
|||
* [[Mark Parisi]], author of syndicated comic strip ''Off the Mark'', was born in Gloucester<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.gloucestertimes.com/news/local_news/off-the-mark-cartoonist-set-for-main-street-visit/article_6a4f9b68-19d7-578f-891c-d45a5ee00e84.html|title='Off-the-mark' cartoonist set for Main Street visit|work=[[Gloucester Daily Times]]|date=December 1, 2014|access-date=December 3, 2014}}</ref> |
|||
* [[Jessie Ralph]], actress |
|||
* [[Cy Perkins]], Major League Baseball catcher |
|||
* [[Marc Randazza]], First Amendment lawyer, legal commentator, and legal author was born in Gloucester. He maintains a portion of his law practice in Gloucester. |
|||
* [[ |
* [[Herb Pomeroy]], [[jazz]] musician, born in Gloucester |
||
* [[Jessie Ralph]], actress<ref>{{cite web|url= https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0707771/bio|title=Jessie Ralph|website= IMDb |access-date= October 24, 2012}}</ref> |
|||
*[[Ben Smith (ice hockey coach)|Ben Smith]], Olympic ice hockey coach, son of Benjamin A. Smith II, was born in Gloucester.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.post-gazette.com/olympics/20020218olyhockfill0218p8.asp|title=Women's Hockey: Smith is a study in history|publisher=[[Pittsburgh Post-Gazette]]|date=February 18, 2002|accessdate=July 25, 2011}}</ref> |
|||
* [[Marc Randazza]], First Amendment lawyer, legal news commentator, columnist (Fox News and CNN) |
|||
* [[William Stacy]] (1734–1802) American Revolutionary War officer, and pioneer to the Ohio Country, was born in Gloucester.<ref>Lemonds, Leo L.: ''Col. William Stacy – Revolutionary War Hero'', Cornhusker Press, Hastings, Nebraska (1993) p. 13, 15, 61.</ref> |
|||
* [[Russ Russo]], actor |
|||
* [[Vermin Supreme]], performance artist, anarchist and activist |
|||
* [[Daniel Sargent (politician)|Daniel Sargent]], merchant, politician |
|||
* [[Capt. Marty Welch]], schooner captain, winner of first International Fishing Schooner Championship Races. |
|||
* [[Epes Sargent (poet)|Epes Sargent]], editor, poet and playwright |
|||
* [[Henry Sargent]], painter and military man |
|||
* [[Paul Dudley Sargent]], Revolutionary War hero, one of founding overseers of [[Bowdoin College]] |
|||
* [[Winthrop Sargent]], patriot, governor, politician, writer; member of Federalist party |
|||
* [[Ben Smith (ice hockey coach)|Ben Smith]], Olympic ice hockey coach, son of Benjamin A. Smith II, born in Gloucester<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.post-gazette.com/olympics/20020218olyhockfill0218p8.asp|title=Women's Hockey: Smith is a study in history|newspaper=[[Pittsburgh Post-Gazette]]|date=February 18, 2002|access-date=July 25, 2011}}</ref> |
|||
* [[Benjamin A. Smith II]], [[U.S. senator]] from Massachusetts (1960–1962), Mayor of Gloucester (1954–1955)<ref>{{cite dictionary|url= http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=S000517|title=SMITH, Benjamin A. II, (1916–1991) |
|||
|dictionary= Biographical Directory of the United States Congress|access-date= October 24, 2012}}</ref> |
|||
* [[William Stacy]] (1734–1802), Revolutionary War officer, pioneer to Ohio Country<ref>Lemonds, Leo L.: ''Col. William Stacy – Revolutionary War Hero'', Cornhusker Press, Hastings, Nebraska (1993) p. 13, 15, 61.</ref> |
|||
* [[Vermin Supreme]], performance artist, anarchist, politician, and activist (perennial presidential candidate) |
|||
* [[Martin Weitzman]], economist, lived in Gloucester<ref>{{cite news |last1=Maskin |first1=Eric |last2=Stavins |first2=Robert |last3=Stock |first3=James |last4=Hart |first4=Oliver |title=Martin L. Weitzman, 77 |url=https://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2021/02/martin-l-weitzman-77/ |work=Harvard Gazette |date=February 3, 2021}}</ref> |
|||
* [[Martin Welch]], schooner captain, winner of first International Fishing Schooner Championship Races<ref>{{cite web|url= https://sites.google.com/site/schooneresperanto/home/capt-marty-welch|title= Capt. Marty Welch |
|||
|publisher=Schooner Esperanto|access-date= October 24, 2012}}</ref> |
|||
* [[Philip Saltonstall Weld]], famed sailor and newspaper publisher |
|||
* [[Anna Maria Wells]], poet and writer for children |
|||
* [[Alfred J. Wiggin]], painter and society portraitist. |
|||
* [[Charles Brenton Fisk]], organbuilder |
|||
==References== |
==References== |
||
{{reflist}} |
{{reflist}} |
||
==Further reading== |
|||
{{see also|Timeline of Gloucester, Massachusetts#Bibliography|l1=Bibliography of the history of Gloucester, Massachusetts}} |
|||
*Anastas, Peter and Parsons, Peter. ''When Gloucester Was Gloucester: Toward An Oral History Of The City'' (1973), Harvard University Press. Published for the 350th Anniversary Celebration of the City |
|||
* Clark, Margaret Elwyn. "Managing uncertainty: Family, religion, and collective action among fishermen's wives in Gloucester, Massachusetts." in Jane Nadel-Klein and Dona Lee Davis, eds. ''To Work and to Weep: Women in Fishing Economies'' (1988) pp: 261–278. |
|||
* Connolly, James Brendan. ''The Port of Gloucester'' (1940) |
|||
* Heyrman, Christine. ''Commerce and Culture: The Maritime Communities of Colonial Massachusetts, 1690–1750'' (1986) |
|||
* Meltzer, Michael. ''The world of the small commercial fishermen: their lives and their boats'' (1980) |
|||
* Miller, Marc L., and John Van Maanen. {{"'}}Boats Don't Fish, People Do': Some Ethnographic Notes on the Federal Management of Fisheries in Gloucester." ''Human Organization'' 38.4 (1979): 377–385. |
|||
* Otto, Peter, and Jeroen Struben. "Gloucester fishery: insights from a group modeling intervention." ''System Dynamics Review'' 20.4 (2004): 287–312. [https://web.archive.org/web/20160113235914/http://yzkc.ncu.edu.cn/dlx/ziyuan/sucai/%E7%B3%BB%E7%BB%9F%E5%8A%A8%E5%8A%9B%E5%AD%A6%E8%8B%B1%E6%96%87%E6%96%87%E7%8C%AE/Gloucester%20Fishery%20insights%20from%20a%20group%20modeling%20intervention.pdf online] |
|||
*Thomas, Gordon W. ''Fast and Able: Life Stories of Great Gloucester Fishing Vessels'' (1952) |
|||
==External links== |
==External links== |
||
{{commons category}} |
{{commons category}} |
||
{{wikivoyage|Gloucester (Massachusetts)|Gloucester}} |
|||
* [http://gloucester-ma.gov/ City of Gloucester website] |
|||
* [http://gloucester-ma.gov/ City of Gloucester official website] |
|||
* {{cite web |title=Vital Records of Gloucester, MA to the end of the year 1849 |publisher=The Massachusetts Vital Records Project |date=2005-2010 |url=http://ma-vitalrecords.org/MA/Essex/Gloucester/ |accessdate=7 August 2010}} |
|||
* {{cite web |title=Vital Records of Gloucester, MA to the end of the year 1849 |publisher=The Massachusetts Vital Records Project |date=2005–2010 |url=http://ma-vitalrecords.org/MA/Essex/Gloucester/ |access-date=August 7, 2010}} |
|||
* [http://www.salemdeeds.com/atlases_pages.asp?ImageName=PLATE_0080.jpg&atlastype=Atlases&atlastown=ESSEX+COUNTY&atlas=ESSEX+COUNTY+1872&atlas_desc=ESSEX+COUNTY+1872&pageprefix= 1872 Map of Gloucester] plate 80-81 Atlas of Essex County published 1872. |
|||
* [http://www.salemdeeds.com/atlases_pages.asp?ImageName= |
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20120323153535/http://www.salemdeeds.com/atlases_pages.asp?ImageName=PLATE_0080.jpg&atlastype=Atlases&atlastown=ESSEX+COUNTY&atlas=ESSEX+COUNTY+1872&atlas_desc=ESSEX+COUNTY+1872&pageprefix= 1872 Map of Gloucester] plate 80–81 Atlas of Essex County published 1872. |
||
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20120323153617/http://www.salemdeeds.com/atlases_pages.asp?ImageName=PLATE_0083.jpg&atlastype=Atlases&atlastown=ESSEX+COUNTY&atlas=ESSEX+COUNTY+1872&atlas_desc=ESSEX+COUNTY+1872&pageprefix= 1872 Map of Gloucester Center – Inner Harbor] plate 83 Atlas of Essex County published 1872. |
|||
* {{cite book |url=http://www.salemdeeds.com/atlases_pages.asp?ImageName=PLATE_0085.jpg&atlastype=Atlases&atlastown=ESSEX+COUNTY&atlas=ESSEX+COUNTY+1872&atlas_desc=ESSEX+COUNTY+1872&pageprefix |title=Essex County 1872 | chapter=Plate 0085, Lanesville, Bayview, Annisquam |publisher=salemdeeds.com}} |
* {{cite book |url=http://www.salemdeeds.com/atlases_pages.asp?ImageName=PLATE_0085.jpg&atlastype=Atlases&atlastown=ESSEX+COUNTY&atlas=ESSEX+COUNTY+1872&atlas_desc=ESSEX+COUNTY+1872&pageprefix |title=Essex County 1872 | chapter=Plate 0085, Lanesville, Bayview, Annisquam |publisher=salemdeeds.com}} |
||
*[http://macivilwarmonuments.com/2018/02/03/gloucester Gloucester's Civil War monuments] at [https://macivilwarmonuments.com/ Massachusetts Civil War Monuments Project] |
|||
<br> |
|||
{{Massachusetts}} |
{{Massachusetts}} |
||
{{Essex County, Massachusetts}} |
{{Essex County, Massachusetts}} |
||
{{Greater_Boston}} |
|||
{{Authority control}} |
|||
[[Category:Gloucester, Massachusetts| ]] |
[[Category:Gloucester, Massachusetts| ]] |
||
[[Category:1620s establishments in the Massachusetts Bay Colony]] |
|||
[[Category:1623 establishments in the Thirteen Colonies]] |
|||
[[Category:Articles containing video clips]] |
|||
[[Category:Cities in Essex County, Massachusetts]] |
|||
[[Category:Cities in Massachusetts]] |
[[Category:Cities in Massachusetts]] |
||
[[Category:Populated coastal places in Massachusetts]] |
[[Category:Populated coastal places in Massachusetts]] |
||
[[Category:Populated places established in 1623]] |
[[Category:Populated places established in 1623]] |
||
[[Category: |
[[Category:Port cities and towns in Massachusetts]] |
||
[[Category:Port settlements in the United States]] |
|||
[[af:Gloucester, Massachusetts]] |
|||
[[ca:Gloucester (Massachusetts)]] |
|||
[[de:Gloucester (Massachusetts)]] |
|||
[[es:Gloucester (Massachusetts)]] |
|||
[[fa:گلوکستر، ماساچوست]] |
|||
[[fr:Gloucester (Massachusetts)]] |
|||
[[it:Gloucester (Massachusetts)]] |
|||
[[sw:Gloucester, Massachusetts]] |
|||
[[ht:Gloucester, Massachusetts]] |
|||
[[nl:Gloucester (Massachusetts)]] |
|||
[[pl:Gloucester (Massachusetts)]] |
|||
[[pt:Gloucester (Massachusetts)]] |
|||
[[ru:Глостер (Массачусетс)]] |
|||
[[sv:Gloucester, Massachusetts]] |
|||
[[vi:Gloucester, Massachusetts]] |
|||
[[vo:Gloucester (Massachusetts)]] |
|||
[[war:Gloucester, Massachusetts]] |
|||
[[zh:格洛斯特 (马萨诸塞州)]] |
Latest revision as of 05:29, 20 December 2024
Gloucester, Massachusetts | |
---|---|
Nickname: "The Place To Be In The Summer" | |
Motto: "America's Oldest Seaport" | |
Coordinates: 42°36′57″N 70°39′45″W / 42.61583°N 70.66250°W | |
Country | United States |
State | Massachusetts |
County | Essex |
Settled | 1623 |
Incorporated (town) | 1642 |
Incorporated (city) | 1873 |
Named for | Gloucester, England |
Government | |
• Type | Mayor-council city |
• Mayor | Gregory P. Verga |
Area | |
• Total | 41.51 sq mi (107.51 km2) |
• Land | 26.19 sq mi (67.84 km2) |
• Water | 15.32 sq mi (39.68 km2) |
Elevation | 50 ft (15 m) |
Population (2020) | |
• Total | 29,729 |
• Density | 1,135.00/sq mi (438.23/km2) |
Time zone | UTC−5 (Eastern) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC−4 (Eastern) |
ZIP code | 01930 |
Area code | 351 / 978 |
FIPS code | 25-26150 |
GNIS feature ID | 0615084 |
Website | gloucester-ma |
Gloucester (/ˈɡlɒstər/ GLOST-ər) is a city in Essex County, Massachusetts, United States. It sits on Cape Ann and is a part of Massachusetts's North Shore. The population was 29,729 at the 2020 U.S. Census.[2] An important center of the fishing industry and a popular summer destination, Gloucester consists of an urban core on the north side of the harbor and the outlying neighborhoods of Annisquam, Bay View, Lanesville, Folly Cove, Magnolia, Riverdale, East Gloucester, and West Gloucester.
History
[edit]The boundaries of Gloucester originally included the town of Rockport, in an area dubbed "Sandy Bay". The village separated formally from Gloucester on February 27, 1840. In 1873, Gloucester was reincorporated as a city.
Contact period
[edit]Native Americans inhabited what would become northeastern Massachusetts for thousands of years prior to the European colonization of the Americas. At the time of contact, the area was inhabited by Agawam people under sachem Masconomet.[3] Evidence of a village exists on Pole's Hill in the current Riverdale neighborhood.[4]
In 1606, Samuel de Champlain explored the harbor, and produced the first known map of Gloucester harbor titling it le Beau port. This map suggests substantial Native American settlement on the shores of the harbor. In 1614 John Smith again explored the area, identifying the indigenous inhabitants as Aggawom.[5] In 1623 men from the Dorchester Company established a permanent fishing outpost in the area.[6]
At the Cape Ann settlement, a legal form of government was established, and from that Massachusetts Bay Colony sprung. Roger Conant was the governor under the Cape Ann patent, and as such, has been called the first governor of Massachusetts.[7][8]
Life in this first settlement was harsh and it was short-lived. The area was abandoned around 1626, and the people removed themselves to Naumkeag (in what is now called Salem, Massachusetts), where more fertile soil for planting was to be found. The meetinghouse and governor's house were even disassembled and relocated to the new place of settlement.
Second English Settlement
[edit]At some point in the following years (though no record exists), the area was slowly resettled by English colonists. The town was formally incorporated in 1642. It is at this time that the name "Gloucester" first appears on tax rolls, although in various spellings. The town took its name from the city of Gloucester in southwest England, perhaps from where many of its new occupants originated but more likely because Gloucester, England, was a Parliamentarian stronghold, successfully defended with the aid of the Earl of Essex against the King in the Siege of Gloucester of 1643.
This new permanent settlement focused on the Town Green area, an inlet in the marshes at a bend in the Annisquam River. This area is now the site of Grant Circle, a large traffic rotary at which Massachusetts Route 128 mingles with a major city street (Washington Street/Rt 127). Here the first permanent settlers built a meeting house and therefore focused the nexus of their settlement on the "Island" for nearly 100 years. Unlike other early coastal towns in New England, development in Gloucester was not focused around the harbor as it is today, rather it was inland that people settled first. This is evidenced by the placement of the Town Green nearly two miles from the harbor-front.
The Town Green is also where the settlers built the first school. By Massachusetts Bay Colony Law, any town with 100 families or more had to provide a public schoolhouse. This requirement was met in 1698, with Thomas Riggs standing as the town's first schoolmaster.
In 1700, the selectmen of Gloucester recognized the claim of Samuel English, grandson of Agawam sachem Masconomet, to the land of the town, and paid him seven pounds (equal to £1,327 today) for the quitclaim.[3]
The White-Ellery House was erected in 1710 upon the Town Green. It was built at the edge of a marsh for Gloucester's first settled minister, the Reverend John White (1677–1760).[9]
Early industry included subsistence farming and logging. Because of the poor soil and rocky hills, Cape Ann was not well suited for farming on a large scale. Small family farms and livestock provided the bulk of the sustenance to the population. Fishing, for which the town is known today, was limited to close-to-shore, with families subsisting on small catches as opposed to the great bounties yielded in later years. The fishermen of Gloucester did not command the Grand Banks until the mid-18th century. Historian Christine Heyrman, examining the town's society between 1690 and 1750, finds that at the beginning community sensibility was weak in a town that was a loose agglomeration of individuals. Commerce and capitalism transformed the society, making it much more closely knit with extended families interlocking in business relationships.[10]
Early Gloucestermen cleared great swaths of the forest of Cape Ann for farm and pasture land, using the timber to build structures as far away as Boston. The rocky moors of Gloucester remained clear for two centuries until the forest reclaimed the land in the 20th century. The inland part of the island became known as the "Commons", the "Common Village", or "Dogtown". Small dwellings lay scattered here amongst the boulders and swamps, along roads that meandered through the hills. These dwellings were at times little more than shanties; only one was even two stories tall. Despite their size, several generations of families were raised in such houses. One feature of the construction of these houses was that under one side of the floor was dug a cellar hole (for the keeping of food), supported by a foundation of laid-stone (without mortar). These cellar holes are still visible today along the trails throughout the inland part of Gloucester; they, and some walls, are all that remain of the village there.
Growth
[edit]The town grew, and eventually colonists lived on the opposite side of the Annisquam River. In a time of legally mandated church attendance this was a long way to walk—or row—on a Sunday morning. In 1718 the settlers on the opposite shore of the river split off from the First Parish community at the Green and formed "Second Parish". While still part of the town of Gloucester, the people of Second, or "West", Parish now constructed their own meetinghouse and designated their own place of burial, both of which were in the hills near the marshes behind Wingaersheek Beach. The meetinghouse is gone now, but deep in the woods on the Second Parish Road, Old Thompson road, one can still find the stone foundation and memorial altar, as well as scattered stones of the abandoned burial ground.
Other parts of town later followed suit. Third Parish, in northern Gloucester, was founded in 1728. Fourth Parish split off from First Parish in 1742. Finally, in 1754, the people of Sandy Bay (what would later be called Rockport) split off from First Parish to found Fifth Parish. The Sandy Bay church founding was the last religious re-ordering of the colonial period. All of these congregations still exist in some form, with the exception of Fourth Parish, the site of whose meeting house is now a highway.
At one time, there was a thriving granite industry in Gloucester. English writer Harriet Martineau, who visited Gloucester during her travels in the United States in the mid-1830s, commented on the ubiquity of granite there:
It has great wealth of granite and fish. It is composed of granite; and almost its only visitors are fish. **** The houses look as if they were squeezed in among the rocks. The granite rises straight behind a house, encroaches on each side, and overhangs the roof, leaving space only for a sprinkling of grass about the door, for a red shrub or two to wave from a crevice, and a drip of water to flow down among gay weeds. Room for these dwellings is obtained by blasting the rocks. Formerly, people were frightened at fragments falling through the roof after a blasting: but now, it has become too common an occurrence to alarm any body.[11]
Geography and transportation
[edit]Gloucester is located at 42°37′26″N 70°40′32″W / 42.62389°N 70.67556°W (42.624015, −70.675521).[12] According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 41.5 square miles (107.5 km2), of which 26.2 square miles (67.8 km2) is land and 15.3 square miles (39.6 km2), or 36.88%, is water.[13]
Gloucester occupies most of the eastern end of Cape Ann, except for the far tip, which is the town of Rockport. The city is split in half by the Annisquam River, which flows northward through the middle of the city into Ipswich Bay. At its southern end, it is connected to Gloucester Harbor by the Blynman Canal. The land along the northwestern shore of the river is marshy, creating several small islands. Gloucester Harbor is divided into several smaller coves, including the Western Harbor (site of the Fisherman's Memorial) and the Inner Harbor (home to the Gloucester fishing fleet). The eastern side of Gloucester Harbor is divided from the rest of Massachusetts Bay by Eastern Point, extending some 2 miles (3 km) outward from the mainland. There are several parks in the city, the largest of which are Ravenswood Park, Stage Fort Park and Mount Ann Park.
Gloucester lies between Ipswich Bay to the north and Massachusetts Bay to the south. The city is bordered on the east by Rockport, and on the west by Ipswich, Essex and Manchester-by-the-Sea to the west. (The town line with Ipswich is located across Essex Harbor, and as such there is no land connection between the towns.) Gloucester lies 16 miles (26 km) east-northeast of Salem and 31 miles (50 km) northeast of Boston. Gloucester lies at the eastern terminus of Route 128, which ends at Route 127A. Route 127A begins at Route 127 just east of the Route 128 terminus, heading into Rockport before terminating there. Route 127 enters from Manchester-by-the-Sea before crossing the Blynman Canal and passing through downtown towards Rockport. It then re-enters Gloucester near Folly Cove, running opposite of its usual north–south orientation towards its terminus at Route 128. Route 133 also terminates within the city, entering from Essex and terminating just west of the Blynman Canal at Route 127. Besides the bridge over the Blynman Canal, there are only two other connections between the eastern and western halves of town, the A. Piatt Andrew Memorial Bridge, carrying Route 128, and the Boston & Maine Railroad Bridge, just north of the Blynman Canal.
Gloucester is home to the Cape Ann Transportation Authority, which serves the city and surrounding towns. Two stops (in West Gloucester and in downtown Gloucester) provide access to the Newburyport/Rockport Line of the MBTA Commuter Rail, which extends from Rockport along the North Shore to Boston's North Station. The nearest airport is the Beverly Municipal Airport, with the nearest national and international air service being at Boston's Logan International Airport.
Climate data for Gloucester, Massachusetts | |||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Month | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | Year |
Record high °F (°C) | 68 (20) |
65 (18) |
86 (30) |
88 (31) |
95 (35) |
98 (37) |
100 (38) |
100 (38) |
97 (36) |
87 (31) |
76 (24) |
74 (23) |
100 (38) |
Mean daily maximum °F (°C) | 35.3 (1.8) |
38.0 (3.3) |
45.0 (7.2) |
55.4 (13.0) |
65.4 (18.6) |
74.4 (23.6) |
79.9 (26.6) |
78.6 (25.9) |
71.2 (21.8) |
60.5 (15.8) |
50.7 (10.4) |
40.3 (4.6) |
57.9 (14.4) |
Mean daily minimum °F (°C) | 18.1 (−7.7) |
20.3 (−6.5) |
27.0 (−2.8) |
35.9 (2.2) |
45.5 (7.5) |
55.1 (12.8) |
60.6 (15.9) |
59.8 (15.4) |
52.3 (11.3) |
41.0 (5.0) |
33.2 (0.7) |
23.7 (−4.6) |
39.4 (4.1) |
Record low °F (°C) | −12 (−24) |
−12 (−24) |
−2 (−19) |
12 (−11) |
30 (−1) |
31 (−1) |
46 (8) |
43 (6) |
33 (1) |
20 (−7) |
10 (−12) |
−15 (−26) |
−15 (−26) |
Average precipitation inches (mm) | 4.22 (107) |
3.54 (90) |
4.25 (108) |
4.34 (110) |
3.55 (90) |
3.63 (92) |
3.46 (88) |
3.40 (86) |
3.87 (98) |
4.22 (107) |
4.69 (119) |
4.27 (108) |
47.44 (1,205) |
Average snowfall inches (cm) | 12.6 (32) |
12.7 (32) |
7.7 (20) |
1.4 (3.6) |
0 (0) |
0 (0) |
0 (0) |
0 (0) |
0 (0) |
0 (0) |
0.6 (1.5) |
7.2 (18) |
42.2 (107) |
Source 1: [14] | |||||||||||||
Source 2: [15] |
Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec | Year |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
42.3 °F (5.7 °C) | 39.4 °F (4.1 °C) | 39.4 °F (4.1 °C) | 42.8 °F (6.0 °C) | 50.4 °F (10.2 °C) | 57.9 °F (14.4 °C) | 65.5 °F (18.6 °C) | 66.9 °F (19.4 °C) | 63.5 °F (17.5 °C) | 57.4 °F (14.1 °C) | 50.7 °F (10.4 °C) | 46.0 °F (7.8 °C) | 51.9 °F (11.1 °C) |
Demographics
[edit]Year | Pop. | ±% |
---|---|---|
1790 | 5,317 | — |
1800 | 5,313 | −0.1% |
1810 | 5,943 | +11.9% |
1820 | 6,384 | +7.4% |
1830 | 7,510 | +17.6% |
1840 | 6,350 | −15.4% |
1850 | 7,786 | +22.6% |
1860 | 10,904 | +40.0% |
1870 | 15,389 | +41.1% |
1880 | 19,329 | +25.6% |
1890 | 24,651 | +27.5% |
1900 | 26,121 | +6.0% |
1910 | 24,398 | −6.6% |
1920 | 22,947 | −5.9% |
1930 | 24,204 | +5.5% |
1940 | 24,046 | −0.7% |
1950 | 25,167 | +4.7% |
1960 | 25,789 | +2.5% |
1970 | 27,941 | +8.3% |
1980 | 27,768 | −0.6% |
1990 | 28,716 | +3.4% |
2000 | 30,273 | +5.4% |
2010 | 28,789 | −4.9% |
2020 | 29,729 | +3.3% |
2023 | 29,959 | +0.8% |
* = population estimate. Source: United States census records and Population Estimates Program data.[17][18][19][20][21][22][23][24][25][26][27][28] Source: U.S. Decennial Census[29] |
As of the 2000 census,[30] there were 30,273 people, 12,592 households, and 7,895 families residing in the city. The population density was 1,166.0 inhabitants per square mile (450.2/km2). There were 13,958 housing units at an average density of 537.6 per square mile (207.6/km2). The racial makeup of the city was 96.99% White, 0.61% African American, 0.72% Asian, 0.12% Native American, 0.02% Pacific Islander, 0.50% from other races, and 1.03% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 1.48% of the population. 22.6% were of Italian, 16.2% Irish, 11.1% English, 8.5% Portuguese and 7.1% American ancestry according to Census 2000.
There were 12,592 households, out of which 27.6% had children under the age of 18 living with them, 48.8% were married couples living together, 10.6% had a female householder with no husband present, and 37.3% were non-families. 30.7% of all households were made up of individuals, and 11.4% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.38 and the average family size was 3.00.
In the city, the population was spread out, with 22.0% under the age of 18, 6.5% from 18 to 24, 29.9% from 25 to 44, 26.1% from 45 to 64, and 15.6% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 40 years. For every 100 females, there were 92.0 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 88.8 males.
The median income for a household in the city was $58,568, and the median income for a family was $80,970 from a 2007 estimate.[31] Males had a median income of $41,465 versus $30,566 for females. The per capita income for the city was $25,595. About 7.1% of families and 8.8% of the population were below the poverty line, including 11.8% of those under age 18 and 11.2% of those age 65 or over.
Politics
[edit]Gloucester is a city, with a strong mayor-council system. The current mayor of Gloucester is Gregory P. Verga as of January 2022. The Mayor is also reserved a seat on the School Committee. City offices are elected every two years (those ending with odd numbers). In 2007, over 40 people ran for the 15 elected seats in the city's government.
The city is divided into five Wards, each split into two precincts:
- Ward 1: East Gloucester – includes Eastern Point and Rocky Neck
- Ward 2: Downtown and the Harbor area
- Ward 3: The western edge of the "island" from Stacy Boulevard to Wheeler's Point – includes the Heights at Cape Ann and Pond View Village.
- Ward 4: North Gloucester – includes Riverdale, Annisquam, Bay View, and Lanesville.
- Ward 5: The entirety of West Gloucester west of the Annisquam River and Blynman Canal to Manchester-by-the-Sea and Essex – includes the Wingaersheek area and village of Magnolia.
As late as the mid-20th century, Gloucester had as many as eight wards, but they have been since reorganized into the current number.
On November 7, 2005, incumbent Mayor John Bell was re-elected to a third term in office. He stated his intention not to run for reelection and stepped down in January 2008.
On November 6, 2007, Carolyn Kirk was elected as the Mayor of Gloucester. Kirk resigned in December 2014 to take a position in the administration of Massachusetts governor Charlie Baker. Sefatia Theken was then voted to be the interim mayor of Gloucester by the City Council. Theken was elected to serve a full two-year term on November 2, 2015, and re-elected again in 2017 and 2019. She was defeated for re-election in 2021 by Gregory P. Verga.
Year | Democratic | Republican | Third parties | Total Votes | Margin |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2020 | 66.84% 12,138 | 30.81% 5,595 | 2.35% 426 | 18,159 | 36.03% |
2016 | 60.70% 9,808 | 33.14% 5,355 | 6.16% 995 | 16,158 | 27.56% |
2012 | 62.63% 9,780 | 35.44% 5,535 | 1.93% 301 | 15,616 | 27.18% |
2008 | 64.54% 9,967 | 33.11% 5,113 | 2.36% 364 | 15,444 | 31.43% |
2004 | 63.79% 9,536 | 34.69% 5,185 | 1.52% 227 | 14,948 | 29.11% |
2000 | 61.11% 8,352 | 30.41% 4,156 | 8.48% 1,159 | 13,667 | 30.70% |
1996 | 62.78% 7,966 | 25.95% 3,293 | 11.26% 1,429 | 12,688 | 36.83% |
1992 | 48.55% 6,808 | 28.40% 3,982 | 23.05% 3,232 | 14,022 | 20.15% |
1988 | 56.16% 7,440 | 42.81% 5,671 | 1.03% 137 | 13,248 | 13.35% |
1984 | 45.12% 5,768 | 54.58% 6,978 | 0.31% 39 | 12,785 | 9.46% |
1980 | 38.81% 4,928 | 43.55% 5,530 | 17.63% 2,239 | 12,697 | 4.74% |
1976 | 53.00% 6,795 | 43.54% 5,582 | 3.46% 443 | 12,820 | 9.46% |
1972 | 50.09% 6,150 | 49.48% 6,076 | 0.43% 53 | 12,279 | 0.60% |
1968 | 58.39% 6,900 | 38.36% 4,533 | 3.26% 385 | 11,818 | 20.03% |
1964 | 72.96% 8,749 | 26.74% 3,207 | 0.30% 36 | 11,992 | 46.21% |
1960 | 52.75% 6,719 | 47.14% 6,005 | 0.11% 14 | 12,738 | 5.61% |
1956 | 30.55% 3,497 | 69.25% 7,926 | 0.19% 22 | 11,445 | 38.70% |
1952 | 36.47% 4,390 | 63.34% 7,624 | 0.18% 22 | 12,036 | 26.87% |
1948 | 44.97% 4,448 | 53.53% 5,295 | 1.51% 149 | 9,892 | 8.56% |
1944 | 46.88% 4,445 | 53.01% 5,026 | 0.11% 10 | 9,481 | 6.13% |
1940 | 41.86% 4,270 | 57.70% 5,885 | 0.44% 45 | 10,200 | 15.83% |
Voter registration and party enrollment as of October 15, 2008[33] | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Party | Number of voters | Percentage | |||
Unaffiliated | 12,563 | 59.89% | |||
Democratic | 6,056 | 28.87% | |||
Republican | 2,208 | 10.53% | |||
Libertarian | 149 | 0.71% | |||
Total | 20,976 | 100% |
Education
[edit]The following schools are located within the Gloucester Public Schools District:
- Gloucester High School (9–12)
- O'Maley Innovation Middle School (6–8)
- East Veterans Elementary School (K-5) (Formerly East Gloucester Elementary School; the former Veteran's Memorial School (which has been demloished) was merged into it)
- Plum Cove Elementary School (K–5)
- Beeman Elementary School (K–5)
- West Parish Elementary School (K–5) (site of the West Parish Elementary School Science Park)
- Gloucester Preschool
Economy
[edit]Gorton's of Gloucester, Mighty Mac, Gloucester Engineering, Good Harbor Consulting, Para Research, Aid-Pack, Cyrk, and Varian Semiconductor are among the companies based in Gloucester.
Gloucester and the sea
[edit]The town was an important shipbuilding center, and the first schooner was reputedly built there in 1713. The community developed into an important fishing port, largely due to its proximity to Georges Bank and other fishing banks off the east coast of Nova Scotia and Newfoundland. Gloucester's most famous[citation needed] (and nationally recognized) seafood business was founded in 1849 as John Pew & Sons. It became Gorton-Pew Fisheries in 1906, and in 1957 changed its name to Gorton's of Gloucester. The iconic image of the "Gorton's Fisherman", and the products he represents, are known throughout the country and beyond. Besides catching and processing seafood, Gloucester is also a center for research on marine life and conservation; Ocean Alliance is headquartered in the city.
In the late 19th century, Gloucester saw an influx of Portuguese and Italian immigrants; they were seeking work in the town's flourishing fishing industry, and a better life in America. Some present-day fishermen of Gloucester are descendants of these early immigrants. The strong Portuguese and Italian influence is evident in the many festivals celebrated throughout the year. During the Catholic celebration, St Peter's Fiesta, relatives of fishermen past and present carry oars representing many of the fishing vessels which call Gloucester their home. Saint Peter is the patron saint of the fishermen. Gloucester remains an active fishing port, and in 2013 ranked 21st in the United States with respect to fish landings. In that year, 62 million pounds of fish were caught bringing in an estimated $42 million.[34]
Arts
[edit]Painting and printmaking
[edit]Gloucester's scenery, active fishing industry, and arts community have attracted and inspired painters since the early 19th century. The first Gloucester painter of note was native-born Fitz Henry Lane, whose home still exists on the waterfront. The premier collection of his works is in the Cape Ann Museum, which holds 40 of his paintings and 100 of his drawings. Other painters subsequently attracted to Gloucester include William Morris Hunt, Winslow Homer, Childe Hassam, John Twachtman, Frederick Mulhaupt, Frank Duveneck, Cecilia Beaux, Jane Peterson, Gordon Grant, Harry DeMaine, Emile Gruppe, Stuart Davis, Joseph Solman, Mark Rothko, Milton Avery, Barnett Newman, William Meyerowitz, Joan Lockhart, Theresa Bernstein, and Marsden Hartley, and artists from the Ashcan School such as Edward Hopper, John Sloan, Robert Henri, William Glackens, Emile Gruppe, Carl W. Illig, and Maurice Prendergast.
Smith Cove is home to the Rocky Neck Art Colony, the oldest art colony in the country. Folly Cove was the home of the Folly Cove Designers, influential to this day in print design and technique.
Sculpture
[edit]Several important sculptors have lived and worked in East Gloucester, Annisquam, Lanesville and Folly Cove. They include George Aarons, Anna Hyatt Huntington, Charles Grafly, Paul Manship and his daughter-in-law Margaret Cassidy Manship, Walker Hancock, and George Demetrios. In addition, Aristides Demetrios grew up in Folly Cove.
Literature
[edit]- Captains Courageous (1897) by Rudyard Kipling was set in Gloucester, and adapted as a 1937 movie starring Spencer Tracy.
- T. S. Eliot (1888–1965) summered at the family house near Eastern Point in his early years. This house is now owned by the TS Eliot Foundation and used as a writer's retreat. Eliot drew great inspiration from Gloucester, and his early poems were collected in a notebook purchased from Procters on Main Street, and now part of the Berg Collection at the New York City Public Library.[35] One of his Four Quartets is entitled The Dry Salvages, the rocks off the N.E. coast of Gloucester.
- Charles Olson (1910–1970), a poet and teacher at Black Mountain College in North Carolina, composed a 635-page poem known as The Maximus Poems, which centered on Gloucester.
- Gloucester is often referred to in the works of horror writer H. P. Lovecraft. The fictional town of Innsmouth in Lovecraft's The Shadow Over Innsmouth is believed partially based on Cape Ann as a whole and Gloucester in particular.
- The book The Perfect Storm, which recounted a massive storm of 1991, had figures based in the town. Scenes from the film adaptation by the same name were filmed there.
- Gloucester and its coast guard station are the center of the land action in Michael J. Tougias' 2005 book Ten Hours Until Dawn, recounting the loss of the pilot boat Can Do and its crew during the blizzard of 1978.[36]
- Gloucesterbook, Gloucestertide, and Gloucestermas are three novels in the Gloucesterman series by Gloucester novelist Jonathan Bayliss set in Gloucester, fictionalized as "Dogtown" on "Cape Gloucester".
- Hersenschimmen (Out of Mind), a 1984 novel by J. Bernlef, is set in Gloucester.
- Anita Diamant has set two novels in Gloucester, The Last Days of Dogtown and Good Harbor.
Comics
[edit]Gloucester is the birthplace of Marvel character Dane Whitman whose superhero alter ego is the Black Knight.
Film
[edit]- Author! Author! had scenes shot on Good Harbor Beach in Gloucester.
- In The Bostonians, oceanfront scenes were filmed on rocks at Rafes Chasm Park, off Hesperus Avenue.
- Captains Courageous was set in Gloucester.
- The Gloucester 18 is a documentary film that investigates the Gloucester pregnancy pact, and was filmed entirely in Gloucester.
- The Good Son was filmed in Gloucester and other Cape Ann communities.
- Grown Ups
- Manchester by the Sea much of which was filmed in Gloucester.
- Mermaids had scenes shot in the Magnolia area of Gloucester.
- Moonlight Mile was filmed almost entirely in Gloucester, with some shots in Marblehead.
- The Perfect Storm was filmed and set in Gloucester.
- Polis is This: Charles Olson and the Persistence of Place is a one-hour documentary about the poet Charles Olson which the Boston Phoenix called "the best film about an American poet ever made."
- Portions of Stuck on You were filmed in Gloucester and in neighboring Rockport. (The rink scenes were filmed at the O'Maley School.)
- The Women was partly filmed in Annisquam.
- The Russians Are Coming, the Russians Are Coming takes place on a fictional Gloucester island but was filmed in Mendocino, California.
- One Step Beyond Episode 19, "The Captain's Guests", takes place on "Cape Ann Road" set in Gloucester.
- Clear History takes place on an island in New England, and was filmed in Gloucester and around Cape Ann.
- The miniseries Olive Kitteridge: Though set in Maine, it was filmed in Gloucester and around Cape Ann.
- The 2021 film CODA is based and was shot in Gloucester.
Television
[edit]National Geographic Channel films its reality television series Wicked Tuna, documenting and chronicling the lives of commercial tuna fishermen, and the lucrative bluefin tuna industry, in Gloucester.
Route 66 season 2, episode 6, "Once To Every Man" (October 27, 1961) was set and filmed in Gloucester.
Bewitched season 7, episode 5, "Darrin On A Pedestal" (October 22, 1970) was set and partially filmed on Gloucester.
Spenser: For Hire, season 2, episode 1, "Widow's Walk" (October 4, 1986) was set and filmed in Gloucester.
Theater
[edit]The Gloucester Stage Company stages five to eight plays each season, primarily in the summer months. Located in East Gloucester, the theatre sits at water's edge overlooking Smith's Cove. It was founded in 1979 by local arts and business leaders to encourage playwrights and their new works. Israel Horovitz, who founded the GSC, was also its artistic director from 1979 to 2006. Over the years, plays developed at the Gloucester Stage Company have gone on to critical acclaim, on and off Broadway, nationally and internationally.[citation needed] The group draws theatre-goers from Gloucester, neighboring North Shore districts, and the greater Boston area, as well as seasonal residents and tourists.[citation needed]
Architecture
[edit]The city has much significant architecture, from pre-Revolutionary houses to the hilltop 1870 City Hall, which dominates the town and harbor. It also has exotic waterfront homes now converted to museums, including Beauport, built 1907–1934 by designer Henry Davis Sleeper in collaboration with local architect Halfdan Hanson, said to raise eclecticism to the level of genius. In addition, it has Hammond Castle, built 1926–1929 by inventor John Hays Hammond, Jr., as a setting for his collection of Roman, medieval and Renaissance artifacts. Gloucester was also the home of feminist writer Judith Sargent Murray and John Murray, the founder of the first Universalist Church in America. Their house still exists as the Sargent House Museum. Many museums are located in the main downtown area, such as the Cape Ann Museum, and the museum/aquarium Maritime Gloucester.
Points of interest
[edit]- The schooner Adventure
- Annisquam
- Cape Ann Museum
- Dogtown Common
- Norman's Woe, known for several shipwrecks, including The Wreck of the Hesperus
- Ravenswood Park
- Rocky Neck Art Colony, America's oldest working art colony
- Sargent House Museum
- Stage Fort Park
- White-Ellery House
Gloucester's most noted landmark is the harborside Man at the Wheel statue (also known as the "Gloucester Fisherman's Memorial Cenotaph"), dedicated to "They that go down to the sea in ships", which is a quote from Psalm 107:23–32.
Gloucester's largest annual event is St. Peter's Fiesta, sponsored by the local Italian-American community. It is held the last weekend in June, which is typically the weekend closest to the saint's feast day. Preceded by a nine-day novena of prayers, the festival highlights include the blessing of the fleet and the greasy pole contest.
Notable people
[edit]- Sylvester Ahola, jazz trumpeter and cornetist
- Willie Alexander, singer and keyboard player, formerly of the Lost, the Bagatelle, the Grass Menagerie and the Boom Boom Band, before briefly becoming a member of The Velvet Underground, was raised and is based in Gloucester; much of his later work involves collaborations in various media with area's rich arts community
- A. Piatt Andrew, congressman, Assistant Treasury Secretary, and Harvard professor;[37] The Route 128 bridge connecting the island and mainland portions of Gloucester was named after him
- Roger Babson, founder of Babson College and presidential candidate for Prohibition Party in 1940
- Walworth Barbour, diplomat, lived for many years in Gloucester
- Thomas P. Barnett, painter
- Jonathan Bayliss, novelist and playwright
- Cecilia Beaux, painter and society portraitist
- Howard Blackburn, fisherman and adventurer
- Nell Blaine, painter
- Clarence Birdseye, founder of modern frozen food industry
- Kyle Bochniak, MMA Fighter
- Phil Bolger, prolific 20th-century boat designer with 668 designs to his credit, designed Canadian-built tall ship HMS Rose later renamed HMS Surprise for use in Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World
- Hugo Burnham, drummer and founding member of British post-punk band Gang of Four
- Virginia Lee Burton (1909–1968), children's book author and illustrator (The Little House and Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel), founder of the Folly Cove Designers group
- Roger Conant, first governor of the Cape Ann colony, moved the colony's center from the Gloucester area to Salem
- Carleton S. Coon, physical anthropologist and president of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists
- Roger Cressey, former member of United States National Security Council, terrorism analyst for NBC News, president of Good Harbor Consulting, and adjunct professor at Georgetown University
- Thomas Dalton, abolitionist leader
- Aristides Demetrios, sculptor, grew up in Gloucester as son of Virginia Lee Burton
- James Elliot, author and United States Representative from Vermont[38]
- Henry Ferrini, critically acclaimed independent filmmaker, nephew of Vincent Ferrini
- Vincent Ferrini, poet, first Poet Laureate of Gloucester
- Thomas Gardner, landed in 1624 at Cape Ann to form colony at what is now known as Gloucester
- Gregory Gibson, author of Goneboy: a Walkabout, Demon of the Waters and Hubert's Freaks
- Raymond Greenleaf, actor
- Emil Gruppe, painter
- John Hays Hammond, Jr., inventor known as "The Father of Radio Control", built Hammond Castle as his home and laboratory
- Halfdan M. Hanson, architect, most noted for collaboration with Henry Davis Sleeper on Beauport, Sleeper-McCann House
- Walker Hancock, sculptor
- Sterling Hayden, actor and writer[39][page needed]
- Helen Hayes, actor, spent her summers in Annisquam
- Winslow Homer, landscape painter and printmaker, lived and painted in Gloucester in 1870s
- Israel Horovitz, playwright and father of Adam Horovitz of Beastie Boys
- Alpheus Hyatt, naturalist and paleontologist
- Anna Hyatt Huntington, animalier sculptor and daughter of Alpheus Hyatt
- Elliott Jaques, psychoanalyst, social scientist, known for coining term "mid-life crisis"; moved to Gloucester in 1991 and lived there until death in 2003
- Alfred "Centennial" Johnson, first recorded single-handed crossing of Atlantic Ocean
- Hilton Kramer, art critic and essayist, was born in, and grew up in, Gloucester
- Fitz Henry Lane, Luminist painter, born and lived in Gloucester
- Paul Manship, sculptor
- Stuffy McInnis, Major League Baseball player and manager, Harvard baseball coach
- Tony Millionaire, artist and animator best known for comic strip Maakies and Cartoon Network's Drinky Crow Show[40]
- Shawn Milne, Cyclist
- William Monahan, Academy Award-winning screenwriter
- Sun Myung Moon, leader of the Unification Church, spent a great deal of time in Gloucester, and the Unification Church at one time owned a large amount of waterfront property[41]
- Richard Murphy, schooner captain
- John Murray, founder of Universalist denomination in the United States
- Judith Sargent Murray, feminist, essayist, playwright, and poet
- Laura Nyro, singer and songwriter, lived in Gloucester for a number of years
- Charles Olson, Black Mountain College poet
- Kris Osborn, former CNN commentator and current columnist for various military industry blogs
- Mark Parisi, author of syndicated comic strip Off the Mark, was born in Gloucester[42]
- Cy Perkins, Major League Baseball catcher
- Herb Pomeroy, jazz musician, born in Gloucester
- Jessie Ralph, actress[43]
- Marc Randazza, First Amendment lawyer, legal news commentator, columnist (Fox News and CNN)
- Russ Russo, actor
- Daniel Sargent, merchant, politician
- Epes Sargent, editor, poet and playwright
- Henry Sargent, painter and military man
- Paul Dudley Sargent, Revolutionary War hero, one of founding overseers of Bowdoin College
- Winthrop Sargent, patriot, governor, politician, writer; member of Federalist party
- Ben Smith, Olympic ice hockey coach, son of Benjamin A. Smith II, born in Gloucester[44]
- Benjamin A. Smith II, U.S. senator from Massachusetts (1960–1962), Mayor of Gloucester (1954–1955)[45]
- William Stacy (1734–1802), Revolutionary War officer, pioneer to Ohio Country[46]
- Vermin Supreme, performance artist, anarchist, politician, and activist (perennial presidential candidate)
- Martin Weitzman, economist, lived in Gloucester[47]
- Martin Welch, schooner captain, winner of first International Fishing Schooner Championship Races[48]
- Philip Saltonstall Weld, famed sailor and newspaper publisher
- Anna Maria Wells, poet and writer for children
- Alfred J. Wiggin, painter and society portraitist.
- Charles Brenton Fisk, organbuilder
References
[edit]- ^ "2020 U.S. Gazetteer Files". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved May 21, 2022.
- ^ "Census - Geography Profile: Gloucester city, Massachusetts". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved September 18, 2021.
- ^ a b Perley, Sidney (1912). The Indian land titles of Essex County, Massachusetts. The Library of Congress. Salem, Mass. : Essex Book and Print Club.
- ^ "Native Americans of Cape Ann". Cape Ann Museum. Cape Ann Museum. Retrieved March 24, 2021.
- ^ Smith, John (1837). A description of New England; or, The observations, and discoveries of Captain Iohn Smith (admirall of that country) in the north of America, in the year of our Lord 1614; with the successe of sixe ships, that went the next yeare 1615; and the accidents befell him among the French men of warre: with the proofe of the present benefit this countrey affoords; whither this present yeare, 1616, eight voluntary ships are gone to make further tryall. Washington: P. Force.
- ^ "History of Cape Ann". Cape Ann Museum. Retrieved March 24, 2021.
- ^ Shipton, Clifford K. Roger Conant: A Founder of Massachusetts, pp. 53-4, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1944.
- ^ Bartlett, Sarah S. Roger Conant in America: Governor and Citizen, An Historical Address Delivered at the Conant Family Reunion, Hotel Vendome, Boston, June 13, 1901, p. 8.
- ^ "White–Ellery House (1710)". Cape Ann Museum. Retrieved May 5, 2013.
- ^ Christine Heyrman, Commerce and Culture: The Maritime Communities of Colonial Massachusetts, 1690–1750 (1986)
- ^ Martineau, Harriet, Society in America, Vol.II, p.207 New York, 1837) (retrieved Jan. 2, 2023).
- ^ "US Gazetteer files: 2010, 2000, and 1990". United States Census Bureau. February 12, 2011. Retrieved April 23, 2011.
- ^ "Geographic Identifiers: 2010 Demographic Profile Data (G001): Gloucester city, Massachusetts". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved August 30, 2012.
- ^ "Zipcode 01930". www.plantmaps.com. Retrieved October 28, 2022.
- ^ "Climate in Zip 01930 (Gloucester, MA)". BestPlaces.net. Retrieved October 28, 2022.
- ^ Gloucester ocean water temperature by month
- ^ "Total Population (P1), 2010 Census Summary File 1". American FactFinder, All County Subdivisions within Massachusetts. United States Census Bureau. 2010.
- ^ "Massachusetts by Place and County Subdivision - GCT-T1. Population Estimates". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved July 12, 2011.
- ^ "1990 Census of Population, General Population Characteristics: Massachusetts" (PDF). US Census Bureau. December 1990. Table 76: General Characteristics of Persons, Households, and Families: 1990. 1990 CP-1-23. Retrieved July 12, 2011.
- ^ "1980 Census of the Population, Number of Inhabitants: Massachusetts" (PDF). US Census Bureau. December 1981. Table 4. Populations of County Subdivisions: 1960 to 1980. PC80-1-A23. Retrieved July 12, 2011.
- ^ "1950 Census of Population" (PDF). Bureau of the Census. 1952. Section 6, Pages 21-10 and 21-11, Massachusetts Table 6. Population of Counties by Minor Civil Divisions: 1930 to 1950. Retrieved July 12, 2011.
- ^ "1920 Census of Population" (PDF). Bureau of the Census. Number of Inhabitants, by Counties and Minor Civil Divisions. Pages 21-5 through 21-7. Massachusetts Table 2. Population of Counties by Minor Civil Divisions: 1920, 1910, and 1920. Retrieved July 12, 2011.
- ^ "1890 Census of the Population" (PDF). Department of the Interior, Census Office. Pages 179 through 182. Massachusetts Table 5. Population of States and Territories by Minor Civil Divisions: 1880 and 1890. Retrieved July 12, 2011.
- ^ "1870 Census of the Population" (PDF). Department of the Interior, Census Office. 1872. Pages 217 through 220. Table IX. Population of Minor Civil Divisions, &c. Massachusetts. Retrieved July 12, 2011.
- ^ "1860 Census" (PDF). Department of the Interior, Census Office. 1864. Pages 220 through 226. State of Massachusetts Table No. 3. Populations of Cities, Towns, &c. Retrieved July 12, 2011.
- ^ "1850 Census" (PDF). Department of the Interior, Census Office. 1854. Pages 338 through 393. Populations of Cities, Towns, &c. Retrieved July 12, 2011.
- ^ "1950 Census of Population" (PDF). Bureau of the Census. 1952. Section 6, Pages 21–7 through 21-09, Massachusetts Table 4. Population of Urban Places of 10,000 or more from Earliest Census to 1920. Retrieved July 12, 2011.
- ^ "City and Town Population Totals: 2020–2023". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved June 5, 2024.
- ^ "Census of Population and Housing". Census.gov. Retrieved June 4, 2015.
- ^ "U.S. Census website". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved January 31, 2008.
- ^ US Census Fact Finder
- ^ "Election Results".
- ^ "Registration and party enrollment statistics as of October 15, 2008" (PDF). Massachusetts Elections Division. Retrieved May 8, 2010.
- ^ "Gloucester, MA". NOAA. Retrieved May 25, 2017.
- ^ T.S. Eliot, Inventions of the March Hare, Poems 1909-1917, (ed.) Christopher Ricks (London, 1996)
- ^ "Inspirational speaker | Author Michael Tougias | survival leadership". michaeltougias.
- ^ "ANDREW, Abram Piatt, Jr., (1873–1936)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. Retrieved October 24, 2012.
- ^ "ELLIOT, James, (1775–1839)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. Retrieved October 24, 2012.
- ^ Hayden, Sterling (1977). Wanderer. New York: Norton. ISBN 0-393-07521-4.
- ^ "Who wants to be Tony Millionaire? - Life - the Phoenix".
- ^ "Theology Today - Vol 37, No. 4 - January 1981 - ARTICLE - the Unification Church and the City of Gloucester". Archived from the original on June 11, 2009. Retrieved December 5, 2007.
- ^ "'Off-the-mark' cartoonist set for Main Street visit". Gloucester Daily Times. December 1, 2014. Retrieved December 3, 2014.
- ^ "Jessie Ralph". IMDb. Retrieved October 24, 2012.
- ^ "Women's Hockey: Smith is a study in history". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. February 18, 2002. Retrieved July 25, 2011.
- ^ "SMITH, Benjamin A. II, (1916–1991)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. Retrieved October 24, 2012.
- ^ Lemonds, Leo L.: Col. William Stacy – Revolutionary War Hero, Cornhusker Press, Hastings, Nebraska (1993) p. 13, 15, 61.
- ^ Maskin, Eric; Stavins, Robert; Stock, James; Hart, Oliver (February 3, 2021). "Martin L. Weitzman, 77". Harvard Gazette.
- ^ "Capt. Marty Welch". Schooner Esperanto. Retrieved October 24, 2012.
Further reading
[edit]- Anastas, Peter and Parsons, Peter. When Gloucester Was Gloucester: Toward An Oral History Of The City (1973), Harvard University Press. Published for the 350th Anniversary Celebration of the City
- Clark, Margaret Elwyn. "Managing uncertainty: Family, religion, and collective action among fishermen's wives in Gloucester, Massachusetts." in Jane Nadel-Klein and Dona Lee Davis, eds. To Work and to Weep: Women in Fishing Economies (1988) pp: 261–278.
- Connolly, James Brendan. The Port of Gloucester (1940)
- Heyrman, Christine. Commerce and Culture: The Maritime Communities of Colonial Massachusetts, 1690–1750 (1986)
- Meltzer, Michael. The world of the small commercial fishermen: their lives and their boats (1980)
- Miller, Marc L., and John Van Maanen. "'Boats Don't Fish, People Do': Some Ethnographic Notes on the Federal Management of Fisheries in Gloucester." Human Organization 38.4 (1979): 377–385.
- Otto, Peter, and Jeroen Struben. "Gloucester fishery: insights from a group modeling intervention." System Dynamics Review 20.4 (2004): 287–312. online
- Thomas, Gordon W. Fast and Able: Life Stories of Great Gloucester Fishing Vessels (1952)
External links
[edit]- City of Gloucester official website
- "Vital Records of Gloucester, MA to the end of the year 1849". The Massachusetts Vital Records Project. 2005–2010. Retrieved August 7, 2010.
- 1872 Map of Gloucester plate 80–81 Atlas of Essex County published 1872.
- 1872 Map of Gloucester Center – Inner Harbor plate 83 Atlas of Essex County published 1872.
- "Plate 0085, Lanesville, Bayview, Annisquam". Essex County 1872. salemdeeds.com.
- Gloucester's Civil War monuments at Massachusetts Civil War Monuments Project