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    Provincetown History Snippets: What is East Harbor?
    June 15, 2018
    East Harbor Proivncetown
    Early records indicate this protected inlet was called Eastern Harbor, a name that evolved into East Harbor. In 1868 the railroad needed track—Provincetown’s flourishing fish industry needed transportation and eventually the railroad brought fish...
    Where Did Boo Boo the Sheep Come From?
    May 21, 2018
    Boo Boo The Sheep ptownie
    ptownie founder Mike Miller’s father had grown up on a farm in Ohio and, along with his sister Mindy, Mike spent a month or two on the farm every summer throughout his childhood and adolescence. He remembers his grandmother with fondness. “She was a...
    Provincetown History Snippets: What is The Gropius House?
    May 18, 2018
    Gropius House Provincetown
    At 2 Commercial Street you can look up and possibly spot part of the Gropius House, also known as the Murchison House. Commissioned by Dr. Paul Murchison and created largely by Walter Gropius, it was based on a Japanese temple design with minimalist lines and...
    Provincetown History Snippets: What is The “Great Dying”?
    May 11, 2018
    Plague Provincetown
    Between 1616 and 1619, a plague struck native villages of coastal New England from Maine to Cape Cod. It killed tens of thousands of people, among them hundreds of men, women, and children from the Wampanoag Nation. The exact nature of the “Great Dying,”...
    Provincetown History Snippets: Moby-Dick and Other Whales
    April 27, 2018
    Moby Dick
    While the home port of the Pequod was Nantucket, as we celebrate the annual reading and celebration of Moby-Dick here in Provincetown this weekend, we can remember the novel—and the whaling tradition that Ptown shares. Written in 1851, Moby-Dick recounts...
    Provincetown History Snippets: What is The Portland Gale?
    April 20, 2018
    Portland Gale Provincetown
    On Saturday, November 26, 1898, New England was struck by a gale that killed over 200 persons and wrecked or sank at least 140 major vessels. The best-known victim of the gale was the coastal steamer Portland that gave the storm its name, lost off Cape Cod...