Hyannis Harbor
Hyannis Harbor is not a natural harbor but is protected by a breakwall that was constructed beginning in 1824. The harbor was used by packet schooners, often as a layover awaiting favorable winds to sail the treacherous back side of the cape to or from Boston. In the 1800s a large wharf, built to service the schooners, was expanded by a rail line linking to the main line in Hyannis. The wharf was dismantled and the granite was used to expand the breakwall. The harbor is now mainly used by private vessels and is home to the Hyannis Port Yacht Club.
Hyannis Harbor is often mixed up with Lewis Bay. Lewis Bay is a small natural harbor that serves as the principal harbor of Hyannis, MA. Lewis Bay is in the town of Hyannis and the town of Yarmouth, and contains the ferry docks in Hyannis in the town of Barnstable, Massachusetts. The inlet is called "Hyannis Inner Harbor" on some government charts. NOAA Nautical chart 13229 shows the relation between Lewis Bay and Hyannis Harbor.
Gallery
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View to Point Gammon
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Hyannis Outer Harbor
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Hyannis Inner Harbor
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Hyannis outer Harbor coast
References
- ^ "Hyannis Harbor Historical Marker". www.hmdb.org. Retrieved 2024-01-21.
- ^ "Hyannis Harbor". www.nae.usace.army.mil. Retrieved 2024-01-21.
Further reading
- "River and Harbor Improvements – Harbors at Hyannis and Nantucket, Mass.". Report of the Chief of Engineers – U. S. Army (Report). Government Printing Office. 1907. p. 75.