Fairhaven Real Estate:
Olde Dartmouth Realty, Inc. serves the real estate needs of the
historic South Coast of Massachusetts. A member organization of
the Greater New Bedford Association of Realtors, Olde Dartmouth's
real estate agents specialize in the marketing of Distinctive Properties:
Waterfront, Vintage Village, Homes of Character, and Land Parcels.
We offer Buyer Brokerage to a select number of clients and also
assist clients who must deal with local, state, or federal officials
on land-use issues.
Other Massachusetts Realty Sites:
Acushnet
Real Estate, Cuttyhunk
Real Estate, Dartmouth
Real Estate, Fairhaven
Real Estate, Fall
River Real Estate, Freetown
Real Estate, Marion
Real Estate, Mattapoisett
Real Estate, New
Bedford Real Estate, Rochester
Real Estate, Wareham
Real Estate, Westport
Real Estate, Tiverton,
RI Real Estate, Little
Compton, RI Real Estate
Our Dartmouth Office:
45 Slocum Road
Dartmouth, MA 02747
Phone: 508.996.6562
Our Mattapoisett Office:
8 Water Street
Mattapoisett, MA 02739
Phone: 508.758.6367
Fax: 508.996.1049
Email: [email protected]
Click image for a Slideshow
The Town of Fairhaven is a suburban/fishing/resort community on
Buzzard's Bay. The town suffered both material damage and loss of
life during the raids and battles of King Philip's war and significant
settlement took place only after the war. Until the middle of the
18th century, the town's economy was agricultural. Beyond that point
there is a shift toward maritime activities such as shipbuilding,
whaling and foreign trade focussing on the town's wharves. By 1838,
Fairhaven was the second busiest whaling port in the country and
at its peak the town boasted 46 ships and 1,324 men engaged in bringing
back over $600,000 worth of whale products annually. Discovery of
oil in Pennsylvania coming on the heels of a national depression
ended whaling and the town turned to such industries as tack making.
In 1903, the American Tack Company's new plant was said to be the
largest and best tack mill in the world. Prominent Fairhaven resident
Henry Huttleston Rogers went to Pennsylvania to learn about the
oil industry and after making himself an oil millionaire, Rogers
re-made his home town. He donated the town hall, library, church,
schools, streets and water system. The buildings make up the state's
finest collection of public buildings, almost all designed by Boston
architect Charles Brigham. The community began taking on the character
of a suburban town in the late 1870's when the street railway connected
Fairhaven to New Bedford. At the same time Fairhaven began to develop
as a summer resort area with significant rural areas still the site
of working farms. *
Described by community members for the MA Dept. of Housing and
Community Development.
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