Marine and Freshwater Beach Testing in Massachusetts Annual Report

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Marine and Freshwater Beach Testing in Massachusetts Annual Report Marine and Freshwater Beach Testing in Massachusetts Annual Report: 2011 Season Massachusetts Department of Public Health Bureau of Environmental Health Environmental Toxicology Program http://www.mass.gov/dph/beaches.htm May 2012 This page is intentionally left blank. 2 PART ONE: THE MDPH/BEH BEACHES PROJECT 5 I. Overview ......................................................................................................7 II. Background ..................................................................................................8 A. Beach Water Quality & Health: The Need for Testing...................................................... 8 B. Establishment of the MDPH/BEH Beaches Project.......................................................... 8 III. Beach Water Quality Monitoring...................................................................11 A. Sample collection.............................................................................................................. 11 B. Sample analysis................................................................................................................ 11 1. The MDPH contract laboratory program ...................................................................... 11 2. The use of indicators .................................................................................................... 12 3. Enterococci................................................................................................................... 12 4. E. coli............................................................................................................................ 13 5. Laboratory Methods ..................................................................................................... 13 6. Bacterial Standards ...................................................................................................... 13 C. Reporting .......................................................................................................................... 14 1. The Beaches Website .................................................................................................. 14 2. Exceedances: Beach Closures & Public Notification ................................................... 15 3. Data Management........................................................................................................ 16 D. Quality Assurance............................................................................................................. 16 E. The Tier System and Frequency of Testing ..................................................................... 16 1. The Three Tiers............................................................................................................ 17 2. Sanitary Surveys and Variances .................................................................................. 17 F. Forms................................................................................................................................ 18 IV. Historical Activities........................................................................................18 A. Training............................................................................................................................. 18 B. Emergency Response ...................................................................................................... 18 V. Limitations ....................................................................................................18 PART TWO: THE 2011 BATHING SEASON 21 I. MDPH ACCOMPLISHMENTS......................................................................23 A. Beaches Website/Data Management ............................................................................... 23 B. Trainings ........................................................................................................................... 23 C. Quality Assurance............................................................................................................. 24 D. Laboratory Program.......................................................................................................... 24 II. MONITORING ..............................................................................................25 A. Results.............................................................................................................................. 25 1. Marine Beaches ........................................................................................................... 25 2. Freshwater Beaches .................................................................................................... 27 B. Analysis of Results ........................................................................................................... 28 III. FUTURE PLANS ..........................................................................................34 A. Direct Web-Based Reporting............................................................................................ 34 B. Training and Community Outreach................................................................................... 34 C. Sanitary Surveys............................................................................................................... 34 IV. SUMMARY ...................................................................................................36 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 37 3 REFERENCES 39 TABLES 42 FIGURES 89 APPENDICES 109 A. General Laws of Massachusetts .....................................................................111 B. Massachusetts State Regulations ...................................................................117 C. Federal BEACH Act ........................................................................................129 D. Massachusetts’ Beach Act ..............................................................................141 E. MDPH Beach Sampling Data Form.................................................................147 4 PART ONE: THE MDPH/BEH BEACHES PROJECT 5 This page is intentionally left blank. 6 I. OVERVIEW There are over 1,000 public and semi-public bathing beaches in Massachusetts, both freshwater and marine. Depending on weather and a variety of other changing conditions, beach water sometimes contains bacteria at levels that can cause health problems such as sore throat, gastroenteritis, or even meningitis or encephalitis.1 Therefore, it is critical to ensure that bacteria levels at beaches are monitored, and that such levels are acceptable and within public health standards. In 2011, bacteria levels that exceeded public health standards were detected on 915 different occasions across the state, resulting in temporary beach closures. This represents 5.8% of all samples collected during the 2011 season. In Massachusetts, bathing beach water quality is regulated by the Massachusetts Department of Public Health (MDPH) under Massachusetts General Law2 and the Code of Massachusetts Regulations.3 These require that all public and semi-public bathing beaches (e.g., beaches at camps, campgrounds, hotels, condominiums, country clubs) in the state be monitored for bacterial, and on occasion other environmental contamination during the bathing beach season. The exact dates of a given bathing season vary from beach to beach, and are determined by the operators of each individual beach. Some beaches open as early as Memorial Day, but the majority begin operation when the school year ends in mid-June, and most close for the season during the week of Labor Day. The vast majority of beach water sampling in Massachusetts is conducted by local boards of health, the Barnstable County Department of Health and the Environment, and the Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation (MDCR). Most marine beach samples are analyzed at laboratories under contract with MDPH’s Bureau of Environmental Health (BEH). MDPH/BEH utilizes both state and federal Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) funds to support these costs. Most freshwater samples are analyzed at private laboratories hired by beach operators or boards of health, while a small number are analyzed at municipal laboratories. Bathing water samples that are found to contain levels of bacterial contamination in excess of regulatory standards are termed exceedances. If water samples from a beach are found to be in exceedance of regulatory standards, the beach waters must be closed. When this happens signs must be posted at access points to the beach notifying the public that swimming is unsafe due to bacterial contamination. For marine beaches, the public is also notified via the Beach Water Quality Locator, on the MDPH/BEH website, which is operated in collaboration with local health officials and MDPH contract laboratories.4 Local health officials and MDPH/BEH contract laboratories collect and analyze the samples and perform a majority of the data entry onto the website. MDPH/BEH is notified of exceedances within 24 hours (105 CMR 445.040). Beaches are to remain closed until their bacteria counts 1 Cabelli, 1983; USEPA, 1986; Cabelli, 1989; Haile, 1996; Pruss, 1998. 2 MGL Chapter (C) 111, § Section (S) 5. See Appendix A. 3 105 CMR 445.000: Minimum Standards for Bathing Beaches (State Sanitary Code, Chapter VII). See Appendix B. 4 The address of the MDPH/BEH website can be found on the cover of this report. 7 decrease to levels below the applicable standard, at which point the postings can be removed and MDPH/BEH is notified of the beach reopening.
Recommended publications
  • Dcr Properties Listed on the National Register of Historic Places
    DCR PROPERTIES LISTED ON THE NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES DIVISION OF STATE PARKS AND RECREATION Northeast Region Southeast Region Ashland State Park Borderland State Park Ashland Dam and Spillway Borderland Historic District Cochituate State Park Cape Cod Rail Trail Lake Cochituate and Dam Brewster Old King's Highway Historic District Old King's Highway Historic District Great Brook Farm State Park George Robbins House Dighton Rock State Park Zebulon Spaulding House Dighton Rock Hopkinton State Park Fort Phoenix State Reservation Hopkinton Reservoir, Dam and Spillway Fort Phoenix Lawrence Heritage State Park Nickerson State Park Bay State Mill Agent's House Brewster Old King's Highway Historic District Bay State Mills Housing Pilgrim Memorial State Park Lowell Heritage State Park Cole’s Hill (NHL) City Hall District National Monument to the Forefathers Locks and Canals National Historic Landmark Plymouth Rock District Lowell National Historic Park Waquoit Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve Downtown Lowell Local Historic District Waquoit Historic District Walden Pond State Reservation McCune Site Walden Pond COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS · EXECUTIVE OFFICE OF ENERGY & ENVIRONMENTAL AFFAIRS Department of Conservation and Recreation Deval L. Patrick Ian A. Bowles, Secretary, Executive 251 Causeway Street, Suite 600 Governor Office of Energy & Environmental Affairs Boston MA 02114-2119 617-626-1250 617-626-1351 Fax Timothy P. Murray Richard K. Sullivan, Jr., Commissioner www.mass.gov/dcr Lt. Governor Department of Conservation
    [Show full text]
  • Fairhaven Tours Book 2016
    It isn’t Europe. It’s Fairhaven. “I never had a delightfuler holiday in my life, and I did hate to leave Fairhaven.” —Mark Twain to daughter Clara, July 27, 1906 Fairhaven today is still every bit as delightful today as it was when Mark Twain used to visit. Maybe even delightfuler. There’s the state beach on Buzzard’s Bay. There’s the 3.5 mile Phoenix Bike Trail. There’s the rich history spanning the time from the Pilgrims, through the American Revolution, and the Nineteenth Century heyday of whaling and adventure. There’s a real fort, which was attacked by the British in 1778. There are the magnificent public buildings donated by Standard Oil Company millionaire Henry H. Rogers. There are unique shops, restaurants, marinas, fairs, concerts, historical tours and more for the whole family to enjoy. See for yourself why Mark Twain hated to leave Fairhaven. TOWN OF FAIRHAVEN, MA Office of Tourism & Visitors Center 141 Main Street Street, Fairhaven, MA 02719 508-979-4085 • [email protected] Mon., Tues., Thurs., Fri., Sat. 8:00 a.m. to Noon and 12:30 to 4:30 p.m. (In summer, Saturday afternoon at Old Stone Schoolhouse, 40 North St.) http://FairhavenTours.com facebook.com/FairhavenTours twitter.com/FairhavenTours Welcome to Fairhaven, MA A LOVELY COASTAL TOWN on the shore of Buzzards Bay, Fairhaven has for more than two hundred years shared its harbor with the famed seaport New Bedford and is within sight of Cape Cod and the Elizabeth Islands off shore. The town is easily accessible from Interstate 195, at Exit 18, about halfway between Providence, RI and Cape Cod.
    [Show full text]
  • Public Meeting #3 Presentation
    Winter Island Park Public Meeting #3 Salem, Massachusetts Draft Master Plan Salem Winter Island Master Plan The Cecil Group •FXM Associates • Susan St. Pierre• Bio Engineering • PAL Progress to Date . Site analysis . Programming (Must, May, Must Not Occur) . Criteria for choice . Goals for the future . Vision for the future . Review Draft MP Alternatives . Draft Master Plan Salem Winter Island Master Plan The Cecil Group •FXM Associates • Susan St. Pierre• Bio Engineering • PAL Site Context The Willows Salem Center Dominion Power Station Marblehead Salem Winter Island Master Plan The Cecil Group •FXM Associates • Susan St. Pierre• Bio Engineering • PAL The evolution of Winter Island... Date: 1940 Salem Winter Island Master Plan The Cecil Group •FXM Associates • Susan St. Pierre• Bio Engineering • PAL Current Conditions…. Salem Winter Island Master Plan The Cecil Group •FXM Associates • Susan St. Pierre• Bio Engineering • PAL Current Conditions-Historic Elements Salem Winter Island Master Plan The Cecil Group •FXM Associates • Susan St. Pierre• Bio Engineering • PAL Goals for the future . Adequate parking for daily use . Financially sustainable . Adequate bathhouse facilities . Provide year round . Provide space for events interest . Accommodate boat launch use . Year round management . Environmentally sensitive approach . Provide education . Enhance historic buildings . Enhance connection to . Provide accessibility to all areas water . Provide adequate sitting/viewing . Flexible open space areas . Phased approach . Establish an organized park setting . Create a safe park environment Salem Winter Island Master Plan The Cecil Group •FXM Associates • Susan St. Pierre• Bio Engineering • PAL Vision for the Future Alternative A Salem Winter Island Master Plan The Cecil Group •FXM Associates • Susan St. Pierre• Bio Engineering • PAL Vision for the Future Alternative B Salem Winter Island Master Plan The Cecil Group •FXM Associates • Susan St.
    [Show full text]
  • Marine and Freshwater Beach Testing in Massachusetts Annual Report
    Marine and Freshwater Beach Testing in Massachusetts Annual Report: 2013 Season Massachusetts Department of Public Health Bureau of Environmental Health Environmental Toxicology Program http://www.mass.gov/dph/beaches June 2014 This page is intentionally left blank. 2 PART ONE: THE MDPH/BEH BEACHES PROJECT 5 I. Overview .......................................................................................................... 7 II. Background ...................................................................................................... 7 A. Beach Water Quality & Health: The Need for Testing ...................................................... 7 B. Establishment of the MDPH/BEH Beaches Project .......................................................... 8 III. Beach Water Quality Monitoring ....................................................................... 9 A. Sample collection .............................................................................................................. 9 B. Sample analysis ................................................................................................................ 9 1. The MDPH contract laboratory program .................................................................... 9 2. The use of indicators .................................................................................................. 9 3. Enterococci ................................................................................................................. 10 4. E. coli .........................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Report to Congress on the Historic Preservation of Revolutionary War and War of 1812 Sites in the United States (P.L
    National Park Service U.S. Department of the Interior Report to CoCongressngress oonn tthehe HiHistoricstoric PrPreservadoneservation ooff RRevolutionaryevolutionary War anandd War ooff 1812 SiSitestes in the UUnitednited StStatesates Prepared for The Committee on Energy and Natural Resources United States Senate The Committee on Resources United States House of Representatives Prepared by American Battlefield Protection Program National Park Service U.S. Department of the Interior Washington, DC September 2007 Front Cover Brandywine Battlefield (PA200), position of American forces along Brandywine Creek, Chester County, Pennsylvania. Photo by Chris Heisey. Authorities The Revolutionary War and War of 1812 Historic The American Battlefield Protection Act of 1996, as Preservation Study Act of 1996 amended (P.L. 104-333, Sec. 604; 16 USC 469k). (P.L. 104-333, Section 603; 16 USC 1a-5 Notes). Congress authorized the American Battlefield Protection Congress, concerned that “the historical integrity of Program of the National Park Service to assist citizens, many Revolutionary War sites and War of 1812 sites is at public and private institutions, and governments at all risk,” enacted legislation calling for a study of historic levels in planning, interpreting, and protecting sites where sites associated with the two early American wars. The historic battles were fought on American soil during the purpose of the study was to: “identify Revolutionary War armed conflicts that shaped the growth and development sites and War of 1812 sites, including sites within units of the United States, in order that present and future of the National Park System in existence on the date of generations may learn and gain inspiration from the enactment of this Act [November 12, 1996]; determine the ground where Americans made their ultimate sacrifice.
    [Show full text]
  • E:\Guide Book\Fairhaven Tours B
    It isn’t Europe. It’s Fairhaven. “I never had a delightfuler holiday in my life, and I did hate to leave Fairhaven.” —Mark Twain to daughter Clara, July 27, 1906 Fairhaven today is still every bit as delightful today as it was when Mark Twain used to visit. Maybe even delightfuler. There’s the state beach on Buzzard’s Bay. There’s the 3.5 mile Phoenix Bike Trail. There’s the rich history spanning the time from the Pilgrims, through the American Revolution, and the Nineteenth Century heyday of whaling and adventure. There’s a real fort, which was attacked by the British in 1778. There are the magnificent public buildings donated by Standard Oil Company millionaire Henry H. Rogers. There are unique shops, restaurants, marinas, fairs, concerts, historical tours and more for the whole family to enjoy. See for yourself why Mark Twain hated to leave Fairhaven. TOWN OF FAIRHAVEN, MA Office of Tourism & Visitors Center 141 Main Street Street, Fairhaven, MA 02719 508-979-4085 • [email protected] Mon., Tues., Thurs., Fri., Sat. 8:00 a.m. to Noon and 12:30 to 4:30 p.m. Outdoor Huttleston Marketplace, Sat., 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. June-Septembe http://FairhavenTours.com Facebook.com/FairhavenTours Twitter.com/FairhavenTours Welcome to Fairhaven, MA A LOVELY COASTAL TOWN on the shore of Buzzards Bay, Fairhaven has for more than two hundred years shared its harbor with the famed seaport New Bedford and is within sight of Cape Cod and the Elizabeth Islands off shore.
    [Show full text]
  • Ocn663904292.Pdf (75.39Kb)
    1000 Great Places Last update 8/4/2010 Name Town Ames Nowell State Park Abington The Discovery Museum Acton Long Plain Museum Acushnet Mount Greylock State Reservation Adams Saint Stanislaus Kostka Church Adams Susan B. Anthony Birthplace Museum Adams The Quaker Meeting House Adams Veterans War Memorial Tower Adams Robinson State Park Agawam Six Flags New England Agawam Knox Trail Alford The John Greenleaf Whittier Home Amesbury Lowell’s Boat Shop Amesbury Powwow River Amesbury Rocky Hill Meeting House Amesbury Emily Dickinson Museum Amherst Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art Amherst Jones Library Amherst National Yiddish Book Center Amherst Robert Frost Trail Amherst Addison Gallery of American Art Andover Andover Historical Society Andover Aquinnah Cliffs (Gay Head) Aquinnah The Cyrus E. Dallin Art Museum Arlington Mystic Lakes Arlington Robbins Farm Park Arlington Robbins Library Arlington Spy Pond Arlington Wilson Memorial Statue Arlington Mount Watatic Ashburnham Trap Falls in Willard Brook State Forest Ashby Ashfield Plain Historic District Ashfield Double Edge Theatre Ashfield Ashland State Park Ashland Ashland Town Forest Ashland Profile Rock Assonet Alan E. Rich Environmental Park Athol Athol Historical Society Athol Capron Park Zoo Attleboro National Shrine of Our Lady of La Salette Attleboro Mass Audubon Oak Knoll Wildlife Sanctuary Attleboro Goddard Rocket Launching Site Auburn D.W.Field Park Avon Nashua River Rail Trail Ayer Cahoon Museum of American Art Barnstable Hyannis Harbor Barnstable John F.Kennedy Hyannis Museum
    [Show full text]
  • Metadata for Massachusetts Environmental Sensitivity Index (ESI)
    MASSACHUSETTS ENVIRONMENTAL SENSITIVITY INDEX METADATA April 2000 Prepared By: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration National Ocean Service Office of Response and Restoration Hazardous Materials Response Division 7600 Sand Point Way N.E. Seattle, Washington 98115-6349 and State of Massachusetts Executive Office of Environmental Affairs Boston, Massachusetts and Coastal Services Center 1990 Hobson Drive Charleston, South Carolina 29405 FILE DESCRIBES: Digital data for 1999 Massachusetts Environmental Sensitivity Index. FILE CREATED BY: NOAA Office of Response and Restoration 7600 Sand Point Way N.E. Seattle, WA 98115-6349 Phone: 206-526-6317 Fax: 206-526-6329 email: [email protected] FILE CREATED ON: 20000419 COMMENTS: Information was developed using the U.S. Federal Geo- graphic Data Committee’s Content Standards for Digital Geospatial Metadata, June 8, 1994. The numbering scheme matches the Metadata Standard in order to facilitate referencing definitions of the elements. The items in bold are required elements and the others are optional elements. The Spatial Data Transfer Standard (SDTS), ver. 03/92, was referenced to properly identify the geographic entities. i TABLE OF CONTENTS Page 1.0. IDENTIFICATION INFORMATION............................................................1 1.1. Citation....................................................................................................1 1.2. Description .............................................................................................2 1.3. Time Period of
    [Show full text]
  • Annual Report • Fairhaven, Massachusetts Annual Report
    2011 2011 Annual Report • Fairhaven, Massachusetts • Fairhaven, Report Annual 2011 Annual Report Fairhaven, Massachusetts Cover – Town Hall in Fairhaven, MA Cover photo courtesy of Frank Rezendes of Fairhaven Proudly Printed by Mallard Printing, Fall River, MA ANNUAL REPORT of the Town Offices of FAIRHAVEN, MASSACHUSETTS For the Year 2011 1 TOWN OF FAIRHAVEN FAIRHAVEN LOCUS 041° 38’ N. Latitude 070° 54’ W. Longitude Elevation 11 ft. M.S.L. at Town Hall Settled 1653 Incorporated 1812 Population 15,911 4th Congressional District First Councilor District Second Bristol Senatorial District Tenth Bristol Representative District Election of Officers First Monday in April 2 Fairhaven, Massachusetts General Information About the Town Located On the Shore of Buzzards Bay 56 Miles from Boston – 1 Mile from New Bedford Registered Voters 10,745 Tax Rate Fiscal Year 2012 Residential – $10.27 Commercial - $20.63 Area 7,497 Acres Miles of Shore Property – 29.4 Miles of Streets and Roads – Approximately 100 Churches – 9 Public Schools – 5 Private Schools – 9 Maritime Education – 2 EMT Training – 1 Pre-Schools – 6 Banks – 8 Principal Industries Ship Building Fishing Industry Winches and Fishing Machinery Marine Repair & Construction Customer Service Hospitality Retail 3 IN MEMORIAM On behalf of the Town of Fairhaven, we offer our sincere appreciation to all these people that have taken the time to serve their community. We are forever thankful. John Gracia, Board of Public Works Phyllis Lavimoniere – Town Clerk/Treasurer’s Office Jean Campbell – School
    [Show full text]
  • A Guide to Civil War Maps in the National Archives
    AGUIDETO CIVIL WAR MAPS ~IN~ THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES NATIONAL ARCHIVES AND RECORDS ADMINISTRATION WASHINGTON, D.C. 1986 Cover: Map of the Battlefield of Antietam, prepared by Lieut. Wm. H. Willcox (RG 77: G 443, vol. 9, p. 10). ISBN 0-911333-36-3 PUBLISHED FOR THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES AND RECORDS ADMINISTRATION BY THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES TRUST FUND BOARD Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data A Guide to Civil War maps in the National Archives. Includes index. 1. United States-History-Civil War, 1861-1865- Maps-Bibliography-Catalogs. 2. United States. National Archives-Catalogs. I. United States. National Archives and Records Administration. Z1242.G85 1986 [468.9) 016.911'73 86-5132 ISBN 0-911333-36-3 FOREWORD The National Archives and Records Administration is responsible for administering the per­ manently valuable records of the Federal Government. These archival holdings, now amounting to more than 1.3 million cubic feet, date from the days of the Continental Congress and include the basic records of the legislative, judicial, and executive branches of the Federal Government. The Presidential libraries of Herbert Hoover, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Harry S Truman, Dwight D. Eisenhower, John F. Kennedy, Lyndon B. Johnson, and Gerald R. Ford contain the papers of those Presidents and many of their associates in office. NARA is also responsible for the presidential papers of Richard M. Nixon, which are stored in the Washington, D.C., area, and of Jimmy Carter, which are stored in Atlanta, Ga. These research resources document significant events in our Nation's history, but most of them are preserved for their continuing practical use in the ordinary processes of government and for the research use of scholars, students, and other individual researchers.
    [Show full text]
  • Fairhaven Tours Book 2014
    It isn’t Europe. It’s Fairhaven. “I never had a delightfuler holiday in my life, and I did hate to leave Fairhaven.” —Mark Twain to daughter Clara, July 27, 1906 Fairhaven today is still every bit as delightful today as it was when Mark Twain used to visit. Maybe even delightfuler. There’s the state beach on Buzzard’s Bay. There’s the 3.5 mile Phoenix Bike Trail. There’s the rich history spanning the time from the Pilgrims, through the American Revolution, and the Nineteenth Century heyday of whaling and adventure. There’s a real fort, which was attacked by the British in 1778. There are the magnificent public buildings donated by Standard Oil Company millionaire Henry H. Rogers. There are unique shops, restaurants, marinas, fairs, concerts, historical tours and more for the whole family to enjoy. See for yourself why Mark Twain hated to leave Fairhaven. TOWN OF FAIRHAVEN, MA Office of Tourism & Visitors Center 141 Main Street Street, Fairhaven, MA 02719 508-979-4085 • [email protected] Monday, Tuesday, Thursday & Friday 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Saturday 8:30 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. off season & 8:30 a.m. to Noon in the summer http://FairhavenTours.com Welcome to Fairhaven, MA A LOVELY COASTAL TOWN on the shore of Buzzards Bay, Fairhaven has for more than two hundred years shared its harbor with the famed seaport New Bedford and is within sight of Cape Cod and the Elizabeth Islands off shore. The town is easily accessible from Interstate 195, at Exit 18, about halfway between Providence, RI and Cape Cod.
    [Show full text]
  • Fairhaven-Tours-Book-2021.Pdf
    It isn’t Europe. It’s Fairhaven. “I never had a delightfuler holiday in my life, and I did hate to leave Fairhaven.” —Mark Twain to daughter Clara, July 27, 1906 Fairhaven today is still every bit as delightful today as it was when Mark Twain used to visit. Maybe even delightfuler. There’s the state beach on Buzzard’s Bay. There’s the 3.5 mile Phoenix Bike Trail. There’s the rich history spanning the time from the Pilgrims, through the American Revolution, and the Nineteenth Century heyday of whaling and adventure. There’s a real fort, which was attacked by the British in 1778. There are the magnificent public buildings donated by Standard Oil Company millionaire Henry H. Rogers. There are unique shops, restaurants, marinas, fairs, concerts, historical tours and more for the whole family to enjoy. See for yourself why Mark Twain hated to leave Fairhaven. TOWN OF FAIRHAVEN, MA Office of Tourism & Visitors Center 141 Main Street Street, Fairhaven, MA 02719 508-979-4085 • [email protected] Mon., Tues., Thurs., Fri., Sat. 8:00 a.m. to Noon and 12:30 to 4:30 p.m. Outdoor Huttleston Marketplace, Sat., 10:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. June-Septembe http://FairhavenTours.com Facebook.com/FairhavenTours Twitter.com/FairhavenTours Welcome to Fairhaven, MA A LOVELY COASTAL TOWN on the shore of Buzzards Bay, Fairhaven has for more than two hundred years shared its harbor with the famed seaport New Bedford and is within sight of Cape Cod and the Elizabeth Islands off shore.
    [Show full text]