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BARNSTABLE , a seaport township and the county-seat of the county of the same name, in Massachusetts, U.S.A . Pop . (1900) 4364, of whom 391 wereSee also: foreign-See also: born; (1910, U
.
S.' census) 4676
.
Barnstable is served by the New See also: York, New Haven & See also: Hartford Railway
.
It is situated between Cape See also: Cod See also: Bay on the N. and See also: Nantucket See also: Sound on the S., extending across Cape Cod
.
The See also: soil of the township, unlike that of other parts of the county, is well adapted to See also: agriculture, and the See also: principal industry is the growing of vegetables and the supplying of milk and poultry for its several villages, nearly all of which are summer resorts
.
At Hyannis is a See also: state normal school (1897; co-educational)
.
Cranberries are raised in large quantities, and there are See also: oyster and other See also: shell See also: fisheries
.
In the 17th century the See also: mackerel and See also: whale fisheries were the basis of economic See also: life; the latter gave way later to the cod and other fisheries, but the fishing industry is now relatively unimportant
.
Much of the county is a region of sands, See also: salt-marshes, See also: beach-grass and scattered woods
.
From 1865 to 1895 the county diminished 20.1 % in population
.
Barnstable was settled and incorporated in 1639 (county created 1685), and includes among its natives See also: James Otis and Lemuel
See also: Shaw
.
See F
.
Freeman, The See also: History of Cape Cod: the See also: Annals of Barnstable County (2 vols., See also: Boston, 1858, 1862 ; and other impressions 186o to 1869)
.
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