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Creating Cape Cod - Lecture by Jennifer Madden

Sun, Feb 01

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Thacher Hall

Join us to learn how the Cape became the vacation destination it is today.

Creating Cape Cod - Lecture by Jennifer Madden
Creating Cape Cod - Lecture by Jennifer Madden

Time & Location

Feb 01, 2026, 4:00 PM

Thacher Hall, 266 MA-6A, Yarmouth Port, MA 02675, USA

About the event

Tickets:

$10 Advance - Click here to purchase via credit card

$15 at the Door (cash or check only!)

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Today, few topics on Cape Cod are more controversial than tourism. Both a blessing and a curse, tourism simultaneously powers a humming economy and acts as a tightening stranglehold on the region’s limited resources. But the Cape wasn’t always known as a place people wanted to visit.


Between 1860 and 1900, the region experienced a lingering depression as traditional industries faltered and residents moved away. In the 1850s Henry David Thoreau described the Cape as a “Yankee backwater,” and most everyone agreed. The Cape’s emerging tourist industry began slowly after the Civil War, picked up speed with the railroad, but didn’t really take off until the widespread adoption of the automobile. Once people could easily travel to and around the Cape, many discovered its seaside charms. Consequently, Cape Cod has been experiencing a tourist boom for over 100 years now.


The expansion of the Cape’s tourism industry has been more successful than anyone could have imagined. How did this happen? And what has been gained, and lost, in the process?

 

Jennifer Madden
Jennifer Madden

Jennifer Madden is the Director of Collections & Exhibitions at Heritage Museums & Gardens where she has worked since 1993. Her duties include organizing the exhibitions presented at Heritage each year as well as supervising the care and conservation of all objects in the museum’s collection. Since she began her employment with the museum, Ms. Madden has curated over 150 exhibitions and published three exhibit catalogues. She earned a BA in Anthropology with a minor in Museum Studies from Beloit College in Beloit, Wisconsin, and a MA in History Museum Studies from the Cooperstown Graduate Program in Cooperstown, New York.


Parking Note:  There is no parking at Thacher Hall. Parking is available just across Route 6A from Thacher

Hall around the Common, as well as at the Post Office and Chapter House Inn. Crossing attendants will be available to assist with crossing Route 6A at the designated crosswalk in front of Thacher Hall. If you need accessible parking information, please email events@thacherhall.org.


Accessibility Note:  Thacher Hall is a historic building and is not accessible via wheelchair - a short flight of stairs is required for entrance into the Hall and the restrooms are located on the lower level (accessed via stairs).


Tickets:

$10 Advance - Click here to purchase via credit card

$15 at the Door (cash or check only!)


Ticket revenue pays artists fees and enables Thacher Hall to continue to share the arts with the Yarmouth Port community.

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