Orleans Information

Samuel de Champlain seems to have been the first European to come to the area of present-day Chatham. His logbooks contain references to a tribe called the Monomoyicks, and his geographical descriptions match the area.

English colonization began when William Nickerson of Yarmouth purchased some land from the Sachem (Chief) of the Monomoyicks, Mattaquason.

By the 1700's , there were about 50 families living in "Monamoy." After being part of Yarmouth for a while, and then Eastham, Chatham was incorporated in 1712.

Prior to the Revolutionary War, the town was slow to prosper. The remote situation of the settlement made it particularly vulnerable to both English and French warships which prowled the waters. After independence though, things got going. The fishing industry, saltworks, and shipbuilding were all part of the economy. Agriculture was always a mainstay, and by the time the 19th century rolled around, whaling was adding to the fortunes of the town and its population.

By the late 1800's Chatham was beginning to change in the same ways that other towns on the Cape were changing. With the railroad in 1887, came summer visitors attracted by the seaside charm…and the resort economy was born. In fact, what the early settlers saw as liabilities are now its greatest strengths: isolation, and exposure to the ocean.