Download the AOL News Toolbar
Our new toolbar integrates latest news into your Web browser and installs in seconds. Download it now!
Send Us Feedback
News Video
Find, view and share videos about news and entertainment from around the Web.
See Videos »

News Alerts

The latest updates sent straight to your inbox.

Get AOL News Alerts »

Tides Take Away Beach Cottages

AOL News
posted: 133 DAYS 12 HOURS AGO
comments: 885
filed under:
Text SizeAAA
(June 26) - The tides are high in Cape Cod, and some beach cottages aren't holding on.
Powerful waves fueled by stormy weather knocked two cottages off their foundations in Chatham, Mass., sending them crumbling into the ocean, The Boston Globe reported.
Skip over this content
The cottages, also called "camps," were part of a cluster of five seaside homes in an enclave known as the First Village. The houses' future along the ocean has long been an uncertain one. But the land the homes are on has been experiencing serious erosion since April 2007, when a storm breached the barrier island. That break ultimately reduced the homes in the First Village from 12 down to five.
The latest storm appears to have sealed the fate of the final five. "We lost 40 feet of beachfront over the last few days,’" Bill Hammatt, one of the cottage owners, told the Globe. "Unfortunately, it has terminally damaged all five of the remaining buildings."
Town officials said four of the five owners have asked to demolish what's left of their cottages.
"They realize it really is past the point of no return,’" said Ted Keon, the town's director of coastal resources.
For Todd Thayer, whose family has enjoyed the cottages for decades, it marks the end of an era. "I have to tell you, it’s a very sad feeling," he told the Globe.
The owners said they knew this day was coming, but they hoped the cottages would be able to sustain one more season. "All we need is one big storm, and we're gone," Hammatt recalled thinking just a week ago.
Town officials said they're concerned about the potential effect of the erosion on mainland property, which only time can answer.
Get the full story from The Boston Globe.
2009 AOL LLC. All Rights Reserved.
2009-06-26 14:50:46

Related Articles

  1. See More Related Articles and Blog Posts
(885)
Sort by:

1 - 10

PTcruz50

07:59 AMJul 03 2009

On a much smaller scale, we looked at a lot on the Ohio River, a beautiful spot that they wanted a gold mine for. We "settled" for two acres up on the hillside.The "Point" is gone now, totally removed by the river, our lot is still up on the hill.Not as impressive but still there!!

AVG RATING:
(0)

MONROE LAW

07:11 AMJul 03 2009

Its a fact of nature that if you build on a beach you risk losing your house. If you live in Tornado Alley, you risk losing your house to a tornado. If you live in a flood plain below sea level, the government will pour billions of untracked dollars into your city...

AVG RATING:
(0)

Whupszdaisy

11:20 PMJul 01 2009

the wind and water put the beach there and the wind and water can and will take it away. shame that us, who can't afford such luxury, will end up paying for this folly in the long run.

AVG RATING:
(3)

Snowbunny3318

07:04 PMJun 30 2009

Another Lake Delton incident! Oy!

AVG RATING:
(1)

Lastprocowboy

05:25 PMJun 30 2009

Most of us were taught as children not to build our castles on the sand.those people that are loosing their beach front homes now are the rich, smug, better than every body else types, they are the ones that hang all those no tresspasing, keep out, and private property- this is my toy and you cant play with it signs everywhere they can find a place to stick them.now they want every body to feel sorry for them while they are sitting back collecting all those home owner insurance checks that WE all have to end up paying a higher rate for!

AVG RATING:
(3)

Egrjnot

05:02 PMJun 30 2009

People crying the blues who live on Cape Cod who blame " summer residents/toutists are idiots. BlameYOUR NEIGHBORS who sold off Cape Cod property to the highest bidders & laughed all the way to the banks. Chatham, Orleans, Wellfleet, Truro, Provincetown ... all the properties no matter how small were allowed to be sub-devided & sold to the highest bidders BUT the people who sold these properties sold the soul of Cape Cod. BLAME THEM!!!!!!!!! Blame all your long time BUDDIES. Cape Cod is a mess now because it is nothing of what it used to be. Sheds were sold as "dwellings" 4' by 4' shacks that held beach chairs & a mower sold at over $750,000.00 a clip.

AVG RATING:
(2)

Bls2934

04:57 PMJun 30 2009

BUILD YOUR (BEACH) HOUSE ON ROCK NOT SAND !!!!!

AVG RATING:
(4)

Egrjnot

04:49 PMJun 30 2009

LOL... $8,000.00 a week if they rented one of these places on the beach. These owners cry because of $$$$$$ and nothing else. Other people have had to move because there is no jobs or income. Get the heck off the Cape if you can't afford to live there any longer. Boo hoo. Sympathy is not for these people but people who REALLY have had hard times & no " beach house " ta boot. Get real.

AVG RATING:
(3)

THE JOE CAMEL

04:36 PMJun 30 2009

Where do rich people come from ?

AVG RATING:
(3)

BOYDSTEPHENSON

04:21 PMJun 30 2009

This is like living in Ca ona earthquake fault and no insurance.

AVG RATING:
(3)

1 - 10 of 885

{ JOIN the CONVERSATION }

YOU'LL BE ASKED TO REGISTER OR LOGIN BEFORE POSTING A COMMENT.

News Makers

NewsmakersSinger Chris Brown says he wishes Rihanna would have kept the details of the night he attacked her "a private matter."1 of 6

News Makers

 

All Good News, All The Time

GNN

The Savings Experiment

cleaning products


* Want the latest Hot Seat polls delivered to your Vista desktop? Hot Seat Vista Gadget »

 

Politics Daily

Sports

Money

Technology

Health

Entertainment

Powerful waves knock two cottages off their foundations in Chatham, Mass., sending them crumbling into the ocean. The area has been suffering from erosion problems for years, but a recent storm appears to spell the end of an era for the unique cluster of five homes.