Description

Book Synopsis
For hundreds of years, farmers and fishing communities maintained the inlet to Ellisville Marsh, a picturesque piece of coastline ten miles south of Plymouth, Massachusetts. Recognized as one of the most environmentally sensitive and ecologically valuable places in the state, the salt marsh and estuary are home to a diverse array of wildlife and a range of habitats, including low-tide mudflats, a saltwater pond, intertidal zone, and fields of tall marsh grass.

After agricultural and fishing activities faded away in the late twentieth century, it soon became apparent that protecting the marsh and its surroundings from development would not be enough to restore the natural equilibrium that had been lost when the inlet became blocked. Having witnessed government inaction over the years, Eric P. Cody and four other locals founded the Friends of Ellisville Marsh in 2007 to address erosion, revive tidal flows, and revitalize fisheries and wildlife in the face of climate change. Rescuing Ellisville Marsh presents the powerful case study of backyard activism, telling the story of a community that bonded with a natural place and decided to fight for it.



Trade Review

"Cody, in detailing the efforts and introducing us to the varied people who got involved—lawyers and botanists, sea mossers and lobstermen, a tribal chairperson, engineers, environmentalists, and a big dog named Veda—creates a moving and compelling ode, to a place, to a natural history, to people and the power that comes from focusing efforts and working with an environment . . . Cody’s deep and reverent attention to the natural world reminds us of its rewards, personally and environmentally."—Boston Globe

“At a time when preventing climate change can seem daunting to the point of paralysis, stories about local, individual action appreciate in value. The author . . . buys a piece of coastal property on the Massachusetts South Shore and finds himself joining with neighbors to protect and then restore a salt marsh inlet. A fine-grained account of what is entailed in addressing the problems humans have caused as the built environment has ‘stranded the natural places.’”—HarvardMagazine

“Cody offers an intimate portrait of this place, its history and people, and the natural life in and around the marsh. The side stories of the community near Ellisville Marsh, the joys of monitoring work on the marsh, and the battles to win permits and keep the inlet open, are compelling.”—Tim Traver, author of Sippewissett: Or, Life on a Salt Marsh



Table of Contents
  • Preface
  • Acknowledgments
  • Main Characters
  • Chronology
  • Chapter 1: A Place Called Ellisville Marsh
  • Chapter 2: How It Is, How It Was
  • Chapter 3:Plants under Siege
  • Chapter 4:The Crux of the Problem
  • Chapter 5: Birth of a Backyard Movement
  • Chapter 6: A Thousand Paper Cuts
  • Chapter 7: Breaching the Spit
  • Chapter 8: The Closer You Look
  • Chapter 9: Invisible Birds
  • Chapter 10: Detoxifying a Pond
  • Chapter 11: Natural Wonders
  • Chapter 12: Canary in the Coal Mine
  • Conclusion
  • Appendix A: “Ellisville History,” by Albert Marsh (1928– 2020)
  • Appendix B: Facsimile of Letter from Plymouth Select Board to Massachusetts Secretary of Energy and Environmental Affairs, May 15, 2018
  • Notes
  • Index

Rescuing Ellisville Marsh: The Long Fight to

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    A Paperback / softback by Eric P. Cody

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      View other formats and editions of Rescuing Ellisville Marsh: The Long Fight to by Eric P. Cody

      Publisher: University of Massachusetts Press
      Publication Date: 30/01/2023
      ISBN13: 9781625346773, 978-1625346773
      ISBN10: 1625346778

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      For hundreds of years, farmers and fishing communities maintained the inlet to Ellisville Marsh, a picturesque piece of coastline ten miles south of Plymouth, Massachusetts. Recognized as one of the most environmentally sensitive and ecologically valuable places in the state, the salt marsh and estuary are home to a diverse array of wildlife and a range of habitats, including low-tide mudflats, a saltwater pond, intertidal zone, and fields of tall marsh grass.

      After agricultural and fishing activities faded away in the late twentieth century, it soon became apparent that protecting the marsh and its surroundings from development would not be enough to restore the natural equilibrium that had been lost when the inlet became blocked. Having witnessed government inaction over the years, Eric P. Cody and four other locals founded the Friends of Ellisville Marsh in 2007 to address erosion, revive tidal flows, and revitalize fisheries and wildlife in the face of climate change. Rescuing Ellisville Marsh presents the powerful case study of backyard activism, telling the story of a community that bonded with a natural place and decided to fight for it.



      Trade Review

      "Cody, in detailing the efforts and introducing us to the varied people who got involved—lawyers and botanists, sea mossers and lobstermen, a tribal chairperson, engineers, environmentalists, and a big dog named Veda—creates a moving and compelling ode, to a place, to a natural history, to people and the power that comes from focusing efforts and working with an environment . . . Cody’s deep and reverent attention to the natural world reminds us of its rewards, personally and environmentally."—Boston Globe

      “At a time when preventing climate change can seem daunting to the point of paralysis, stories about local, individual action appreciate in value. The author . . . buys a piece of coastal property on the Massachusetts South Shore and finds himself joining with neighbors to protect and then restore a salt marsh inlet. A fine-grained account of what is entailed in addressing the problems humans have caused as the built environment has ‘stranded the natural places.’”—HarvardMagazine

      “Cody offers an intimate portrait of this place, its history and people, and the natural life in and around the marsh. The side stories of the community near Ellisville Marsh, the joys of monitoring work on the marsh, and the battles to win permits and keep the inlet open, are compelling.”—Tim Traver, author of Sippewissett: Or, Life on a Salt Marsh



      Table of Contents
      • Preface
      • Acknowledgments
      • Main Characters
      • Chronology
      • Chapter 1: A Place Called Ellisville Marsh
      • Chapter 2: How It Is, How It Was
      • Chapter 3:Plants under Siege
      • Chapter 4:The Crux of the Problem
      • Chapter 5: Birth of a Backyard Movement
      • Chapter 6: A Thousand Paper Cuts
      • Chapter 7: Breaching the Spit
      • Chapter 8: The Closer You Look
      • Chapter 9: Invisible Birds
      • Chapter 10: Detoxifying a Pond
      • Chapter 11: Natural Wonders
      • Chapter 12: Canary in the Coal Mine
      • Conclusion
      • Appendix A: “Ellisville History,” by Albert Marsh (1928– 2020)
      • Appendix B: Facsimile of Letter from Plymouth Select Board to Massachusetts Secretary of Energy and Environmental Affairs, May 15, 2018
      • Notes
      • Index

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