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Primary Source Sets
The American Whaling Industry
A map showing Boston’s top-five foreign languages spoken at home in 2015.

A map showing Boston’s top-five foreign languages spoken at home in 2015.

This map, created by the Boston Planning and Development Agency in 2017, shows the five languages other than English spoken at home in Boston as of 2015. The presence of Cape Verdean (a creole language rooted in Portuguese and African dialects) as one of these top-five languages shows the enduring presence of this community in Massachusetts, and its roots can be traced back to the whaling industry. Whaleships would often seek harbor on the islands of Cape Verde off the coast of Africa to purchase supplies, but also to acquire crew members who were experienced sailors, and who would return with the ships to the US. These Cape Verdeans formed permanent communities on the south shore of Massachusetts as well as in the city of Boston.

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Citation Information
Boston Planning and Development Agency, “Boston's top 5 foreign languages spoken at home, 2015,” Digital Public Library of America, https://dp.la/item/c673242c58f330a7d747af3a1b246106.
Note: These citations are programmatically generated and may be incomplete.
Courtesy of Boston Public Library via Digital Commonwealth.

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For this source, consider:

  • the author's point of view
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Item 12 of 14 in the Primary Source Set The American Whaling Industry

Previous ItemNext Item
Excerpts, including illustrations, from an 1839 text describing how whalers captured and killed the sperm whale.
A “skimmer” tool used in the processing of whale oil aboard nineteenth-century ships.
The introduction to a 1918 text about John Manjiro (Nakahama Manjiro) and William H. Whitfield, including source documents and photographs.
A photo of John Manjiro and a bearded man, possibly Captain Whitfield.
An excerpt from Herman Melville’s 1851 novel about whaling, Moby Dick.
A photograph of the interior of the Seamen’s Bethel Church in New Bedford, Massachusetts.
An 1845 world map showing sea currents and whaling grounds.
A photograph of a model whaling ship and whaleboats.
An 1882 photograph of African American sea captains.
A scrimshaw tooth from 1840, carved aboard a whaling ship.
A photograph of the New Bedford whaleship Plantina.
A map showing Boston’s top-five foreign languages spoken at home in 2015.
A photo of Bishop Charles M. Grace, a Cape Verdean American pastor and community leader who was born in the 1880s and died in 1960.
A whale-oil lamp.

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