History of the Scientific Community in Woods Hole
The village of Woods Hole was settled more than 300 years ago and for
two centuries remained primarily a farming and fishing community. Then
in 1871 the United States Commission of Fish and Fisheries (precursor
of the National Marine Fisheries Service) was established, and its
first director, Spencer Fullerton Baird, set up a temporary collecting
station in Woods Hole to study marine animals. Attracted by the
abundance of fauna and unpolluted waters, he established a permanent laboratory in the village in 1875. Soon,
visiting scientists were studying local marine plants and animals, and
a hatchery was organized to stock rivers with shad, salmon, and other
fish. At about the same time, the Fish Commission acquired Albatross, a
234-foot steamer and the first American ship to be designed
and built as a research vessel.
In 1888, a second institution, the Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL),
was established across the street. Its founders believed that some of
the essential processes of life, such as cell division, nerve and
muscle activity, and development, might be studied more easily in
simple marine forms than in higher animals. Consequently, both teaching
and research were begun in cellular biology, embryology, and biomedical
fields as well as in marine biology in general. For almost 90 years MBL
was solely a summer institution, but since the 1970s it has housed a
number of major year-round programs.
The Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI), a private nonprofit
organization originally funded by the Rockefeller Foundation, struck
off in a somewhat different direction. It was incorporated in 1930 to study all branches of
oceanography. Since much of the research was planned for the deep sea,
the research vessel Atlantis was built and used from 1931 to 1964. In
its first decade, WHOI was primarily a summer institution. During World
War II it changed to a year-round operation to gather oceanographic
information for anti-submarine warfare, amphibious landings, and other
operations. After the war, WHOI continued to work with the government,
and at present 80 percent of its annual budget is supported by federal
grants and contracts.
In the 1960s, the Fisheries and MBL replaced old wooden buildings with
a new aquarium and modern laboratories; WHOI expanded its research
programs and facilities and established a graduate education program in
concert with Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). A fourth
institution, the U.S. Geological Survey, headquartered its new Branch
of Atlantic Marine Geology here to investigate the geology and
geophysics of the Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico, and Caribbean. The Sea Education Association joined the
community in 1975, and Woods Hole Research Center in 1985.

