The story has it that 40 years ago this spring, Massachusetts state Sen. William (Billy) Bulger was on Nantucket and decided to go for a dip in the deep blue sea. As he went down to the shore and faced the horizon, he soon found out that lurking behind him was the devil, the one who came over on the Mayflower. In short order, Senator Bulger was summarily kicked off the beach. He had broken a colonial law trying to reach public water by stepping across private sand. Enraged, he asked the legislature and the courts for help. He might have had better luck asking his brother Whitey.
In 1641 the first families of the Massachusetts Bay Colony decided to lay down the laws. Of course, they did this after they took their colony name from the Native Americans who lived here, killed some, converted others to Christianity and took their land. This was an early example of a concept now called eminent domain.
Adapted as law by the General Court of the commonwealth was the following: “Every inhabitant that is a householder shall have free fishing and fowling in any great ponds and bays, coves and rivers, so far as the sea ebbs and flows within the precincts of the town where they dwell, unless the Freemen of the same town or the General Court have otherwise appropriated them, provided that this shall not be extended to give leave to any man to come upon others property without their leave.”
Eventually, this came to mean: “My property goes down to the sea and I can tell you to get off because I pay taxes on this swatch and you don’t.” In the United States this concept of beachfront as backyard applies only to Massachusetts and Maine, these two states being one unified territory back in 1641.
The first families allowed themselves beach rights, but since they were Puritans, they never used them for the pleasure to swim, surf, boat, tan, lounge or stroll. Beach rights meant fishing and fowling. In short, “my property includes my food supply.”
So they drew a line in the sand and then spent time, money and reams of yellowing paper defining conditions under which anyone else could cross it. The devil was truly in the details. After all, these were the people H. L. Mencken once described as having “the haunting fear that someone, somewhere, may be happy.” So today, towns use public funds to hire one party to stop a second party from entering the beach property of a third party. This is happening although the Puritans long ago faded onto the endangered species list, somewhere between Native Americans and moderate Republicans.
According to the Martha’s Vineyard Commission, about 65 per cent of our shoreline is now restricted, either held by individual landowners or beach associations.
Spending years rallying support, Mr. Bulger filed a bill to liberate the shores of Massachusetts. The bill would have given the public a right of passage up to the high-tide mark. Those water line boundaries have always been a source of confusion. First, property extended only to the high-water mark. Then it stretched from the mean high-water line to the mean low-water line. This was allegedly clarified to mean the rights went to any tidally exposed land out to 1,650 feet beyond the high-tide mark. Eventually these marks sounded like a Marx Brothers routine.
Equally mesmerizing are swimmers’ rights. You can swim through the waters of private property, but that’s it. According to a 1907 state court ordinance, a swimmer’s feet cannot touch dry land if it’s private. Heaven help those caught in a shipwreck or a riptide.
In 1991, the state Supreme Judicial Court gave Mr. Bulger a victory that was a bit pyrrhic. The law was changed to give the public the right to walk the shores between dawn and dusk, but first property owners would have to be compensated at fair market value for their de-privatization or deprivation. To follow through with this ruling, the state would have to sell Martha’s Vineyard back to New York or file for bankruptcy.
Financially, we seem stuck with this beach situation. Even if we tried a tax deal such as offering a landowner a rebate in exchange for an easement, each town would probably be up the public creek in a loss of operating capital.
So here’s your choice — if you want to tempt fate and walk along a private beach, you’d better be walking with a fishing rod on your shoulder and a creel belted to your waist. Or you can carry a blunderbuss and say you’re on your way to the Antiques Roadshow. Or you can buy a key to Quansoo at a cost in most states of a nice four-bedroom house on a half-acre lot. Or you can just rest your addled brain on a pristine public beach. By the way, pristine is an old New England term meaning devoid of concessions and plumbing.
Legal challenges will no doubt come up again. Meanwhile, colonial quaintness remains. Laws like these were written to establish a vagueness that could lead to misinterpretation, which could lead to fines, which could make the town coffers healthy. Hence, no new taxes. We are talking about people living in an era that justified dismemberment. Pity the poor uneducated transgressor who thought drawn and quartered meant depicted by illustration and housed.
If you ask me, never let folks who think dancing is a symptom of witchcraft create your legal code.
Arnie Reisman and his wife, Paula Lyons, regularly appear on the weekly NPR comedy quiz show, Says You! He also writes for the Huffington Post.
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