Maritime Cultural Landscapes
Conservation Issue
Mallows Bay-Potomac River National
Marine Sanctuary (MPNMS) has a rich
maritime cultural landscape, which
includes historical, cultural, and natural
resources and human habitation dating
back thousands of years. The coastal
environments within the sanctuary are
connected with historic events, activities, or
persons and demonstrate many aesthetic
or cultural values. A complete and rigorous
analysis of the sanctuary region’s maritime
cultural landscape, inclusive of all peoples
through time and their connection to the
maritime resources, is an important
management goal.
Description
A maritime cultural landscape is a geographic area where the combination and
interrelationships of human
activity and the marine environment is expressed in significant ways, such as the
distribution of heritage
resources, traditions and cultural practices, or culturally important locations. Every
maritime cultural landscape
captures a unique combination of both material and intangible heritage, and includes meaning
attached to a
given location by different stakeholder groups. The maritime cultural landscape approach
identifies and
characterizes these landscapes and provides a comprehensive framework for better
understanding and
managing ocean resources.
MPNMS overlaps part of the traditional homeland and cultural landscape of the Piscataway
Conoy
Confederacy and Sub-Tribes and the Piscataway Indian Nation of Maryland, as well as the
Patawomeck Indian
Tribe of Virginia.
Together with the World War I U.S. Shipping Board Emergency Fleet wrecks, the area has also
been the locus
of important activities pertaining to the development of the United States. It was the site
of a land-sea skirmish
between Royal Navy forces, the Virginia State Navy, and the Maryland Militia during the
American Revolution,
and was also the site of pre-Civil War steamboat landings and Civil War campsites and
batteries. The region
also contains the historical and cultural remains of several regimes of the Potomac
fisheries industry from the
1840s through the 1920s and is home to four U.S. Navy and Joint Bases along the Potomac
River downstream
of Washington, DC. The area also has connections to generations of African American
heritage, including
direct connections to the shipbreaking era during the 1920s–1940s. Due to the area’s
historical significance,
the Mallows Bay-Widewater Historic and Archeological District was listed on the National
Park Service's
National Register of Historic Places in April 2015.
The MPNMS management plan offers opportunities to enhance public understanding and
stewardship of the
sanctuary, its maritime resources, and the greater Chesapeake watershed through partnerships
with formal
and informal education providers and institutions, distance and other web-based learning,
and specific
educational programs and initiatives. The examination of the MPNMS maritime cultural
landscape will add
greatly to the “story” of the site and help guide research and outreach efforts.
Data and Analysis Needs
- Baseline characterization, assessment, and interpretation of sanctuary waters and
adjacent terrestrial
and wetlands areas, including remains of the Ghost Fleet and other historical and
cultural resources
- Research on historical and cultural resources present at MPNMS
- Collaboration with the region’s Indigenous peoples to analyze and interpret Indigenous
cultural heritage
practices associated with MPNMS
- Analysis and interpretation of cultural heritage practices associated with MPNMS, in
collaboration with
African American communities, commercial and recreational fishing communities, and the
Department
of the Navy
Potential Products
- Geographic information system (GIS) products, such as interactive maps of human uses in
the MPNMS
area throughout history
- Outreach products related to the MPNMS maritime cultural landscape, including content
for web and
virtual products, signage, and educational activities
Suggested Scientific Approach and Actions
- Community science surveys in collaboration with the sanctuary co-management team
- Remote sensing (aerial, LiDAR, multibeam and side scan sonar)
- Photogrammetry
- Photo and video surveys
- Historical and archival research
- Oral histories
Key Partners
NOAA’s Office for Coastal Management ● Maryland Historical Trust ● Piscataway Conoy
Confederacy and
Sub-Tribes ● Piscataway Indian Nation of Maryland ● Patawomeck Indian Tribe of Virginia ●
Smithsonian
Institution ● Maryland Department of Natural Resources ● Virginia Department of Historic
Resources ●
Widewater State Park ● Charles County ● U.S. Department of the Navy ● Potomac River
Fisheries
Commission ● Research institutions and universities ● Local experts
For more information about this assessment, contact mallows.bay@noaa.gov.