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The seeds of Oak Bluffs sprouted in August 1835 from a handful
of tents pitched amid a grove of oak trees for a week of
spiritual rejuvenation. By 1880, this Methodist revival meeting
in the Camp Ground had grown into a summer city of a thousand
wood frame tents and cottages.
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Initially part of Edgartown, Oak Bluffs in the space of 35 years grew
from wilderness to the most famous Methodist camp meeting in the United
States. In 1835 a few pilgrims from Edgartown pitched nine tents in a
grove of oaks just behind the bluffs overlooking Nantucket Sound and
for a week sought a closer and more fundamental communion with God than
they could fine in the comfort of the village. By 1870, thousands were
coming from all over New England to witness the spectacle of revival
meetings - and to vacation in a town that grew in a circuit around the
original camp meeting site.
Oak Bluffs is a relatively young town, by Island standards, and
since its economy had more to do with recreation than with the
time-honored whaling or shipping trades of Edgartown and
Vineyard Haven, it evolved with a much more frivolous,
lighthearted air.
Instead of serviceable, weather-hardy salt-boxes or dignified
captains' houses, Oak Bluffs filled with whimsical, multicolored
gingerbread cottages unwinterized "wooden tents" erected to
replace the earlier Methodists' canvas ones.
Oak Bluffs businesses also leaned toward pure entertainment
there were theaters, a giant roller skating rink, hotels and a
carousel (still in operation).
Before the turn of the century, townsfolk were feeling their own
needs, separate from Edgartown, so community leaders began
agitating for separation. In 1880, they broke away and renamed
the town Cottage City. In 1907 they renamed it as Oak Bluffs.
As the Vineyard's first summer resort, Oak Bluffs fostered a
vacation economy that soon spread throughout the Island to
replace the disappearing whaling economy.
1. Circuit Avenue
Always the business center of town, it was named for the
"circuit" many of the Camp Ground's preachers rode. The Oak
Bluffs Land & Wharf Company laid out most of the town and named
it. Their first commercial building, the Arcade, is half-way up
on the right side.
2. Camp Ground
Entrance to the famous Martha's Vineyard Camp Meeting Grounds.
Original owners modeled their cottages after the Victorian
styles popular in Newport, but added unique Revival elements,
especially filigree trim. The result was the "Carpenter's
Gothic" style.
3. Tabernacle at Trinity Park
Originally designed to be built of wood, the Tabernacle, 100
feet high, 130 feet across, and seating more than 3,000, was
built with wrought iron and replaced a one-ton tent. On
Illumination Night, each August, hundreds of Chinese and
Japanese lanterns decorate the Tabernacle and the eaves of
surrounding cottages in a celebration that traditionally marks
the nd of summer.
4. The Lawton Cottage
70 Trinity Park. Said to be the first family cottage to replace
a tent, it was prefabricated, shipped from Rhode Island, and
assembled on the site.
5. Cottage Museum
A chance to see the inside of one of the gingerbread cottages.
The public is invited to see exhibits that show how cottages
have been furnished for the past 100 years with rocking
chairs, Bibles, hooked rugs, quilts and historical bric-a-brac.
Located at 1 Trinity Park, open Monday-Saturday, 10 am to 4 pm.
6. The Ark
Owned by Governor William Sprague of Rhode Island during the
Civil War, this cottage at 10 Trinity Park was the most
expensive one to build, costing $3,500. The name comes from its
large size and from the rain water which sometimes surrounds it.
The Ark is a private residence and is not open to the public.
7. Tall Timbers
The gray three-story cottage at 35 Allen Avenue has long,
one-piece pine boards that run the height of the house and form
the principal support for the upper two stories.
8. Number 17
Situated on Commonwealth Avenue, this cottage features a hunter
and his dog pursuing a rabbit in its gingerbread woodwork. The
new steam-driven tools of the late 1800s made detailed woodwork
possible.
9. Wesley Hotel
Built by A.G. Wesley in 1879 for the sum of $18,000, the hotel
prospered until a November 1894 fire. Three days later, A.G.
confessed to arson. He wanted to build "an even larger, more
creditable hotel for the community." The hotel rehired A.G. as a
cook after he served three years in jail. This sole survivor of
the large hotels so prominent in Cottage City's heyday was
remodeled in 1986.
10. Oak Bluffs Harbor
Once a swampy, landlocked pond called Lake Anthony, this harbor
was opened up to the ocean at the turn of the century. Now it
holds as many as 500 boats at a time snug and safe during the
entire summer. The boardwalk continues to bustles with shops and
restaurants.
11. Flying Horses
Built in 1876, the oldest operating platform carousel in the
country is registered as a National Historical Landmark. There
are twenty-two wooden horses with real horse hairand of course,
a brass ring to catch.
12. Civil War Memorial Statue
Gift of Charles Strahan, who served in the Confederate Army and
was editor of the now-defunct Martha's Vineyard Herald, which
was printed in Oak Bluffs. In 1980, the town re-painted the
statue. The statue clearly is of a Union soldier; U.S. is
stamped on his kit.
13. Ocean Park & Bandstand
Showplace seven-acre park. The annual fireworks and summer band
concerts are held here. The houses surrounding the park reflect
the more affluent families in their size and style Queen Anne
and Gothic Revival.
14. Dr. Tucker's Cottage
Built by a patent medicine king known for his hospitality and
his diaphoretic compound Number 59 which was sold across the
country. President Grant once watched fireworks in Ocean Park
from his balcony.
15. Hartford Park
The Consecrated Tree, an old, gnarled, dried-up cedar set in
cement and dedicated with a plaque, has been a place of worship
since 1849. The plaque on this natural tree sculpture tells the
tree's story. Nathaniel Hawthorne mentions a prayer service held
here.
16. Cottager's Corner
Once the town hall, this is now the office of Cottagers Inc.,
which supports a number of Island charities. Many "friends of"
organizations such as this one channel the goodwill of
civic-minded Vineyarders toward worthy causes.
17. Union Chapel
Designed by noted architect Samuel F. Pratt, this octagonal,
acoustically sound chapel with its three-tiered roof and four
doors was the site of secession meetings when the town debated
breaking away from Edgartown. Concerts are held here throughout
the summer.