Great events shaped the history of Marthas Vineyard in
the second half of the 20th century and made the Island famous
around the world. There was the accident at Chappaquiddick in
1969, the filming of the movie Jaws in 1974, the
purchase of land by Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis in 1978, the
visits of the late Princess of Wales and the President of the
United States in the 1990s, the plane crash off Aquinnah that
killed John F. Kennedy Jr. in 1999.
For a time, it felt as if the Vineyard had no more story to tell
of itself than could fit into a three-minute segment on
Entertainment Tonight.
But the true history of Marthas Vineyard is a story laced
with drama and contradictions. In one sense, it is a recent
history, for the Vineyard is the newest piece of real estate in
the geologic evolution of New England. In another it is one of
the oldest histories, for the Vineyard remains the home of the
some of the first settlers in the northeast, both Indian and
English. It is a story rooted in the Atlantic adventure of
fishing, the global adventure of whaling, the labor of farming,
the booms and busts of resorthood. In his book Marthas
Vineyard an Elegy, written by the late Everett S.
Allen (once a columnist for the Vineyard Gazette), Hattie
Tilton, of an ancestral Vineyard family, said: I imagine
everything that ever happened on earth has happened on the
Vineyard at least once. And some things twice.
The story of the physical creation of the Vineyard begins about
12,000 years ago, as a huge shoveling wall of ice crept to a
stop under what was probably for an ice age, anyway
a relatively mild afternoon sun. One lobe of ice to the
north was forming the peninsula of Cape Cod. Another, about 20
miles to the east, was shaping the crescent of Nantucket. The
lobe that would create the Vineyard had advanced as far as what
is now the northwestern shore of the Island. As the parade of
warmer days marched on, the glacier began to melt and retreat,
leaving behind a landscape of highland and valley, boulder and
stone, along the whole western spine of the Vineyard from West
Chop to Aquinnah.
The winds blew much of the sand, dirt and grit to the south and
east, forming a granular, acidic bed of topsoil called
sandplain. Today this sort of soil is to be found no place on
earth except where the last glacial advance finally stopped,
along Long Island, the Vineyard and Nantucket. The sea slowly
flooded the lowest areas around the Islands, separating them
from Cape Cod. With its unique sandy soil, its prairie
landscape, its perpetual battering by sea and storm, the
Vineyard began its life as a place biologically disconnected
from the mainland not more than three miles away. Everything
above and around the Island the land, the sea and the sky
conspires to treat nature pretty hard, and for many
generations existence on the Vineyard was hard on people too. No
matter the species, life here begins with a sense of being
somehow separate from the everyday, uniform world of the
mainland.
THE FIRST SETTLERS
The first people on Marthas Vineyard were Indians of the
Wampanoag tribe, who probably were able to walk here before the
sea filled the lowest valleys and plains. Wampanoags still make
up a large part of the town of Aquinnah, known as Gay Head until
the spring of 1998. The modern history of Marthas Vineyard
begins with the arrival of a single English ship in 1602,
commanded by Bartholomew Gosnold, who built the first colonial
settlement in New England on Cuttyhunk, a small island just
across Vineyard Sound. Gosnold crossed the sound to visit the
Vineyard many times during the single summer season he remained
in the New World; the Indians called it Noepe, meaning
Amid the Waters a reference to the two
distinct and often conflicting tidal currents the native people
saw at work around the Island. Gosnold named it
Marthas Vineyard, probably after his infant
daughter and because the Island was covered by wild grapes.
The right to settle permanently on the Vineyard was purchased by
Thomas Mayhew Sr., a miller from Watertown, Mass., who obtained
his title from two English noblemen who held overlapping claims
to the Islands. His son Thomas Jr. moved to what is now
Edgartown with a handful of settlers in 1642, and his father
followed soon after. The senior Mayhew established himself as
governor of the Island; the younger became a teacher and
missionary to the Indians, converting the first of them to
Christianity less than a year after his arrival.
The newcomers spent the first 150 years on the Vineyard farming
and fishing. When they arrived, there were about 3,000 Indians
living in four main tribes on the Island one of the
densest concentrations in all of New England but the
native people were stricken by diseases brought by the English,
and soon the only tribe left was the Aquinnahs at the isolated
far western end of the Island. For many generations after the
coming of the whites, the total population of the Vineyard
hovered around 2,000 people.
They lived on an Island roughly shaped like a triangle, about 25
miles long and only seven miles wide at the widest. In colonial
times, there were only two towns on the Vineyard. Edgartown, the
county seat, encompassed the eastern half of the Island,
including the adjacent island of Chappaquiddick; Tisbury made up
the western half, including the tiny village of Chilmark and
what would become an enclave of relatively arid land for the
Indians at Gay Head.
WHALING
Shortly after 1800, the Vineyard and its sister island of
Nantucket began to embark on extended whaling voyages to distant
parts of the world. Indians had been whaling along the shore for
decades, and Islanders had joined the hunt in these nearby
waters almost from their arrival. But it was these distant
voyages that brought sudden and immense wealth to the two
Islands. Nantucket grew famous for providing the ships, and
though it had a small fleet of its own, the Vineyard became best
known for providing the captains, the crew, and many of the
services whaling ships needed as they headed out sea, or
returned with their catch.
Whaling expeditions sailed all over the globe, into the South
Atlantic, the Arctic, the Indian Ocean, and many times around
the stormy southern tip of South America and into the Pacific.
Nantuckets harbor was too shallow to accommodate her own
whalers when they returned laden with oil, so Edgartown grew
rich by offloading Nantucket vessels when they came home. With
whaling money, great mansions were built in the oldest Island
village. By 1840, the names of both Islands were famous all
around the world.
It was during this period of tremendous prosperity that the
Vineyard Gazette was born. Edgar Marchant, a printer and
newspaperman with a reputation for bullheadedness (A
man of positive convictions, he waited not first to learn what
others thought, before uttering his own opinions, read
one tribute after his death), put together his first four-page
sheet on May 14, 1846. He set type by hand, one letter at a
time. The Gazette still has the press he used. With other
mementos of the old hot-lead days, it is preserved in a small
museum at the newspaper office on South Summer Street in
Edgartown.
RESORTHOOD
In 1859 oil was discovered in Pennsylvania. It was far easier
and cheaper to light lamps with petroleum products than whale
oil. By 1871 the whaling industry had collapsed almost
completely. Suddenly Marthas Vineyard had to find another
way to make a living.
It would do so, first, by finding salvation.
In the 1820s a great fundamentalist revival swept the country.
The nation had secured its liberty, villages were growing into
cities, and a new class of merchants and businessmen was
beginning to rise up and grow comfortable on its earnings. But
prosperity brought with it the worrisome notion that a country
founded by puritans was losing sight of God and the rigorous
meaning of faith. Vineyarders growing ever more wealthy on
whaling money looked around at their Greek Revival houses and
began to feel the same sense of uneasiness. In the summer of
1835, a small knot of Edgartonians, newly converted to the
fundamentalist principles of John Wesley and Methodism, left the
town and all its comforts behind and set sail for a wilderness
of oaks, standing on a bluff on a northern headland of the
Vineyard, about five miles away. For a week they held a revival
camp meeting there.
The event was so invigorating to the spirit that they returned
the next year. Soon a few mainlanders joined them. And some of
them fell in love with the beauty of the land and water, and the
healthful saltiness of the air. They too began to come back year
after year.
Eventually, these worshippers built elaborately decorated homes
where their tents once stood. These became summer cottages in
the Victorian gingerbread style. The visits grew
less and less spiritual and more and more recreational. They
lasted longer each summer. Word of the Island spread across New
England, and soon people began to associate the words
Marthas Vineyard with the word resort.
In the summer of 1863, it was still possible to wander through
this wilderness of oak and meadow on the old Camp Ground and see
not a single permanent building. Ten years later the oak and
meadow were gone. In their place stood the village of Cottage
City the future town of Oak Bluffs as a visitor
would recognize it today.
REVERSAL OF FORTUNE
Its hard to believe, seeing the Vineyard now, but for the
rest of the 19th century and for many years into the 20th, the
Island struggled just to make do.
After the death of whaling early in the 1870s, the Vineyard
continued to make a living fishing and farming, but these
enterprises didnt bring in much mainland money. Vineyard
men also acted as pilots for sailing ships. There was, as yet,
no Cape Cod Canal, and so the clippers and schooners of the 19th
century had to brave the perilous shallow waters around Cape Cod
and the Islands as they carried their commerce between New York
and Boston. Vineyard and Nantucket Sounds were called the second
busiest waterway on the face of the earth, after the English
Channel. Only Vineyard men knew these waters well enough to get
deep-draft sailing vessels through the tides and over the shoals
with reasonable safety.
But as a resort, the Vineyard was slow to build first-class
hotels or improve roads. It made no recreational use of its
harbors. (Menemsha, now a famous fishing port, stood on a
narrow, unnavigable creek until it was dredged starting in 1899,
and what had been a freshwater pond at Oak Bluffs wasnt
opened to the sea as a harbor until that year.) What modest
summer business there was withered in the wake of every stock
market crash or recession. Summer residents came to enjoy the
simplest kind of life because thats the only kind
of life Marthas Vineyard could offer.
MODERN TIMES
World War II shot the Vineyard forward into modern times.
Servicemen from all around the country were stationed on the
Vineyard during the war, many of them at an air base built
quickly in the center of the Island it is now the county
airport where they learned aerial gunnery and how to fly
on and off the decks of aircraft carriers. They went home to
their families after the war and spoke about a place of
astonishing beauty off the coast of southern New England. Even
without the war, the Vineyard couldnt have escaped
attention forever. It lay on one corner of a triangle on whose
two other points stood the cities of New York and Boston. And
the interstate highway system was heading this way.
Today, the year-round population of 15,000 lives in six towns.
From east to west, these are: Edgartown, Oak Bluffs, Tisbury
(Vineyard Haven), West Tisbury, Chilmark and Aquinnah (formerly
Gay Head). Histories of these towns may be found on this
Website.
Today this Island, laid down by the ice and shaped by the sea,
is famous around the world. In summer the population swells to
100,000 residents and more, and the Vineyard sees more than
25,000 additional visitors coming and going every day.
With this sort of traffic, and this sort of fame, the pressure
on the Vineyard to grow and conform to mainland standards of
size, pace, comfort and appearance are constant. Conservation
groups and individuals fight a never-ending battle against the
forces of change that would make this place less and less as it
was for the past 350 years, and more and more like everywhere
else.