The photographer Peter Simon takes a look back at his own long, strange trip.
Bill Eville
The Island Autism Group is pursuing an ambitious new goal: to acquire land and build a center to serve as a hub for after-school programs, a family summer camp, job training, expert lectures, a community space, and much, much more.
Mary Breslauer
His auto empire is far larger than the one he inherited from his late father. But Ernie Boch Jr.'s place in Edgartown? You might be surprised.
Vanessa Czarnecki
While chefs usually get most of the credit for a successful meal out, it’s the servers who are on the front lines.
Simone McCarthy
As idyllic as Island farming may seem, making a go of it is, and always was, a mysterious combination of constant hard work and occasional good luck. At West Tisbury's iconic Nip'n'Tuck Farm, it's always been, well, nip and tuck.
Tina Miller
The magical realism of Cindy Kane.
Alexandra Bullen Coutts
Captain William A. Martin of Edgartown was that rarest of things, an African American Whaling Captain.
As difficult, dangerous, and sometimes financially unrewarding as whaling was, it still beat slavery by miles. By some estimates thirty percent of the thousands of whalers before the Civil War were minorities. A few even overcame all the odds and rose through the ranks to command ships. More than thirty African American whaling captains have been identified, one of whom, William A. Martin, was born on Martha’s Vineyard.
Skip Finley
For more than half a century youth baseball has been one of the rites of spring – and of passage – on the Island.
Ivy Ashe