海角大神

Obama's vacation spot has strong links to black history

By the 1800s, the servants of white summer residents of Martha's Vineyard were buying up land. In the 1950s, the island was popular with civil rights leaders like Martin Luther King Jr.

|
Steven Senne/AP
A storefront display on Martha's Vineyard features memorabilia and books on President Obama. He is just the latest high-profile African-American to visit the island.

Rocky ocean cliffs and tangles of green foliage. Crowded Edgartown restaurants, large yachts, and even larger gray-shingle mansions. These are the images that many people equate with Martha鈥檚 Vineyard.

What is less known is that the island has a long-enduring African-American history as well.

President Obama, who arrived Sunday on Martha鈥檚 Vineyard with his family for a week-long vacation, is helping to highlight that history.

Martha鈥檚 Vineyard is not a surprising choice for a presidential vacation. After all, former President Clinton has strolled its beaches with his family many times.

But Mr. Obama鈥檚 vacation shows a different side of the island.

鈥淚n some ways, I think the Vineyard is postracial,鈥 says Dr. Elaine Cawley Weintraub, author of 鈥淟ighting the Trail 鈥 the African American Heritage of Martha's Vineyard.鈥

The first Africans on the island were slaves in the late 1600s. By the 1800s, the servants of the island鈥檚 white summer residents were buying up land in Cottage City, now known as Oak Bluffs and the unofficial capital of African-American culture there.

Oak Bluffs was a popular site for summer religious retreats. Charles Shearer, a former slave from Virginia, first came to the island in the late 1800s with his Baptist church group and later opened an inn to accommodate family and friends. His roster of guests reads like a who鈥檚 who of African-American culture at the turn of the 20th century: actors and singers like Ethel Waters, Roland Hayes, and Lillian Evanti; political figures like William H. Lewis, an assistant attorney general under President Taft; and the 眉ber-wealthy Madam C.J. Walker, who made millions in the beauty industry.

鈥淚t was a very cultural time for African-Americans to share with each other,鈥 says Lee Jackson Van Allen, the great-granddaughter of Mr. Shearer who now runs . Her great-grandfather, she says, moved to the island 鈥渢o expose his family to the ocean and certainly a population of African-Americans that aspired to do well and who were highly educated and prosperous.鈥

In the 1950s, the Vineyard was also popular with civil rights leaders like Martin Luther King Jr. Sen. Edward Brooke, the first African-American elected by popular vote to the Senate, owned a home in Oak Bluffs.

Islanders were 鈥渁lways aware of diversity,鈥 Dr. Weintraub says. She credits the maritime whaling industry, as well as the island's native American population, for breaking down racial barriers. On whaling ships, whose logs included sailors of all backgrounds, 鈥測ou didn鈥檛 care about race,鈥 Weintraub says. 鈥淵ou cared about whether the guy behind you could do his job.鈥

Today, the island is still a popular vacation spot for wealthy and elite African-Americans. Film director Spike Lee is reportedly a frequent summertime visitor. Prof. Henry Louis Gates Jr. fled to the island after his controversial arrest outside his home in Cambridge, Mass., earlier this summer. Fellow Harvard professor Charles Ogletree is also a regular on the island, as well as a friend of Obama's.

Martha鈥檚 Vineyard also hosts an , has its , and offers an , which chronicles of the experiences of blacks through 22 historic sites.

Yet despite the strength of the island鈥檚 African-American community, Obama鈥檚 vacation has another No. 1 priority.

鈥淗is desire in Martha's Vineyard is to get a little break,鈥 , speaking to reporters in Oak Bluffs. 鈥淗e certainly appreciates the hospitality of the folks who are here. But his desire here is to relax and spend time with the family.鈥

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
QR Code to Obama's vacation spot has strong links to black history
Read this article in
/USA/Politics/2009/0824/obamas-vacation-spot-has-strong-links-to-black-history
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe