novaTopFlex

Expressing the 'Top-Flex Identity!

Tag: Dukes

  • Hype for the Future 68I: The Historical Significance of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, County by County

    Preamble

    The Commonwealth of Massachusetts is not just defined by Plymouth nor by Boston, but also by the numerous other cities and towns within the surrounding areas and beyond—as far west as the Berkshires, as far east as Cape Cod, and as far south as Martha’s Vineyard and Nantucket.

    Introduction

    The Commonwealth of Massachusetts is home to fourteen (14) distinct counties, of which eight (8) of the county governments have been abolished. The other six remain in full force and are entirely located further south and east in the Commonwealth, including the counties of Norfolk, Plymouth, Bristol, Barnstable, Dukes, and Nantucket.

    Barnstable County

    Home to Cape Cod, Barnstable County is most notable historically for containing the first landing site of the Mayflowers as well as the more recent tolerance of the LGBTQIA+ community, as well as prominent and occasionally seasonal ferry services to Boston, Martha’s Vineyard, and Nantucket Island.

    Nantucket County

    Coextensive with the island of Nantucket, the Town and County of Nantucket is most notable for astronomer Maria Mitchell, an early figure in the movement of Women in STEM that can be remodeled for any other marginalized group. Deviating from traditional gender roles of the time, Maria Mitchell’s legacy has resulted in her name becoming attached to an aquarium, an observatory, an association, and select other tourist attractions within especially the central village area.

    Dukes County

    Martha’s Vineyard is also an island within the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, though the island is located further west and nearer Buzzards Bay. While the island is similarly known for the whaling industry, as with Nantucket, the communities of Martha’s Vineyard are also known historically for ferry services and connections to the Boston Brahmins of much of the Elizabeth Islands and Town of Gosnold across the Vineyard Sound.

    Bristol County

    Within the SouthCoast region of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, perhaps the most prominent of historical characteristics and features include the whaling industry in New Bedford, the Portuguese community centered around Fall River, and the jewelry industry around Attleboro, just to name a few.

    Plymouth County

    Perhaps the most notable feature of Plymouth County, especially for tourists,8: the Town of Plymouth, established by the Pilgrims of the Mayflower and Mayflower Compact in 1620 for the New World. The National Monument to the Forefathers is located within the Town of Plymouth and is the most iconic part of the county; however, further north are the historic towns of Hingham and Hull, in which the Town of Hull is on a peninsula and is home to the historic Hull Life Saving Museum based on the significant context of the southern Massachusetts Bay.

    Norfolk County

    While Norfolk County may not contain nearly as much in terms of historical significance as surrounding counties, with more modern influence predominating the narrative, the most important portions of the county are the historic sites of John Adams and John Quincy Adams in Quincy, Massachusetts.

    Suffolk County

    Home to the capital and largest city of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts and the regional hub for all of New England, Suffolk County is most notable for the attractions associated within. Boston is the principal city of the county; however, the Cities of Chelsea and Revere and the Town of Winthrop also play large roles in the regional values.

    The most important of the historic sites, including Faneuil Hall, the Old South Meeting House, and the historical markers and areas along the Freedom Trail, are identified within the Boston National Historical Park of the National Park Service.

    Middlesex County

    Home to the oldest university in the United States of America, Harvard University, in Cambridge, Middlesex County is highly renowned for charming historical sites and the surrounding historical context. While the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and Tufts University are situated in a more modern technical context, Middlesex is also home to the historic Lowell textile mills, as well as Minute Man of Lexington and Concord of the Revolutionary War and even the numerous historic urban layouts in the earliest suburbs of Boston, often tracing to the colonial era.

    Essex County

    While Essex County is perhaps most notable for the Salem Witch Trials of historic Salem, Peabody, and surrounding areas, the Town of Nahant is also notable for the historical context of the surrounding areas north of the Massachusetts Bay. Apart from the museums representing Salem history, Gloucester, on Cape Ann, also contains a historical context and associated museums and cultural sites at the northern end of the Massachusetts Bay along the significantly larger Gulf of Maine.

    Worcester County

    Largely determined by the Blackstone River, Worcester County is most notable for industrial working-class heritage, especially identifiable within the communities of Worcester, Leominster, and Fitchburg. While the Town of Winchendon is also of historic significance, the aforementioned communities of greater industrial heritage are nowadays identified as state university and art museum locations, specifically in Worcester and Fitchburg.

    Hampden County

    Perhaps the most significant historical events and figures of Hampden County, home to such communities as Springfield, Chicopee, and Holyoke, are Dr. Seuss and the inventions of volleyball and basketball within the county limits. Also associated with industrial heritage in the region, the communities are largely aligned along the spine of the Connecticut River.

    Hampshire County

    Within Hampshire County, the most important historical events have largely occurred in the City of Northampton, though many have been lost to history. In modern Northampton, the Hotel Northampton is perhaps the most iconic city feature that remains steadily in maintenance, while the community today is also home to all-female Smith College. Today, the county is most notable for the Five Colleges, though many more are within the Towns of Amherst and South Hadley.

    Franklin County

    Unlike the other thirteen counties in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Franklin County, home to the City of Greenfield, has largely been identified and associated with the industrial working class, without a significant developmental push in the area there nor in the Deerfield area. If the Westfield River is notable in Hampden County, then the Deerfield River is notable in Franklin County.

    Berkshire County

    While Berkshire County might be most notable for tourists associated with mountains and nature, historic events that have been associated with the county have included the birth of Susan B. Anthony in the north and the presence of W. E. B. Du Bois in the south.

  • Hype for the Future 65C: Martha’s Vineyard, the Island of Dukes County

    Introduction

    While the Elizabeth Islands that separate the Buzzards Bay from the Vineyard Sound are located off the coast of the Woods Hole area and contain the Town of Gosnold, the vast majority of the approximately seventy (70) permanent residents are exclusively within the area of the village of Cuttyhunk on Cuttyhunk Island specifically, as the remaining islands are largely identified as privately owned by the Boston Brahmin Forbes family.

    The vast majority of Dukes County, Massachusetts, is largely identified by the location on the Island of Martha’s Vineyard, opposite the Vineyard Sound from the Elizabeth Islands, which are in turn opposite the Buzzards Bay from the larger area of the South Coast of Massachusetts, containing Bristol County and such communities as New Bedford and Fall River.

    Towns

    The seven towns associated with Dukes County are the Towns of Gosnold (on the Elizabeth Islands), Aquinnah, Chilmark, West Tisbury, Tisbury, Oak Bluffs, and Edgartown, from west to east. The Towns of Tisbury, Oak Bluffs, and Edgartown provide ferry services to elsewhere in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, including both the Nantucket area and the mainland of the Commonwealth.

    Ferries

    From the Tisbury village area of Vineyard Haven, ferry services are accessible to Woods Hole (Falmouth) and to New Bedford. The Martha’s Vineyard Fast Ferry provides access from the Oak Bluffs Harbormaster to North Kingstown, Washington County, Rhode Island, while the primary ferry dock associated with the town provides services to New Bedford, Woods Hole, Falmouth, Hyannis, and Nantucket. Edgartown provides access to the Falmouth community also, albeit on a separate axis due to beginning further east on the island.

    Aquinnah and Chilmark

    Located on the western end of Martha’s Vineyard, the Town of Aquinnah is home to the Gay Head Light, the Aquinnah Cliffs Overlook, the Red Gate Farm, and Toad Rock. To the east is the Town of Chilmark, home to the Mememsha Public Beach, the Great Sand Bank Overlook, the Brick Yard, the Former Home of James Cagney, and the Magical Sculpture Trail and Pottery Shop at Island Folk Pottery.

    (West) Tisbury

    Most of the larger village areas within Martha’s Vineyard are located along the northern shore of the island and relatively east within. Tisbury, Oak Bluffs, and Edgartown are the primary towns containing relatively larger villages within the county. Within the Town of West Tisbury, the primary attractions are the Heath Hen Monument and the Granary, Davis House, and Field Galleries.

    Outlying Areas in the East

    While the Town of Edgartown serves as the county seat of Dukes County, Massachusetts, the southern portion of the town is actually relatively empty in comparison. At the southern end of the island is the area of the Katama South Beach, with the area just to the north home to the four-star Winnetu Oceanside Resort. While located closer to a central village area, the southern part of the Town of Oak Bluffs is home to the Joseph Sylvia State Beach and the Featherstone Center for the Arts.

    Town of Edgartown

    Edgartown is the easternmost town and county seat of Dukes County, Massachusetts. Home to the Edgartown Harbor Lighthouse, the community is also highly notable for the Carnegie Heritage Center of the Vineyard Preservation Trust, as well as the Giant Pagoda Tree, the Edgartown Visitor Center, and the Vincent House Museum within the Edgartown Historic District. The following galleries are located within the Town of Edgartown:

    • Old Sculpin Gallery
    • Eisenhauer Gallery
    • The Christina Gallery Incorporated
    • North Water Gallery
    • The Edgartown Art Gallery Incorporated (located within the Charlotte Inn)

    Town of Tisbury

    The Town of Tisbury is the location of the Martha’s Vineyard Museum in Dukes County, Massachusetts. The Vineyard Arts and Louisa Gould Galleries are located at the center of the central village area, with the historic Nathan Mayhew Schoolhouse located further to the north.

    Town of Oak Bluffs

    Though the Town of Edgartown is the county seat of Dukes County, the Town of Oak Bluffs may be identified as a larger community within the county, home to the Moore Family Gallery, the Harthaven Gallery, and the Eastville Point Beach in the outlying area of the village as well as the East Chop Lighthouse at the northernmost point of the inner village.

    More centrally located within the village of Oak Bluffs, the Oak Bluffs Harbormaster is the aforementioned marina providing access to the Fast Ferry to North Kingstown in southern Rhode Island. In the southwestern area of the village are the MVCVA ART, Knowhere Art, Alison Shaw, and Crossroads Galleries, the latter of which contains Michael Blanchard Inspirational Photography. Craftworks may also be located within the Vineyard Haven area, though the facility may be seasonal or no longer effective.

    Within the Oak Bluffs portion of the Oak Bluffs area are the Corbin Norton Gallery, the Healy Square, Craftworks, the Cousen Rose Gallery, the Center of Knowhere, the site of the Mariposa Museum with And Still We Rise (Oak Bluffs), the Gingerbread Houses, the Flower of the Winds, and the Martha’s Vineyard Camp Meeting Association with the Cottage Museum.

  • Hype for the Future 65B: Nantucket, a Queer Haven, Town, County, and Island

    Introduction

    The Town of Nantucket is the sole town in the consolidated town-county arrangement of Nantucket County, Massachusetts. Though not as notable for the LGBTQIA+ 🏳️‍🌈 population as the Cape Cod area, including Provincetown, the island of Nantucket offers seclusion that may provide privacy and security for members of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer/questioning, intersex, and aromantic/asexual community, albeit on a different register.

    Notable Attractions

    The bulk of attractions on the island of Nantucket of historical significance are of women in STEM, in particular Maria Mitchell, a notable astronomer from the island area. The Maria Mitchell Observatory is an observatory named in her honor, though the aquarium of the island is also named for her, along with numerous representative facilities located both in the village area and potentially elsewhere on the island.

    First Sunrise?

    Scientists observing the times of the sunrises along the eastern seaboard of the United States have debated the location of the first sunrise in the contiguous United States, which usually varies between Cadillac Mountain in Acadia National Park in the winter months, Mars Hill in Aroostook County in the summer months, and the Lubec/West Quoddy Head area around both equinoxes. However, at the beginning of the new millennium, referring to 2000, the first sunrise over CONUS was measured as being reported at the Siasconset village area on Nantucket, Massachusetts, rather than being located within the more easterly State of Maine.

    Ferry Service

    Four (4) ferry routes are identified regarding access to Nantucket Island on Google Maps. While Google may not necessarily provide the most accurate nor up-to-date coverage of ferry routes, especially regarding seasonal ferries, the island is currently identified as being accessible from elsewhere in the Commonwealth exclusively by ferry (and the same is true for Martha’s Vineyard to the west, by the way).

    From Straight Wharf, the Nantucket ferry provides access to the Port of Harwich on the mainland in the southern portion of Barnstable County, Massachusetts. From Steamboat Wharf, access is provided to the communities of New Bedford on the South Coast in Bristol County, Oak Bluffs on Martha’s Vineyard in Dukes County, and the village area of Hyannis in Barnstable County.

    Outlying Villages

    The outlying villages of the Island, Town, and County of Nantucket include the villages of Siasconset, Wauwinet, Polpis, Tom Nevers, Dionis, Eel Point, and Madaket. Siasconset is located at the eastern edge of Nantucket County and is often shortened to ‘Sconset and home to the ‘Sconset Foot Bridge, while the village of Wauwinet contains a five-star hotel in the area. Altar Rock, the Sankaty Head Lighthouse, and the Barnard Valley Road Viewpoint are each located within the outlying areas to the east, with Nobadeer Beach to the south and Madaket Beach to the west.

    Though not in the central village area of Nantucket, the town is also home to the seasonal Nantucket Shipwreck and Life Saving Museum. However, within the true village area are numerous arts galleries, including Arts Nantucket and the Nantucket Gallery at the southern end, as well as the Barn, the Old Mill, the Museum of African American History, the Loines Observatory, and the numerous exhibits and tourist sites associated with astronomer Maria Mitchell further north. The Maria Mitchell exhibits include, though are not limited to, the year-round Maria Mitchell Observatory, the seasonal Maria Mitchell Hinchman House, the seasonal Greater Light, the Hadwen House, the appointment-only Eric Holch Gallery, the Macy-Christian House, the Friends Meeting House, Stone Alley, the Meridian Galleries, the Maria Mitchell Association Classroom, the Maria Mitchell Aquarium and Sea Shop, the Quidley and Company Fine Art Galleries, the C+C Photography Gallery, White Elephant Nantucket, Buglight, and Steps Beach Nantucket within the outer area and numerous locations within the innermost portion of the village area:

    • Captain George Pollard House
    • Hostetler Gallery
    • Samuel Owen Gallery
    • The Scrimshander Gallery
    • Nantucket Whaling Museum
    • Bernard D. Grossman Visitor Center
    • The Gallery at Four India Street
    • Cavalier Ebanks Galleries
    • Artists Association of Nantucket Galleries
    • Noble Fine Art
    • Pierce Galleries Incorporated
    • East End Gallery
    • Stark Gallery
    • Marcus Foley | Thomas Macy Gallery
    • Photographic Scenery by Chad Pierre
    • G.S. Hill Gallery
    • Nantucket By Water
    Fediverse Reactions

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started