Statue of Liberty
- by Joan -
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Tagged architecture, monuments, New Jersey, New York, night, Photographs
Today would be my mother’s birthday.
Maude Louise Littlefield Freeman

born March 11, 1907 in Waterville, Maine
She’s the reason MV is in the lives of my family. Although born in Maine she was raised on MV and through her we’ve all come to love the Vineyard.




Her father died when she was 3 years old, her mother remarried and that husband died when my mother was around six. At that point my grandmother, Albra Mae met and married a Vineyarder named Arthur Baird, Sr and so my grandmother and my mother Maude came to live on Martha’s Vineyard in Oak Bluffs and thus began our connection to, and love of the Vineyard.


After my mother graduated from high school she moved to New Jersey and..
married a Jersey boy…. and had a Jersey girl :)

My first trip to the Vineyard was when I was less than a year old… here I am on the beach in Oak Bluffs with my mother and godmother…

My entire family has been to MV with me at one time or another but never all of us at the same time. That’s okay though as the Vineyard is a different experience depending on who I’m there with.

I hope she knows how grateful we all are to her for the gift of the Vineyard she gave to us…. thank you Mom
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Although I’ve tried to say how deeply I feel about my mother and the Vineyard, no words I could find could say so beautifully what my daughter Deb wrote below about her grandmother.
Please take a moment to CLICK HERE and read Deb’s post.
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Tagged Family, Martha's Vineyard, Memories, New Jersey, Photographs
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Tagged architecture, New Jersey, Photographs, sky, sunset, windows
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Tagged New Jersey, objects, Photographs, sky
Chester, New Jersey
This is where AT&T used to test different woods for telephone poles. I believe it’s now part of a park !! Used to tell kids this is where the poles were grown
Shadows on the snow
- by Joan -
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Tagged New Jersey, Photographs, snow, trees
Few years ago I put up this post:
I was in New York City and visited Grand Central Station, mostly to take photos of this magnificently restored building. I thought I had never been there before…but in looking around something clicked in my brain !
When my mother and I would go to MV every summer we would take a train from Pennsylvania Station in Newark, NJ to, as it turns out, Grand Central Station in NYC where we would change trains.
We would have to run from one end of the station to the other to board the New York/New Haven & Hartford’s train on the Old Colony line called the Day Cape Codder, which would take us all the way from New York City to Woods Hole, MA. That’s right, all the way to Woods Hole.

The train stopped at what is now the staging area for cars waiting to get onto the ferries. The tracks ran under the overpass in the left corner of this photograph. It was literally only steps from train to boat. A comfortable and luxurious way to travel in the days when lots of people didn’t have cars and the road system left a lot to be desired anyway. The trains had dining cars with each table dressed in fancy tablecloths and crisply ironed napkins. The waiters and conductors were always the same and seemed to remember me from year to year… made me feel special and grown up. Train service to Woods Hole ended in the 1960′s.
The ferry, the Nobska/Nantucket would take us to MV.
We’d land here in Oak Bluffs and our relatives would be there to greet us, and three glorious months on the Vineyard would begin.
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Well it turns out I was wrong !!!! I don’t like being wrong, even worse I don’t like admitting it… but I have to set the record straight because I know at least one person who did these trips as well and he’ll spot the mistake.
Recently I was watching the PBS program The American Experience about the ‘The Rise and Fall of Penn Station’ and I realized it wasn’t Grand Central Station we had taken the train to Woods Hole from…. it was Penn Station !!


Pennsylvania Station was built in 1910, covered nearly 8 acres, extended 2 city blocks and was one of the largest public spaces in the world. Its 3 year demolition began in October 1963. It was replace with another Penn Station which Madison Sq Garden sits atop.
Functional but not beautiful :)
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The person I mentioned above is my life long friend Will Jones. His parents Bill and Bertha owned the bowling alley in Oak Bluffs which was across from the Flying Horses.
You might enjoy reading about our moms who grew up on Martha’s Vineyard and our dads who grew up in Newark, NJ …
My friend Will Jones and I were always looking for things to keep us busy and out of trouble during our summers on MV. Someone showed me how to make little flowers by using yarn and forks… I immediately showed Will. We set about our tasks, me at my house, he at his.
The next morning Will’s mom called my mom asking if he was at my house ? Seems she went looking for a fork and couldn’t find any !!! A few moment later Will was at my door, and yes, he had all his mother’s forks with him and they were filled with yarn. Seems I had neglected to show him how to get the yarn off the forks to make the little flowers…

Will had carried those forks from his house way on the other side of Oak Bluffs …
up Circuit Ave …
… to my house where we freed his mother’s forks of their yarn. I have no recollection of what we did with the yarn flowers.

(Will’s mom – my mom)
Our moms were childhood friends, as were Will and I. Our moms graduated from Oak Bluffs High School together (long before the regional high school was built). Our moms moved to Newark, NJ after graduation and it was there that they met their future husbands, our dads, who were also childhood friends. (In 1907 Will’s mom, Bertha Carter, was the first girl baby born in Oak Bluffs after its name change from Cottage City.)
(my dad – Will’s dad)
Will and I spent every day of the summer together. We went swimming, rode the Flying Horses, read, drove our parents crazy and were inseparable. For many years his parents owned a bowling alley in Oak Bluffs across from the Flying Horses. Long before automation the pins had to be set by hand, I even did it from time to time myself.
Being a summer kid on the Vineyard was the best thing in the world… it still is.
Will and I live near each other in NJ and when we see each other we do a lot of talking about the Vineyard.
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Ahh, memories… whether they’re right or wrong I’m not telling :)
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Tagged architecture, Martha's Vineyard, Memories, New Jersey, New York, Oak Bluffs, Photographs, trains, travel
Ford Mansion -George Washington’s headquarters – Morristown, New Jersey
- by Joan -
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Tagged architecture, historical, houses, New Jersey, Photographs
In honor of Presidents Day I thought I’d write about our first president.
I don’t know if George Washington ever slept on Martha’s Vineyard but he certainly slept his way around New Jersey.
He arrived at Ford Mansion in Morristown, NJ in Dec of 1779 and stayed until June of 1780. His troops of 10,000 men were encamped at nearby Jockey Hollow during the harshest winter of the war.
Morristown, New Jersey
This description of the mansion is from Wikipedia:
‘The Ford Mansion has a Georgian style exterior, but the interior kitchen and framing shows evidence of Dutch influence. The mansion was made with palladian window above the door and a stylish cornice. The fancy architecture was not created to look appealing, but to showcase the wealth of the family who owned the building.’

Built between 1772 and 1774 it was the home of Jacob and Theodosia Ford. The following description is from Wikipeida:
‘The headmaster’s section of the house was built with symmetrical rooms on both side of the foyer. The office is across from the library and the parlor is across from the dining room. On the second floor there are symmetrical bedrooms for each side of the hallway. The servant’s section of the house was near the kitchen and the pantry on the east side. The grand hall and the parlor are what categorized the house as a mansion. Unlike most mansions at the time, the Ford Mansion did not use bricks for the exterior, but painted flush board and clapboards.’
Front door of main part of house
Door to servant’s quarters
Fireplace and back of house
Across the road is this statue of George Washington by Frederick Roth (1927-28)
Sometimes it’s fun to play tourist in and around where you live. Morristown in particular is rich in American Revolutionary War history and Morris County is known as The Military Capital of the American Revolution.
LINKS:
Washington’s Headquarters – National Park Traveler
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Tagged architecture, history, holidays, New Jersey, Photographs
Hi, and welcome to anyone who popped on over from MV Obsession…
Categories are along the right side of the blog –>
I hope you enjoy them and remember, you’re welcome anytime.
- by Joan -
(sample of mosaic category)

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Tagged doors, food, fruit, mosaics, New Jersey, Photographs
It’s been snowy, rainy, icy, grey, cold, snowy, sleety just icky a lot lately… so why go visiting then? Well for one thing we’re not leaving the comfort of our homes or even our keyboards.
We’re going to visit my other blog …

CLICK HERE for Martha’s Vineyard category
CLICK HERE for my home state of New Jersey
CLICK HERE for the city and state of New York
CLICK HERE for flowers
CLICK HERE for food
CLICK HERE for architecture of all kinds
CLICK HERE for sunsets
CLICK HERE for animals
That’s only 8 of the many categories you can visit if you choose to come on over and spend awhile at ‘Through Jersey Eyes’.
Just CLICK HERE walk right in and make yourself comfy.
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Tagged animals, architecture, flowers, food, Martha's Vineyard, New Jersey, Photographs