Obama adds modern touch to Vineyard’s history

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OAK BLUFFS, Mass. (AP) – When Barack Obama kicks off his flip-flops on the Martha’s Vineyard sand next month, he’ll be adding a modern note to the island’s black history that stretches back three centuries.

Decades ago, the island was a summer sanctuary for middle-class black families unwelcome elsewhere. Martin Luther King Jr. swam and wrote there.

Centuries before that, Martha’s Vineyard was home to blacks who defied the times to claim their place in island life.

One slave woman became a landowner. Her great-grandson was the island’s only black whaling captain. And a modest 20th-century innkeeper helped establish Martha’s Vineyard as a summertime haven for the middle- and upper-class blacks who are preparing to welcome the country’s first black president.

“There’s so much pride. That [Obama] family is like our family,” said Skip Finley, a radio executive and year-round Martha’s Vineyard resident.

Director Spike Lee, attorney and Clinton confidant Vernon Jordan and scholar Henry Louis Gates Jr. are a few of the prominent blacks who call Martha’s Vineyard home for at least part of each year.

To Harvard Law School professor Charles Ogletree, a friend of Obama’s and a regular summer visitor, coming to Martha’s Vineyard is a chance to do yoga at Inkwell Beach, fry some fish or loaf around in sandals past the gingerbread cottages without worrying that his skin color means anything at all.

“I have been escorted by Officer Friendly in many places to make sure I was going through, and not to, a community,” he said. “That doesn’t happen at Martha’s Vineyard.”

The island’s black history is isn’t entirely upbeat. Discrimination lasted long after slavery was gone. But the overall story is not just about persecution; it’s also about the “massive success” that followed for blacks on the island, says local historian Elaine Cawley Weintraub.

“In some ways, what happened here is sort of the American story: can do, will do,” she said.

Slaves probably lived on the island beginning around 1680, but the first known record of slavery is in the 1703 will of a man whose estate included “a Negro woman valued at 20 pounds.”

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