Voice Writing

The Voice is an online magazine that cultivates stories in partnership with individuals, organizations and businesses. We work with people to discover, produce and publish stories — on health, people, arts, food, farming, land, energy, housing — as part of a larger grassroots effort to strengthen the island community. The result is a publication that celebrates, reinforces and participates in the aspirations and activities of islanders.

Publish

Publicity/sound bytes abound these days on: Green living, local food, concerns over climate, water and soil, using more local/renewable resources, alternate transportation, and Green/natural building.

Posted By: DickPierce

E-commerce increased 19% from 2006 to 2007 reaching over $136 billion in sales…the world is doing business online.

Posted By: editor

Edgartown Affordable Homes Ready This May

Posted By: editor
Categories: affordable Housing IAHF

This post was contributed by Linsey Lee and The Martha's Vineyard Museum

"I go back quite a long ways. I was born in 1903. William Allen was my father’s name, and Sarah Allen was my mother’s name. She was a Hammett. My father’s people, they came over on the Mayflower, and they settled in Chilmark. So I have quite a title to my name.
"My father was a farmer.

Posted By: Linsey

The Vineyard Voice is a free, nonprofit site for community publishing and an information resource for all islanders.

Posted By: patrick phillips

This post was contributed by Linsey Lee
and The Martha's Vineyard Museum

"I grew up on the South Road. My father was John Bassett. Oh, we had quite a farm. It was at least a hundred acres. It was on both sides of the road. My father had cows, and the sheep, and oxen and the horse. We had ducks. There were turkeys. He used to sell turkeys, ship them off-Island Thanksgiving and Christmas. I remember him crating them up. I suppose Bart Mayhew picked them up and took them to the steamship wharf.

Posted By: Linsey

This post was contributed by Linsey Lee
and The Martha's Vineyard Museum

"And there were plenty of cranberry bogs on the Island when I was younger. There was one, two down by Lake Tashmoo, then the big one, Evan Bodfish’s on the Lambert’s Cove Road. Then the next one around was Howland’s.

Posted By: Linsey

JEN JEN Jewelry

Support Island Artisans
Shop at JEN JEN Jewelry >