Long term project to refurbish and raise Memorial Wharf is in the planning stages.
Mark Alan Lovewell

Edgartown Turns Attention to Historic Memorial Wharf

Memorial Wharf joins the Edgartown Yacht Club and the Vose family boathouse as Edgartown looks to preserve historic harborfront buildings in wake of climate change.

Every summer Tuesday night in Edgartown, the On Time Ferry dances double-time as Islanders of all ages don their pastel pinks to listen to the Dock Dance Band raise the roof of historic Memorial Wharf.

Although summer is still months away, Edgartown is making plans to raise the wharf’s half-century old floor, too.

At their meeting on Tuesday, Edgartown selectmen signed off on an approximately $100,000 contract for design services to reinforce the steel beams that currently serve as the wharf’s base and lift the entire structure by about 18 inches. Although the contract for design services is only the first step of a multi-phase, multi-year, multi-million dollar project, it comes as two other historic buildings on the Edgartown harbor — the Edgartown Yacht Club and Vose family boathouse — undergo similar renovations and reflects a town-wide response to the threats of rising sea levels and perilous winter storms.

“It’s been a long time coming,” said selectman Margaret Serpa at the meeting on Tuesday.

Memorial Wharf’s colorful history dates back to the mid-19th century, when the primitive dock served as a stopping-off point for seabound whalers and belonged to the most lucrative merchant on the Edgartown harbor: oil salesman and chandler, Dr. Daniel Fisher. In 1889, the heirs of Dr. Fisher sold the dock to the New Haven Steamboat Company, and it serviced travelers to the Island from New Bedford until the last steamboat trip was made to Edgartown in 1934.

Pavilion was restored in 2017.
Mark Alan Lovewell
Pavilion was restored in 2017.
Mark Alan Lovewell

In 1938 the town undertook an effort to purchase the former steamboat dock, sensing its potential for development. The initiative was championed by sea captain Winthrop B. Norton, who doggedly pursued the issue until the town bought the property for $12,000. He then convinced voters at town meeting in 1950 to overwhelmingly support a project to make “extraordinary repairs” to the wharf, including the construction of a “much-disputed captain’s walk” on top of its roof, according to a 1950 Gazette article.

Today, that once-controversial captain’s walk offers one of the finest views on the Island, and has played host to countless weddings, first-kisses, post-dock dance romances, and pensive, peaceful moments overlooking Chappaquiddick and the Edgartown harbor.

“From the town’s standpoint, the dock is beyond price,” reads a 1963 Gazette story. “Without it, Edgartown might as well be landlocked. Transfer of property to the town must be considered one of the most important events of the whole quarter century.”

While the dock has undergone a few extensive renovations since its transfer to the town in the 1950s (one in the 1970s, another in the 1980s), years of overuse had caused it to fall into disrepair by the 21st century. In early 2016, Edgartown established the Memorial Wharf committee with the long-term goal of ensuring the wharf, including its underside, remained a sound and stable structure. After examining preliminary evaluations from Child’s Engineering — the same company that drafted the contract for design services — it was clear that the wharf’s pavilion was in desperate need of a makeover.

“It was nowhere near code,” said Edgartown procurement officer Juliet Mulinare, speaking to the Gazette by phone about the project. “It was just generally a hazard with the re-creation of Dock Dance and all the activity down at the wharf.”

In response to the report, the town earmarked $750,000 in Community Preservation Committee money to fund the initial steps of a three-phase, five-to-ten year project that would include a renovation of the pavilion, raising the wharf and reinforcing its steel beams, and ultimately a large-scale overhaul of the entire parking lot and Chappy Ferry landing.

With the pavilion renovation completed in July of 2017, including new stairs to the captain’s walk and stabilized railings, the town has about $380,000 in CPC funds remaining for the design of the project’s second phase. Ms. Mulinare said that while the contract for design services would cost less than $100,000, the entire project would be in the neighborhood of two to three million dollars.

“Broadly, the project is going to involve reinforcing the steel beams and in doing so, raising the wharf up to the extent that the steel maintains its integrity,” Ms. Mulinare said. “So there will be a step up to the wharf.”

Ms. Mulinare said that there have been discussions of raising the timber walkway on the outside of the wharf and converting the other walkway on its north side into an ADA accessible ramp. She estimated the town would have a warrant article ready for spring of 2020 to ask for the construction funds.

In the long-term, she said the plans to raise the entire parking lot and adjoining Chappy Ferry remain in the works, potentially a decade down the road.

As the Memorial Wharf project nears a start date, two similar ventures on the Edgartown harbor approach an end date. Barely 100 yards south, the Edgartown Yacht Club is finishing up their $7 million project to raise the historic, 1927 clubhouse 18 inches off the water. And just a bit further down the water, the 19th-century Vose family boathouse is back on its haunches after having them raised by a foot this winter.

While the eventual effects of sea-level rise remain unclear, Edgartown’s decision to act now in preserving three of its harbor’s most historic edifices would most likely stand well with its forefathers.

“Time slips away quickly,” Captain Norton said at Edgartown town meeting nearly 70 years ago. “And we can’t look into the future.”

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 02/22/2019 - 15:06

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Pat Tyra Edgartown & Dania Beach, FL

In the 50's we teens had dock dances at the Wharf on Thursdays in the summer and so enjoyed the time together. And Memorial Day parades ended there with lilacs thrown into the harbor. Great memories. So glad we still have and will have, now a preserved wharf.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 02/23/2019 - 12:47

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Squidder Edgartown

I'm not one to participate in moonlit dances on the harbor or really any fancy festivities. That's just me. I can tell, however, that this is something that brings great pleasure to others, so it brings a smile to my face. I enjoy the wharf in quite a different way. To me, going down there in the early hours, shoulder season, to see if I can catch a few squid; that is my dance. You meet all sorts of people down there in late April or early November. At 2am. Everyone gets along, despite the fact that half the crowd on any given night has an advanced degree in bar fighting. They are there to unwind as well, in the wonderful low stakes game of squid fishing. It isn't like a jetty during the derby, and it isn't like wasque when the bass are in. Those are high stakes fishing. Here, one can stand shoulder to shoulder and if someone mistimes a cast, the most that is lost is a Yozuri jig, a twelve ounce squid, or both. Things don't escalate on the wharf. Fresh calamari...like that squid beak just took a chunk out of my thumb when I was cleaning it fresh...a low rent affordable luxury. Thanks Edgartown, for keeping this dock nice and sound. For me and for the others who enjoy it dancing in season by the yachts. That spot brings a lot of different people a lot of different joy, and is worth a few bucks to keep up.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 02/24/2019 - 18:07

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George Edgartown

Great move. This is a must see location for our visitors to the Island.

The town should seek grant funding for this from the state and federal governments. It’s a historic structure for which numerous grants should be available to help defray the cost to resident tax payers. Private donations from local residents should also be sought. In my home town of Lake Forest, IL we have raised millions of dollars for similar preservation and transportation efforts using these approaches. Based on the timeline in the article there should be ample time for such fund raising here.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 02/24/2019 - 19:37

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Jennifer Stix Vineyarrd Haven

like most of the Edgartown kids, growing up, we probably never heard "Memorial Wharf" we just called it "the town dock" and it meant so much to our family, 3 blocks away, our doorway to viewing harbor activity, fishing, dances, fireworks, meeting place and overall a site of endless entertainment, all seasons. One of my fav photos is teenage me hanging out there, think I'll frame it and put it on the wall, love the memories. Keep it strong, proud, and beautiful!

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