Laurence A. Mercier, a former longtime Edgartown businessman and town official who was widely respected for his civic-minded nature, died at home on Sunday. He was 81. A son of Edgartown, he had worn many hats through the years.
Laurence A. Mercier, a former longtime Edgartown businessman and town official who was widely respected for his civic-minded nature, died at home on Sunday. He was 81.
A son of Edgartown, Larry Mercier had worn many hats through the years, among other things owning two grocery stores and the Chappaquiddick Ferry, and serving as an Edgartown selectman and later longtime highway superintendent.
“I’m sort of a jack of all trades. Not good at any of it but I know enough to get by,” he deadpanned to the Gazette in a 2003 interview when he retired as highway superintendent after 21 years on the job. “I’ve loved what I’ve done. I’ve been lucky to do things I enjoyed. I never woke up not wanting to go to work,” he said at the time.
He had many successful business ventures throughout his life. He owned the On Time, the two-car barge that was the Chappy Ferry, from 1962 to 1966 when he sold it to Jared Grant. In 1966 he bought Connors’ Market on Main street Edgartown and renamed it Mercier’s Market, following in the footsteps of his father who had been a Main street grocer in the 1920s. He expanded the grocery in an era when Main street still had two drug stores, a post office and a hardware store. He ran the market until 1974 when he sold it to Robert Harrison Jr.
In 1972 he bought the former First National Store on Water street in Vineyard Haven and reopened it as an IGA. He closed the store in 1976.
Deeply devoted to the interests of Edgartown, his civic life was as diverse as his business life. He had served as an Edgartown selectman in the 1970s during a time when many blueprints were drafted that would help shape the future of Martha’s Vineyard. His years in public service saw the implementation of zoning, the creation of the Dukes County Planning and Economic Development Commission and the Martha’s Vineyard Commission, and the saving of Katama Farm. Later he was at the forefront of efforts to have the town take over the Edgartown Water Company. After his retirement as highway superintendent, he served as a town assessor and on the refuse district for many years.
An equally devoted family man, he and his wife of nearly 55 years, Doris, raised their four children on the Island.
He was a longtime member of the Friday morning breakfast club, a handful of town fathers who would talk politics over coffee and eggs.
“The only rule is we don’t agree on anything,” he told the Gazette in the 2003 interview. “When you get up and walk away from the table, you forget it. That’s politics. You win some, and you lose some.”

Comments
When I got the news all the
Richard J. O'Neil Naples, FloridaWhen I got the news all the memories came rushing back. He was one of those people us younger guys' looked up to back in the day. I ended up working for him for many years. That included fishing, adding on to the Edgartown store, foundations at Katama and hauling groceries with the Bag Man. He would tackle any project big or small. Good memories of a VERY GOOD GUY. Love to you Mert and rest in peace
Richard said it all. I hauled
Trip Barnes vhRichard said it all. I hauled his groceries too.My thoughts are with Doris and the family he was so proud of RIP Larry God Bless you
Enjoyed many conversations w
Ray Villanova Hamden CtEnjoyed many conversations w Larry at Dock St. Very interesting gentleman. My condolences.
Larry Mercier represented the
Nelson Sigelman Vineyard HavenLarry Mercier represented the bedrock of the Edgartown community. Here’s a Larry story.
Edgartown owned a parcel of land at the end of North Neck Road that provided informal fishing access to the gut until a property owner stuck up a fence. So Edgartown decided to formalize its access and create a parking area for fishermen.
I attended a meeting in Edgartown town hall between the Boston lawyers for the property owner, a Wall Street investment firm honcho, and town officials. Selectman Fred “Ted” Morgan, a real-life hero in so many respects, and Larry, in his role as Edgartown highway superintendent, were present.
The lawyers paid no attention to Larry, whom I guess they thought was a local yokel in a baseball cap. The property owner and his wife were using what I refer to as the “Timmy on his bike” argument for restricting access. She said that the sandy dirt road was narrow and dangerous, and her children rode bikes on it. Creating a small access parking lot for fishermen would invite disaster, she said.
Larry spoke up. As I remember, he said, “I’m the highway superintendent in this town and we have an eight-foot right-of-way. If you think it’s dangerous I’ll just blow the road open.”
He said it in a very matter-of-fact way, but I watched the expression on the woman’s face change as the smartly-dressed Boston lawyer holding her yellow notepad paused to consider what she was hearing. Well, maybe the road wasn’t so dangerous, after all, they concluded.
The issue ultimately ended up in Land Court. A compromise agreement among all parties limited the town to a five-car parking lot and an area to turn around. Don’t worry, Larry said, “There’ll be plenty of room to turn around.” And while he was the town’s highway superintendent, there was always plenty of room, which was greatly appreciated when the albies were in the gut and parking space was at a premium.
Larry, you will be missed.
An exceptional individual
Mark Hess EdgartownAn exceptional individual whom I've known since I was a kid. His dedication to the Town of Edgartown and the friendliness he showed to all he met along the way, was exemplary.
Larry was an exceptionally
Jane Chittick Amelia Island FLLarry was an exceptionally smart (and funny!) man. In the 1980s, the Selectmen appointed the two of us to represent Edgartown on the island-wide Regional Waste and Disposal Committee-an attempt to deal cohesively with our sole source aquifer and the trash each town was throwing into dumps (they were not today’s ‘landfills’). We did prevail in getting the town to reject an effort to ‘bale’ the trash before dumping it in the ground to leach and fester over time, but the 6 towns eventually abandoned the regional effort. Larry was a wonderful man who spoke up and said what he had to say. What I also loved about him was that despite how cantankerous an issue became, we could always laugh our way through it…most often in the early morning at Dock Street Coffee Shop. His wit and laughter still echo in my mind. My love to Doris and Michelle and to Larry, God-speed.
I first became acquainted
Pia Webster EdgartownI first became acquainted with Mr. Mercier -- anyone who went to town meeting knew of him -- when he approached me outside the post office on a frigid day in the winter of 1995-96. Oh dear. I was out front hoisting a poster-board sign that read, "Plenty of money for brick sidewalks, not a penny for the fishermen's dredge!" I'd been haplessly organizing with fishers in my Ocean Heights neighborhood to get a dredge article on the town meeting warrant by petition. Not that I knew much about what I was doing, but I meant well and I wanted to help these Islanders. Mr. Mercier introduced himself, offered his support for what we were doing and was just so funny and kind to this wash-ashore who'd landed here six years earlier. The word that comes to mind when I think of him is merry. My face always kind of hurt from smiling so hard after listening to him for a few minutes. What a dear, funny man he was. He'll be missed.
Larry was one of those people
Donald Bagnall Seymour, CTLarry was one of those people whose influenced people,place and environment. I was certainly one of those young people who benefited from his "knowledge of all things" including humor, discipline, diplomacy to a point, to name a few. As a ragtag young kid in Edgartown, he gave me chance to craft a work ethic over half a dozen summers,school vacations, included in family dinners whom his better half,Doris prepared, in the middle of some "renovation" only to have it sold later for a new project.Whether it was sweeping floors, stocking groceries,loading/unloading trucks, banging nails, painting, Mert made sure you worked hard,If you were a sidewalk superintendent, he handed you tool and said get to work... Over 40 years later all of this is still notable, so many memories, gifts of friendship from he and Doris. The best part is, I am not the only one. A great legacy, Larry. Thoughts are with Doris and the rest of the Mercier Clan.
Larry was a great guy, always
Bob MoneLarry was a great guy, always had that chipmunk smile. I was his milkman when he owned the IGA Market in VH where the PO is now. I also worked with him when I was at White Brothers and he was the highway superintendent in Edgartown. great guy he will be missed
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