The Aquinnah Shop Restaurant sold this week to the Native Land Conservancy for $2 million.
Ray Ewing

Aquinnah Shop Restaurant Sold for $2 Million

The Native Land Conservancy purchased the iconic cliffside restaurant and the surrounding land this week. It will hold the property until the Aquinnah Land Initiative, a new Wampanoag nonprofit, can raise funds to buy the property.

After going on the market earlier this June, the property formerly known as the Aquinnah Shop Restaurant will soon return to Wampanoag hands.

The Native Land Conservancy purchased the iconic cliffside restaurant and the surrounding land for $2 million this week. The conservancy, a Mashpee-based Native American conservation group, will hold the land until the Aquinnah Land Initiative (ALI), a new Wampanoag nonprofit, can raise funds to buy the property.

The Aquinnah Shop has been considered the centerpiece of the Aquinnah cultural district since its opening in 1948. The land had remained under Wampanoag ownership until 2016 when a dispute between brothers and co-owners David and Matt Vanderhoop prompted the brothers to sell the property for $1.29 million.

The restaurant closed and the property went up for sale again this summer, with an asking price $3.5 million. With that high price, members of the Wampanoag community feared the land was well out of reach.

But the collaboration between the land conservancy and the Aquinnah Land Initiative made the deal possible, said ALI president Wenonah Madison. Ms. Madison is the great-granddaughter of Aquinnah Shop founders Napoleon and Nanette Madison and the owner of 7a Foods in West Tisbury with her husband Dan Sauer.

“When the restaurant first went up for sale, there was a lot of community outrage, and a lot of people reached out to me,” Ms. Madison said in a phone call with the Gazette. “I knew we didn’t want to have an individual owner, we want to keep it collectively-owned and put the land in conservation.”

The eventual owners of the property, Aquinnah Land Initiative, is a land conservation group led by an all-female, all-Wampanoag board of directors. The organization is still waiting to receive official nonprofit status from the IRS, but there are already plans to partner further with the Native Land Conservancy and purchase additional land in Aquinnah.

“For time immemorial Wôpanâak women have watched over our ancestral lands and worked hard to remain here on the island and in Aquinnah,” Madison said in a press release. “ALI will continue this tradition, empowered by the cultural understanding that our bodies are not separate from our land.”

Ramona Peters, the founder of the Native Land Conservancy, said the national organization was incredibly grateful to donors that made the Aquinnah sale possible.

“Our priority has always been on recovering ancestral homelands and providing indigenous access for cultural purposes,” she said. “This success is historically meaningful.”

The two groups will prioritize erosion protection of the 3.3-acre property, which includes an area on the face of the vulnerable Gay Head Cliffs.

What will happen with the Aquinnah Shop Restaurant is still not clear.

Ms. Madison couldn’t say what the next steps for the property might look like or when the cliffside patio might fill up once again, but she guaranteed that the restaurant space will be leased to another Wampanoag business owner when it does eventually open.

“Just getting to today was incredibly complex,” Ms. Madison said. “Right now we just want to take a breath before we make any other decisions.”

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 08/18/2023 - 17:22

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Dean Rosenthal Edgartown

Amazing news, congratulations to all on finalizing this new step! It’s so nice to read truly positive news here on this island when it comes to development and preservation. More, please!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 08/18/2023 - 21:12

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Mitzi Pratt Aquinnah

This is wonderful news! Congrats to ALI for extraordinary alacrity in reacting to what could have been a heartbreaking situation. Let’s all support them in keeping as much of Aquinnah as possible in Wampanoag hands.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 08/19/2023 - 08:31

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TJ Hegarty west tisbury

Congradulations for all your hard work.
Cant wait for a famous plate of fried bellied clams and a slice of strawberry / rhubarb or Banana cream pie.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 08/19/2023 - 13:21

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Sara Alwardt West Tisbury

Congrats & best of luck w/all future erosion protection & conservation plans ! So glad you can keep it in the family ❣️

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 08/19/2023 - 18:58

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Chris Daly Aquinnah

Congrats! Looking forward to returning to the restaurant with family and friends. All best wishes.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 08/22/2023 - 05:51

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John Abrams West Tisbury

Vineyard real estate transaction of the year, bar none. Thrilling - great work!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 08/22/2023 - 09:23

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Abbe Burt Vineyard Haven

Huge congratulations to the Wampanoag women who have worked so hard to save this iconic Vineyard treasure! This land is one of the heartbeats of our island with deep emotional feelings for all of us. We shall all look forward with great anticipation to eating again on the decks.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 08/22/2023 - 09:44

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Bonnie Berger Chilmark (formerly Gay Head)

Aquinnah Shop brought us so many memories with our friends and family for over 40 years - Thank you Nonie for putting in the hard work ensuring the continuation of this landmark so new generations can benefit from the dining, breathtaking beauty and camaraderie. (Hoping you might be a part of the any new food venture- 7a a huge success!)

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 08/22/2023 - 10:24

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Guinevere Cramer Oak Bluffs

Congratulations Nonie and ladies - I can't wait to see what the new ownership brings! Happy to support this endeavor!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 08/23/2023 - 00:01

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Dan Cohen Aquinnah

The Aquinnah Shop has been a staple in my life for decades. Someone correct me if I am wrong, but as I recall, the year when Ann and Luther took the place upscale with $10 entrees, they maintained a secret menu of $2 burgers and fries for 15 year-old "old timers" like me. I am so glad to see familiar names of Aquinnah women scoring such a big win for the community and the Island.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 08/24/2023 - 15:05

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Nancy cotton Aquinnah

Thank you for all the hard and resourceful work! I can look out my window and feel joy that this landmark is in the right hands
Hooray
Nancy

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