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We’ll be updating this frequently with any cancellations. Send them to [email protected]. The Steamship Authority is cancelling its ferries for Saturday and is alerting customers that some Sunday crossings could also be affected. The announcement to cancel Saturday’s ferry crossings was made Friday afternoon. The SSA is urging its customers to stay off the roads. […] ....
Theodora Louise Edwards - The Martha's Vineyard Times mvtimes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from mvtimes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The Martha s Vineyard Times This Was Then: Chief King Very slow cows and blue light bulbs. 1 of 2 Dixon Renear, William Carroll, and Chief William King, about 1958, on Union Street, Vineyard Haven. Ford dealer Dixon Renear hands over the keys to the town s first cruiser. Prior to this, patrolmen were paid $1 per day for the use of their cars. The Union Street police station (existing from about 1944 until 1965) is visible on the right. Courtesy Barbara Baldwin Chief King inside the Union Street station. Courtesy Barbara Baldwin Before 911, before police radios and walkie-talkies, there were blue light bulbs over Main Street, Vineyard Haven. When a call for help came in, the telephone company switched on the light to signal the Tisbury police, like a Vineyard Haven Bat-Signal. ....
The Martha s Vineyard Times This Was Then: Superintendent of streets Keeping the streets clean in Vineyard Haven in the early 1940s was no work for slouches. George Sears and Mike Fontes, Vineyard Haven, circa 1940s. Courtesy Chris Baer “You didn’t have tractors, you didn’t have the machinery that you got today,” recalled the late Basil Welch of Vineyard Haven in a 1982 recording. “We had an old 1936 ton-and-a-half dump truck, and we put a plow on it that had to be pumped up and released by hand. We used to go out and plow snow with that thing. You had to put chains on the back wheels, and that was in the days when before you plowed the streets, you shoveled the sidewalks. [The Tisbury Highway Department] used to hire the school kids to shovel the sidewalks away from Main Street, but we used to shovel the sidewalks on Main Street and then plow the snow on Main Street. Then we had to shovel all the snow that was on the street into the trucks ....