Nelson Smith died April 5 at the age of 92. He was descended from the first colonial settlers on the Vineyard.
Mark Lovewell

Nelson Smith Lived a Life as Full as His Net

His great-uncle was Ellsworth Luce West, the last whaling master on Martha’s Vineyard, and Nelson Smith of Edgartown knew him well.

His great-uncle was Ellsworth Luce West, the last whaling master on Martha’s Vineyard, and Nelson Smith of Edgartown knew him well. It occurs to me that I won’t ever have the chance to write a topic sentence like that again. But it says something about the residual nature of Island history that up to the end of last week, it was still possible to write it of a man living on the Vineyard 17 years into the 21st century.

Captain Smith died April 5 at the age of 92, and with him vanishes another of those expert old Vineyard storytellers, the sort whose tales rolled out like a memory in a Eugene O’Neill play. There was drama in every yarn he told. His voice was low and slow, and the narrative rumbled along free of hesitations, interjections and caesuras. The accent was pure Edgartown, and the way he said a few words, like “Choppy” for Chappy and “Nobskee” for Nobska, must have been rooted in the way he heard them said as a boy, nearly a century ago.

Interviewing him, you sometimes thought he was telling you a story he had told a hundred times before, so practiced did it sound, but you could also lead him off in any direction and the narrative mastery was always there. He was descended from the first colonial settlers on the Vineyard and reckoned that he was related to just about every old English family left here. What you soon realized was that on the Island, Nelson Smith knew nearly everything there was to know going as far back as living memory allowed. And even farther back than that when he was discussing a part of his family history that seemed to mean a great deal to him.

He always did you the enormous honor of giving you the inside dope on all the Island heroes he had known, plus all the strivers, drunks, harlots, connivers, pretenders, simpletons and victims of cruel fate. And then, if you were a journalist, he’d also deal you the powerful blow of adding that what he’d just told you “wasn’t for the paper.” I have heard that he was quietly but deeply generous to friends and fellow veterans, and I am also told that one twilight evening, he was seen steering the ferry from Edgartown to Chappaquiddick with one hand on the wheel while with the other he also head-locked and pummeled a lone passenger who had somehow given offense. I could often see both those men sitting across from me in the dim light above his kitchen table.

The places he went, the dangers he risked, the things he achieved (“Bob Morgan and I are probably the only guys on Martha’s Vineyard right now alive who have caught swordfish on rod and reel”) — you could see all that in him too. His body was bent, but his face was roundish and surprisingly smooth for a fisherman well into his late 80s. Last time I talked with him, a year ago on a ferry headed home, he still had an eye that could go through you like a laser if he thought you had a fact mixed up or an idea wrong. If I remember this right, he was missing the last part of a finger, maybe the index, and if true, I’m sorry I didn’t hear from him how that happened. Couldn’t have been pleasant.

That sword-fishing quote comes from More Vineyard Voices, the second volume of personal Island histories compiled over the last couple of generations by Linsey Lee, the oral historian of the Martha’s Vineyard Museum. When an old-timer like Nelson goes, I always scamper to my Vineyard bookshelf to make sure that Linsey got him or her on tape before it was too late. Thank goodness she got Nelson. He’s gone now, but the Island he talked about in those dramatically faultless monologues going back to 1642 or thereabouts lives on in those oral histories of Linsey’s. For Nelson’s sake — and yours — I wouldn’t pass one by if I saw it on a bookshelf.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 04/13/2017 - 23:24

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Sarah K Edgartown

What an excellent piece on such a sui generis old salt. Wherever Nelson has gone, his hand is on the helm.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 04/14/2017 - 06:56

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Gary Farmington

Perhaps the Gazette should record some of these conversations before the memories are lost forever.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 04/14/2017 - 10:24

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Horace Hillman Waters Andover, MA

I lived next-door to the Smith family for the first 18 years of my life. Nelson and my brother, Charles (Fred), were in school together and were always playing pranks on each other. Nelson retained his playful sense of humor throughout his long life. Whenever I saw him in Edgartown, he always had a story to tell of something he and Fred had done. Late in my grandfather's life (Capt. Horace O. Hillman was in his late 70s), Nelson (in his mid 20s) rowed him out in a dory to get his last swordfish. Now the baton is passed to yet another Vineyard generation.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 04/14/2017 - 17:07

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Sara Piazza Edgartown

Really fine writing - what a challenge to do justice, with words, to a storytellers life, but you met it, and beyond, Tom. And what a great portrait, Mark.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 04/14/2017 - 22:00

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Philip Walsh Miami, Florida

When I was a boat coxswain at Coast Guard Station Gay Head (now Station Menemsha) in the early ‘70’s, we picked up a troubled bass boat along the south shore one morning and ended up so far east, I decided to tow the boat into Edgartown harbor, even though it was outside our area of responsibility. I tied the 40 footer up at the town dock, and a small group of people formed up while I was gathering information from the boat’s owner. Some man made the unnecessary comment, "What a bucket of bolts! I can't believe this is what we get for our tax dollars." I ignored him, but this was not the sort of remark I’d ever heard in Menemsha. Nelson Smith, who I had a nodding acquaintance with as I lived in Edgartown, turned to him and said,” That bucket of bolts would look pretty good to you if you got yourself in trouble out there, something that wouldn't surprise me," and the man left, perhaps understanding that whoever it was that had brought him up short did not appear to be a man to be trifled with. We talked a little about Wasque after that and became friends over time. When Ted Henley bought the Saltshaker to town, as fine and seaworthy a small boat there ever was, Nelson invited me to come along on her the maiden fishing trip. These guys and others like them, Oscar Pease comes to mind, were royalty to me, and I eagerly accepted the invitation. We fished the mussel shoals between Chappaquiddick and Tuckernuck and landed around fifty big striped bass (the fishery appeared untroubled back then). My back hurt for days, because we were trolling at three knots, and not slowing down when fish came on the line, or when four fish were on the line, as was often the case. Fuel was an astounding $1.20 a gallon, and no one saw anything wrong with covering the cost of the trip and maybe even walking away with a little extra. We fished for just over four hours and came into the lower Main Street dock with just over 2,000 pounds of fish - and it wasn’t even lunchtime! I hung on their every word, although this wasn’t a group given to idle chatter, and I learned a lot. Our friendship grew over the years, and because our house was on Chappaquiddick, and he was often the ferry captain, we saw a lot of each other. He knew what and who he was, and anyone that knew him was the better person for it.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 04/20/2017 - 16:25

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TAMMY DEESE HYANNIS

Great story about a wonderful man. Always a pleasure to run into him. RIP Mr Smith

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