The trust announced Thursday that the owners of LeRoux — a kitchen and home-goods store based in Vineyard Haven — will manage the historic general store.
The Vineyard Trust announced Thursday that it will contract with the owners of LeRoux — a kitchen-ware and home-goods store based in Vineyard Haven — to run the historic Alley’s General Store, marking a shift for the Island’s oldest retail business.
Famously known as the Dealers in Almost Everything, Alley’s opened in 1858. It was acquired by the Trust in 1993, and today sells everything from groceries to home goods to beach equipment in the wood-frame building which also houses a branch post office in the heart of the West Tisbury village.
The Trust contracted for management of the store with the Wampanoag tribe from 1998 to 2002, but has mostly hired its own managers through the years.
Two years ago the Trust reorganized the store’s stuffed-to-the-brim, cabinet-of-curiosities interior, moving the checkout counter and providing greater space between shelves and stock. Extensive renovation work was also done on the building.
Speaking to the Gazette by phone Thursday, Trust executive director Funi Burdick said she had been looking to cede management of the store to a retailer, hoping to focus more broadly on the central mission of the Trust.
“Our mission is restoring living institutions, and making sure that the buildings themselves are in good condition, and stay there,” Ms. Burdick said. “Our mission is not to manage a general store.”
A private nonprofit founded in 1975 that owns more than 20 historic properties on the Island, including the Old Whaling Church in Edgartown and the Flying Horses Carousel in Oak Bluffs, the Trust also owns old buildings that are storefronts in downtown Edgartown, the former West Tisbury library, Osborne Wharf, and the building that houses the Vineyard Gazette.
Ms. Burdick said it had become financially burdensome for the Trust to operate Alley’s, and the contract with LeRoux comes at the right time.
“This will provide us with the income to really maintain the building and the grounds, and to not be . . . running a retail business when we’re supposed to be running a preservation business,” she said.
She said LeRoux owners Michael and April Levandowksi came to her with an offer to lease and operate the store earlier this year. Ms. Burdick described the offer as favorable, compared to two other offers she received, and said it was subsequently approved by the Trust’s board.
According to the Trust website, Mr. Levandowski serves on the Trust’s board as a trustee.
Ms. Burdick said the transition will take place within the next couple of weeks, although an exact timeline has not been set. Staff have been invited to stay on during the transition, she said. The Trust will retain ownership of the building and property, while the Levandowskis will license the Alley’s General Store name.
“We felt that Michael and April Levandowski, who have owned multiple businesses on the Vineyard, and multiple retail stores, were the perfect people to lease from us,” Ms. Burdick said. “I think they’ll do a terrific job — a better job than we’re able to do.”
The store will retain its motto, Ms. Burdick said, with the goal still to be purveyors of everything from a hammer to a beach ball. Ms. Burdick said the lease requires the Levandowskis to come before the Trust before any large-scale changes are made to the store, although she suspected there would be an expansion of stock, as well as other changes.
“They are not going to make it LeRoux in West Tisbury,” Ms. Burdick said.
Founded in 1998, LeRoux At Home, a retail store situated on Main street Vineyard Haven, focuses on kitchen wares, gourmet foods, domestic goods and home décor. The business has since expanded throughout the New England region, with sister stores in Falmouth, Portsmouth, N.H. and Portland, Me.
Alley’s was founded by Nathan Mayhew in 1858. His sons Sanderson and Ulysses later took over the store and in 1916 the Mayhews sold the store to Charles Turner and Benjamin Woodaman. In 1945 Albion Alley bought the store and in 1964 sold it to his three children. The store changed hands again before it was sold to the Trust in 1993.
In the press release, Mr. Levandowski expressed excitement about the transition.
“Our business philosophy has always been grounded in serving the community,” he said. “We feel that operating Alley’s General Store, which is such a central feature of Island life, is a natural fit with our philosophy.”

Comments
U G H
Disgruntled VHU G H
I look forward to this new
Guinevere Oak BluffsI look forward to this new chapter for Alley’s. April & Michael are success business owners on the Island. I think they will focus on the needs of the Up-Island community and follow the Trust’s mission.
One of the problems is the
Bob EdgartownOne of the problems is the Trust's mission is not understood by the trust anymore. It maybe time for a new mission statement from the Trust as the current one is not being used. Let the public know what the new mission is.
Alleys has done an amazing
Daisy ChildrenAlleys has done an amazing job recently to return to their old time vibe.Need an onion or a head of lettuce , done !
A birthday card , a newspaper.. a little gift ?? All set .. Please don’t make any drastic changes.. oh and the staff so helpful..
Last time I was in Alley's it
Martha MageeLast time I was in Alley's it didn't feel like Alley's anymore. Either they'll restore the authentic general store feeling or they'll make it even more boutiquy and worse. I hope, the former. Time will tell. either the Vineyard will remain the Vineyard or it will be forever lost to elitism.
They'll probably charge $5
Charlie Callahan So Boston/EdgartownThey'll probably charge $5 for a can of coke
Really that’s what things
Jim OBReally that’s what things cost now...
Great news!!! Get this place
Tom WTGreat news!!! Get this place back and running!!! Such a great location and we need it! Thank you
Ugh is right, more overpriced
PM ChilmarkUgh is right, more overpriced kitchen wares and another step further away from the "old Alley's"........
If only the farm / produce
AM 02539If only the farm / produce stand in the back building were to come back....it was great quality with neat / old fashioned presentation. the beach gear can be found elsewhere.
Bravo to Funi Burdick for
Alissa MVBravo to Funi Burdick for taking steps to ensure The Vineyard Trust can focus on its mission in future! The Levandowskis have a great track record in operating retail stores. This is a great solution to what must have been a hassle for The Trust, operating a retail general store. I am confident the Levandowskis, as long-time island community members and savvy retailers, are going to run a terrific operation that will be a benefit to the heart of West Tisbury. Freeing up The Trust to focus on historic preservation (their reason for existing) is a win for the island! Thank you, Vineyard Trust, for sensibly planning to preserve what is beloved on the island.
A wise choice by the Trustees
Robert Skydell Granada, NicaraguaA wise choice by the Trustees. April and Michael will likely do a great job in turning Alley's back into the general store it deserves to be and had been for so many years before it turned into a jumbled emporium of cheap plastic toys and kitschy junk. How many rubber duckies does a person need?
Congratulations from afar.
“Our mission is restoring
Thomas Hodgson WT“Our mission is restoring living institutions, and making sure that the buildings themselves are in good condition, and stay there,” Ms. Burdick said. “Our mission is not to manage a general store.”
What is Alley's store but a living institution?
What's most interesting in this article is what it doesn't say.
That said, April and Michael are good people. May they successfully return Alley's to its former functionality. One great place to start would be to price some of the basic staples...milk, bread, eggs, etc., at non-boutique prices. That would be a service to the community.
Look, If they need to sell
Sig Van Raan West TisburyLook, If they need to sell kitsch to keep afloat - fine as long as I can rely on milk, eggs,
an heirloom tomato, a can of peas, my copy of the New Yorker in the mail, the morning paper, a plastic football for my grandson, a paint brush, urethane, toothpicks, toothpaste, and granola bars, and a shelf to sell my children 's book.
Sorry Sig, but I don't think
Robert Skydell Granada, NicaraguaSorry Sig, but I don't think selling kitsch to keep afloat is necessarily a forgone conclusion. The year round community's needs can be better served with a more well-rounded selection of essential items akin to, well, a real general store! I'm sure the Levandowski's are also aware of that and will ably guide the transformation back to its roots. Hurrah!
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