David McCullough in 2019, near the entrance to his writing office.
Maria Thibodeau

A McCullough Moment and So Much More

<p>I did a lot of interviews during my three and a half years working at the Vineyard Gazette.

I did a lot of interviews during my three and a half years working at the Vineyard Gazette. I asked Steve Ewing how the Edgartown harbor had changed since he was a dockhand on the Chappy Ferry. I questioned Cynthia Riggs about the mysterious disappearance of her chickens. I asked Ted Box when the Seeker would be finished. Then I asked Ted Box again, and again, and again when the Seeker would be finished.

But David McCullough, sitting in a rocking chair on his Music street back porch, was by far the best. I never had to ask a question.

In many ways, as both a person and a writer, I don’t know where I’d be without the guidepost of David McCullough. I was a history major at Yale, where I roomed with David McCullough 3rd, who told me so many stories about his grandfather I felt I knew him long before I met him in person.

I arrived on the Vineyard in the summer of 2018 as a stranger on a strange Island, knowing no one and nothing except the ubiquity of the McCullough name. On my first day driving to work at the Gazette, I reached the T-shaped intersection of Middle Road and Panhandle, and made a right onto Music street. I saw an older man wearing a red cardigan and slacks, walking slowly but firmly down the side of the road. I wished I stopped.

By my second summer on the Island, The Pioneers was set to be released, and I convinced my former roommate to set up an interview with his grandfather under the pretense that we’d talk about the book. I arrived at the house and was greeted by David’s wife, Rosalee.

When David came down, walking slowly but firmly, he was laughing. I suspect he never really stopped laughing. He walked that same slow but firm walk out to his writing shed, and immediately started talking about his famous Royal Standard Typewriter. He couldn’t get rid of it, he said, because he thought that it was writing his books. Soon enough, I was laughing too.

We sat down on the rocking chairs on his back porch. He immediately got up and asked Rosalee to retrieve a copy of John Adams. He read me the first two paragraphs, which describe two men on horseback in the cold New England winter, one of them slightly older, slightly stouter, and doing most of the talking. It isn’t until paragraph three that he reveals the talker is John Adams. It’s genius. It was history coming alive.

“I have always loved beginnings,” I remember him saying. “That’s what gets you off.”

As he kept talking, about education, about the love of his life, about Martha’s Vineyard, I felt a deep reverence for this man, an octogenarian chronicler of the American experience who had become just as much a part of history as his subjects. Then he started interviewing me. He asked me about everything we shared, about Yale, about history, about education, about writing, about Martha’s Vineyard.

Despite being published weekly in the Gazette, it was the first time I truly started to think of myself as a writer. He liked me. I was still in my own first two paragraphs.

When Mr. McCullough spoke about history during those two hours on his back porch, he told me it should encourage two things above all else: empathy and gratitude. Back then, I thought he was talking about presidents and pioneers. I now feel he was speaking directly to me.

I cried on Monday when I heard about David McCullough’s death. But I feel so lucky that I got to spend an afternoon on his back porch, asking no questions and getting all the answers.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Thu, 08/11/2022 - 23:28

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Dick Pratt Edgartown

I too met David-I represented our local Rotary club-He and I spent an unforgettable hour in his shed which was his favorite place to talk to people like me-I won’t ever forget that time -!!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 08/12/2022 - 07:53

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Leni Preston Bethesda MD

What a wonderful remembrance- thank you for sharing a wonderful reminder of a true gentleman and scholar. They are all too rare today.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 08/12/2022 - 08:40

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JA McNary VH

Dear Noah, Come back!! The quality of your voice here resonates with that illusive, calm, solid (but lively!), Vineyard Gazette-esque, cello-like, real, journalistic truth and authority (but accessibly so!) that has sung through the paper via B.E., J.W., and others for the duration. Mr. McCullough would no doubt smile reading your work.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 08/12/2022 - 09:53

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Loretta Alper Northampton, MA

Thanks for this fond remembrance, Noah. Seeing your byline once again, and reading your tribute to McCullough's indelible influence on you, both and a person and a writer, was a great start to my day. Hope you are still writing wherever you are.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 08/12/2022 - 10:38

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Bob Gothard Vineyard Haven

I first came to the Vineyard in 1978 on to shoot a fashion feature on America’s new fashion designers, Calvin Klein Perry Ellis, Alexander Julian and Ralph Lauren . It was love at first sight, everything, the weather, the people, the scenery and the houses. So on my return to the Island the next year I looked for a house to rent for the summer. Magically I happened on the first house on Music Street belonging to Alan Whiting, it was Jan Brem's house,his grand mother. After settling in I discovered an added amazing bonus, the neighbors!
Dick and Carol Craven, Paul Cook, John and Shirley Mayhew , Dick Burt, John Athen to name but a few and last but not least David and Rosalie McCollough two doors down the street.
Regularly as clockwork winter or summer David would leave the house at 7.30 am to walk up Music St to Alleys to collect the daily newspapers. As always he was impeccably dressed in a freshly pressed shirt, tie, tweed sports coat and an Irish Flat Hat. Often we would exchange pleasantries if I was in the front yard. On one such occasion he stopped and we were discussing his latest novel, his brow wrinkled and he murmured he was having issues with “P” , this was a mystery to me , he explained the the “P” on his beloved Royal Standard typewriter was acting up, causing an issue with writing. On further questioning I discovered the age and model number of the offending machine. David left for Alleys and I for my computer. About a month later a large very heavy box arrived at my door. The hurried down the street to David’s bearing the box, open opening it the look on his facing was a joy to see, there inside the package lay a perfect Royal Standard type writer with a set of perfectly working keys. On inquiring as to where I found the machine I replied Ebay, his retort was “What’s Ebay “.
On another occasion in the snow we chatted as our chubby springer spaniel name Baby Thunder frolicked around making Dog Angels in the snow. David remarked that Baby Thunder had now turned into “Rolling Thunder”. How we will miss his wit, humor love of life and more importantly his love of everything the Vineyard stands for. We lost a giant.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 08/12/2022 - 14:28

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Mary Beth Norton W Tisbury

David McCullough often said to me that he would enjoy teaching at a university, and my History Department at Cornell asked me to offer him that chance while he was completing his biography of Harry Truman. (He later told me that the position delayed his finishing the book by at least 6 months.) He spent a fall semester with us as a visiting professor, teaching a popular lecture course entitled “American History through Biography,” in which all lectures and most of the readings were biographical. More than 200 students signed up for the class and it led at least one of them to choose a career as a professional historian. He worked with experienced teaching assistants and held frequent office hours for the undergraduates but did no grading of papers or exams—the TAs took care of that—since he had no experience in that aspect of instruction. When several years later the History Department invited him back to teach the successful course again, he declined, saying he had enjoyed it, but teaching was more work than he had anticipated!
I was so sorry to hear of his death this week, and Rosalee's earlier this summer. She had a special connection to Cornell because her grandfather had funded the construction of Barnes Hall on our campus, a venue for small concerts and some offices as well.
As a seasonal MV resident, it was always a pleasure to see them here in the summers.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 08/12/2022 - 19:04

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Cynthia Bloomquist West Tisbury

Such a beautiful a tribute to a lovely man. We have lost too many of the people who have helped make the Vineyard magical over the years. I grateful for those who continue to do so.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 08/13/2022 - 15:12

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Ben Merrill Savannah, GA

Noah, a wonderful, well written memory. I wondered what happened to you...then I found you writing about the doings of the Chicago area. I hope you are merely perfecting your craft before returning 'home' to the island. Your voice belongs on MV and I have no doubt others feel the same way.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 08/14/2022 - 06:55

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Lisa Vanderhoop Aquinnah

Noah that was just such a beautiful, lovely recollection and tribute to such an amazing man. Thank you

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