Virginia Jones is an up-Island maritime history aficionado.
Albert O. Fischer 3rd

History Buff, Maritime Bookseller Ginny Jones Closes Up Shop

When it comes to Vineyard history, up-Island mariner and antiquarian bookseller Virginia Jones pulls no punches. Since 2014, she has spent her days holding court at her Menemsha bookstore.

When it comes to Vineyard history, up-Island mariner and antiquarian bookseller Virginia Jones pulls no punches. Since 2014, Ms. Jones, known to most as Ginny, has spent her days holding court at her Menemsha used bookstore, Fo’c’sle Locker, educating locals and visitors alike on her particular view of Island history and culture.

Her West Tisbury home is filled with historical pictures, books and maritime ephemera.
Albert O. Fischer 3rd
Her West Tisbury home is filled with historical pictures, books and maritime ephemera.
Albert O. Fischer 3rd

At the end of 2022, Ms. Jones closed her doors for the last time to transition into retirement.

Speaking to the Gazette this week, Ms. Jones reflected on her mission to dole out accurate and uncompromising Island history, to keep her vision of the true Vineyard spirit alive.

“The Island was not a perfect place back when I grew up, and it still isn’t perfect,” she said in a characteristically blunt interview.

Ms. Jones was born on the Vineyard and her Island roots date back for a century when her maternal grandparents bought Tea Lane Farm, her mother’s birthplace, around World War I.

Growing up, she said she was influenced by “Island literati” such as Gale Huntington, whom she described as a “fisherman, author, amateur archaeologist, teacher, folklorist, musician and historian.”

In high school, Mr. Huntington taught her courses in Latin and democracy. To this day, she is quick to recommend his book, Songs the Whalemen Sang, to her customers and anyone else who might be interested in a good maritime read.

She said her strongest influences growing up came from being around the informal summer colony of social scientists who used to live around the Tisbury Great Pond. As a result, she decided to major in anthropology in college.

In retrospect, it was “just about a useless subject” for a young mother without time for grad school, she recalled. The one bright spot that came from her degree, she said, was learning the value of good research.

After graduation, Ms. Jones went on to work as a secretary and researcher at Mystic Seaport Maritime Museum, cultivating a maritime passion that also went back to childhood.  

“I was fascinated by all that because we have an incredible maritime history on the Vineyard,” she said. In 1985 she returned to the Island, working as office manager for Gannon and Benjamin Marine Railway for nearly 30 years, among other endeavors.

Ms. Jones is closing her Menemsha used bookstore Fo’c’sle Locker.
Albert O. Fischer 3rd
Ms. Jones is closing her Menemsha used bookstore Fo’c’sle Locker.
Albert O. Fischer 3rd

During that time, Ms. Jones experienced the maritime world firsthand, working as cook on wooden-boat voyages from the Vineyard to the Caribbean (she still extols the superiority of Antiguan pineapples).

She also worked as a cook on her son’s sailing yacht crew from Hawaii to Washington in 2004. “It was 21 days, and that was about 10 days too many for mom,” she said, recalling the difficulty of catering to a hungry crew with limited ingredients and equipment. The biggest crowd pleaser was her chicken pot pie.

“I am happy to say that I will never have to cook on a boat again,” she declared.

While she does not miss the cook-in-the-galley side of sailing, her life on dry land remained defined by boating, as her book store’s name suggests: a foc’s’le, short for forecastle, is a ship’s front deck, location of the locker which holds its anchor chain.

The small shop was tucked away next to the Copperworks on Basin Road, packed floor to ceiling with Island and maritime letters, and always staffed by Ms. Jones herself.

“I don’t read much current literature, I tend to read the old stuff,” she said of her book sense. Her approach to Foc’s’le Locker was to focus on that old stuff, leaving newer offerings to other Island merchants.

The most fulfilling part of shopkeeping, she said, was directing customers to accurate, lucid accounts of Island history.

“I could point them out to people looking for factual info and say, this is what you need to look at,” she said. “I knew their research was impeccable.” Among her most recommended authors were Henry Beetle Hough, Gale Huntington, Eleanor Ransom Mayhew, the Island naturalist Ann Hale and whaling captain George Fred Tilton.

She said her mission was helped by the volume of high-quality writers the Island has produced. “We have the tranquility that makes it conducive to being that kind of person,” she said.

Through those referrals, Ms. Jones felt she was positively influencing Island culture.

Well steeped in Island politics from her many long years on the West Tisbury planning board, she is prone to taking a dour view of the Vineyard’s future. But recently she found inspiration from other islands across the globe. In 2020, she began attending virtual meetings of the Island Innovation network, an international group that aims to foster collaboration among islands on issues they face.

“I was just mind-boggled, and practically on my knees with awe,” she said. “Islands of the so-called third-world, which is a pejorative term, are so far ahead of us . . . they are the ones leading us against climate change.”

In retirement, Ms. Jones hopes to do more inter-Island advocacy.

Still, she is also looking forward to a rest.

While she demurred on the question of her age, Ms. Jones admitted that she doesn’t have the energy she once had, and that was a factor in her closing the shop. Besides, she said, the old building is too cold.

Most of the time, she said, “I’ll sit in a comfortable chair with a nice cup of tea and my knitting, and a good book.”

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 03/04/2023 - 10:57

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Tom Engley West Tisbury

Ginny Jones. I wish I knew her better. She is a force and an advocate for our little island. She gets it , most of the people who come here now have no idea of what it was like to live here in the 60s 70s. No work hard times
We’ve come full circle now no workers.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 03/04/2023 - 13:24

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Charlie Callahan So Boston/Edgartown

A nice lady I've bought a few things from her, Here's a little sailors poem from the Navy; Whether the weather be fine, or whether the weather be not,we'll whether the weather, whatever the weather, whether we like it or not.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 03/04/2023 - 16:30

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Ginny WT

Kudos to Tom for distilling my grumbles into something positive! The shop was fun and a lot of interesting folks stopped in over the years. We cleaned most of the books and other stuff out today. They will be spread around to the W T Library, the Cuttyhunk Library, to the Shipyard at Mystic Seaport and the Herreshoff Museum, a future cruising center in VH and to other recipients.

Two corrections please: our passage in 1999 from Hawaii to Neah Bay in the Straits of Juan de Fuca was actually 21 days not 24. I am still relieved never to cook another meal at sea.... although it was often fun, and only occasional torture. Rather than the romance of a birth at the Howes House, I was born conventionally at the Hospital in OB.

Thanks to Thomas, to great customers, great books, and to folks who passionately care about islands, May we flourish and persist in short circuiting those who wish only to line their own pockets and destroy.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 03/04/2023 - 18:12

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Valerie Sonnenthal Chilmark

I so loved reading this and learning a bit more about a woman whose doors were always open, even to my dogs, and always had tales to share, besides all the great finds, which one might easily overlook. Thanks for all those wonderful years of being so welcoming to this washashore.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 03/06/2023 - 19:05

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Nan and Phil Logan Woods Hole

Best wishes in your new endeavors. Thanks for all your efforts.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 03/07/2023 - 06:56

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Dianne Poole Barrington, RI (formerly Chilmark)

Ginny's intellect, integrity and friendship are unsurpassed. We already miss her in Menemsha.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 03/07/2023 - 07:35

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Lisa Brown Langley Edgartown

Thank you for this article, only a brief moment in time to read about a lifetime of commitment to history and passion for Martha’s Vineyard and Islands. It is said Island folk are always island folk and they gravitate towards each other. Thank you Ginny, for sharing your history and love of island, particularly this one. You are a true treasure and deserve to be able to go have your cups of tea and enjoy your knitting. Thank, thank you for sharing your wisdom and passion. May it live on and all of those blessed to hear your wisdom and knowledge. Enjoy!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 03/07/2023 - 08:28

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Sharon Judd Marlborough

Thank you, Ginny for your wonderful collection of stories and items. The books I have purchased over the years have been shared and the cookbooks are used frequently. Enjoy your next series of adventures.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 03/07/2023 - 09:54

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Linda Vadasz West Tisbury

Not only did Ginny sell books on maritime history, but I bought beautiful Bohemian glass buttons that I have never seen elsewhere. She also carried gorgeous hand-knitted sweaters. Ginny, your shop will be missed. We look forward to the next chapter of your colorful life.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 03/08/2023 - 17:20

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Ginny WT

What will Ginny do next? Continue to work to slow the slow but insidious leaks of island values and culture, and the fast erosion of our shores due to rising seas. If anyone wants maritime or island related books give me a jingle (land line only) if you want to know more about Island Innovations, I can direct you to their organization and work. University of Prince Edward Island has a highly regarded program(from Ph D, down to undergraduate level) -- let's send some students there.

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