Updated 10/3 with more photos
After attending granddaughter Christine's wedding on Cape Cod, Hugh and Dolores jaunted over to Nantucket, where they had celebrated their honeymoon in 1954.
After taking a ferry from Hyannis to the island, they "walked around town a bit and had dinner at The Ship's Inn, where we stayed 65 years ago," Hugh writes.
The Ship's Inn no longer has a hotel, so the couple stayed at the Jared Coffin House. "It's one of the few three-story buildings allowed, been built during the Whaling Days prosperity," Dolores writes.
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Jared Coffin House |
"Nantucket was lovely and memorable as we remembered - still mostly unspoiled," Dolores said. During their stay, "We had a wonderful all-island tour, and that was the
best."
But there have been some changes over the years, Dolores reports: "Traffic! Like Rehoboth Beach in August, with cobblestones!" And the meals, she said, were expensive and pretentious. "We have had meals in Europe, Alaska, Australia and New Zealand, and
none of those places were so full of themselves." She added that The Ship's Inn's food was the best of the bunch.
Thankfully, she added, "The scenery is still free!" Here are a few of her photos of the sights.
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The oldest house on the island—dated 1659 |
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Sankaty Lighthouse, on the east coast of the island. It was moved back from the land's edge a few years ago due to erosion. |
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The tip of Nantucket, from the small plane that carried Hugh and Dolores to Boston for their flight home. |