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Robert Douglas, whose Black Dog became a symbol of summer, dies at 93
Robert Douglas, whose Black Dog became a symbol of summer, dies at 93

Boston Globe

time30-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Boston Globe

Robert Douglas, whose Black Dog became a symbol of summer, dies at 93

Advertisement Although Mr. Douglas spent much of his time on the water, skippering chartered tours on the Shenandoah, he was eager for a place near the harbor where he could sit among friends with a good cup of chowder. Most of the island's restaurants were closed in the winter, when visitors stuck to the mainland. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up With help from carpenter Allan Miller, who became a part-owner of the restaurant, Mr. Douglas took matters into his own hands, opening the Black Dog in Vineyard Haven in the dead of winter, January 1971. The restaurant remained open year-round, offering steak, chicken, and plenty of seafood specials, including locally caught bluefish and flounder stuffed with crab. Within a matter of months, it was attracting attention well outside New England. Advertisement 'Stockbrokers and freaks, infants and old seadogs swell the line seven days a week every day of the year,' restaurant critic Raymond A. Sokolov wrote in The New York Times that August, praising the food as 'an expert blend of the gourmet and the gutsy.' By then, the restaurant was frequented by unassuming locals as well as celebrities including singer James Taylor and actress Ruth Gordon. It gained an even wider following with help from T-shirts, hats, and other merchandise bearing a picture of Mr. Douglas's pet dog, the aptly named Black Dog, for whom the restaurant was named. The dog was itself named after a pirate in Robert Louis Stevenson's novel 'Treasure Island.' Diners at The Black Dog Tavern, a Vineyard icon since 1971. MATT COSBY/NYT In its classic version, the Black Dog T-shirt featured only the dog logo on the front, drawn by artist and restaurant hostess Stephanie Phelan. On the back was the Black Dog's name, along with the year of the shirt's purchase - a detail that helped visitors memorialize their trip to the island and, intentionally or not, served to distinguish newcomers from old-timers. Although the shirts were first sold in the early 1980s, the merchandise really took off a decade later, after President Clinton and his wife, Hillary, began sporting the gear on summer trips to the island. (Under questioning about his relationship with White House intern Monica Lewinsky, the president testified that he had given Black Dog T-shirts to Lewinsky as a gift, along with a Black Dog tote bag and stuffed animal.) 'What the Lacoste alligator shirt was to the 1970s, and Ralph Lauren's polo pony to the '80s, the Black Dog threatens to become to the '90s, in appropriately faded shades of moss green, stone-washed blue, soft cherry and classic white,' Ruth Marcus of the Post wrote in 1994. Advertisement An umbrella at the Black Dog Bakery helped frame ferries in Vineyard Haven. Mark Lennihan/Associated Press 'At times this island looks like a veritable kennel club, with every other person sporting some piece of Black Dog gear,' Marcus added, before noting that 'Black Dog shirts have been sighted everywhere from a country lane in Provence to the slopes of the Grand Tetons. A recent clipping from a Florida newspaper shows a Cuban refugee being picked up on the high seas - wearing a Black Dog hat.' The restaurant capitalized on the trend by opening a succession of retail shops it called General Stores, first on the Vineyard and then up and down the East Coast, with locations now stretching from Florida to Maine. It released a cookbook; sold merchandise through mail-order catalogues that reached more than 200,000 customers; and expanded its lineup to sell Black Dog granola tins, baby onesies, bucket hats, and soccer balls. 'The tail started wagging the dog,' Mr. Douglas once noted in an interview with the Vineyard Gazette. 'It started as a restaurant and it turned into a dry goods business.' The second of four sons, Robert Stuart Douglas was born in Chicago on March 18, 1932, and grew up in Lake Forest, Ill. His paternal forebears helped found the Quaker Oats Co. His father, James H. Douglas Jr., was an Army veteran who worked as a lawyer, investment banker, and military official, serving as secretary of the Air Force and deputy secretary of defense during the Eisenhower administration. Mr. Douglas was 16 when his mother, the former Grace McGann, died. Mr. Douglas studied political science at Northwestern University, receiving a bachelor's degree in 1955. He trained as a fighter pilot in the Air Force, flying his last mission in 1958, when he ejected from a malfunctioning jet, according to the Black Dog's website. Advertisement Later that year, Mr. Douglas moved to Vineyard full time and turned from the skies to the water. The Gazette reported that he worked for several months as a seaman on the 1962 film 'Mutiny on the Bounty,' aboard a replica of the HMS Bounty that was built in Nova Scotia and sailed through the Panama Canal to Tahiti, where the movie was shot on location. After returning to New England, Mr. Douglas worked at the Gamage Shipyard in South Bristol, Maine, and financed the construction of his own schooner, the Shenandoah, which he named after a favorite sea shanty. He bought a string of waterfront properties in Vineyard Haven that today house Black Dog Tall Ships Inc., according to the Gazette. As part of that effort, he expanded his fleet by acquiring a second schooner, the Alabama, a former pilot boat that he overhauled and added sails. The vessel now does tours out of Vineyard Harbor. The lure of the ocean animated much of Mr. Douglas's life. 'The bigger the sailing vessel, the more fun it is to sail,' he wrote in Sea History magazine. 'Seven thousand square feet of canvas straining overhead, the roar and thunder of the lee bow wave, the view from aloft on the crosstrees seventy feet above the decks, the slow determined response of a one hundred and seventy ton hull to two or three spokes the wheel, the intricacies of square rig, sharply braced yards and tapering topmasts outlined against a star-filled sky. Advertisement 'This whole sailing ship ethos is powerful and many faceted, but undeniable, and once involved with it, one is never quite the same again.' Mr. Douglas married Charlene Lapointe, a sailor and equestrian, in 1970. She runs Arrowhead Farm in West Tisbury, where she offers boarding, riding lessons, and summer camps, according to the Gazette. In addition to his wife and son Morgan, he leaves three sons, Robert Jr., Jamie, and Brooke, who have each played a role in the family business; and six grandchildren. During a lull in his charter business in the 1990s, Mr. Douglas began using the Shenandoah to deliver his love of the sea to local schoolchildren. 'They are just great big sponges, they can't get enough,' he told the Gazette in 2013. 'Everything is new and interesting. I provide the platform, a different lifestyle, one that is entirely different from anything they have ever experienced.' By 2020, when Mr. Douglas donated the schooner to the Martha's Vineyard Ocean Academy, an estimated 5,000 children were said to have sailed aboard the Shenandoah, some in trips that lasted a week or more. The ship was engine-free and occasionally encountered fog that could stymie a voyage for three days at a time. When that happened, Mr. Douglas said, the children were unbothered, learning to tie knots or jumping off the side to go swimming. Adults had less patience for the inconvenience. 'Grownups tend to lose their resiliency,' he observed. 'That is the major grown-up problem.'

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