Welcome to The Inn at Blueberry Hill
Welcome to The Inn at Blueberry Hill, a storybook New England hideaway. The Inn is set in open lawns and forest with ancient stone walls criss-crossing the pastures, greeting you with the unmistakable signature of three centuries as a Chilmark Farm. There are 56 acres of open skies, songbirds and wild blueberries. Spring, summer and fall you are invited to walk among the ever-changing signs of the season: an early hint of fiddleheads, a blossoming butterfly weed, a flaming bettlebung. Close by are glorious beaches, quaint fishing villages and historic towns.
What the Critics Have to Say about "Their goal was to create a spa - like retreat of the utmost luxury without in any way compromising the lovely natural setting - 56 acres of former farmland, surrounded by vast tracts of conservation forest. They've succeeded splendidly." "...the several buildings that compose the Inn are more modest in style and size, as befits the New England standard of luxe without excess...the philosophy being that here in the prettiest, most pristine scenery on the northeast, the whole point of the indoors is to supply a portal to nature." "Exclusive and secluded, this unique property ... puts you in the heart of the rural Vineyard with a nature preserve out the back door." "This is a wave-of-the-future resort in terms of environmental awareness. Built around the core of a crumbling inn, which began as a farmhouse in the 1790s, the main house and added cottages fit the spruce-shaded grounds as if they'd always been there." "With its beautiful fields, and a grand assortment of enormous trees, the Inn establishes an atmosphere of idyllic bliss." "...The Inn at Blueberry Hill, is perhaps the most private of all Island resorts... The Pastoral setting, rich in natural beauty, and enhanced by lovely flower gardens, delights the senses and nurtures the spirit." "Although it is a vacation home of numbers of celebrities, Martha's Vineyard maintains a much prized 'tone of quiet aloofness' and no where is this more evident than at the low key but elegant Inn at Blueberry Hill ..." |