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Monday, 31 December 2007

Recipes from the Island

New Shipment of Popular Tangier Island Recipe Book Has Arrived!

When Tangier Island Health Center colleagues Cindy Parks, Cindy Wheatley, and Anna Parks decided on a project to help raise funds for the island’s new health clinic, they had no idea how successful it would be.  “Island Treasures: Collected Recipes,” is now in its third printing.   To date 535 books have been sold and the Tangier Island Health Foundation has received its first gift of the proceeds.

It took two months to collect, type, and print the 202 recipes from island residents. Each section of the book (Appetizers, Soups & Salads, Main Dishes, etc.) is preceded by a “Helpful Hints” page.  Contributors were encouraged to present at least two favorite seafood recipes (crab, of course, features prominently).  Other tasty offerings range from “Cubbit Creek Gumbo” to “Lee’s Tugboat Meatloaf” to “Ain’t Your Mamma’s Banana Pudding.” All are attractively presented in a spiral-bound edition with a clear index and a back section featuring pages on pantry basics, cooking time tables, an equivalency chart, and calorie counts.

Cover art was contributed by Ken Castelli, who will be the island’s artist-in-residence, working with the Tangier History Foundation to create a new museum for the island during the summer of 2008.  The book was published at no initial cost by Morris Press Cookbooks of Kearney, Nebraska.   The Chesapeake Bay Foundation has purchased 200 copies and more than 300 have been sold on the island.

A new shipment has just arrived and copies may be purchased for $12.00 (+ $3.00 shipping charge) by contacting:

Cindy Parks

Tangier Island Health Foundation

PO Box 259

Tangier, VA  23440

Phone:  757-891-2412

Email:   parkscp75@yahoo.com

Or they may be picked up in person from the White Stone Family Practice in White Stone, Virginia.

Please contact:

Kim Clark

Phone:  804-435-3133

Email:   kclark@whitestonefamilypractice.com

Checks should be made payable to the Tangier Island Health Foundation.

Thursday, 27 December 2007

Recent Press

September 25, 2008

A Closer Look

When Charlotte Hayman called me from Reedville and described the modern-day treasure hunt called “geocaching,” I thought she was nuts. But now that I’ve spent a morning playing the game with Charlotte and her husband, Sonny, I can see why they’re pumped. (article no longer available online)

Download Rapp.Record.JPG

- The Rapphannock Record Online

January 16, 2008

‘Red Hats’ Want to Help Build Clinic on Tangier Island

The Red Hot Granny's in Newport News are calling on all fellow Red Hat Society members in Hampton Roads to pony up $10 to help build a modern medical clinic on Tangier Island, a isolated community on a tiny spit of land in the Chesapeake Bay.

- The Daily Press

January 14, 2008

Land Bought for Tangier Clinic

Efforts to replace the outdated clinic on Tangier Island moved a step closet to reality today with the announcement that organizers have bought land for the new clinic.

-Richmond Times-Dispatch InRich.com

January 14, 2008

Tangier Clinic Moves Forward

Organizers of a much-needed island medical center reached their first milestone by buying land for the clinic with the help of a $25,000 private grant they announced today. The grant from the W.K. Kellogg Foundation in addition to a portion of $300,000 in state funds the General Assembly earmarked last year enabled the Tangier Island Health Foundation to make the purchase.

-Richmond Times-Dispatch InRich.com

December 26, 2007

Islanders Hope for Modern Clinic

Claudine Eskridge walked into Tangier Island's Gladstone Memorial Medical Center, hoping to walk out free of pain and knowing why her right knee was swollen and her feet throbbed.

- The Daily Press

November 22, 2007

Rotary Welcomes Tangier Advocates: The Rotary Club of West Point Hopes to Join in the Efforts to Serve Tangier Island

The Rotary Club of West Point welcomed David B. Nichols and James N. Carter, Jr. as speakers at their Nov. 8 meeting. Nichols has been flying to Virginia's Tangier Island once a week for 27 years to care for more than 600 isolated residents. Carter is the Chairman of the Tangier Island Health Foundation.

- RedOrbit.com

January 19, 2007

David Nichols - Doctor Makes Weekly Helicopter Housecall to Island in Need of Help

Twenty-seven years ago, Dr. David Nichols made a promise after he visited the 600 residents of tiny, isolated Tangier Island, just off the coast of Virginia. "I promised them that I would continue to come, and not just come for a year or two as other people have and then leave the patients stranded," Nichols said.

- ABC News Person of the Week

January 2, 2007

Doctor Takes Job to New Heights

The license plate on David Nichols' helicopter reads "DR COPTR."  For 27 years, the physician has flown to an isolated island population in the Chesapeake Bay each week to provide care. This fall, his efforts earned him the 2006 Country Doctor of the Year Award from the organization Staff Care.

-USA Today

December 2006

Healing Tangier

The isolated islanders have medical needs like everyone else. But with only one rundown clinic and weekly visits from Dr. David Nichols, it’s a struggle to care for them. Could help be on the way?

-Chesapeake Life Magazine

December 11, 2006

Tangier Doctor: "This is My Mission"

It’s not easy to earn the trust of the Tangiermen who are often skeptical of outsiders. But Canadian native Dr. David Nichols has become like a celebrity in these parts because he’s kept a promise to provide desperately needed medical care to isolated, rural islanders who would otherwise put their medical needs aside until it was absolutely necessary to be flown or boated to the mainland. (article no longer available online)

- The Daily Times

December 5, 2006

By Plane or Boat, Doctor Makes His Rounds

On a sight seeing trip to Tangier Island, Dr. David Nichols saw a medical mission. A pilot, he started flying in on Thursdays, his day off, and worked in the clinic. At the time, folks thought they had seen his kind before. Well-meaning, but...

- The Virginia Pilot

December 5, 2006

Doctor’s Soaring Loyalty Rewarded

David Nichols flew an airplane every week to practice medicine on Tangier Island until he bought a helicopter to make the commute across the Chesapeake Bay. Now, 27 years after flying into the hearts of island residents, he's been named Country Doctor of the Year for 2006. (article no longer available online)

-Richmond Times Dispatch

July 28, 2006

The Doctor Who Watches Over an Island

It first appears as a smear on the horizon, barely visible through the helicopter's windshield on the hazy expanse of the Chesapeake Bay. Soon an outline emerges, then houses, a church, white picket fences and a weedy, forlorn airstrip.

-The Washington Post

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Who We Are

  • Tangier Island Health Foundation is a non-profit, community-based organization committed to serving Tangier Island by raising funds in order to replace the existing 50 year old clinic with a fully equipped state-of-the-art medical clinic.

Recipes from the Island


  • In it's 3rd printing - A collection of favorite recipes from local Tangier men and women and those out of towners who have become like family.

Proposed Clinic



  • Rendering of the proposed Tangier Island Health Clinic - Architectural design by William D. Prillaman, Irvington, Virginia.

Photo Albums

  • Click on any of the albums below to view pictures:

Clinic Groundbreaking

  • (c)KenTouchtonPhoto08-085
    All photos taken by Ken Touchton © 2008