New Hampshire

Exploring Star Island and the Oceanic Hotel

New Hampshire’s Star Island, the only one of the nine Isles of Shoals openly accessible to visitors, is famous for its stunning scenery, history, commitment to sustainability, and one of the best porches in New England.

Three people sit in rocking chairs on a wooden porch, overlooking a dock with a red and white ferry near a small island on a clear day.

Grab a rocker and enjoy the view.

Photo Credit: Aimee Tucker

Have you ever visited New Hampshire’s Star Island? If not, you should.

Star Island
The Oceanic Hotel on Star Island.
Photo Credit : Aimee Tucker

The first thing you’ll notice when you arrive is the Oceanic Hotel. Large and rambling (though not exactly grand) on the relatively small island, it was built during the “island hotel” tourist boom of the mid-19th century, and sure looks the part. In the 1600s, the island was the busiest fishing port on the East Coast, but the 1800s ushered in an era of creative artists, writers, and intellectuals.

By the end of the 19th century, mountain hotels were becoming more popular than coastal ones, so the Oceanic was fortunate to have Thomas Elliott and his wife Lilla as guests in 1896. The Elliotts were Unitarians and thought the picturesque Oceanic would make the ideal spot for church conferences, so they made a deal with the manager to fill the rooms the following year. They did, and the Oceanic held on.

In 1915, the Isles of Shoals Summer Meeting Association bought the hotel and the island, forming the nonprofit Star Island Corporation. Though the island maintains close ties to the Unitarian church, the many conferences still held each year are based around a variety of family, youth, and individual themes, including faith, music, art, yoga, and history. In 2008, “personal retreats” were introduced, allowing guests not participating in a conference to stay on Star for up to one week.

Of course, Star also welcomes daytrippers. As we docked for our hour-long “walkabout,” the captain gave us a brief rundown of the island, its facilities, and a few suggestions on what to see (the view from the gazebo) and what to avoid (the poison ivy on the walking paths).

Summer Day Trip to Star Island

Star Island
Welcome to Star Island!

I can’t imagine the Oceanic looks much different today than it did a century ago, and in truth, it doesn’t. As we strolled closer, I could see the vast front porch was scattered with large wooden rocking chairs, most of them holding guests with books in their laps.

The Oceanic Hotel i
The Oceanic Hotel in a postcard from c. 1910.
Photo Credit : Public Domain/Wikimedia Commons

To the right of the hotel lies the old burial ground and gazebo with (it was true) stunning Atlantic views — a perfect spot for a picnic lunch.

star-island-graveyard
Caswell Cemetery on Star Island.
Photo Credit : Aimee Tucker
star-island-gazebo
The gazebo, with seagull.
Photo Credit : Aimee Tucker

After checking these out, we headed to the other side of the hotel and back towards Gosport Church. Along the way were charming little sea-air scrubbed cottages, like something right out of Anne of Green Gables.

Touring Star Island.
Touring Star Island.
Photo Credit : Aimee Tucker
star-island-cottage
The quintessential coastal cottage.
Photo Credit : Aimee Tucker
Stone cottages, too.
Stone cottages, too.
Photo Credit : Aimee Tucker

Gosport Church, as the sign inside says, was built twice out of wood, beginning in 1685, before the current stone version was constructed in 1800. Perched on the highest point of the island, the church serves as a chapel and meetinghouse. The Star Island website paints a pretty picture of the building’s role on the island:

“At the close of each day, Shoalers gather at the foot of the hill and form a procession, carrying candle lanterns as the villagers of long ago carried their whale-oil lamps up the same winding path. Inside the chapel, the candle lanterns are hung on brackets from the walls, providing the only source of light.”

Gosport Church.
Gosport Church on Star Island.
Photo Credit : Aimee Tucker
Inside Gosport Church.
Inside Gosport Church.
Photo Credit : Aimee Tucker
Gosport Chapel in a postcard from c. 1930–1945.
Gosport Church in a postcard from c. 1930–1945.
Photo Credit : Digital Commonwealth/BPL/Tichnor Bros. Collection

Outside of Gosport Church, I looked to my right and saw the roof of a little stone cottage and some sort of tower, so we headed that way to check them out.

The cottage was Vaughn Cottage. It serves as a small library, museum, and archive for the island. We didn’t go inside, but it’s open to the public during the summer months if you’re interested.

star-island-vaughn
Vaughn Cottage on Star Island.
Photo Credit : Aimee Tucker

The monument proved to be Tucke Monument, a large granite obelisk built to honor Shoals minister Rev. John Tucke. You get to the monument by passing through a wooden turnstile, and follow a path bordered high with flowering hedges until you reach the base.

star-island-tower
Tucke Monument on Star Island.
Photo Credit : Aimee Tucker

After seeing the monument, we took a loop around the back of the Oceanic, past the bustle of machinery (a lot of it solar-powered) that keeps the island running, then headed inside to check out the lobby and grab some refreshments at the snack bar before making our way back to the boat that would return us to the mainland.

The gleaming lobby had a parlor-meets-classroom look, with daily schedules on display and the permeating aroma of home-cooked food, ocean air, sunscreen, and the faint whiff of grade-school chalkboard.

star-island-hotel-lobby
The cool and gleaming Oceanic Hotel lobby.
Photo Credit : Aimee Tucker

Since the emphasis for visitors is on the conference seminars, outdoor activities, and an unplugged peace of mind, the rooms and amenities at the Oceanic are simple. The only public television is in the front lobby, power is produced by three large generators, and showering is only available every other day to conserve water (which comes from rain runoff). Star is magnificently self-sufficient, but not without a lot of organization and hard work from its staff.

We've given the island an award or two...
We’ve given the Oceanic Hotel an award or two…
Photo Credit : Aimee Tucker

Special kudos are given to the Pelicans, a Yankee pick for “one of the top ten summer jobs in New England.” The Pelicans are a crew of 100 or so young adults (mostly college students) that spend the summer on the island and do everything from housekeeping, maintenance, gardening, and cooking. It’s a job, but it’s also an opportunity to be part of a unique and close-knit community and form lifelong friendships. Former Pelicans even have their own website, Pelicans are Pelicans, to keep in touch and plan reunions.

Beyond the lobby was the snack bar and dining room. While lunch reservations for meals are required at the Oceanic, the snack bar is perfect for a quick ice cream cone, hot dog, or raspberry lime rickey.

star-island-blackboard
The Oceanic Hotel snack bar features ice cream, light bites, and beverage classics like the popular raspberry lime rickey.
Photo Credit : Aimee Tucker

Family-style meals in the dining room are included for conference attendees and personal retreaters, with Pelicans doing the cooking, serving, and cleaning.

Porch entrance to the dining room
Porch entrance to the dining room
Photo Credit : Aimee Tucker
star-island-hotel-dining-hall
The dining room
Photo Credit : Aimee Tucker

Thankfully, no reservations were needed for the hotel’s front porch, so I settled into a rocker with my book and enjoyed a few chapters (plus the view of a determined seagull eating peanuts out of a neglected drinking glass further down the porch) before it was time to head back to the boat — the clean, crisp ocean air working on me like a tonic.

The famous Oceanic Hotel porch.
The famous Oceanic Hotel porch.
Photo Credit : Aimee Tucker
Grab a rocker and enjoy the view.
Grab a rocker and enjoy the view.
Photo Credit : Aimee Tucker

Sooner than I would have liked, it was time to head back to the mainland. Until next time, Star Island.

goodbye-star-island
Goodbye, Star Island!
Photo Credit : Aimee Tucker

As you sail away, keep an eye out for the island’s very own dinosaur…

star-island-dinosaur
Do you see the dinosaur?
Photo Credit : Aimee Tucker

I’ve found myself thinking about the simplistic beauty of the Star Island often in the weeks since, its pull going to work on me, urging me back for a longer stay, offering what so few collectively can — community, solitude, nature, mediation, nourishment, peace…and yes, the chance to see seagulls eating peanuts from the view of a comfy rocking chair.

Who could resist?

Getting to Star Island is easy, thanks to ferry services in either Portsmouth through the Isles of Shoals Steamship Company or Uncle Oscar’s in Rye.

Have you ever visited Star Island?

This post was first published in 2012 and has been updated. 

Aimee Tucker

Aimee Tucker is Yankee’s senior digital editor. A lifelong New Englander and Yankee contributor since 2010, Aimee has written columns devoted to history, foliage, retro food, and architecture, and regularly shares her experiences in New England travel, home, and gardening. Her most memorable Yankee experiences to date include meeting Stephen King, singing along to a James Taylor Fourth of July concert at Tanglewood, and taking to the skies in the Hood blimp for an open-air tour of the Massachusetts coastline.

More by Aimee Tucker

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  1. There is no place better then Star Island to vacation with your family. Our family has been attending the LOAS II for years. I appreciate the Islands respect of nature and the ability to have great friend time and unplug from most of the world. Our kids have made friends there each year some new, some returning.

  2. You delightfully captured the essence of Star. A longer stay will reveal even more beauty, peace, and camaraderie.

    Thanks for pointing out T-Rex. I haven’t seen him before but will be on the look out.

    Hope to see you there soon. You will come back!

    Peace,
    Susan Stibler

  3. As a long time attendee at the IA conference and an “old shoaler “, I really appreciate this account and photos.

  4. Our family has been attending conferences at Star Island for years. Your article was perfect!! Your photos help to capture the experience there. To really experience Star, though, you HAVE to be there to see a glorious sunset and then later attend a candlelight service in the stone chapel. Even if you have only been there for a few days, Star Island will never leave you. Jane

  5. I very nice review. I’ve been going to Star Island with my family for years first as a kid and then as a parent. One truly unique feature of a Star Island conference for parents is the absolute safety you feel for your kids as they roam freely within the conference community. This results in the most relaxing vacation you’ll ever take with your kids. I’ve never found a similar situation anywhere else.

  6. Can I make a reservation for one for an overnight stay just to get away and if so, how do I go about doing it?

    Brenda Harlow

  7. Great article!! Great place! You can only really “get it” with an overnight(s) stay. It’s being in a place where life is as it was meant to be……..

  8. Thank you for the photos of my Mecca, my Israel, where I spent a total of a half a year in weekly increments through the years, mostly at the Arts Conference. I can no longer negotiate the terrain, but the island & the friends I made there with my music remain in my heart and memory forever.

  9. My late aunt, Janet Taylor, Of North Hampton, NH, used to say that, “a day at the Isles of Shoals (Star Island) is like two weeks anywhere else.” I only regret that “Personal Retreats” weren’t available until after she was too old and infirm to negotiate the terrain. She passed away in January 2010, at the age of ninety.

  10. Just returned from a week on Star Island (my 36th visit). The theme was Climate Change. I was once more very impressed by Star Island’s “Green Gosport Initiative,” which includes the largest solar array in the State of New Hampshire.

  11. Spent a week there in 1962 with the LRY on a wor crew. Remember helping paint The Oceanic Hotel. Great memories and long time friendships. Thanks for a great article. Would love to return for a visit!!

  12. I moved to Hampton Beach in 1960 and would lay on my bed at night and watch the beam from Isles of Shoals lighthouse. This led to a lifelong love of lighthouses and all things nautical. I cruised around the Isles many times on private boats, but only visited Star Island once. It was very memorable. My son-in-law is descended from the pirate Blackbeard, who left his treasure and bride on the Isles. I would love to go back and visit once more.

  13. When I was a young man in the 1960’s, my father kept a 30’ cabin cruiser in Ipswich. Over the years, he and I took a number of day trips to Isles of Shoals, greatly enjoying the scenery and often anchoring in the harbor off Star Island to have lunch. One day, on a rare occasion when my mother joined us, we ran into a threatening storm on our return trip that seriously frightened her. She never made the trip again. I believe in those days the main building, once a hotel, was unused, although it later was taken over by the Unitarian-Universalist church and became a site for retreats. It’s a lovely place on a temperate summer day.

  14. Is there a registry of the people who are buried in Star Island? My ancestor, Rev. Joseph Hull, is said to have been buried on the Isle of Shoals but I do not know which one. He died in the mid 1600s.

  15. It truly is a wonderful place for vacation, haven’t gone in awhile but I sure do remember how beautiful it was.

  16. This is in response to “Kay” about her ancestor Rev. Joseph Hull. There are some interesting comments about Rev. Hull’s possible resting place at Find-a-Grave. https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/73100242/joseph-hull
    Also, to the writer of this article about Star Island: my ancestors are buried in the Caswell cemetery on Star. I wish you had identified it as such under the photo out of respect. Thank you.

    1. Hi Kathy. I certainly meant no disrespect by not giving the full name of the cemetery. I did not see a sign during my visit, but have updated the caption to include the name. I am glad you enjoyed my post!

    2. Aimee’s article was fine as it was. If it’s so important to you, write your own article about your family cemetery in your own way.

  17. A college friend sent me this article sort of recalling Star Island might have been where I spend time years ago… Ah.. I enjoyed reminiscing, having really grown up there spending conferences (IA) with my parents and brother and then later as a worker; called Pelicans, for a few Summers. It was a place to be yourself, explore your crafts, be they art, nature, music or whatever. It was “Our Spirt’s home” as the song went. You can find yourself, lose yourself in the ocean (not literally hopefully, although my parents almost did on their sailboat one week), sitting on the rocks listening to the surf … the creaky antique buildings not creepy, (except for the top floor of the oceanic which we thought was haunted). Back then we dove off the cliffs at Smuttynose, dumped broken pottery from the dining hall off the rocks (not done now), had mussels and periwinkles on the rocks, searched for sea anemones in the tidal pools, watched [as an old fashion waitress in the dining hall (waitron) and a night watchperson] the storms come and go and showered in suits over the rain gutters on the porch… Good times.

  18. My parents attended Unitarian conferences on Star Island & I worked at the hotel the summer of 1951. I remember best the hours of sitting & watching the surf pound the rocks & also swimming in 55 degree water. A most wonderful place.

  19. Our family treasures 2 different Unitarian Universalist conference weeks at “Star”, the one 3 daughters were young; such a spiritual experience for the whole family! It really is magical. The regret is that it is so popular that it is difficult to get reservations.

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