From collection Creating Acadia National Park: The George B. Dorr Research Archive of Ronald H. Epp

Page 1

Page 2

Page 3

Page 4

Page 5

Page 6

Page 7

Page 8

Page 9

Page 10

Page 11

Page 12

Page 13

Page 14

Page 15

Page 16

Page 17

Page 18

Page 19

Page 20

Page 21

Page 22

Page 23

Page 24

Page 25

Page 26

Page 27

Page 28

Page 29

Page 30

Page 31

Page 32

Page 33

Page 34

Page 35

Page 36

Page 37

Page 38

Page 39

Page 40

Page 41

Page 42

Page 43

Page 44

Page 45

Page 46

Page 47

Page 48

Page 49

Page 50

Page 51

Page 52

Page 53

Page 54

Page 55

Page 56

Page 57

Page 58

Page 59

Page 60

Page 61

Page 62

Page 63

Page 64

Page 65

Page 66

Page 67

Page 68

Page 69

Page 70

Page 71

Page 72

Page 73

Page 74

Page 75

Page 76

Page 77

Page 78

Page 79

Page 80

Page 81

Page 82

Page 83

Page 84

Page 85

Page 86

Page 87

Page 88

Page 89

Page 90

Page 91

Page 92

Page 93

Page 94

Page 95

Page 96

Page 97

Page 98

Page 99

Page 100

Page 101

Page 102

Page 103

Page 104

Page 105

Page 106

Page 107

Page 108

Page 109

Page 110

Page 111

Page 112

Page 113

Page 114

Page 115
Search
results in pages
Metadata
1878-80
1878
1 ehron. 10/20/05
1879
1880
Trep to brittany.
- Forg field/GustMentas Old Farm buil 4,51818 1880
(Also see 1980
-Oll Farm built
file) is - of at Harvard
occuped
Hadley long doc (12/29/44)
see Pychical Exp. File]
-Post Graduate work - - 2
at Haward physics
- Long Field
arvana Callage. Class 8 1874 50thcm Anniversary
Report 1924]
[87]
Bennett, a- writer and translator of note. Three sons and
a daughter have been born to them: all are married, and
there are five grandchildren. The family home is at 12
Dane Street, Jamaica Plain, Boston, with a summer place,
The Moorings, Ogunquit, Maine.
GEORGE BUCKNAM DORR
GEORGE BUCKNAM DORR was born in Jamaica Plain, Bos-
GEORGE BUCKNAM DORR
ton, December 29, 1853, son of Charles Hazen and Mary
Gray (Ward) Dorr, and fifth in descent from Edward Dorr,
who came to Massachusetts Bay Colony and settled in Rox-
bury about 1660. Dorr prepared for college in Mr. Dix-
well's school.
After graduation Dorr lived for four years in Europe,
spending some of the time in travel. Returning to the
1875
United States in 1878 he entered the Harvard Graduate
School, and for three years read philosophy, history, and
general literature.> He served as chairman of the Visiting
Committee on Philosophy, which with the help of President
Eliot and the Faculty of the Department raised a fund for
1905
the building of Emerson Hall.(Later he again travelled in
Europe, and in Egypt and the Nearer East. He became in-
JAMES DWIGHT
1917
terested in the opening fields of mental suggestion, thought
transference and psychical research, working on the latter
subject in conjunction with Professor William James and
the English Psychical Research Society, which later pub-
lished a volume on his work. He travelled in the West
through the wilder portions, and took up the study of trees
and landscape planting: he founded the Mount Desert Nur-
series at Bar Harbor, and joined with President Eliot and
Bishop William Lawrence in establishing the Hancock
County, Maine, Trustees of Public Reservations. In 1916,
on Mount Desert Island, in territory once a portion of the
French Province of Acadia, Dorr founded Lafayette Na-
tional Park, the first in the East or bordering the sea, and
LOUIS
DYER
*1908
[88]
the first Wild Life Sanctuary administered by the Federal
Government in our Eastern States. In recognition of this
work by Harvard University, at Commencement, 1923,
President Lowell conferred the honorary degree of Master
of Arts upon him, as "A lover of nature, who has preserved
as a national park the grandest point on our Atlantic coast ".
And in 1924 the University of Maine gave him the honorary
degree of Master of Science.
Dorr's address is The Somerset Club, Boston, or Bar
Harbor, Maine.
JAMES DWIGHT
JAMES DWIGHT was born in Paris, France, July 14, 1852,
son of Thomas Dwight and Mary. Collins, daughter of John
Collins Warren, M.D., of Boston. After he was two years
of age he lived in Boston, and he prepared for college in
the school of Epes Sargent Dixwell.
After graduation Dwight entered the Harvard Medical
School, choosing naturally the profession in which his
mother's family had won great distinction. He took his
M.D. in 1879, and entered practice: by reason of ill health
he was soon forced to give up medical work for a time, and
he never resumed it. On January 12, 1887, he married
Elizabeth Frances Iasigi, who bore him three sons and three
daughters: the first son, Alfred Warren, died May 4, 1893.
After a long and painful illness our classmate died at Matta-
poisett, Massachusetts, July I3, 1917. Mrs. Dwight, two
sons and three daughters survive him: two of the children
have married, and there are two grandchildren. The young-
est child, Richard Warren, is a member of the Harvard
Class of 1925. Mrs. Dwight resides at 18 Browne Street,
Brookline.
" From boyhood Dwight's success in games involving
skill, strength and judgment had been great. This was the
more remarkable because in certain ways he was physically
4/13/2019
Expositions universelles de Paris - Wikipédia
WIKIPÉDIA
Expositions universelles de
Paris
Cet article traite des différentes Expositions
internationales et nationales qui se sont
tenues à Paris, et qui ont en partie façonné
la capitale française que l'on connaît
aujourd'hui.
Sommaire
Exposition universelle de 1900.
Exposition nationale de 1844
Exposition universelle de 1855
Exposition universelle de 1867
Exposition universelle de 1878
Did the Darrs visit?
Exposition universelle de 1889
Exposition universelle de 1900
Exposition internationale des Arts
Décoratifs et Industriels Modernes de
1925
Exposition universelle de 1937
Exposition spécialisée de 1947
Notes et références
Voir aussi
Articles connexes
Liens externes
Exposition nationale de 1844
Britanny
1940
I'OVISION
C.2
In the spring of 1878 we -- my father, mother and I --
made a trip together into Britanny.
It was at the season
when the broom and the gorse were in their bright yellow
bloom, making gay the tracts along the coast, wild and
picturesque with long, rocky inlets and projecting reefs
on which the surf broke unceasingly as western winds drove
in the waves from the Atlantic. It was a lonely coast
from
which fishermen sailed their craft, not in fleets but singly,
each for himself. It was a dangerous coast, too, and often
the fishermen, caught by fog and storms, did not return. But
it made a great appeal to the imagination, the region steeped
in ancient myth and legend.
There was no thought then of motor cars; their
day was yet to come. So we drove leisurely through the
land, stopping where we would, my mother making sketches and
my father and I wandering along the shore where the water
came surging in from the outer sea.
Years ago I came upon a book, then lately published,
entitled "The Fairy Lore of Celtic Lands." The author was
a young student who, graduating from the University of
California, planned to take that subject up as his first
objective and went out to France to study, going to the
University of RENAEXX Rennes, where he wrote a thesis for his
doctorate on his chosen field.
study getag-te-the Thence he went to Oxford and
studied under Sir John Rhys, the world's greatest authority on
the old Celtic myths and legends.
2 Britanny 1943
Rhys found him a student according to his heart and,
when he had completed his work with him, suggested that he
take the subject of his Rennes thesis and expand it into
a book. This he did and in it he discussed the theories
that have been offered in explanation of the fairy lore which
was 00 marked a feature among the Bretons, the Irish and the
Scotch Highlanders, all of kindred stock.
But, one after
another, he dismissed these theories and stated his
own conviction that there was something real behind it all,
something of which we in the broad light of the passing
day fail to be conscious but which none-the-less is there, a $
factor (to be reckponed with) in our surroundings.
And the author of the book, defending his position,
said that no one who h d not done what he had done
lived with the people in their huts, Wan dered by moonlight over
lonely moors or visited the shore by starlight listening to
the breaking waves -- was in position to pass judgment on it
all.
"There are," he said, "things we cannot see in the
broad light of day but of which we may become aware under the
right conditions of eeriness and solitude."
II It was a thought that interested
that our minda and senses
may for am for from feeling
neveral 7 us in ordinary life the whole
k that which is
page 3 Brittany 1943
But to return to Brittany. The people at the time when
we were there, sixty years ago, still wore in many parts
their native costumes, quaint and picturesque. They still
had their fairs and still went as a Sunday, attired in their
best, to the little, stone-built churches to worship and hear
mass chanted, in the simple, unquestionin. 9 faither inherited
through generations.
One feature of our trip which was very pleasant IV as that
it was made in great part by carriage, a welcome relief from
the tyranny of railroads.
The difference in the character of the people of
Britanny and of Northern France was extraordinarily marked;
they W ere two races, two distinct xxx civilizations.
All through Britanny ns through Normandy, which we
went on to from Britanny, the drink was not wine, as elsewhere
througout France, but cider.
to XXX
JmL. Box 1, end folder 6
OLD FAEH
PT-1
page 2 of the April 6 diotaphone transcription near the middle of
Cylinder 1, but a new subject.
Frenchmans Bay is the la st considerable opening on the
coast as one goes north which lies open freely to the ocean.
Beyond,all is one great bay st which the tide rolls with
sweeping force, that culimmates in the Bay of Fundy, the name
given by a Portuguese fisherman who came out upon the Banks
to fish in the latter half of the 16th century, meeting
there fishermen from Brittanyand from England -- a truly
Cosmopolitan gathering.
The Bay of Fundy is a corruption
early
of Baiou Fonda, the Deep Bay.
The French called it
Baie Francoise, but the Portuguese is the one that held,
handed down from one generation of fishermen to andt her, till
it came fixed with all.
For naval purposes Frenchmans Bay, a name which goes back to
the early 17th century when the French province of Acadia
stretched down to t he Penobscot and Frenchmans Bay was the
r endezvous for French vessels gathering for attack on the
New England coast or for shelter in attack. The PREEX
pleasantest
EXEXEXT and most fertile part of Nova Scotia , the best in soil
east
and exposure and the most free from fog, lies no nearly Runnatte
of Mount Desert
Exem
Island, though somewhat to the north. It is a
well sheltered coast, relatively free from fog,
ps. 4
pago 4, April 6
moved slowly southward, a.. solid, dividing the ancient
granite mass into separate, isolated peaks, the Island's
though
present mountain chain. It is a great history,
but
dimly apprehended, That it covers the whole development of
life on land, vegetable and animal aliko with we clearly know
from he rare evidence left behind. And that of life upon
land goes further ages back to life within the sea, which
receded addras the source of all its varied life on land, plant
and animal.
Compass Harbor, to return to that, is the only
Bay/ I know unon the Island, though there may be others,
bottomed with quartz sand, the delightful to see and for
children to play upon, that comes from the coast southward
Ogden's Point, the point from which
bounded on the
northern side to the vicinity of Schooner head, is the most
ancient on the Islnad, built up of hard old rock, and except
at Caompass Harbor is cliffed and bold, leaving no opportunity
for sand to gather.
Compass Harbor got its name from t he early
settlers from the shores of Massachusetts Bay,tt --
settlers who did nt come direct from overseas -- at the
end of the Acadiannperiod, who named it from its placing
opening due north toward toward the Gouldsboro Hills,
which give that whole section of the coast its unrivalled
beauty,
It makes excenti mally good mooring ground, where
I kept my boat, The Wren,
page 5,
April 6
Cyl 3
built for me by the elder Burgess, Edward Burgess, who
safely
built some of the earlycup defenders, --
for eighteen
nearly
years though a great midsummer storm once wrecked
it as it strained upon the hook of inch thi ck iron by which
it was moored, till, when the storm was over I found it had
just held by chance, being all but straightened out.
Opposite Compass Harbor and the Oldfarm shore liesh
a mile away but nearer, seemingly, the bold, rounded
mass of Bald Porcupine, a baxx dense mass of ancient lava
rock poured out from some bench or crack probably in the earth's
surface, on top of its more ancient Cambrian rock which one
may see lying in strata beneath the lava at the eastern
its
foot of the great cliff, the sea gulls' nesting place.
This island now belongs to my friend and neighbor, on
northern
that
Ogden Point, which forms the eastern bound of the Harbor
as it does the southern bound of Cromwell's Harbor, a superb
sitro, but limited practically to the single house site.
Mrs Browning broght the island because I told her of what
Congressman Crampton, who once stayed with me at Oldfarm with
his wife, on their way back fromCanada, told me 12 that unless
we secured that island which we were then looking at from
my Oldfarm winde- porch, we would wake uo some day and find it
covered with huge advertisement, so conspicuous an opportunity
cyl 3 page 6, April 6
for them were its cliffed faces, west and south, past which all
boats went by.
So,
when I had done, I thought, my share
I invited Mrs Browning to purchase it for our joint protection,
which she, repeating to her son, he bought it for her and
incidentally for me as well. But there is nothing to be
done with it but to hold it nd she would gladly give it to
the Park, I know, should ft be desired.
The Old farm property is one of the best and most
fertile pieces of farmland on the Island, long cultivated
when
which he did
for my father purchased it in the summer of 1868, the first
spent here and a dozen years before we built the Oldfarm house.
one of the
It was an early farm grant, the earliest on the island, datingx
stretching back with straight parallel sides onto the nor thern
front of the mountain once called Neport for no known reason and
now by its Government renaming/: Champlain. That further
is now part of Acadia National Park, given to it by me,
when the Park was formed. The Mount Desert Nurseries occupies
the central portion which was-- constituted the 'Cousens'
country farm and our Oldfarm house , overlooking the Bay, rises,
built of red-tinged granite from the Gorge, rises from one of
the most beautiful house sites I know upon all the coast,
taken in can junction with the beauty of the shore and gardens.
Cy1 4, page 7, April 6
For gardens, gardens of the hardy perennial plants, natural
to this- tjuxxx such northern regions the W orld around seem
almost a necessity in this northern land, and on our coast
especially with its wild seas
One needs the contact
But the early settlers lived full as much upon the sea as upon
the land. It was their only highway and connection with the
world of men. Over the seas they traded their lumber and their
salted fish for the rude comforts of their life. But
it is all new country yet; another life has long as mine has
been in acquaintance with these shores would take one back
close to the first beginnings of all things on the Island or
the neighboring coast and what such another will do, going
forward through the years to come, lies beyond all conjecture.-
the world is moving rapidly in change.
The great change lies in communication. When one
can hear, as has been lately done along our whole Atlantic
coast, a speech delivered by a man in Rome, the capital
This
of Italy, the world has shrunk in respect to / sound
at least to the dimensions of a room. The real
battleground of the future is the air that carries sppech
rather than the land we live upon, for as men may be moved
by speech to think and feel, they may be molded to the
speaker's will, the strength a nd indepenednce of the nation
may be sapped and yet no blow be struck.
one add. po. (8).
1828
old form
April 14, page 5
Still Cyl 2
Separate paper.
The National Park had its origin at Oldfarm, the old
Cousens' farm grant, one of the earliest on the Island where
preceding its Bingham purchases Note for copyist
Please get and read to me Richard Hale's paper on
the Bingham purchases which he sent me lately, and which
I asked, I think to have copied.
The Bingham purchases which bordered it originally on
the south, extending from it along the shore to the
Sand Beach and beyond and extensively over the mountain.
Like the other early grants of that time it ran a mile back
from the shore and- at mean low tide for a measured mile,
the measurement
taking in whatever it encountered , mountains, lakes or
in a
woodland and running definite course with two parallel
sides and an end perpendicular to them. This was the case 3
Oldfarm which was as defined by t he Cousens farm grant, a very
various piece of ground, extending from the-Aepth-side from high
upp on the north side of Champlain Mt to the sea two brooks flowing
through it , Bear Brook next the mountain , rising in the wooded
Gorge between Picket Mountain and Champlain, and Compass Harbor
Brook draining the farmland to the north, and winding widely
through the Ogden , Coles and other lands to come out finally
at the base of Ogden's point into Compass Harbor. It is not only
page 6 of April 14
but exceedingly interesting piece of land, CO taining also
sono of the best farmland on the Island. Fro the beginning
on it has been tied up inextricably wi th the Park,
It is
long before the Park tunkox was established that its real history
begins.
In writing my history of the Park beginning, I want
this clearly recognized and established.
Cyl 3
The present generation will pass as my own has done, but
the mountain S and the woods, the coasts and streams that have now
passed through the agency of the Park to the National Gove rnment
will continue as a national possession, a public possession,
henceforth for all time to come. It never
will be given up to private ownership again. The men in
control will change, the Government itself will change, but
its possession by t he people will remain whatever new policies
or developments may come. The important thing now is to start
the Park
it right in its service to the public and for this ** is wonderfully
placed, looking out across the Atlantic to the coasts
of Europe from the Mediterranean to the British channel and
the Irish Sea. It is a part and a unique feature of the
eastern boundary of the c country, but a true international
boundary now to be guarded and defended. For the new developments of
page 7, April 14
science are bringing our country dangerously near what was so
have
remote and distant a hundred years ago. The changes that kax come
in my lifetime here, commencing in the eighteen sixties,
are are but the beginnings of others that we cannot in any way
foresee.
That is the point that impresses itself now upon my
bounded past
human
mind -- the shortness of the banninix
having whose history we
so largely know and the boundless future which we cannot read
but yet can influence. And the story we now tell, the shaping
that we give the present, will remain as a tale of origin and
as a shaping force through endless generations if man endure.
That is the point I want to emphasize: The brief past and
the immesasurable future which changes all- beyond all human
predication Which that brief past has already seena nd the
changes the future may bring yet greater than the past. For the
Park the main thing is to open it as widely as may be to the
people while yet keeping it from being a mere playground;
to make it a source of real reoreation- re-creation and save it
from vulgarization. To make it something that will uplift and
inspire its visitors, while giving them new health
and bigor. And to develop all the possibilities that it offered
for study along many fields for the giving out of ideas to a great
audience, for
in one of those spots that it and the
to
whole coast about it has which people always come in summer,
unique in i ts situation on sea and the pikxx facing that it has
across it to the lands of its parentage, beyond. -- the source
page 8, Apri 14
perhaps of future danger, the source quite certainly of new ideas
whether for good or ill.
Note:
One of the things to be established is a
flying service across the entrance to the bay of Fundy to the
western coast opposite, of Nova Scotia. It would make a mos t
interesting excursion to be done by flying boat from the Upper
Bay and would be reached at any point desired in an hour,
flying boat would limit it to the shore
in aeroplane provided on the Nuva Scotia
and have the whole Maritime provinces
(end of record not good)
Monday, February 12, 1940.
It was my father's purchase of this old farm which
Henry Higgins had sailed Himself down with his family
from Cape Cop to build a century before on the yet wild
shore of Frenchmans Bay with its mountain lands and wood-
lands, its safe little harbor facing north on Frenchmans
Bay, its pleasant site for building on and good land for
cultivation, that oddly enough became as the years went
by the foundation stone from which, as a starting point,
Acadia National Park has risen. And it is to tell of
how this came about step by step that I am writing this
today. All from the beginning flowed on consecutively
through various channels but with the end undreamt of
till the last to the establishment of a unique and striking
monument to a chapter, great in its consequences, in world
the
history: the struggle and its issue between great colonizing
powers of France and England for the control of North America.
fateful
The historian who has made that contest peculiarly his own,
Francis Parkman, came down for years with President Eliot
and his sons, sailing himself down with his boys aid, to
camp on Calf Island in Frenchmans Bay and Parkman took the
opportunity President Eliot offered to sai 1 down with them
and gather material for his work. One of the lesser but
boldest and most outstanding of the mountains in the Island
chain was named by the Government on its Acceptance of the
my ship to pq.4
1. June 14.
In the history of its land-titles, Oldfarm goes
back to the first days of occupation of the Acadian coast
by settlers from the English colonies, sailing down from
western ports to make new homes for themselves along the
shores of the former French Province of Acadia.
Mount Desert Island, situated on the constantly
embattled coastal border between the French and English
colonies, Acadia and Massachusetts Bay, was thrice conveyed
in gift, once by the Province of Quebec, se t of Government
of the French Dominion in America, to Antoine de la Mothe
Cadillac, a gentleman of ancient lineage from Gascony
in So thwestern France, who was then serving as an
officer in Acadia, the grant of the Province being con-
firmed to him soon after, ona return to Paris, by Louis
the Fourteenth; again, after the fall of the French
dominion in America, to Sir Francis Bernard, last Colonial
Governor of English birth of the Province of Massachusetts
Bay, whose title was similarly confirmed to him by
George the Third; and finally, after the Revolutionary War,
by the State of Massachusetts, now acting in its own
right as a sovereign state, to the heirs of these two
previous grantees. To the granddaughterrof Cadillac
3. : Oldfarm as its name tells
broad feat
Oldfarm, the house, stands on a ridge of the same
hard and ancient rock that encloses Compass Harbor along
the coast on either side, against whose base, when the land
stood at lower level in relation to the sea during the last
flacial period, the waves must have broken with tremendous
force. To the north it faces across the whole length of the
Upper Bay to the Gouldsboro Hills; to the south the Oldfarm
lands and gardens merge unbrokenly into those of Acadia
National Park which drew from them their early inspiration
for the origin of the Park.
X*-
The house, fitting well the landscape, is built
story?
up
to
the second floor of warm-tomed, native granite
9
above itris covered with shingles of the California
which
Redwood, similar in tone, which have never needed to be
renewed, save in portions of the roof, since the house was
built, now close onto sixty years. It is spaciously
designed, with ample out-door porches, screened from the
driveway, fronting on the view, while broad stone steps, laid
in easy descent, lead from it to the lawns above the shore.
(then follows History, which is paged History- 1 etc.
1879
flo
In the history of its land-titles, addar goos
back to the first days of occupation of the Acadian coast
by settlers from the English colonies, sailing down from
western poarts to make new homes for themselves along the
shores of the former French Province of Acadin.
Mount Desert Island, situated on the constantly em-
battled ecastal border between the French and English colonies,
Acadia and Massachusetts Bay, was thrice conyeyed in gift,
once by the Province of Quebec, seat of Government of the
French Dominion in America, to Antoine de la Mothe Cadillae,
gentleman of ancient lineage of Gascony in Southwestern
Frence, an officer then serving in Acadia, the grant from
the Province being confirmed to him soon after, on a temporary
return to Paris, by Louis the Fourteenth; again, after the full
of the French dominion in America, to Sir Francis Bernard,
last Colonial Governor of English birth of the Province of
Massachusetts Bay, whose title was similarly confirmed by
George the Third; and finally, after the Revolutionary War
by the State of Massachusette, now acting in its own sovereign
right, to the heirs of those two former granteess To the
granddaughter of Cadillao and her husband, M. and Mme. da
Gregoire, refugees from Brance at the commencement of the
-1-
French Revolution, the General Court of Nassachusetts
gave the eastern half; to John Bernard, son of Sir
Francis, the western half, sending down two surveyors --
Salem Towne and John Peters - to make division and except
from the grant such tracts as they might find alroady taken
up and hold by 'squatters rights'. This division was
made up the deeply penetrating fiord of Somes Sound and
thenco northward to the Narrows.
John Bernard mortgaged his portion and went to England,
where later he appears as receiving from the Crow, in
acknowledgment or his father's services, the Governorship
of one of the lesser West Indies, where be thoreafter lived
and dieds the de Gregoires came down to Mount Desert and
lived upon their grant, building themselves a house a Bullo
Cove and selling off their lands, tract by tract, as sottlers
came down and sought them and the good title which they
carried,
Among the first tracts sold was that of the present
aldfarm and its continuation southward up the steep-forested
side of Champlain Mountain, easternmost member now of the
National Park range, to one Henry Higgins, recorded as pur-
chasing it in 1792.
8.
Henry Higgins was born at Eastham on Cape Cod, the
son of Terael Biggins who had sailed down with his family
from South Truro, on Cape Cod, in 1771 and established
himself at Bulls Cove, as it soon after became known.
But before its purchase by Henry Higgins, John Cousins,
son of Elisha Cousins, who had sailed down yet earlier
with his family, from Harpswell on Casoo Bay, casting about
as he grow up to see what be best could turn his hand to,
had sottled himself in true pioneering fashion, asking
no leave of any, where there was as yet no owner but the
state, on this same tract, with its tall pines and spruces,
fit for masts and building, and its good harbor for shipping
them off to western markets. Into this work he threw him-
self with such energy and good result that for generations
after, though he never had or claimed a legal title to it,
the land romained known as the 'Cousins Lot',
Henry Higgins died early and the tract acquired by him
from the de Oregoires passed by inheritance to others,
whose names and those of their successors it would be 1d1o
to recall; they are all on record.
In the summer of 1868, our first at Bar Harbor and the
first in which land was bought on Mount Desert Island for
summer residence, the eastern partion of the Henry Higgins
lot was purchased by IV father, Charles Hasen Dorr, and
4.
his friend, Thornton K. Lothrop, who had come down
with us from Boston to see the new coastal landscape
of whose beauty and pleasantness we all had board so
much.
The western portion of the Henry Higgins loti as it
was then divided, had been purchased a few weeks previously
by Professor Mahan of West Point, father of Captain A. T.
Mahan, a boy then, who became famous a generation later
for his writings on the influence of sea power upon history
and the fate of nations. Three and a half years later,
early in the winter of 1871-172, Professor Mahan died and
his widow, on my father's writing her, sold him the land
she and her husband had earlier planned to build upon.
This land my father bought from Mrs. Mahan contained
in st the deep-soiled, cultivated land of the old farm and
two splendid house sites between which, when we came to
build, we hositated, but finally chose - wisely, I think -
the site the aldfarm house stands built upon.
Finally, in 1875, when we were making plans to build
at Oldfarm the following year, my father acquired from
Mr. Lothrop his share in the joint earlier purchase, uniting
once again the original one-hmndred-aore Henry Higgins
lot.
5.
The site we chose when we came to build in the autumn
of 1878 was the broad, flat top of an ancient sea-oliff
whose base had been raised by ooastal elevation some forty-
odd feet above the present level of the sea, where the waves
in their oeaseless activity are now at work on forming a new
and lower coast-line. From it one looked out due north
across the whole wide stretch of Upper Frenchmans Bay to
the Gouldsboro Hills, forming a picture which in the long,
slowly-deepening twilight of the northern summer is one of
surpassing beauty.
The oliff we built on markes the western termination
of a line of ancient rooks, hard and contorted and rising
beyond Oldfarm into yet higher cliffs, which, continuing
eastward to Schooner Head, is the oldest geologio formation
on the Island.
To the west the cliff we built on descends abruptly
to the level of a former sea beach, marked by the surf-piled
stones of a sea-wall, behind which lay, as in many another
spot along the present coast, a salt marsh, now become a
fertile meadow-land, across which our Oldfarm house looks
out, evening after evening, to the deep-red sunset glowp
while to the south the area drops gently away to rise again
6.
into the deep-soiled cultivated lands of the old farm,
which extend away, with no house in sight, framed in the
distance by the mountains of the National Park.
Tr. May 13
The house we had looked forward to and planned for so long
Europe after
we started building at once on our return from/a stay,
unexpectedly long,
Start over
The house we had planned for and looked forward to
and looked forward to SO long we started to build at once on
our return from Europe in the autumn of 1878, after a stay
unexpectedly prolonged.
Almost immediately after landing,
we came down with our architect, Henry Richards, to determine
on our site and set things in motion. My mother soon returned
to Boston but my father and I stayed on, studying and
planning until the approach of winter made us thankful
to return to Boston. The next spring we started in good
1879
earnest, our plans worked over through the winter contributing
we made
our part. My mother had been most interested during a stay
in England in the work of William Morris, architect and
designer, which she had seen at an exhibition a year or
two before) and worked with our architect, a mo st happy choice,
to carry out some of the ideas which she had got from them.
The practical part my father and I contributed, but the artistic
was hers and her architect's, young, enthusiastic, capable of
absorbing new ideas. It was the first house at Bar Harbof/r
to be really well built; and well built it was with nothing
2.
spared in work or material. The first storey we built of
granite split out from tumbled boulders in the gorge,
weathered and warm-toned, save for where cut stone was
water-table (*?)
necessary for the
and the windows, and
at the last some brick was used that added their touch of
color to the warm-toned granite. Above that first storey,
all was shingled with shingled of the warm brown, never
rotting California Redwood, which, on all vertical parts
of the house remain upon it still.
Great chinmeys of brick rose above the shingles
promising gnerous warmth, a promise which they have well
fulfilled.
In the interior, the frame was built with extra
strength my father saw to that- while all the interior
skilfully and
finish was carefully worked out from the best of Michigan
and White Pine, Maine wood of similar grain being no longer
floors
obtainable. The xxxxxthroughout were of well-seasoned,
native oak, birch and maple, and better one could not have.
The carpenters 6 and the Maine folk have a genius for that work,
took great pride in thetxx their work and endless time about
it. The result, when we at last moved in the summer of 1880,
the carpentors still working upon the house, was a delightful
home and a home it has proved to beat any season of the year.
May 2d transcription.
The site my mother, father and I, together with
our architect, Henry Richards, chose for the Oldfarm
house in the fall of 1878, was the broad, flat top of
an old sea-cliff, facing north to the Gouldsboro Hills
across the long reach of Upper Frenchmans Bay.
This cliff
rose well back from the present shoreline, where the breaking
surf is now setting its makr on a new shore, thirty to
forty feet below the old one, carved evidently in a
stormier period. The gently sloping space over which the
surf rolled up to break against the cliff, was covered at
that time with dark evergreens, mingled with birch and pine.
Bald Porcupine rieses opposite, a mile away, dividing
eastern
with its mass the itam and northern skies, the dawn
long growing in this northern clime before the sun appears.
From the high-placed casement windows of the chamber
I chose for myself when the house was done, the Sea Room
as it as called, I used to see, day after day, this
wonderful, slow breaking of the dawn, with the bold rounded
mass of the Porcupine black a gainst the growing light reflected
in the Bay, then changing insensibly to green S the light
grew stronger.
2.
To the west of the site we built on, cliffed also on
ed
that side, a long level line stretch 111 away, making what
was at that time the cobblestone or sea-wall beach behind which
had lain a considerable mass, as I discovered once on
digging down for water, coming at nine feet depth on smooth.
glaciated rock with the characteristic fine blue clay
left everywhere by the over-riding ice-sheet of the last
glacial period. In this I found shells of a shell-fish extinct
in the regional waters now, but extant in the arctic
still. I gave these shells, in which my father took great
interest too, to a friend of ours, Dr. Henry Chapman of
Philadelphia, who presanted them to the Philadelphia Natural
History Museum, where they were iden ified and placed.
STAIRS TO
STORM BEACH
TERRACE
SERVANTS'
DINING
LAUNDRY
ROOM
DINING ROOM
LIBRARY
PARLOR
PLAZZA
ENTRY
COVERED TERRACE
D
w.a
KITCHEN
I
HALL
LANDING
DEN
ENTRANCE
PLAN OF FARST FLOOR
PORCH
SCALE 4'-1"
Old Farm
House of George B. Dorr
Bar Harbor, Maine
New York, March 5, 1878.
My dear Mary:
We hear constantly of you and Charles and
George from Lily and Bessy, and no doubt you get full
accounts of all our goings on. Bessy tells us that you
have invited them to visit you in Paris on their way to
this country and that there is some chance that you may
cross the water with them, and if you do I suppose your
natural destination for the summer would be Lenox. I need
not say how welcome the news that you are coming would be
to us.
I do not know how far you would find Lenox land-
scape sketchable. It is a singular fact that in all my
living at Lenox, I never have been tempted to sketch; but
the truth is, that with the exception of a little sketch-
ing at Canton and a year ago we were at Luzerne, I never
did any in this country and scarcely anywhere except in
Italy and Egypt, where the pictures are ready made to your
hand. Still I always flatter myself I am going to take to
it again. If there were only some way of making charcoal
stick! The ordinary processes are too slow for me in our
windy, summery climate, and any sketch that takes me more
than fifteen minutes is too long for me. So charcoal just
suits me if it would only stay put. But for a painter there
are no end of beautiful studies at hand.
I trust our new home would interest you all. It
is very audacious and my friends shake their heads, but
I think it will be delightful. Imagine two modest farmhouses,
last quarter of record
fresh beginning after interruption.
The Oldfarm house was built under plans prepared by
Henry
one of the best younger architects of his day and as
Richards
thoroughly as could be, making no sacrifice to cost.
It is in as good condition now as it was when first completed and
the only changes made have been those needed to keep it level
with the times in all new development.
Electric lighting was unknown when the house was built
and for twenty years the reafter at Bar Harbor.
gracity
So with the town water
and so with the telephone. But all
that has been needed to keep it abreast of the time has been
added. Life was simple in he 1880's. So long as my mother
and my father lived, Oldfarm was the scene of constant
hospitalitity. The house was- is specious and was kept always
full with delightful company. My father died
first in 1893, my mothr seven years later. Ever delighting
to have friends about her, my own especially.
838,
surveyed
Have the rose garden lot as laid out in my
intention
to take in my mother's old flower garden, from which as
us back
a beginning the Park developed. This takes that to the
middle
axxig 1880's when the garden was fo rine d. The road to the
shore lot above Storm Beach has its own entrance from The
Way Road and the rose garden, as intended, will be entirely
screened from it by the ridge of rock on the east, with the
will
brook on the west beyond. This road watch bound the
lot
upon the east and south and it will be bounded
on
the
west with the path through to and beyond The Way from
Oldfarm, being open at some point to the- entrance from
the path from Oldfarm, which it nowhere will
A plan should be drawn by Breeze and Sherman for the
development of the parking ground where the tennis sourt
now is, the soil being carefully carefully preserved for
use elsewhere in the garden. The entrance to the
rose garden will be byond the cedar he dge to the southeast
and the opening through the hedge be allowed to close.
The whole needs to be drawn out in detail and studied.
Restrictions against building or di sfigurement
or other use than flowering plant exhibition should be
placed upon that portion of the nursery land above The
Way road to the south, as far as KEK to the first crossroad
from which northward the direction of the watering pipe
undated typesigh ps 4 of 6.
s.
Heary Eiggins died early and the treet acquired
by him from the de Gregoires passed by inheritance to
others, whose names and those of their successors it
would be idle to recall; they are all on record.
In the summer of 1868, our first at Bar Harbor
and the first in which land was bought on Mount Desert
Island for summer residence, the eastern portion of
at
the Henry Higgins lot was purchased by father,
R
Charles Hazen Dorr, and his friend, Thornton K.
Lothrop, who had come down with us from Boston to
see the new coastal landscape of whose beuaty and
years Quary lot
of
pleasantness we all had heard so much.
The western portion of the Henry Higgins lot, as
it was then divided, had been purchased a few weeks
previously by Professor Mahan of West Point, father
of Captain A. T. Maham, a boy then, who became famous
the Cherkyore
a generation later for his writings on the influence of
sea power upon history and the fate of nations. Three
and & half years later, in the early winter of 1872,
T.E.
Professor Mahan died and his widow, on my father's
x
Lacin
writing her, sold him the land she and her husband had
earlier planned to build upon.
Whitten
3.
Title BE 1: Old on green
1st 2 pases, history of
Among the first tracts sold was that of the
present Oldfarm and its continuation southward up
the steep-forested side of Champlain Mountain, eastern-
most member now of the National Park range, to one
Henry Higgins, recorded as purchasing it in 1792.
Henry Higgins was born at Eastham on Cape Cod,
the son of Israel Higgins who had sailed down with
his family from South Truro, on Cape Cod, in 1771
and established himself at Hulls Cove, as it soon
after became known. But before its purchase by Henry
Higgins, John Cousins, son of Elisha Cousins, who had
sailed down yet earlier with his family, from Harpswell
on Casco Bay, casting about as he grew up to see what
he best could turn his hand to, had settled himself
in true pioneering fashion, asking no leave of any where
there was as yet no owner but the State, on this same
tract, with its tall pines and spruces, fit for masts
and building, and its good harbor for shipping them off
to western markets. Into this work he threw himself
with such energy and good result that for generations
after, though he never had or claimed a legal title to
it, the land remained known as the 'Cousins Lot'.
4.
Henry Higgins died early and the tract acquired
by him from the de Gregoires passed by inheritance to
others, whose names and those of their successors it
would be idle to recall; they are all on record.
In the summer of 1868, our first at Bar Harbor
and the first in which land was bought on Mount Desert
Island for summer residence, the eastern portion of the
Henry Higgins lot was purchased by my father, Charles
Hazen Dorr, and his friend, Thornton K. Lothrop, who
had come down with us from Boston to see the new coastal
landscape of whose beauty and pleasantness we all had
heard so much.
The western portion of the Henry Higgins lot, as
it was then divided, had been purchased a few weeks
2
U.S
N.A. previously by Professor Mahan of West Point, father
of Captain A. T. Mahan, a boy then, who became famous
a generation later for his writings on the influence
of sea power upon history and the fate of nations.
Three and a half years later, early in the winter
of 1871-172, Professor Mahan died and his widow, on
my father's writing her, sold him the land she and
her husband had earlier planned to build upon.
5.
This land my father bought from Mrs. Mahan contained
in it the deep-soiled, cultivated land of the old farm
and two splendid house sites between which, when we
came to build, we hesitated, but finally chose -- wisely,
I think -- the site the Oldfarm house stands built upon.
Finally, in 1875 , when we were making plans to
build at Oldfarm the following year, my father acquired
from Mr. Lothrop his share in the joint earlier purchase,
uniting once again the original one-hundred-acre Henry
Higgins lot.
The site we chose when we came to build in the
autumn of 1878 was the broad, flat top of an ancient
sea-cliff whose base had been raised by coastal eleva-
tion some forty-odd feet above the present level of the
sea, where the waves in their ceaseless activity are
now at work on forming a new and lower coast-line.
From it one looked out due north across the whole wide
stretch of Upper Frenchmans Bay to the Gouldsboro Hills,
forming a picture which in the long, slowly-deepening
twilight of the northern summer is one of surpassing
beauty.
6.
The cliff we built on marks the western termination
of a line of ancient rocks, hard and contorted and rising
beyond Oldfarm into yet higher cliffs, which, continuing
eastward to Schooner Head, is the oldest geologic
formation on the Island.
To the west the cliff we built on descends
abruptly to the level of a former sea beach, marked
by the surf-piled stones of a sea wall, behind which
lay, as in many another spot along the present coast,
a salt marsh, now become a fertile meadow-land, across
which our Oldfarm house looks out, evening after evening,
to the deep-red sunset glow; while to the south the area
drops gently away to rise again into the deep-soiled,
cultivated lands of the old farm, which extend away,
with no house in sight, framed in the distance by the
mountains of the National Park.
may 30 -
Dectaf
Philasophy
We returned from Europe in the fall of 1878,
after a stay of four years.
That autumn we came
down to Bar Harbor and chose the sito for our Oldfarm
Home upon land my father had already purchased and
planned upon our return to build upon.
A new life
began for us all, centering round this home out of
which sprang the National Park and much besides.
Living for four years abroad in the midst of historic
scenes and reading much with my father about the human
interests connected with them, I came back with a
mind full of questions as to the whys and wherefores
and bent toward the study of philosophy. But my aim
was practical; not the study of dialectics and past
systems of thought leading nowhere but to get light
on human hature and the problems of existance.
Reading
along these lines, I became a member of the Harvard
Alumni Visiting Committee on the department of
touch
philosophy which brought me into/with the work that
was being done there and the men who were doing it.
William James's father had been an old family friend
and William and Henry had been familiar figures at
our house while I was growing up; John Fisko I know
through my aunt, my-father's sister, who had sent
2
abroad when I was a boy to got a first hand knowledge
of Herbert Spencer and the new philosophy; and Josiah
Royco was giving lectures on Spinoza and I arranged
to read with him privately and talk Spinoza system
over which had raised many questions in my mind and
led me far baok into the Middle Ages for its origin.
The Visiting Committee on philosophy at the time
I went an it was an interesting one, no less than the
Faculty. Brooks Adams, younger brother of Charles
Frances and Henry, was its chairman and its members
all were really interesting both in the subject and
the work. I stayed on the Visiting Committee for
years and presently became its Chairman, taking part
as such in the raising a fund for experimental xp
psychology, a new subject then, and ultimately in the
building of a hall for philosophy, which
hitherto had been housed about the yard as space could
be found for it and lecture hours fitted in with
lectures upon other subjects.
Education, a new subject then in Academic circles,
***/ was given place by President Elliot
till independent standing could be gigen it, in the
department of philosophy. And this brought me into
contact with the work that was being done to raise
Everson
3.
its standard and with its teacher, Prof. Hanus, who
had many troubles.
One evening in
, Prof.
Royce came in to see me at our home in Boston to tell
me of difficulties he had got into over the building
of a new house on land he had purchased alongside of
William James on Irving place, part of the old Norton
property at Shady Hill which had been recently opened
for development.
The building of the house then
well under way was oosting much more than he anticipated
and he had no funds to meet the additional expense.
What Kd was ho to do about it.
I took it under
consideration and told my mother, who offered a very
practical solution; sen she would organize some lectures
for him on the history of philosophy, its men and problems,
to be given in different private houses in Boston, the
sponsoring by whose owners of them would give them
standing and command attention.
It was an admirable
scheme providing means if it succeeded for Prof. Royoo
to meet its obligations without borrowing and the burden
of an idebtedness hanging over him.
For a brief
moment he questioned; could he give such a course of
lectures and make them popular without lowering the
dignity of his subject.- Philosophy.
The houses
The houses were obtained, the tickets sold, Royce
wrote his lectures and the whole went off with much
ocalat. Another course was organized for the
following autumn, followed by yet another in New York.
The lectures were put into book form and published,
and the book was dedicated gratefully to my mother,
she had solved his problem.
After that he used
to come down and stay with us at Oldfarm with other
friends each summer that he could get away, having
long talks with my mother and widening his horizon.
Professor Royce, a born philosopher, was &
remarkable man.
Born in a mining town among the
mountains of California, he worked his way along
through the University of California, were Prof.
LaConto befriended him and thence went out to
Germany to study philosophy, getting a place as
instructor at Harvard on his retunn, had a quaint
and homely personality.
He had a head like Soorates,
a slow, drawling speech, and a gift of humor all his
own. His memory was remarkable. I remember
one night when we were returning home, after dining
out in my little open buckboard and were passing
a meadow lit by a misty, waning moon, he started
in his slow drawling utterance quoting what I had
5.
what I had never ohanced to have read or heard before,
Edgar Allon Poe's poem
Walman
which
just fitted the hour and the scene and which he quoted
from beginning to end without the loss of a word
(find the poem) Mr. Dorr make quotation.
You
I rember his once telling me speaking of the
limitation to the imagination to things one has seen
or experienced, that born as ho was in the little
mining town among the mountains of California and
knowing no other scene he had read of the ocean
and longed to see it. He dreamed of it but never
in his dreams could he picture it as other than a
big miner's pond.
Big he could make it but it
had to be no other than what he knew.
He loved
musio of the symphonic type, understanding how it
was built up, and he loved Browning who combined
poetry with religion and philosophic speculation.
One morning, when our house was full at Oldfarm,
he came down to breakfast from the cottage on the
hill where we kept rooms open always to overflow
into, complained bitterly that Dr. Hodgdon, in a
boisterous and
mood, and
had made themselves so disagreeable about - I forget
precisely what now - some favorite poem or poet of
his that he was going home.
He would not stand
it! But breakfast over he was feeling better and by
noon had forgotten it -- which shows philosophers
too are but human after all.
No had a very interesting group of younger people
- friends of my own - who oamo to stay with us every
summer in those days, climbing the mountains and going
off on all-day tramps, with older people mingled and
over enchanging group, bringing now thought and interests.
And we.kept open house without
no
dinner parties,but teas and suppers only and no dress
suit, no telephone as yet, nor electric lights, my mother
still the center of it all until the last, interested
in the younger generation, interested in people.
her face was turned always to the sunrise, hot to the
setting.
My father had passed on the winter following
our return from Egypt, along with Bishop Brooks, the
greatest preacher I have over heard who left all
dootrine behind to ? go to the heart of things, And
our friend and neighbor, Col. John Markoe of Philadelphia,
gar
a very gallent gentleman and soldier of the Civil
Wt. Those were the closing years of a period
that went back with little outward change to the
end of the Civil
the water was flowing
fast the while beneath the bridge and a new world
was in the making.
In 1897 or thereabouts I got a pamphlet from
a younger friend of mine at Harvard, Thoodore William
Richards, a chemist of the new school which mingled
experimental
higher
px1 older/chemistry with/mathematics, outlining a
new idea of his, a continuously Pulspting Atomowhich
I read, so far as I could following/ it with interest
and went to talk it over with him.
It had won him
fame, I learned, and the offer of a ohair one of the
Bamous old Universities of Germany which he was at
that time considering the acceptance of though Harvard
hold him, but the offer of a full professorship.com the
atom of the older schoolof ohemists had always been
a mystery to me and I was interested.
His atom
I Bound was a certain portion of space defined by the
possesssion of certain characteristic energy -- for
this was still the time when men conceived the world
as made op of distinot, indestructible elements.
What makes your atom expand?, I said,
'The solf-
repulsion of the space within it', he answered.
8.
"And what makes 1t contract?", I asked. 'The
kick-back of external space, he answered, resisting
the expansion.
Then somewhere in space, I said,
there must be a point of resistance equal to the forco
of expansion .
'Yes, he said, 'but that
you can place as far off as you will. "It means
however, that a stream of energy, incaluably straight,
is always going out into space and never returning. "
'It does,' he said, I but that does not enter into my
calculation.
For them all I need is mathematical
space, space that I can deal with after the method
of
geometry
S
Frankly, I have no use
for matter.
1
I cannot imagine it in itself but
only by its action upon other similar source-points
of energy.
Give me a point to work from, lines
for measurement and an
equation and I
have all I want. I
This, cradely stated, was the
substance of his theory and it was a theory that
worked so well that it brought him honor and advancement
but it was not long afterward that the new roantgen rays
were discovered and stop by step the old atomic theory
gave way before now theories of matter, equally incom-
prehensible reducced all to motion but cannot toll what
it is that moves, or why or how. This is now nearly
forty years ago and the mystery only deepens. More
9.
than
ever it is wise xp not to dognutage
Our
knowledge is founded on our senses and our senses
tell us only about things that have been useful to
man, his preservation and development to the point
he has now obtained.
We are in the presence of
forces that we cannot estimate, and of SALK others
which
doubtless we are yet unconsoious oft/Nohetheless
make part of ourselves and our environment.
Faith, the evidence of things unseen, tells us
nothing surely about facts; about principals I
feel it does tell st us of eternal truth and that
on it we can surely build.
copy 1
File 1879-80
C
0
OLDFARM
P
Y
Bar Harbor, Maine
The Cottage
August 1, 1940.
His Excellency,
Franklin Delano Roosevelt,
The White House,
Washington, D. C.
Dear President Roosevelt:
I write about a matter that is much in my heart
at this time and that I hope greatly you may look up-
on favorably. I have devoted my life these last two
and thirty years, as its major work and interest, to
the creation of Acadia National Park, where scenery
on the New England coast is at its finest and the
climate at its best, invigorating and refreshing
through the summer heats.
The Park, proclaimed as a National Monument by
President Wilson on July 8th, 1916, became by Act of
Congress and the President's signature a National Park
during the single day and night President Wilson spent
at the White House on his first return from the Ver-
sailles Peace Conference, on February 26th, 1919. It
has steadily advanced since then till it now holds all
the mountains, with a single and minor exception, in
the Mount Desert Island chain, and extends across the
entrance to Frenchmans Bay to include the magnificent
rounded mass of Schoodic Head, looking down upon Moose
Island where the best opportunity for overseas radio
communication upon our Atlantic coast exists and has
been fully developed under expert advice.
The first gifts of land in which the Park orig-
inated, conveyed to a public service corporation
formed by President Eliot and myself for the recep-
tion and holding of such properties, began with a
gift from myself from an early grant of land acquired
Page 2.
by my father in 1868, before any summer residences ex-
isted on Mount Desert Island or the coast about it.
1879
Upon this land, eleven years later, we built our home,
Oldfarm, occupying it the following year, it being one
of the first and pleasantest of the summer homes built
upon the Island, which still remains, my father and
mother having long since passed away, in my possession.
This old family home, which has been in its day the
scene of much generous hospitality, I would like greatly
to have become, while I yet live, the possession of the
United States, that it may serve the President and his
Executive Officers, who will plan the policies of the
Government in the critical, important times that lie
ahead, in maintaining health and vigor for their work.
The acceptance of this gift, made directly to the
Executive Branch of the Government, entails no obligation
other than that of using it in such fashion as may best
serve the purpose for which the property is offered.
Acadia National Park can readily at this time be
brought to extend unbrokenly to entrance on this prop-
erty, opening directly to its roads and trails in all
their beauty and variety, protected by an efficient,
well-organized ranger corps. Upon the opposite side,
the lands of the estate I offer, of exceptional beauty
in themselves, descend onto a harbored shore where I
kept my own sailing boat in safety for many seasons.
The property offered is directly accessible from
Washington by air and water over distances that, reckon-
ed in terms of time, are rapidly and constantly diminish-
ing; while radio communication, rapidly improving, is
already of the best, as are those of mail, telephone and
telegraph, making a nerve center of the site of the most
direct and sensitive character.
The house I offer, simple in character but spacious
and most comfortable, stands out alone upon its site,
with ample space about it of garden grounds and lawns;
Page 3.
while executive offices for work, independent of the
house, could be added, unseen, in its immediate vicinity
and equipped with every facility for planning, discussion
or the dispatch of business.
I may add in conclusion that the whole State, of
whatever Party, would welcome most warmly the estab-
lishment of such a summer home for the National Execu-
tive, and do all that may lie within its power to pro-
mote its purpose.
Hoping greatly that my offer and its purpose may
appeal to you, believe me to remain, with ever high
regard,
Sincerely yours,
GEORGE BUCKNAM DORR.
Education
Spiritualism.
In the eighteen forties and fifties a good deal of interest
was taken in Boston and elsehwere in the phenomena of spiritualism,
as they were alleged to be. Whatever their cause might be, the
phenomena at least seemed real; and if real, to open up new fields
for study, new conceptions of existence. My father was interested,
my mother too, and making trial had some experiences which it did
not seem possible to explain in terms of the known facts of material
existence. I knew nothing of these at the time --I was too young --
but they were told me later, and what my father told me I could
not question; he was an excellent and cool observer. Years later
I, chance throwing the opportunity in my way, experimentedmyself
along the same line and equally arrived at no conclusions.
A number of years after I graduated from Harvard, returning
1878-19
from some years abroad with a new phenomena of electricity awaken-
ing my interest, I went out to the Jefferson Laboratory at Harvard
where the professor of Physics in charge --Professor Trowbridge
was an old acquaintance, and entered myself as a postgraduate student
in one of his courses upon electricity. With a more mature mind
than the other students in the class, I sought to understand the
principles governing the phenomena and, lingering along after the
others had left, I asked him certain questions which he frankly
told me he could not answer, and would think them over. I said
that I should have thought they were questions his students would
be asking constantly and familiar to him. "No", he said, "they
Spiritualism =2
work at the problems set them, read what the text book says, and
leave it there. Those who want to understand the philosophy of
the matter are few; two or three in the year, perhaps, at most."
"But", he added, "you are working along the wrong line! You want
to know the theory of what happens and hang your facts upon it, al
there is no theory; all that we know as yet are facts."
This
is the case also with what are temred the phenomena of spirituali
all that we can hope to learn at the present time are facts; and
all we can do is to learn whether they are genuine or not. For
the whole study of these phenomena is complicated by endless frand
For one thing, I made up my mind that there is communication be-
neath the level of our consciousness between mind and mind, not
made through any sense we know nor limited apparently by establish
sense conditions. Yet, and "there's the rub", it is not 80 simple
as that; one might understand one mind's acting on another, trans-
mitting a name or thought; there are plenty of instances of that.
But there are cases that seem beyond question where active, creati
intelligence comes between and the thought taken from one person
is dramatized, and not simply echoed, in coming from the other.
What is that intermediate intelligence and how does it work?
When we ask ourselves this, we have to recognize that we know
literally nothing of consciousness in itself, neither where it is
seated nor how it operates. It is one of the ultimates of existen
Spiritualism -3
which there seems as yet no chance of reaching. It is one of
Professor Trowbridge's "facts" and which we cannot even formulate
a theory for it to hang upon.
They are trying experiments now at Duke University on this
very subject of thought transmission and have published within a
few months results that so far as they have gone seem to postulate
communication not limited by the time conditions of known electrical
phenomena --which make light the ultimate of speed. Communication
between distant points seems to be instantaneous and if it be
our physicial science kn owB no medium or agency through which such
communication can take place. They are continuing with the investi-
gation and if, as they believe, they can establish the facts it
seems to make necessary the recognition of energies and forces,
hidden from ordinary observation, but constantly in operation none
the less, which followed further, may work a revolution in our
conceptions of the universe.
Another complication of these old phenomena of my father's
time is that they relate not only to thought communication but
seem to have been associated with physical movements, and move-
ments directed apparently by some extraneous intelligence that
can receive ideas and act on the matter.
I remember one summer when we were in the Engadine in Switzer-
land spending the summer, that I sat at table d'hote next my
father's and mother's friend Mr. Benjamin F. Rotch of Boston, a
man of unusual intelligence. He told me, speaking of the phenomena
of that time, whid Wi he, too, had been interested in, that one time
Spiritualism -4
when a famou 8 medium a man, was in . Boston, he and a small group
of his personal friends, genteèmen who all knew each other well,
met at his house in Boston together with this medium, no one else
being present nor any possibility of a confederate; that the medium
brought with him certain of the paraphernalia of the medium's
trade - a large hand-bell, like a school bell, with a stout handle
to it, and that this went flying about the room, while a heavy
mahogany dining table in the room was drawn apart where the leaves
were inserted to enlarge it on occasion, and this bell in its
gyrations thrust itself up, the handle rising through the space the
table was drawn apart, just wide enough to admit it, and that he
grapsed it firmly in his hand, resting his fist upon the table
either side, and said to the medium, "Now if your spirits will
take that away from me, I'll believe there is something in it."
The medium replied that he did not know whether he could get this
done but he would ask the controls and see. Mr. Rotch tole me
that in a moment or two he felt a tiny pull upon the bell which
made him laugh and ask if that were all that they could do,
but he said the pull increased and increased till finally it drew
the handle of the bell out of his grasp, supported by the table
as it was, not as if some one were jerking it away but as though
some great machine was quietly but irrestiatably pulling it from
his grasp. If Mr. Rotch had been a man of impressionable character,
and if no others had been present, or a confederate had been there,
one might look for some normal explanation of what took place, but
Spiritualia -5
he was not in the least of an emotional character and his experi-
ence does not st and alone. Others have had a like, nor is any
explanation offered. I recall his commenting upon it to me and
saying that he was then, in the prime of his younger life, unusually
muscular and strong; no man could have drawn that bell away from him
without a jerk, a sudden pull, but the force that withdrew it from
his hand was like that of some great machine.
I have known of other instances in which heavy mahogany
dining tables were moved about in private homes when a small
group of friends, no medium being present, joined their fingertips
above it. The hands of all present being visible and the table
moving in response to suggestions given by the people present.
It all seems utterly meaningless but if there be truth at all
anywhere it means that there are fordes at work, and forces
not wholly dis-assoc iated from intelligence, which if we can learn
more about them and bring them under the range of observation may
alter our whole (conception of the universe.
One of the things that happened in that first period of my
father's and mother's interest in the subject was when they went
on to New York to stay and dined out the first evening they
were there where these matters were spoken of at table and an
address given of a medium, a man named Foster, if I remember right,
whom they said was remarkable. My father took down the name and
the address and thought no more of it, but the following day he
and my mother and a friend of my mother's who had come on with them,
Spiritualism -6
were walking through the street when it suddenly occured to
my father that they were passing the address he had written down
the night before, and he suggested that they gotin and see if
he were there and would give them a sitting, which they did.
The man was there and some remarkable things took place. He did
not go into a trance but seemed to pass into a state not wholly
normal in which he carried on communications, according to his
talk, with personalities and presences in another world. He
asked my father to write down on a blank sheet of paper questions
my father would like to ask and give him the paper, not letting him
see what was written. This my father did folding the paper as he
wrote and taking it where by no possibility could the medium read
as he wrote, and folding the paper down as he wrote each question,
to oover it from view. When he had asked his questions he took
the folded paper and twisted it and tossed it over to the medium
who took it up and held it in his hand and began to talk, answer-
ing the questions categorically as my father had written them.
What the questions were I do not remember but this I recall;
that one of my uncles on my father's side, a half-brother of an
older group, had recently died at our home in the country, my
father caring for him to the end. Of him, as though present,
my father asked one of the qestions he had written down, and when
he came to this question the medium began to talk not as though
talking himself--he was an illiterate man of common speech - but
as my uncle, who was a noted scholar of a time when long-syllabled
words and Johnsonian phrases were the custom among scholars, and
Spiritualism =7
which my father said he could by no possibility imagine the medium
could have used even if he had known my uncle.
But a more cirious thing than this happened. The friend
who had come on with my mother and father from Boston had been
living abroad for years and while she was there she had become
engaged to a Englishman. The engagement was never announced and
my mother who knew her intimately had no knowledge of it. The
man had died; the incident was closed. But at this seance the
medium insisted that there was some one there, a man, whowished
to sent a message. It me ant nothing to my father and mother
and my mother's friend, if she realized what was coming, must have
endeavored to avoid it, if avoidance were possible, but the
medium, controlled as it were by this presence on the other side
insisted and the name and the facts came out, much to the embarrass-
ment of my mother's friend. What was said beyond the name and
the fact of presence I do not recall, or if it were told me, but
in some way the past which had meant so much to my mother's friend
surged up and presented itself dramatically before her and before
my mother and my father who had no knowledge whatever of it and
from who se minds it could not in any way have come. Nor could
the medium have had any knowledge of my mother's friend, for she
and my father and mother had only come to the City the evening
before and their coming in to see the medium was the merest chance,
yet somehow the fact came out and came out dramatized as though
the man she had lovee was present.
B8
Another time. earlier than this, my mother when she was
living at Jamaica Plain, and I was but a young child, too young
to be told of it at the time, went at see a medium she had heard
of, hoping possibly to get some word, if there were truth in it,
of a brother no had lately died abroad and her whole thought
in going was centered upon this, but a seeming personality in-
truded itself in the talk of the medium on going into a trance,
much to my mother's vexation who did her best to force it, - the
personality that intruded on the trance - aside. But this person-
ality - one doesn't know what name to give it other - insisted
with reiteration that he had done my father a wrong in a business
transaction connected with a bank and wished to tell him of his
deep regret. My mother telling my father of this on her return
home said "I might have thought it was so and so (referring to
a matter of which she knew in part ) but that he said it related
to a bank and that affair had no connection with a bank. "
My father replied, "It all turned upon a bank; it was a bank
transaction", and he was much impressed. The result of all which
is that "there are more things in heaven and earth's Pition
than thou has dreamt of in thy philosophy."
7/14/08
Dorr Papers
Spectralian
Boston intent, 1940's-
M&u Dar among them,to IS to GISB leter.
Years later, 6 B D experimated "no conclusions."
Electrical studies c Prot. Troubridge.
whole "whole study complicated } endless fraud."
GBD concluded that then is conscoous comment
limited to established sense data.
"We know literally nothing of consumer in itself,
neite when it is seate nor how it operates."
n.y.
Recalls suman In Smitgerlad, sat next to Denjamin
1.4
7. Rotch of Proston, who referred to a tomous
medium's his experience i forces operating on
p.5
physical objects. Also, "I have to noun of other
instruces" when "heavy mahogary dining
table
me moved about duy goth of small group of
tues, no medium by present.
p-L
Really parents expensi in 1840's- is C.H.D'S
> use it medium to role contact with
his half brother whom CHD helcared for.
p.7.
Citer moth instrum of meducin knowledge at past
e ments of one of Dorr's friend.
n.y
Citer anth water From 1850's, N 6W0 wet 4
see a medicar hoping to got info "afa
broth ur had lately died abroad."
But a "personality" intruded insisting he
had done CHO a wrong in a business
tranaction, wishing to expus rep ugget.
When mouth to CHD, "he wes and
impused since it insomatid 10 his
line history. Conclude: involething
in heaven earth that thouhes dreat
of in thy philosophy
3. Illness in 1880.
"Early in the 1880's I had a long illness
a caplete but -dnu of nerv ous rigar
ad energy The cause was obscause."
Physicans punded no help. "It looked as if
I right not live."
The GBD found an unsamed book telly of
writeral cures- people put in "meomeric trances"
to receive suggestions. Dozs not benefits
google.
na it physician a hospital in India. (Braid?)
Carried - at high seentia plane."
Wnked attached hy The Lancet, "in the uilest manner.
Wheel it work on Dar?
At saw two an movent in Booton sealed
"Mental Healing, one sf its nones.
Han th mind weres the in street but
'one knew methi more, ne how fe
Suggestion been effective there the
n. 3
nervous supten. Anoble group, Chush
Sminsts, troth up c Mrs. Eady, what
Dorr acvided because he was not seperation
in read, to take up an faith doctors
I and not industried
Mrs. Dor fond a practition for GRD,
The female practition ( Mrs. D E? Urs.Dresser?)
said all that an human was t he
"quiescent IN our attitude t has
a open wind. The powerlag deeparthan words.
GBD walf regulars enly Z was t no effect.
But suddey I realized a clot 7 felt c
new power, a new energy rising wh me + this
3.
continued to someweah men, worly a
mul from Format in my state." The
change he interputs + due due to
the unconscious mind it has gun in
the litt I needed of the improvent
catiness on, gradesly buy me new
strength + vigor."
Undated
CAM 1-
casa,
1285
Excellent
Road
(850's)
71879
-6B0 wheelful BH the building ira torristi and GSD. fine
The Long Field and the Great Meadow
in the early days
⑈
are Kebo
The Long Field I remember walking out to one
1879
Sunday afternoon in the summer of 1879, when our
Oldfarm house was building and we were boarding at
the DesIsles House in the Village. Colonel John
Markoe and his wife were spending the summer in a
2
house ndarby and it was with them and a pleasant
group of younger folks who were staying with them
forg
that I was walking.
Tall spruces of the native wood that had grown
upon the Field had just been cut and the ground was
being cleared of roots, the soil sold and hauled away
to make the lawns of summer homes along the Bar Harbor
shore.
There was then no town road that led to it,
nor to the Great Meadow beyond, which remained hidden
from view from any public way until twenty years
later, when I built the road connecting the County
road to Otter Creek with the right-of-way to Harden
Farm.
2.
Entrance to the Long Field was over a haul-way
round the northern end of Strawberry Hill, avoiding
the brook which swept the narrow gorge below from
side to side.
The Great Meadow basin was then completely locked
away, shut in by woods, no road approaching it.
A
single farm, called after its owner 'Harden Farm!
reached down to it on the northwest, at the foot of the
Kebo range, and a right-of-way road led to it from
Cromwell Harbor road to give it entrance.
Climbing, one looked down on the Meadow from its
encirclement of mountains; else, near as it was to Bar
Harbor, it remained -- when life was at its fullest
in the big hotel days and early period of summer home
construction unvisited and unseen.
But an old
Indian Trail, leading through the Gorge from the
northern shore of Frenchmans Bay to Otter Creek, ran
past it on the west, around the mountain base, along whose
line I later built the beautiful Hemlock Road past
Sieur de Monts Spring.
3.
The Great Meadow must anciently have been the
basin of a lake walled around by high hills, with a
background to the south of the Island's mountain
chain, cut at their midst by the deep Otter Creek
gorge, forming a picture, could one have seen it in
that early time, of seclusion and great beauty, with
the green forests growing down unbrokenly to the
water's edge. Gradually through the centuries, the
waters flowing from this lake cut their way down where
the Long Field now lies, finding an outlet through the
rock which all but closed their passage at its northern
end, beyond which it unites with Cromwells Harbor Brook.
Gradually, the stream / deepening its channel, the lake
drained itself down to the present meadow level, that
which lay below this level filling up with washed-down
clay and gravel from the hillsides round about and with
peat from the in-growth of sphagnum moss round about
the water's edge.
2. 4.
At this stage, it would have been possible for
the early settlers, when, pioneering, they came to
make homes for themselves along the Bar Harbor shore,
fishing and lumbering, to drain, at slight expense,
with all the big timber they then had at had, these
outflowing waters and to have re-created the lake and
furnished themselves with a water power, at Bar Harbor's
very door, ample for their own and the future village's
every need, whether for water or for power and water of
the purest for drinking, close at hand, had they but had
the vision, and altered, at a single stroke, the whole
character of the future town.
When, climbing the hills that close it in about,
I first saw the meadow, it was an uncultivated bog
producing only masses of wild swamp grasses, green in
spring but which quickly dried to a dusky brown when
summer droughts began. Amddst these grasses, here and
there, grew beds of the native cranberry, with foliage
that turned to brilliant shades of crimson in the late
summer, and great patches of the swamp rhodora, with its
beautiful red blooms at the end of June. That was as the
Meadow was when I first knew it, when we built our summer
3.5
home on the opposite Compass Harbor shore and dwelt
in it.
Not long after, in the middle Eighties, when we
1880's
had spent the winter abroad, my motherm father and I,
we were on a trip along the Riviera, homeward bound,
when we received, in a belated batch of mail, a letter
from our caretaker at Bar Harbor, who told us that a
terrific fire, starting among the dry swamp grasses of
the Meadow, was raging even as he wrote, over the whole
length of Strawberry Hill and threatening the homes upon
the shore, our own among them -- and there the letter
bboke off, after adding that our friend and neighbor,
Mr. Edward Coles of Philadelphia, with a home near ours
on the shore, had packed all his silver and valuable
possessions of small bulk in sheets, ready to carry off
in case the house should go.
4.6
Then no further word reached us for near a week, while we
travelled on in suspense, not knowing whether we had a home in
Bar Harbor to return to or if it lay in ashes. At last a second
letter came, giving full detail and the welcome assurance that
our house was safe as well as those of our neighbors along the
shore.
Cranberry pickers on the Meadow had in some way started a
fire, with pipe or matches probably, among the dry swamp grasses
and, unaware, had left it smoldering. The high southwest wind
which accompanies such times oi' drought along our coast fanned
it into flame, whose smoke was reported to the office of the
Selectmen. Two men were sent out to put out the fire. It had
at that stage nothing but the dry grass tofeed it and they beat
it out sufficiently, as they thought, and returned home to dinner
While they were gone the fire started up again and when the men
returned it had spread on to the then thickly wooded western side
of Strawberry Hill, swept on by terrific gusts of wind, great sheets
of flame which it seemed that nothing but the sea could stop. But
then a miracle had happened. The tremendous heat of the fire, when
it reached the steep eastern declivity of Strawberry Hill, caused an
updraught so strong that it held the fire in its onward rush and
saved the houses on the shore below. All that was needed then was
to establish a cordon of men with buckets who extinguished the
sparks and burning embers which rose into the sky and then dropped
upon the lawns and other grounds of houses on the shore.
5. 7
The town had no water supply nor organized fire department in
those days. All depended upon wells which, shallow at best to the
bedrock below, were all but dry. Realizing the possibility of such
a fire emergency my father and I had dug out near the Compass Harbor
shore where a brook flowed by in spring and fall, a cistern forty-
five feet long by fifteen wide which went down to the glaciated bed-
rock nine feet below. Putting a cover over it we had always kept it
filled with water drawn from the brook. This now proved invaluable
to the fire fighters from the town and was their only means of ob-
taining water for extinguishing minor blazes which sprang up here
and there upon the various estates on the shore.
8.
In 1899, to obtain for my mother and our friends
and neighbors on the Eastern Shore a short and pleasant
drive, not leading through the Twon but connecting with
its western side, I made the Town a favorable offer to
obtain the right-of-way and build e, road around the
Western side of Strawberry Hill, connecting the
Otter Creek county road with the Town's right-of-way
road to Harden Farm, limiting the Town's expense to
$2,500, an estimated one-half of what the road would
cost, making myself responsible for the rest. The
Town accepted, the road was built for me by the Mount
Desert Nurseries and opened to use in the Spring of 1900.
This road, opening up for the first time the
Great Meadow basin made a beautiful quiet drive for
use with horses.
The meadow, its drainage blocked
by the silting up of the brookbed, was a bog, with
wild cranberries growing anid swamp grass on its eastern
side, which turned to beautiful color in the later season,
while on its western side, and embayed by the extension
of the forest onto it grew the swamp-loving rhodora,
mingled with Labrador pea and similar wild plants of
the northern bogs, and forming brilliant sheets of color
every spring.
Road construction requirements were simple in
those horse-driving days,
I drained the road-bed
well and graded it, using such material as I found along
the way and the Town has never had occasion since to
make expenditure upon it, other than on surfacing it
for motor use.
Fifteen years later, when motor cars had come in
use, I built, owning then the land, a road around the
Meadow's southern end, continuing my e arlier road, so
that people coming from Seal Harbor or beyond might
take this shorter, better routs to reach the Building
of Arts for concerts, flower shows and the like, XVX/
the Kebo Valley Golf Club, with its nine-hole course,
or summer residencesobn Bar Harbor's western side.
When, in 1930, Mr. RockefeAler, having acquired the
land on the Island's ocean front, from Sand Beach to
Hunter's Brook, asked the Town if it would surrender
to the Government its Ocean Drive that he might
build,for the Park, replacing it, a motor road along
this whole magnificent stretch of shore, bridging the
Creek, and the Town agreed, he included in his offer
the construction of a road connecting the Cadillao
Mountain road where it rises over Great Pond hill with
this ocean drive.
His offer accepted, he brought
surveyers down from New York to study this connection,
who worked the whole following summer through, consulting
also, in regard to it, eminent landscape architects,
before giving the route publicity.
But the result
was not a happy one, limited as the study was to lands
the Park already owned.
And ultimately Mr. Rockefeller,
giving the lands he had acquired for carrying out the
plan, withdrew from his offor, leaving it to the Govern-
ment to continue with it,placing it for execution with
the Federal Bureau of Roads for further study.
In this,
familiar with the whole territory as I was, I was able
to help.
The road originally surveyed was laid out over the
Great Meadow's boggy bottom, where construction would be
costly and no compensating view could be obtained.
at high level
The road I had laid out and built/around the Meadow basin
NA
was clearly the place where the rod should go. In this, once
stafted, all agreed, but none had thought it possible
the Town would yield the road to the Government.
I thought it would, if given good pe rmanent connection with
the road when turned over to the Park and thi 8 connecti on
I W as in position to make possible through my ownership of
the Long Field, the one tract still left to me of the land
I had originally secured for my Wild Gardens project.
This I gave.
The Tonw, the matter being laid
before it at its next annual meeting, agreed, and my road of
thirty odd years before round the Meadow's northern YX
end and eastern side, was taken for the
new Park road, leaving free from road construction the lake-
like moadow bottom and incidentally saving the Government
a full half its estimated oost.
In making my gift to the Government of the land
down the Long Field, which alone made it possible to obtain
the Town's consent to the relinquishment to the Government
of its road around the Great Meadowm I asked in return one
thing:
The construction, planting and maintenance of a
path over it and across the Great Meadow beyond, connecting
the Town with Sieur de Monts Spring and the mountain trails
which rise from it.
This path, long since planned and partly built,
lies wholly in its course over land of my giving and recalls,
being full of association for me, my Wild Gardene plen which
led on to the Park's creation.
To this, referred to Washington, the Government,
represented by the National Park Service, agreeed, as it
did also to my having the plants intended for it grown
in advance En-m under my direction by the Mount Desert Nurseries,
COPY: NEA: 1/30/41
I
Random notes on the early history and development as a summer
resort of Mount Desert Island and particularly Seal Harbor.
DAS
By George L. Stebbins -- August 1938
X
MY
The discovery of Mount Desert Island by Samuel de Champlain
for
in 1604 and the various attempts at settlement in those early
times are so well known through the accounts of Francis Parkman
and others that I shall not describe them but commence with the
first permanent settlers who established themselves about the
year 1768. The Somes family and others at Somerville, now Somes-
ville, John Hamor, Captain Samuel Hull and others at Hulls Cove
and the Manchesters, Clements and others at Northeast Harbor
and Seal Harbor. The Town of Mount Desert was incorporated in
the year 1789 and included all of the Island, Bear Island, the
Cranberry Isles, and other small islands. The Town of Eden,
now Bar Harbor was set off in the year 1796, the Cranberry Isles
in 1830, and the Town of Tremont, now Southwest Harbor and Tremont,
in 1848. In the year 1840 when the town included Southwest Harbor
and Tremont as well as the town of Mount Desert, the taxable valua-
tion of the town was as follows:
Real Estate
$109,290
Personal
59,801
Total
$169,091
and it is interesting to note that of the Personal Estate,
$37,850 was represented by shipping, indicating that almost all
of the inhabitants got their living by following the sea. The
total valuation of the present Town of Mount Desert for the year
1930 was $3,787,000.
In 1840 there were in the town:
213 Oxen
Now o
382 cows
" 71
52 horses
11 42
19 pleasure carriages
From about 1797 to 1807 the land in the vicinity of Seal
Harbor and Northeast Harbor was surveyed by John Peters of Bluehill
who had moved from Massachusetts to Bluehill, Maine, and had been
engaged in "running out" settlers' lots in various parts of Hancock
County under the authority of the General Court of Massachusetts.
It may be interesting to note that this John Peters became
the ancestor of many men later prominent in the affairs of Maine,
including two chief justices of the Supreme Court of Maine, the
present Judge of the United States district court and the donor to
the Trustees of Public Reservations of the Black Mansion and its
contents at Ellsworth.
John Poters and a son named James ran an east and west line
starting at a point on Asticou Hill and running eastward to a point
on Day Mountain, crossing the Long Pond Meadows north of Long Pond
and the Jordan Pond road near the house now owned by James McCrae.
North and south lines from this back line to the shore divided
the land into settler lots, but when Peters came to a point on the
east side of Seal Harbor just back of the present residence of
Arthur M. Clement, he stopped and made a note in his book that the
land east of the point was not worth surveying, "that is was lazy
land". That worthless land now comprises the sites of the Dane,
Dunham, Hoe, Ford, and other houses.
About 1866 or 1867 a large tract of this land was owned by
a man named Porter Brewer who said he wanted to sell it. There
were two buyers, James Clement, son of the founder of Seal Harbor,
and John Bracy, and Brewer said that he would sell it to the
highest bidder so they sat on the ledge and commenced to bid against
each other, starting at 10d an acre and bidding up until finally
Clement bid $1.00 an acre and Bracy told him he could have it,
it was not worth that. When I made this statement at the Village
Improvement Society Meeting at the Seaside Inn, August 12th, 1931,
Mr. Charles II. Clement, the son of James Clement, said that he
remembered the incident and was there at the time. Mr. Clement
died in 1932 at the age of 91.
The town assessors recently told me that the square half mile
included in this tract is now the most valuable square half mile
in the town, including, of course, the buildings on it. When this
sale at $1.00 an acre was made, the land was surveyed by Eben Hamor
of Town Hill and I was told by my friend, Judge Peters, that the
next time Hamor came to survey land in that vicinity, it had sold
for $2000 an acre, this of course was many years after.
The Town of Eden, now Bar Harbor, was set off from the Town
of Mount Desert in 1796 and the first town meeting was held at the
residence of Captain Samuel Hull of Derby, Connecticut who settled
at Hulls Cove prior to 1789 and in this connection it is possible
that I may claim to belong to one of the oldest families of the
Island for my great, great grandfather was Captain Samuel Hull
of
Derby, Conn. At first I thought this Captain Hull might be my
ancestor but upon consulting "Uncle" Eben Hamor who was the sage
of the Island at the time I arrived and knew all the families, I
found they were not the same person but probably my ancestor was an
uncle of the settler of Hulls Cove. The records show that John
Manchester settled in Northeast Harbor in 1775 while the first
settler at Seal Harbor was John Clement who came in 1809.
In 1796 William Bingham of Philadelphia purchased most of the
eastern half of the Island (it being a part of the tract owned by
de Gregoire family up to 1792).
2
Mr. Bingham died in England leaving this property in trust
for his children, two of his daughters marrying members of the
Baring family, and this trust has continued until the present day,
most of the titles running back to that ownership.
At first the early settlers were only squatters but as they
became established, they went over to Ellsworth and got deeds for
their lots from the Trustees of the Bingham estate paying a few
dollars for the titles. The deeds described the conveyances as
to the shore which was considered sufficient until a few years ago
when some lawyers searching titles raised the point that they did
not convey to low water mark of the sea and we were therefore
obliged to get deeds from the Bingham Trustees for the property
between low and high water mark which were given for a nominal
consideration. In looking at the old maps, one of which I have
dated 1868, it is interesting to note the shift in population from
the west to the east side of the Island, at that time the most
popular section being around Pretty Marsh, Center, Seal Cove and
Bass Harbor which now is the most sparsely settled part of the
Island.
The Island was brought to the attention of the eastern city
dwellers by artists who cruised this way before the Civil War,
but very few people came until after that was over, when the resi-
dents of Bar Harbor commenced to take boarders, and the first
summer cottage, which still stands near the Newport Hotel, now in
process of demolition, was built in 1867 by Alpheus Hardy of
Boston who was followed the next year by Mr. Dorr, father of
George B. Dorr, who has done so much for the Island. The attrac-
tions of the climate and scenery soon became known to the fashion-
able world and gradually the boarding houses were replaced by
large, barnlike hotels which offered very little in the way of
conveniences but were most popular, particularly with the young
people. The heyday of hotel life at Bar Harbor was from 1875
to 1885 when the Rodick House was the center of social life. It
was situated in the main street extending with its grounds from
Higgins' Grocery Store down to Cottage Street, the tennis courts
being on the lower end of the lot. While life was very simple,
Bar Harbor was a very fashionable resort and it was considered
quite the thing for a debutante of Boston, New York or Philadelphia,
to spend at least part of the summer there. Sproul's restaurant
catered to the fashionables and the races of the Kebo Valley Club
were gala affairs. When the hotel dwellers commenced to build
cottages there was very rapid development and there was an active
and rising real estate market from the middle 70's up to the boom
year of 1887. The first cottage builders took up the shore
property but later the possibilities of the hillsides were seen
and farseeing men from the cities planned their development.
Charles T. How of Boston was the leader of these and did more than
anyone else to promote the best development of Bar Harbor, buying
large tracts of land and building the Highbrook, Cleftstone and
other roads on the hillside.
3
Although the first residents landed at Southwest Harbor,
that being the largest village, the development of the west side
of the Island came later, and that of Northeast Harbor dates from
the your 1880 when President Eliot of Harvard University bought
land and built his cottage and Bishop Doane of Albany stopped at
Squire Kimball's boarding house situated on the site of the present
Kimball House and also bought land. It is stated that Deacon
Kimbnll was very much puzzled by his new boarder and stated to a
friend that he did not know what to call him because he had regis-
tered in the style of an English Bishop as "William of Albany".
It wns almost an accident that President Eliot did not settle
where Sorrento now is for his son told me that in 1877 or 1878
he oruised down this way with his two sons then in college and
made an offer to the Widow Bean for her farm comprising the point
at Sorronto, quite a large tract of land. It was a good offer for
that time but was refused because the widow thought it so high
that there might be some hidden value that she did not know about.
It sooms that a short time previous, silver ore had been discovered
at Sullivan Falls and the widow thought that this college professor
who was a scientific man had discovered silver ore on her property
and timt was why he made such a high offer. Dr. Samuel Eliot also
tel li me that he and his brother camped at Northeast Harbor in 1880
and advised their father to buy land there for a summer home,
whereupon he drove along the shore front from Manchester's point
to Soal Harbor and selected the point where the house now stands
as the best there was. The development of Nor theast Harbor as a
hotol and cottage colony was very rapid for the next 12 years and
has nontinued steadily up to the present day.
The first settler in Seal Harbor was John Clement who came in
1809 and set up a bark tent until a log cabin could be built. He
was n cooper and made barrels for the Hadlocks of Cranberry Isles.
During the next year he settled on the east side of the harbor on
land of the Bingham Land Purchase. His sons took to fishing and
went to the Magdalen Islands in the springs for herring to smoke
for the Boston market. They succeeded in this business and accu-
mulated enough money to buy some real estate where the Seaside Inn
now stands. One of the brothers, James Clement, built what is now
known as the Homestead Cottage which still stands and in 1869
thoy sold all interest in the fish business and commenced to re-
build the old house into a summer hotel which was a success from
the start although for a number of years in a small way.
In 1884 the Glen Cove Hotel was built on the site of the present
Village Green and later an annex was built to this hotel connected
wi the the main building by a passage way known as the "Hyphen".
In its early days Seal Harbor was noted for the number of
literary and scientific men and college professors who made their
4
homes there either at the hotels or in cottages. Among them being
Professors Rowland of John Hopkins, Dana and Summer of Yale, Toy
and Thayer of Harvard, besides Doctors Edward K. Dunham, Christian A.
Herter and Simon Flexner, the authors James Ford Rhodes, Hamilton W.
Mabie, Winston Churchill, Dr. Henry van Dyke and others. In fact
at the old Glen Cove Hotel the scholarly atmosphere was such that
the bell boys were sometimes wont to construe latin prose with the
guests.
Up to the year 1894 there was very little cottage development
at Seal Harbor, the principal summer residence being that built in
1891 by Mr. and Mrs. George B. Cooksey on the point at the east
side of the harbor now occupied by the residence of Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest B. Dane. Previous to this Admiral Crowninshield, Mr. R. R.
Thomas and Messrs. Boggs and Barr had bought on the west side
of the harbor but there was no road to enable people to get to
the shore front beyond the Cooksey point and the real development
of the place commenced when the Cookseys bought 800 acres of land
with the shore front from their point to beyond Little Hunter's
Beach, a distance of about two miles and Mr. Cooksey in 1895
built the Sea Cliff Drive and provided an adequate water supply
for the place from Jordan Pond. Development followed rapidly and
summer cottages were built by Professors Rowland and Dana besides
Messrs. Hoe and Bodman and others, and also Doctors Edward K.
Dunham, and Christian A. Herter who had besides, well equipped
laboratories and took an active interest in the sanitary conditions
of the place, the milk and water being regularly inspected commencing
with the year 1902.
After the death of Dr. Herter, work in his laboratory was
continued by Dr. Henry D. Dakin, developer with Dr. Carrell of the
Dakin solution which saved many lives during the World War and
in 1921 the place was bought by Dr. James B. Murphy of the Rocke-
feller Institute for Medical Research making a continuous line of
scientific men in the same location interested in the welfare of
the place.
Speaking of these laboratories, there is rather an amusing
story in connection with Dr. Herter's. Dr. Herter had a number of
monkeys for his spinal meningitis experiments and one day the
laboratory attendant was careless and left the door of the cage
open, whereupon the monkeys escaped and sought their home in the
woods of Mount Desert Island. But finding its natural food scarce,
one of them was tempted by the smell of cooking from a cottage
occupied by an old gentleman whose cook was broiling a steak for
his noonday meal. She was a good cook and had been in his employ
for a long time but unfortunately was inclined to indulge a little
too much in the cup that cheers and also inebriates. The kitchen
window was open and the monkey seeing and smelling the food, jumped
through it onto the shoulder of the cook who, not knowing what had
happened to her, rushed in to her master who was equally surprised
but soon recovered his composure and drove out the animal.
5
When I came to Seal Harbor in the year 1892 for a visit to my
cousin, Mrs. George B. Cooksey, who had recently built her house on
the point where the Dane house now stands, there was not a house on
the Jordan Pond Road. There were two hotels and only five cottages
which had been built for summer residents, although there were a
few other houses owned by the permanent residents, which were
rented in the summer time.
The water supply was from a dam in the brook about half way up
the Jordan Pond Road, and was very fitful.
Mr. Cooksey soon saw that a better supply was needed and he
bought the plant and franchise of the water company from Mr. Campbell
of the Glen Cove Hotel and planned to bring the water from Jordan
Pond down the Jordan Brook valley to the foot of Long Pond. He
thereupon had a survey made for condemnation purposes at the outlet
of Jordan Pond where the present dam now is, the only point where
a water supply could be taken from the pond, and had his lawyer,
John A. Peters, now Judge Peters of Ellsworth, commence condemna-
tion proceedings at Ellsworth, went to Boston, and ordered the
necessary pipe, the order being so large that it took all the
available pipe there was in Boston, had it shipped by fast freight
to Mount Desert Ferry and chartered a steamboat with Captain William
Cox of Seal Harbor, an experienced navigator, on board to trans-
port it from there to Seal Harbor. At this point the officers of
the Northeast Harbor Water Company and the residents along the
Asticou Road got wind of the proceedings and concluded that they
would like to have control of the supply of water from Jordan Pond.
They had possession of another charter which was outstanding
and which contained the right to take water from Jordan Pond and
under the impression that the first company that laid pipe from the
pond would have the prior right, telegraphed to Boston for pipe
and received word back that there was no pipe in Boston. In the
meantime, Mr. Cooksey's pipe had reached Mount Desert Ferry but
its arrival at Seal Harbor was delayed because of a dense fog,
so they thought of some old rusty discarded pipe which they had in
stock and rushed it up to Jordan Pond with a gang of men to dig a
trench and put their pipe in it, although there was no possibility
of its carrying any water. Mr. Cooksey's men with their pipe arrived
soon after and there then was some trouble up by the outlet of the
pond. One gang throwing dirt out of the trench and the other
throwing it in. But soon Mr. Gardiner of the Northeast Harbor
Water Company got word from Ellsworth that Mr. Cooksey's condemna-
tion proceedings were completed and that he had therefore the prior
right.
As soon as Mr. Cooksey had won the contest, he, with his usual
6
liberality, approached Mr. Gardiner and his associates, told them
that he wished to give them an adequate supply of water and made
arrangements which were perfectly satisfactory to them.
I was not here at that time but I got this account from Judge
Peters, who attended to the legal matters, from Mr. Gardiner, who
in his usual humorous way expressed it by saying, "I was like Davy
Crockett's coon who said "Don't shoot, I will come down", and from
Mr. Alanson Clement, who, although a close friend of Mr. Cooksey,
was President of the company sponsored by the Northeast Harbor people.
An amusing side light occurred when the schooner arrived off
Cooksey's (now Dane's) Point.
Mr. Cooksey, wishing to help, went out on the point and shouted
and Captain Cox, wishing to hear the waves on the rocks and not
recognizing the voice, shouted back, "Shut up, you damned fool".
The four-inch water main down the Jordan Brook valley served
the place for a few years but the growth was so rapid that in 1901
Mr. Cooksey's company laid a ten-inch main below frost down the
Jordan Pond Road to the village, this, giving a winter supply of
water, created a rapid growth along the Jordan Pond Road, which
has continued until this day.
An important element in the development of these villages was
the establishment of the Village Improvement Societies, the Northeast
Harbor Society being founded in the year 1898 and the Seal Harbor
Society in 1900, the basic reason for their establishment being the
system of town government characteristic of New England. The towns
comprise large areas outside of the villages and there are no
local village governments to take care of immediate and local wants
such as the sprinkling of street, removal of garbage, etc., and in
these early days, the town finances did not admit of their being
taken over by the town, therefore for a number of years at North-
east Harbor and Seal Harbor the sprinkling of the streets and the
removal of the garbage and refuse and the raking up of the village
streets were done by these societies, the funds being provided
by voluntary contribution or entertainments gotten up by the summer
people. Later as the towns grew larger and the jobs became too big
to be handled by the societies, they were taken over by the town.
The most important development in the history of the island
was the establishment of the Hancock County Trustees of Public
Reservations. This was orgenized by President Eliot in 1901 on
the model of the Massachusetts organization of which he had been
an officer for a long time. The officers were: President
Charles W. Eliot; Vice-president - George B. Dorr; Secretary -
L. B. Deasy; Treasurer - George L. Stebbins. This organization was
empowered to receive lands to be held for the public benefit but
7
no lands were received until the year 1908 when my associate,
Mr. Cooksey, suggested that we might start things by presenting
the trustees with a very small bit of land on which the Champlain
Monument had been erected in 1904 and the first deed recorded
by the trustees was June 5th, 1908, of this little bit of land
comprising a f ew square yards.
The first substantial gift, however, was from Mrs. Homans of
Bar Harbor, by deed dated prior, but recorded subsequent to the
Cooksey deed of a considerable tract of land on the Bee Hive
Mountain back of Schooner Head.
Very notable additions were made to the reservations in the
years 1910 and 1911 when a group at Seal Harbor composed of George B.
Cooksey, Tracy Dows, Richard M. Hoe, Edward C. Bodman, Dr. Edward K.
Dunham, Dr. Christian Herter, and George L. Stebbins, discovering
that a good title could be obtained to a tract of over 3600 acres
once owned by a bankrupt land company of the boom days of 1887,
bought the tract and by arrangement with Mr. Dorr of Bar Harbor,
turned over to him some 1600 acres on the slopes of Green Mountain
in the town of Eden and made a gift to the reservations of Pemetic
Mountain and the Triads, some 1000 acres. Soon after that the
Charles T. How property, comprising about 1700 acres, including Jordan
and Sargent Mountains and most of the Bubbles, came on the market
and was bought and presented to the reservation by a group from
Northeast Harbor headed by President Eliot and assisted by contri-
butions from the Seal Harbor and Northeast Harbor Water Companies.
At that time other purchases were made in the Bar Harbor district
largely through the generosity of the late John S. Kennedy, resulting
in a tract of 5000 acres being held in the reservations more than
half of which came from the Town of Mount Desert.
In the late summer of 1910, Mr. Rockefeller who had rented a
cottage in Seal Harbor that and the previous season, bought and
made large additions to his present residence, the Eyrie built in
the winter of 1900-1901 by Professor Samuel F. Clarke of Williamstown,
Massachusetts and immediately became interested in the reservations,
and later the National Park, rescuing large tracts of land from
the umbermen.
Few people realize, except those immediately concerned, that
these acquisitions were made just in time to save our forests from
being devastated by the wood cutters.
In the old days the deep woods were safe because it cost too
much to transport the logs to the sawmills, which we're located at
the outlets of the ponds, but soon after the beginning of this
century, the portable gasoline sawmill came into general use and
that, together with a great increase in the price of lumber, made it
profitable to cut any of the soft wood growths on the island.
8
In acquiring these tracts for the reservations, thus saving
the forests, we in some cases got ahead of the speculators and
lumbermen by a few hours only.
One of the lively episodes of what are now old times was the
fight to keep automobiles from the roads of Mount Desert Island.
In the year 1903 a Bar Harbor lawyer got a bill through the Maine
State Legislature permitting towns on Mount Desert Island to
prohibit the use of automobiles on their roads and all of the towns
immediately voted for that prohibition. Conditions remained very
satisfactory until about the year 1911 when a strong sentiment
in favor of admitting automobiles grew up particularly among the
permanent residents of the town of Bar Harbor, resulting in that
town voting in July 1913 to admit the automobiles. This was soon
followed by Southwest Harbor, but the Town of Mt. Desert held out
with a solid opposition to the admission of automobiles, expressed
by the summer residents and backed up by an over-whelming vote in
August 1913 by the voters of the town and it was not until action
was taken by the State Legislature in the winter of 1914-15 that
the automobiles were admitted.
The next event of great importance in the development of Seal
Harbor, was the presentation by Mr. Rockefeller in the year 1920
of the property comprising about six acres on which the old Glen
Cove Hotel, which had been closed for years stood, to the town for
use as a Village Green and public park. The buildings which
housed the Whitmore store and Billings' market were moved northward,
giving the open space which we now see and which adds so much to
the beauty of the village and to the pleasure of its inhabitants.
The Mountain Road and other developments by Mr. Rockefeller
which are of so much benefit to Seal Harbor and Mount Desert Island,
are matters of recent and not old times and, therefore, I shall do
no more than to refer to them.
As the place grew, various activities for the benefit of the
winter as well as the summer residents developed, the Seal Harbor
Library being built in the year 1900 on land donated by George B.
Cooksey and Mrs. Charles H. Clement, a summer and a winter resident.
In 1906 the Harbor Cliffs Tennis Club was established on the high
land east of the harbor and continued its activities with tournaments
every summer until 1927 when it was superceded by the new Harbor
Club. The Seal Harbor Neighborhood Hall was built in 1914 principally
for the benefit of the permanent residents of the place and from
subscriptions made very generally from both the permanent and summer
residents. This hall was burned to the ground in 1919 and replaced
by the present building from the proceeds of the insurance with
additional subscriptions, and fills a very important part in the
9
social life of the place, particularly during the winter months.
The Seal Harbor Yacht Club was organized in 1923, its first
Commodore being Mr. Roscoe B. Jackson of Detroit, who served until
his death in 1929, he was succeeded by Mr. Edsel B. Ford, and in
1935 by Mr. Edward K. Dunham, Jr. The Club affords landing to
visiting yachts and holds an annual Regatta each year in coopera-
tion with the Northeast Harbor Fleet, which organization sponsors
the July and August series of races participated in by the racing
members of the Seal Harbor Club.
In 1910 Mr. and Mrs. Ernest B. Dane bought the Cooksey point
on the east side of the harbor and built their present house on
the site of the old one and Mrs. Marcus A. Hanna occupied her new
house built on the point adjoining it on the east.
In 1925 Mr. Edsel B. Ford who had been coming to Seal Harbor
for stays of longer or shorter duration for many years bought
75 acres on Ox Hill at the east of the harbor and the next year
occupied his present residence. In that year also Mr. Roscoe B.
Jackson bought the Penrose property on the east side of the harbor
just above the Yacht Club and built the residence which now stands
there.
In the year 1926 Mr. Rockefeller, Mr. Ford, and the late
Mr. Jackson and the late Dr. D. Hunter McAlpin, seeing the desira-
bility of a swimming as well as a tennis club, bought property
bordering on Bracy Cove and built the present Harbor Club with its
Club House, swimming pool and tennis courts, the old tennis club
being given up in that year.
An account of Seal Harbor would hardly be complete without
mention of two other items. First the Jordan Pond House which has
played a large part in the life of the summer residents and has
been conducted since the year 1895 by Mr. McIntire who built it up
from a very small beginning to its present attractive condition.
The other is the network of woodland paths radiating from this
spot for, as stated by Baedecker in his guide-book of the United
States, "It is for its convenience as a center for walkers that
Seal
Harbor is very favored." These trails, laid out and mapped
mostly in the years 1895 and 1896 by the late Waldron Bates of
Bar Harbor with assistance from our side of the Island, are kept
up by the Village Improvement Society and offer a variety of sea-
shore, mountain and valley walks such as can be had in few places.
In speaking of old times, I recall various incidents which
perhaps are not familiar to the present generation. When I attended
my first Town Meeting in March 1896, the seat of the town
government was at Somesville, and we all drove there to the meeting.
10
It often happened that there was good sleighing and an old time
custom still prevailed of the men from the other villages as soon
as the meeting was over, to hitch up their horses and race home,
making it sort of a local Derby day, and I remember a week or two
before the meeting seeing various men cut at dusk with their
fastest horses, getting them into condition for the race, but when
one spoke to them about it, they always allowed that they were not
going to race this year because their horses were not in good
"ruddin" condition.
During the years in which I spent a great part of the year
at Seal Harbor, I made many close friends among the permanent
residents and I well remember a drive to Somesville with the late
James Clement, when, in his relation of old time stories regarding
the residents along the road, he displayed his keen sense of humor.
As we came to one place he said a man named Richardson once lived
there who had three sons not noted for their industrial habits.
One day he undertook a journey to Ellsworth and before leaving,
gave each son a hoe and told them to hoe the corn patch during his
absence; but when he returned he found the three sons leaning on
the handles of their hoes, gossiping, with very little of the
patch hoed. A few days after, he again went to Ellsworth but be-
fore going he took a saw and sawed the hoe handles half way down
to the blade so that they could not lean upon them but upon re-
turning a little early, he found the three sons with the hoes
reversed, sitting on the blades and talking.
At another house, he said an old fool lived there who had a
rooster that crowed very early in the morning, thereby disturbing
the next door neighbor, whose house was near the barn. The
neighbor conceived a plot to rid himself of this nuisance and
went and told the man that it was very bad luck to have a rooster
that crowed at midnight, and that night he got up at midnight and
went into his neighbor's barn with a lantern and waked the rooster
up so that it crowed. The next day the owner of the rooster told
the neighbor that he was much alarmed, that the rooster had crowed
at midnight and he was assured it was a very bad sign. The next night
the neighbor repeated the truck which resulted in the rooster being
killed the next day.
11
1880
Some Thoughts Concerning Acadia National Park,
Planning for its Future.
George 5. Dorr
December 10, 1940.
Omitting studies in detail, my desire is to do what
I may, while the opportunity yet remains, to create certain
central points of interest in the eastern portion of the
Park, whence it originated and where its planning and
directive activities have always lain.
The first of these concerns itself with the Park
Office whose site I chose even before the thought of a
National Park had clearly taken shape in my mind, and
which was suggested by opportunities that had come my
way for laying it out on the broad scale and striking
setting it now occupies.
Along with this, I wish to convey to the Park, as
a central feature in it and giving it contact with the
sea upon a harbored shore, my own inherited home at
Compass Harbor on Frenchmans Bay, where my dream of the
future Park first came into being and which was one of
2.
the first summer homes built upon Mount Desert Island
and rich for me with long, personal association.
The third point I look upon as central is that of
Seal Harbor where some of the earliest reservations,
making possible the Park upon a broad and national
scale, were obtained, and where so much has since been
accomplished both on the shore and inland to make it
the central landscape feature of the Park and Island,
with its dominating mountains either side of the most
beautiful lake basin upon Mount Desert Island.
The Park Office site came to me in its entirety
and including the Town Athletic Field it looks out upon,
southward and toward the mountains, as the result of a
combination of circumstances whose bearing upon my plan
I recognized and, aided by others, took from the start
full advantage of. That plan has as yet been only
carried out in part, but it still lies in my power
to complete it in its original intention and make it
permanent through the Govermment's ownership, which I
now wish to do. This involves the inclusion in the
Park of the land lying west of the Athletic Field
where, as the maps accompanying this will show, the
separate road system and path system of the Park shall
take their start, commencing off Park Street, the road
laid out by me for the Park offices to front upon.
The land required for this, reserved for the pur-
pose, lies in my power to give, freely and without con-
sideration, and this I now propose to do. But certain
modifications of the present Town road system will be
required to give it full effect, and to obtain these
some few early house sites of the town remain to be
acquired. The whole plan for this, also, is clearly
shown upon the accompanying maps.
In planning for Park Street, my thought was to
take the road across the whole breadth of the plain
the Town of Bar Harbor is situated on, from the summer
residences on the shore to the east, making use for this
4.
of a road already built, named for Mr. Johnston
Livingston of New York whose lands it bordered,
to Glen Mary Park upon the west. The portion of
this road frontage opposite the Athletic Field, some
five hundred and twenty feet in length from Main Street
to School Street, is what I am now offering to the
Government in its entirety for its administration
buildings, for which it forms a dignified and
spacious site.
1914
On the corner of Main Street, where Park Street
commences, I built, in anticipation of the Government's
acceptance of the lands I offered, the present Park
Office building, planning it most carefully with the
help of a competent local architect, and rented it
to the Government when the Park was created, so that
from the first that site has been associated with the
Government's administration of the Park.
This office, ample for earlier needs, suits ad-
mirably the need for information, suggestion and ad-
vice to the great stream of visitors who come now
seasonally to see and explore what the Park has to offer.
But this need, grown great beyond all anticipation, re-
quires practically the whole building and the work of
the Park administration now absolutely needs a separate
building where the office of the Superintendent and his
assistants may be placed spaciously in a dignified, at-
tractive setting. The want of such a building, long
felt, is provided for in the present plan, the site
selected, after careful study, being opposite the
center of the Athletic Field, with most attractive
plantings of trees and flowering shrubs on either side
long since set cut, with all due care, and growing well.
The only request I wish to make in connection with this
building is that it be designed, since it will represent
the Government to all who now come in such numbers from
the whole country over, in a style characteristic of the
best old-time New England architecture.
The land west of School Street, fronting upon Park
Street, has now been accepted by the Town of Bar Harbor
6.
for its office and administrative needs, for which it
forms a most excellent site, looking out upon the lands
offered to the Government and tying up together in the
happiest way the Town and Park ddrinistrations to the
gain of both, the whole forming the most attractive
road frontage in the Town.
Along with this broad development of the Park
Office site and the secure and permanent possession of
it by the Government which it provides for, I offer, in
connection with it, my old family home, Oldfarm, upon
the shore of Frenchmans Bay with which the whole develop-
ment of the National Park has been, from its inception
on, most intimately associated. This, one of
the
earliest and best-situated summer homes upon Mount
Desert Island, was for many years the scene of generous
hospitality, till those who made it so, my father and my
mother, had passed on, leaving to me the spirit of that
hospitality, to which, extended to a wider, national field,
Acadia National Park, in its origin, is due.
The site occupied by this home is that of one of
the earliest cultivated farmlands on the Mount Desert
coast, settled by migration from Cape Cod. This farm-
land, with the woodlands and wild lands associated with
it, is, owing to the bold, rocky character of the coast
beyond, the last tract of farmland character capable of
being cultivated upon the western coast of Frenchmans
Bay or the coast beyond until Seal Harbor and the island-
sheltered entrance to Somes Sound is reached. It also
fronts directly upon the last good harbor for small
vessels along that whole stretch of coast, lying closely
outside the extensive sheltered basin of Upper Frenchmans
Bay created by the breakwater extended by the Government,
at great expense, from Round Porcupine westward toward
the Bar Harbor shore, with passage-way left open between
for smaller craft.
The original Oldfarm grant acquired by my father
extended back from the Compass Harbor shore and the
Storm Beach point beyond for a measured mile, ending
on the all but precipitous slope of Champlain Mountain,
8.
the easternmost mountain in the Mount Desert Island
chain, which, with Bear Brook and Beaver Dam Pool at
its base, was one of the earliest gifts of land, made
by myself, which now constitute Acadia National Park.
This Oldfarm tract, which, in its entirety, I
inherited from my father, is one of extraordinary in-
terest and variety, with its harbored shore, its cul-
tivated farmland, its bold granite heights above the
cottage that I now occupy, its tiny lake, Compass Harbor
pond, and the stream that winds its way down from it to
the harbor. And along with these the tract across the
public way, the Schooner Head Road, which I gave early
to form part of the group of public reservations that
presently became the National Park.
Wide extended as the Park now is, it has, even yet,
no frontago upon any harbored shore until Somes Sound is
reached, midway of Mount Desert Island. The Oldfarm tract
I now offer will fill this want, and in the most complete
and satisfactory way.
9.
The house itself, Oldfarm, built by day labor
under my father's, my mother's and my own direction
in consultation with the architect and the builder,
is, owing to the care taken of it, in as good con-
dition now as it was when it was finished, sixty years
ago, and no repair to it is needed, within or without.
It occupies a magnificent situation above the shore and
harbor and is completely furnished, having been rented
to friends of mine at intervals throughout the years.
This furniture is included in my offer. Private roads,
avenues and foot-paths connect the house widely and
directly with the lands now already included in the
National Park, and it seems more natural and right to
have the Park extended across the public way to Compass
Harbor and contact with the sea and to the house that was
my own.
10.
Oldfarm, the house, was built by the day, and most
extraordinarily well. Our architect was Henry Richards
of Gardiner, Maine, a recent graduate of the Nassachusetts
Institute of Technology, who took the keenest interest in
his work and followed it closely, consulting constantly
with my mother, my father and myself as the work went on,
unhampered by any contract. Whatever changes suggested
themselves as the work progressed, adding to the comfort
and convenience of the house, were promptly made, for we
planned for the future and an enduring home.
The lower story of the house was built of granite,
using, for effect's sake, the old oxidized surface from
a new quarry in the Gorge opened for the purpose; cut
stone was only used for the window frames and doors and
the effect was excellent. The rest of the house was
splendidly Pramed in wood, the best Maine could supply,
with strong and heavy beams that made the structure of
this portion as enduring as could be built in wood. The
upper stories and the roof were shingled with California
Redwood, imported for the purpose. The Redwoods all possess
some quality that prevents decay -- they never rot, though
they may wear thin and crack with time. This was a suggestion
of our architect, who used them for their warm, reddish
tone, fitting well with that of the granite used in the
lower floor.
The house was built sixty years ago the present
year - 1940 - and no renewal or repair even of these
shingles has ever been required, save for those upon
the roof which ultimately wore thin and cracked and
which I had replaced, as better fitted to the climate
and exposure, with the best native cedar shingles pro-
duced in Maine.
We planned the house spaciously, that we might
have our friends come to stay with us freely, and it
became at once, with the rare gift for entertaining
that inj mother had, a social center of the pleasantest
sort. It is the recollection of those days and the
good times we had that makes me desirous now of making
our old home serve the Government in recreation and in
rest, if it so might be, for those who shape, at Wash-
ington, the policies of the National Government.
C.)
UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
Acadia National Park
Bar Harbor, Maine,
May 1, 1939.
Mr. Arno B. Cammerer, Director,
National Park Service,
Washington, D. C.
Dear Mr. Cammerer:
I have given Mr. Hadley a brief statement
to enclose you in regard to Oldfarm, along with what he has
written in answer to your request for figures from the
Town Assessors' book and has just mailed you. I now write
a further word concerning this and on some memories the
question has brought up.
In 1878 we returned from Europe - my father, mother
and I - after a stay abroad unexpectedly prolonged by my
older brother's death in New York two years before in the
summer of 1876, while studying law in the office of an ol-
der friend, Mr. Louis L. Delafield, one of the leading law-
yers of the country at that time.
Old 14.7am
We had planned returning home ourselves the fall of
that year and building a permanent summer home at Oldfarm
on a site my father had already purchased a half dozen
years before. My mother was at work over plans for this,
studying some of the old English country houses, when a
cable reached us, telling of my brother's sudden illness,
followed immediately after by another informing us of
his death.
Bar Harbor, when we returned in the fall of 1878, was
just recovering from the effects of a typhoid epidemic two
years before, brought on by the rapid growth of the place
as a resort and lack of realization by its citizens of the
need or corresponding sanitary measures. It had learned
its lesson, however, and steps were in progress to correct
UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
2. Director 5/1/39
the evil, but the effect on summer life, when we returned,
and commenced to build, still lingered; no land was being
sold, no houses built.
Ours at Oldfarm as the first house to be built for
summer residence, spaciously and comfortably, on Mount
Desert Island and the re utation of it as the work went
on gave confidence to others, starting what was known
afterwards and long referred to as the &Bar Harbor boom. ,
The price of lands along the shore went up a hundred per
cent within six weeks that summer and building continued ac-
tively thereafter for years to come.
The Oldfarm house was built for the first storey up
of granite of a warm reddish have from the nearby Gorge
and above that was covered with shingles hewn out of Cali-
fornia Redwood, their tone blending well with the granite
and still remaining, after all the years, untouched by
decay.
We had for architect Henry Richards
one of the old
Gardiner family of Gardiner, Maine, who had married the
daughter of my mother's early friend, Julia Ward Howe.
Henny Richards was then a recent graduate from the archi-
tectural school of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
and worked in well with my mother in the plans which she had
made, producing a house that has ever remained for me one
of the most attractive, home -like and best-fitted to its
setting built on our eastern coast.
The soale of wages at that time was low, one dollar
to a dollar and a quarter a ten hour day for ordinary labor;
two and a half to three dollars for skilled. The work was
done by the day and was sound throughout and good. father
and mother were building for the future and spent liberally
upon the work.
When all was done, my father told me one day that the
house and the work done upon the grounds connected with
it had cost seventy thousand dollars, an amount far greater
than it would seem t oday.
UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
3. Director 5/1/39
But the work has long since justified its cost
in its enduring quality and the fitness and pleasantness
of the home constructed.
Yours sincerely,
GED-0
last quarter of record
fresh beginning after interruption.
the Oldfarm house was built under plans prepared by
Keury
one of the best younger architeots of his day and as
dichards
thoroughly as could bo, making no saorifico to oost.
It is in as good condition now as it was when first completed and
the only changes made have been those nooded to keep it level
with the times in all new development.
Eleotrio lighting was unknown when the house was built
and for twenty years the reafter/ at Bar Harbor. thanxhx
gracity
So with the town water and SO with the telephone. But all
that has been needed to keep it abreast of the time has been
added. Life was simple in t he 1880's 8. So long HS my mother
and my father lived, Oldfarm was the soene of constant
hospitalitity. The house was- is specious and was kept always
full with delightful company. My father died
first in 1893, my mothr seven years later. Ever elighting
to havo friends about her, my own O specially.
C 1938
3. A Oldfarm as 1 ts name tella
broad feat plin
Oldfarm, the house, stands on a stuge of the same
hard and amient rook that encloses Compass Harbor along
the ooast on either side, against whose baso, whon the land
stood at lower level in relation to the sea during the last
glao1al period, the WAVOB must have broken with tromendous
force. To the north it faces across the whole length of the
Upper Bay to the Gouldsboro Hills; to the south the Oldfarm
landa and gardens merge unbrokonly into those of Aoadia
National Park which drew from them their early inspiration
for the origin of the Park.
XX L
The house, fitting well the landscape, is built
story?
up to the second floor
of warm-tomod, nativo graniteg
above Title oovered with shingles of the California
which
Redwood, similar in tone, which have never needed to be
renowed, save in portions of the roof, sinco the house was
built, now close onto sixty years. It is spaciously
designed, with ample out-door porches, screened from the
driveway, fronting on the view, while broad stone stops, laid
in easy descent, lead from it to the lawns above the shore.
(then follows History, which is paged History- 1 eto.
C.I
1939
UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
Acadia National Park
Bar Harbor, Maine,
May 1, 1939.
Mr. Arno B. Cammerer, Director,
National Park Service,
Washington, D. C.
Dear Mr. Cammerer:
I have given Mr. Hadley a brief statement
to enclose you in regard to Oldfarm, along with what he has
written in answer to your request for figures from the
Town Assessors' book and has just mailed you. I now write
a further word concerning this and on some memories the
question has brought up.
In 1878 we returned from Europe - my father, mother
and I - after a stay abroad unexpectedly prolonged by my
older brother's death in New York two years before in the
summer of 1876, while studying law in the office of an 01-
der friend, Mr. Louis L. Delafield, one of the leading law-
yers of the country at that time.
We had planned returning home ourselves the fall of
that year and building a permanent summer home at Oldfarm
Old
on a site my father had already purchased a half dozen
years before. My mother was at work over plans for this,
studying some of the old English country houses, when a
cable reached us, telling of my brother's sudden illness,
followed immediately after by another informing us of
his death.
Bar Harbor, when we returned in the fall of 1878, was
just recovering from the effects of a typhoid epidemic two
years before, brought on by the rapid growth of the place
as a resort and lack of realization by 1ts citizens of the
need or corresponding sanitary measures. It had learned
its lesson, however, and steps were in progress to correct
UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
2. Director 5/1/39
the evil, but the effect on summer life, when we returned,
and commenced to build, still lingered; no land was being
sold, no houses built.
Ours at Oldfarm as the first house to be built for
summer residence, spaciously and comfortably, on Mount
Desert Island and the re utation of it as the work went
on gave confidence to others, starting what was known
afterwards and long referred to as the &Bar Harbor boom.
The price of lands along the shore went up a hundred per
cent within six weeks that summer and building continued ac-
tively thereafter for years to come.
The Oldfarm house was built for the first storey up
of granite of a warm reddish hue from the nearby Gorge
and above that was covered with shingles hewn out of Cali-
fornia Redwood, their tone blending well with the granite
and still remaining, after all the years, untouched by
decay.
We had for architect Henry Richards one of the old
Gardiner family of Gardiner, Maine, who had married the
daughter of my mother's early friend, Julia Ward Howe.
Henny Richards was then a recent graduate from the archi-
tectural school of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
and worked in well with my mother in the plans which she had
made, producing a house that has ever remained for me one
of the most attractive, home-like and best-fitted to its
setting built on our eastern coast.
The soale of wages at that time was low, one dollar
to a dollar and a quarter a ten hour day for ordinary labor;
two and a half to three dollars for skilled. The work was
done by the day and was sound throughout and good. My father
and mother were building for the future and spent liberally
upon the work.
When all was done, my father told me one day that the
house and the work done upon the grounds connected with
it had cost seventy thousand dollars, an amount far greater
than it would seem t oday.
UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
3. Director 5/1/39
But the work has long since justified its cost
in its enduring quality and the fitness and pleasantness
of the home constructed.
Yours sincerely,
GED-0
18
in that city, under the firm name of J. E. Ditson & Co., now doing
business at 1228 Chestnut Street; will return to the Boston house this
summer, though the Philadelphia. business will still be carried on
under his supervision; Oct. 2, 1877, was married in Boston, to
Henrietta Curtis Mixer; Oct. 20, 1878, James Edward Ditson, jun.,
was born.
NATHAN HASKELL DOLE. The first year after graduation
taught at De Veaux College, New York; the next year was instructor
in Greek and English literature at the High School, in Worcester,
Mass.; in December, 1876, succeeded Nichols, as preceptor of the
Derby Academy, in Hingham, Mass. where he remained until June,
1878; since then has resided at 2 Mount Vernon Place, Boston; and
has been engaged in general literary work, especially in editing and
enlarging Rambaud's History of Russia," published in three volumes,
by Estes & Lauriat, of Boston; is American correspondent of "Le
Livre," and has recently been appointed on the Committee to visit the
Academical Department of Harvard.
GEORGE BUCKNAM DORR. Soon after `graduation went to
Europe, where he remained, travelling and studying, until 1879;
since his return to Boston has not been in activé business; the past
year has been treasurer of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty
to Children. (No report since graduation.)
JAMES DWIGHT. In the fall of 1874, began the study of medicine
at the Harvard Medical School; serious illness interrupting his work
at the school. he did not receive his degree of M.D. until June 25,
1879; passed the following winter as House Physician at the Boston
Lying-in Hospital, and has since been practising his profession at
Boston and at Nahant; in 1879 was elected a Fellow of the Massa-
chusetts Medical Society.
LOUIS DYER. Soon after graduation entered Balliol College, Oxford,
England continued his studies there until February, 1877, when he
was called home to Chicago on account of his father's illness; remained
in Chicago for some months, studying, teaching, and lecturing, and for
the past- two years has been tutor in Greek in Cambridge. and is ex
officio a member of the faculty in July, 1878, received the degree of
B.A. from Oxford; has written several reviews for the Atlantic
Monthly;" expects to pass this summer in Europe.
WILLIAM SAMUEL ELIOT. Died in Boston, Nov. 15, 1874.
See first triennial report.
4
Know all men by these presents that he
Lucy this of the City of Boston, County of saffolk, Com-
monwealth of Massachusetts, singh gentlewoman,
Theodore Chase and aliee Chase wife of said Theodore
Chase both of land City of Boston, John marko and
Matilda markoe wife of land John Markoe both of the
City and County of Philadelphia, Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania, being all the owner and rightful oce-
pants of two certain parcels of land situation in the
town of Eden, Comity of Hancok and state of name,
morefully described in a certain deed of the ways and
Easements heremanter described from sand Charles H, Don
to said lucy Ellis and others dated November 29-1879
and recorded in the Registry of Deeds for Hancock County,
state of name, Vol 169 page 229, the first of which
tack is bomined and described as N with
and East by the Sea: South by land formerly of the
Angham Estate, and West by land of Charlis H Don:
and the second of which lots is bounder and described
as follows: North by land of said Incy Ellis: East by
the sea; south by Dear Book; and West by land of
said Don; in consideration of the sum of one dollar
and other good and valuable considerations to Each
of hs paid by Charles N. Don of the Land City of Boston,
the receipt whereof we do hereby acknowledge do heach
useb in said deed, which clams, rights, Fitter, interests
and Easements are described in said deed as follows:
a night of way over and across the land of said Door
to and from the highway known and called the Jehom
W Head Road, such way hereby granter being par-
triularly located and described as follows: that is to
say beginning on the East side of said highway
called the Schooner Head Road, at the South host
corner of a cottage of Laid Dorr, and thence rummy
following the avenue of said Dor, as now built,
first South seventy form degrees East, Eight and
three forths rods to the West line of the "Sherman
"lot" so called thence South forty one and three fourths
degrees East five oods; thener south fifty one and
three fourths degrees East fine sods: thener south
sixty two and one fourth degrees East, two rods:
thener South Seventy and three fourths degrees East
five rods: thence South fifty form and one half degrees
East nine and three fifths oods to the West line of land
of said Don which lme is the East line of sand "shirman
' lot ' themer South listy seven and one fourth degrees East
three rods; thence South fifty five and three forth
degrees East five rods; thiner South forty Eight and one half
degrees East ten rods: themer South fifty and three fourths
degrees East (deverying from the mam Avenue of said door/
form Ands to a shake; thence South twenty sing and onehalf
degrees East Twelve tods; thence South forty six And
rods; thener North Seventy one and one fourth degrees last
two rods to the point of L ledge: themer South Eighty mm
and one half degrees
two rods; thence Douth Awenty
three and three fourth degrees East two rods to a stake:
the apresaid way from the place of beginning to this last
stake to be twenty feet wide; thence South
fifty three and one half degrees East one not to a shake on
the West line of Laid land of said they Ellis: the said way
at this point be thirty feet wide. The time herein above
described by to vanons comes distances and monuments, from
said Schooner Hean Road to the land West the of land of
said Lucy Ellis to be the center Im of the way hereby
granted. The comes herem above named are the general
courses, but there are curves between points herem before
grown, and said way is a emong way numming through sain
points herem before named. For further identification of said
way hereby greater reference may be had to a plan of paid
way, made by C m. Hamon Surveyor, from his survey,
the lamman September 13FA.D. 1879, said plan being
dated September 18-1879 marked A" and signed by said
E.M. Hamor and herewith to be recorded, the way herely
granted being marked on said plan in red mk.
meaning and intending hereby to remise, release and quit
claim to the said Charles # Dor his him and assigns
way or other thing granted w conveyed to us And om him
and assigns by the need of said Charles H, Don bearing even
date with these presents and to be recorded in the Nancock
Comity Registry of Duds, although the same or any part
thereof may be identical with the ways, rights, Fitles
intents and Easements herem described am upon, N over
any land covered by n meluded in said way herein described
or my part thereof.
To have and to hold the herdy released premises with
all and apportenances thereof to the tain Charles
H, Door and his herr and assigns forever, but subject & the
foregoing aception and reservations, so that, 4cept as
herembefore accepted, neither we the said Suey Ulis,
Theodore Chase, also Chase John marker and matila
marker nov either of us nov nor the him ON assigns of
Either of hs nn any person or persons claiming by, through
or under, or in the name, right or stead of us or Either
of wo or the hims N assigns of us or eithin of us shall N will
by any way or means have clam or demand any lawful
night or tith to the Laid premises ON then appentinances
or any part w hand thereof frever
In witness when of we the said Lucy illis, Theodore
Chase, aliee Chase John marko and Matilda Markoe
(the saidaliu Chase and matilda markoe
signing then these presents in testimony of then selm-
quistment of all nights of dower and all other nights in the
premises herely acleased) have heremeto set m hands and
peals this 31- day march in the year
one thousand Eight and sinely
Theodore
bigitive
any
signed,
ml
in
Commonwealth of Massachusetts
City of Boston,
Suffoth County SS.
On this 31 day of march A.D. 1890.
personally appeared before me, a Notary Public of
said suffolk County the above named buy Ellis and
acknowledged the foregoing instrument to be her free act
and deed.
In witness whereof, I have percento set my hand and
affixed my official seal the day and year aforesaid.
(signal) Andrew hishe
Notan Public
for suffoth lomity
Commonwealth of Messachusetts
Suffoth S.S. Boston gnd april 1890
Then personally appeared Theodore Chase and
acknowledged the foregoing instrument to be his free
act and deed, before me
(signal Lewis A Dabney
justin of the Peace
R. Stanton Avery
Special Collections Dept.
New England Historic
Genealogical Society
101 Newbury Street
Boston, MA 02116
1871 - GBD & WWD go to London- then join parents at Baden-Baden
(Good copy - to be read for typographical errors)
Trace noute on map.
Italy.
1872-1874 - C.H.D. to Paris for winter, going to Riviera and
&WWW
to Rome; ChD. returned home in spring; GBD & WWD going
again, the same spring to England, Scotland and Wales,
with Mr. Dana as a companion on the trip; in the fall
of 1873 WWD returned home, & CHD joined GBD for a
winter in Paris and on Riviera, returning home in the
spring of 1874. (Good copy, but change has to be made,
as it is written incorrectly.)
1874 - 1878 -- Abroad - Rome, etc. (unfinished)
1878 - trip to Brittany ; trip to Spain, winter of 1877 to be
added to the story.
1882 - Trip to Central Italy & Sicily - Rough Copy
1891-1892 - Trip to Palestine & Up Nile - Good
Canoeing Trip to Moosehead Lake with Sam Warren - 1895
1902 - Trip with Geologists - Good
1903 - GBD & Vanderbilts - Good
1904 - To Sierras - Good
1907 - Last Trip Abroad Rough
A trip through Virginia
Staying at Biltmore
Estes Park - (Col. Fordyce
hebacco
The Journal of the Mount Desert Island Historical Society
Volume XXII
SUMMERS OF SCIENCE AND WONDER
THE CHAMPLAIN SOCIETY LOGBOOKS 1880-1882
2021
Mount Desert, Maine
Champlain Society
1880
Champlain Society members at Camp Pemetic, 1880. Left to right: Donnell, C. Eliot, De Windt, Townsend, S. Eliot, Davis, John Wakefield,
Rand, Breyant. M.P. Slade photo
Viewer Controls
Toggle Page Navigator
P
Toggle Hotspots
H
Toggle Readerview
V
Toggle Search Bar
S
Toggle Viewer Info
I
Toggle Metadata
M
Zoom-In
+
Zoom-Out
-
Re-Center Document
Previous Page
←
Next Page
→
1878-80
Page | Type | Title | Date | Source | Other notes |
1 | File folder | File contents. 1878:Trip to Brittany.1879:LongField/Great Menors (also see 1930 file), Old Farm built re Hadley long doc (12/22/44), Post graduate work at Harvard, physics; Long Field. 1880: Old Farm built (1878-80), occupied in 1880; zero at Harvard [See Psychical Exp File] | Chron 10/20/05 | Ronald Epp | |
2-3 | Class Notes | Biographical entry: George Bucknam Dorr | 1924 | Harvard College. Class of 1874. 50th Anniversary Report, 1924 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
4 | Website | Expositions universelles de Paris | 4/13/19 | Wikipedia | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
5-7 | Manuscript excerpt | Travels to Brittany | 1943 | JML. Dorr Papers B2,F6 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
8-12 | Manuscript excerpt | Old Farm | April 6 | JML 1,f.14 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
13-16 | Manuscript excerpt | The National Park had its origin at Oldfarm | April 14 | JML 1,f.13 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
17 | Manuscript excerpt | Purchase of Oldfarm | February 12, 1940 | JML 1,f.14 Dorr Papers | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
18-19 | Manuscript excerpt | Oldfarm | June 14 | JML 1, f.13 | |
20 | Date Page | 1879 | 1879 | Ronald Epp | |
21-26 | Manuscript excerpt | Oldfarm 1871-72 | No date | Dorr Papers.B2.F.1. | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
27-28 | Manuscript excerpt | Building of Oldfarm | May 13 | JML.Dorr Papers | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
29-30 | Manuscript excerpt | Description of Oldfarm | May 2d | JML 1,f.13 | |
31 | Drawing | Plan of first floor, Oldfarm | No date | ||
32 | Letter | Letter to Mary | March 5, 1878 | T.W.Ward Ms. B.3.f.28 | |
33 | Manuscript excerpt | Living in Oldfarm 1880's | No date | JML 1,f.13 | |
34-35 | Manuscript excerpt | Gardens at Oldfarm, 1878 | No date | JML 1, f.2 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
36-39 | Manuscript excerpt | History of Oldfarm land | JML 1.f14 | Annotated by Ronald Epp | |
40-48 | Manuscript excerpt | Return to Oldfarm 1878, philosophy, William James and Royce | May 30 | Dorr Papers. B.1 F14 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
49-51 | Letter | Letter to President Franklin Delano Roosevelt from George Bucknam Dorr re: Oldfarm | August 1, 1940 | ANPA, B4.F1.21-23 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
52-59 | Manuscript excerpt | Spiritualism | No date | JML. Dorr Papers. c.1 | |
60-62 | Notes | Outline and Notes on Spiritualism and Illness in 1880 | 7/14/08 | Ronald Epp | |
63-69 | Essay | The Long Field and the Great Meadow in the Early Days | No date | B3.F5.14-20, ANPA | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
70-74 | Manuscript excerpt | The Great Meadow, road building and Wild Gardens plan | No date | No source | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
75-85 | Notes | Random notes on the early history and development as a summer resort of Mound Desert Island and particularly Seal Harbor, by George Stebbins | August 1938 | ANPA 7, f.8 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
86 | Date Page | 1880 | 1880 | Ronald Epp | |
87-97 | Essay | Some Thoughts Concerning Acadia National Park, Planning for its Future, by George B. Dorr | December 10,1940 | B2.F1.16-26, ANPA | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
98-100 | Letter | Letter to Mr. Arno B.Cammerer, Director National Park Service from George B. Dorr re: Oldfarm | May 1, 1939 | ANPA, B4,F1.24-26 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
101-102 | Manuscript excerpt | Oldfarm in the 1880s | c.1938 | Dorr Papers. B1.F.14 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
103-105 | Letter | Letter to Mr. Arno B.Cammerer, Director National Park Service from George B. Dorr re: Oldfarm | May 1, 1939 | ANPA, B4.F1.24-26 | Duplicate and Annotated by Ronald Epp |
106 | Class Notes | Biographical entry on George Bucknam Dorr | 1880 | HUA [Harvard University Archives]. 3rd Report | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
107-112 | Deed | Transfer of Land from Lucy Ellis and others | 1890 | Chapman Archive. JDR Jr. Papers.B.13.f08. [Charles Dorr,1890] | |
113 | Timeline | Timeline and notes 1871-1907 | No date | R. Stanton Avery Special Collections Dept., New England Geneological Society | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
114-115 | Journal excerpt | Champlain Society 1880 | 2021 | Chebacco: the Journal of the Mount Desert Island Historical Sociery. Volume XXII. 2021 |
Details
1878 - 1880