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
Search
results in pages
Metadata
1945-46
1945
1946
Judy Peters
- HOTPR response GBD to Ir's reg. to
-Jo. letter to Ludge Peters
buy the exprepert (7/31).
rationale frist following
is Acadia Crop. concerning
GBD's Oldfarm plans.
ad continuance (2/1)
-see 1946, item 5
I Jr. buys Dan estate
properties far ANP.(10/23)
-Judge Peterslitter Jr. re
-Jr!s intend in donation by estate
Doer Mt. removery ad plaque.
Davis modest "charreter (1/22)
of Dariploputics to ANP (7/31)
-Echo fake properties (7/32.)
-H Albright letter to Jr. (1/21)
- Ong mountain (E7lying Squiden)
re process of renaming to Dorr
renamed Dorn ME. (2/11/46)
mt / concessions
1 -Julge Peters letter to Jr. (9/18)
-pelpe Peters to Fr. (2/6/46)re
discussing pt. 2 of story and
renaming Doer Mt./Acodualong/
whether it orgett to he published
-Master List 8 Jr. gotts to U.S.
Any response from Jr. ?
JZ U.5 gavernal (1946)
Peters/Jr. conesp. (7/31,7/20/7/2)
-Allen new to Hadley (12/23) is
re Don properties. Jr. advances
any. that Het PR should donete
-Allen meny to Hall (12/6)re
Dorr's papers, ind. Ward Family
lands to ANP.
Dorr's papers. V. Imptire
- JDR J. (8/32) trees to secure
Had llery view of GBD.
GBD lands at less than approved value.- Acedia corp.: 5 documents
Park Concernons (1/31)
from RAC!
1 JDR Sr (7/20) dis cusses value of
GBD lands and asho Tuestees to consider
donation to NPS as what Dorr wored
-Jr.to Savage (12/16) on Acade
have ur shed.
Corp, Fordcen Pond House, Et.
-Jadge Peters (7/31) to Jr. re donation
of Doss lasts and reasons GBD wanted
-Hadhay to Jr. (1/30) he bedgelaun
sale, not donation
Ave. Extension - CBO estate properly
-Peters letter (6/21) to Jr. is Dorr parcels
to he acquired.
airilable
-Peters to Jr. (12/18) re delay in
-Peters letter to In (10/15)re Dou properties
complety sale from Dorr estate to you
ad Jr.'s offer of $5,000. Also(10/5)letter
of land pancel
re story of ANP, II.
- Pets to Jr (10/5) is politication it
-thata to Abbe business (12/12/45? re
"Mr.Dorr's memorrs Mrs. Sylvia
beneficing of GBD's will
is 1/4 of estate.
Jr. (11/25) on Building the Arts future.
Baltabor VIA beetings no mention of Dor's
death
late 946.
Srto Peters a publication of
story of ANP Quality of work.
Dorris death. (10/1/45)
1945
1946
1 Peters to Jr. no Dorr Estate to
Sale of lands Sr. (6/21)
Question: How much acreage did
Jr. gift to Fed govt der edg
us gfts via HCTPR. What %
of park is result of Jr.
donations ?
641.5
UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY
BOARD ON GEOGRAPHICAL NAMES
WASHINGTON 25, D. C.
JAN 12 1945
The Secretary,
Chamber of Commerce,
Bar Harbor, Maine.
Ny dear 3ir:
The National Park Service has recommended to the Board on Geographical
Names that the name of Flying Squadron Mountain in Acadia National Park be
changed to Dorr Mountain to honor Mr. George Buckman Dorr. Mr. Dorr, who
died on August 5, 1944, at the age of 91, bad been superintendent of the
park from the time of its establishment and the Park Service desires to
commemorate his nearly half a century of public-spirited work leading first
to the creation of the present Acadia National Park and later to its adminis-
tration and development for public use.
Would the name Dorr Mountain meet with general public approval on Mount
Desert Island? Before approving the change we shall appreciate it if you
will let us know whether members of your organisation would approve of honor-
ing Mr. Dorr in this way. As you probably know, the name Flying Squadron
Mountain was suggested by Mr. Dorr himself and has been in official use for
a relatively short time, about fifteen years.
An addressed franked envelope is enclosed for your convenience in replying.
Sincerely yours,
(Signed) Meredith F. Burrill
Meredith F. Burrill,
EF:Sma
Director.
Enclosure.
CC: Case file,
Reading file,
Dr. Burrill,
Miss Fitton.
*
23004572
DECISION
Name
Dorr Mountain
County Hancock
State Maine
Not: Dry Mountain, Flying Squadron Mountain
16
1258
Lat. 44° 21' 20" N.
Long. 68° 13'00" W.
Section
T
R
M
Description: A peak 1270 feet high rising immediately west of The
Carn about 2 miles southwest of Bar Harbor in
Acadia National Park.
B6n
6/15/45
Approved
4506
Date
Promulgation Date
JUN -- 1945
Number 641.5
(over)
half
24164
BCN
2 of 3
No. 641.5
UNITED STATES
BOARD ON GEOGRAPHICAL NAMES
Case Study (Domestic)
if
Decision
Date
Dorr Mountain
Case Name Dorr Mountain VS Flying Squadron Mountain
Nariants
Not: Flying Squadron Mountain, Dry Mountain
State
Maine
County Hancock
Lat. 44 o 21 I 20 " N.
Long. 68 o 13 , 00 " W.
Source
USGS, Bar Harbor quadrangle, 1:62,500, 1942
Sec.
T.
R.
M.
Source
Description
A peak 1270 feet high rising immediately west of The Tarn about 2
miles southwest of Bar Harbor in Acadia National Park.
Summary: This mountain was originally called Dry Mountain. On Oct. 2, 1918, the Board
officially changed the name to Flying Squadron Mountain to memorialize the
Lafayette Escadrille of World War I. The National Park Service now wishes to
change the name again to honor Sperintendent George Buckman Dorr who died
Aug. 5, 1944. The Chamber of Commerce at Bar Harbor is in favor of changing
the name to Dorr Mountain and the Chamber of Commerce at Southwest Harbor has
no objection.
The name Dorr has always been associated with this area (Dorr summer estate
near Bar Harbor and Dorr Point forming the southeast point of Compass Bay
south of Bar Harbor). Mr. Dorr was instrumental in having the park established
on Mount Desert and figured prominently in its development. The Park Service
feels that a mountain would the most fitting type of feature to be named for
Mr. Porr, as man of "rugged physical stature, of rock-like integrity, and of
eminent scholarly attainmentsa and culture",
RECOMMENDED
KENNETH J. PORTPAND FFR 2 0 1945
Submitted by National Park Service
Date Submitted
Oct. 10, 1944, NPS memo.
Prepared by E. Fitton
Date Prepared
Feb. 1945
29508
Messill F.Burill JUN
15 1945
CR-3 (revised)
3 of 3
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
BAR HARBOR, MAINE
FEBRUARY 3, 1945
RECEIVED
FEB 5 1945
Meredith F. Burrill, Director,
Board of Geographical Names,
Department of Interior,
Washington 25, D.C.
Dear Mr. Burrill:
At a meeting of the Board of Directors
of the Bar Harbor Chamber of Com erce it was voted to
recommend that you do change the name of Flying Squadron
Mountain to Dorr Mountain in Acadia National Park. We think this
a splendid thing to do and we believe most people living
on Mt. Desert Island will approve the change.
Sincerely yours,
VECarter
AEC/c
Secretary.
ATHENAUM ITEMS
A Library
The Boston
Letter from
Athenxum
No. 33
FEBRUARY
1945
Healy and the Dorrs
T
HE late George Bucknam Dorr, who died at Bar Harbor last August at the age
of ninety, had been a proprietor of the Athenium for fifty years. The share that
stood in his name had belonged, before it became his, to his father, Charles Hazen
Dorr, for the forty-nine years preceding 1894. From 1822, when it was issued, to 1844
it belonged to C. H. Dorr's father, Samuel Dorr, a Trustee of the Library and a donor to
its resources.
A portrait of Samuel Dorr, painted by George P. A. Healy, was one of the inherited
possessions of his grandson, George Bucknam Dorr, in whose memory his surviving repre-
sentatives are now presenting it to the Athenxum. Quite apart from its considerable
merit as a work of art, this picture is a most welcome accession, for quite apart from the
immediate uses of the Athenium as a repository of books, this Library is also a shrine of
associations.
George Dorr himself was a man of wide interests, ranging from philosophy and the
occult, a field in which he was a fellow-worker with William James, to the open spaces
of nature. To his initiative and energy the very existence of the Acadia National Park
on the coast of Maine is largely due. To the end of his days, he identified himself with
this dream come true. Bar Harbor became his residence, but whether there or in Boston,
whether in person or through the Post-Office, he turned naturally and habitually to the
Athenxum for books related to his interests.
No living person can remember the Samuel Dorr of Healy's portrait. The George
Dorr in whose memory it will hang in the Athenxum will remain for some years to come
a distinctive figure remembered by many. In another hundred years, assuming the heav-
ens are not to fall, the nineteenth and twentieth-century Dorrs who cared for the Athe-
naeum will still be commemorated here. The ivy of memory is a long-lived and hardy
plant. It flourishes in many works of art bequeathed from time to time to the Athenium,
and is set off throughout our building by the beauties of color constantly renewed in the
flowers that speak alike for a memory and for a living devotion to the Library.
Arms, the Man, and the Book
U
NDER the heading "Books for Remembrance" there appeared in that excellent
column of "Topics" in a recent issue of the New York Times a few paragraphs re-
lating to a small public library at Warrenton, Virginia. When the "Life and Letters of
Walter H. Page" appeared in 1922, the library received a copy of the book, as a gift, in
memory of a young soldier of World War I. Since that time other single books have been
United States Courts
Judge's Chambers
Portland, Maine
2nd march, 1945.
Dear Cerenus:-
After considerable correspondence and many conver-
SL tions and visits by rs. linle in Boston, we have dis-
posed of the portrait of Samuel Dorr, by Healy, by donating
it to the Boston thens.cum, 0 very appropriate place for
the picture as you will see by this little pamphlet which
I
enclose together with the acknowledgement by the officers
of the Athenseum.
Te were offered 165.00 for the picture, but it
seemed to us, in view of all the circumstances and the
long connection of the Dorr family with the Athenaeum,
that it would be wrong to sell it at that price under
the circumstances. I feel sure that Mr. Dorr would much
prefer to have it given to the Athenaeum where it will
be appropiately and permanently hung with a proper in-
scrip tion and safely dept. I feel very strongly that
this is the thing to do with it, and SO does Mrs. Hale,
one of the Trustees. After you have read this letter
with the documents enclosed, will you be good enough to
show the letter and give the documents to Ben Hadley
to whom I address this letter jointly with you, and ask
him to return the documents to me, - or you can do SO
when you have occasion to write.
I expect to go to Bangor March nineteenth and be
in Bar Harbor mos of the day arch twentieth. At that
time I will tale up with you any matters that may be
pending ready for disposition, and I also expect to have
a session with rs. Sylvia and Mr. Goodrich.
Very truly yours,
JOAN
JOHN
PETERS.
Seronus 3. Lodick, Ssq.,
Bar Marbor, Naine.
Enclosures.
Manuscriots presented from
Estate of George 3. Dorr
Hoston, Mass.
received: 26 Mar 1945
441-329F
Curtis, George William, 1824-1892.
A.L.S. (George William Curtis) to [Charles
Hazen] Dorr; [Boston] 30 Nov 1869. folder ([2]p.)
441-330F
Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth, 1807-1882.
A.L.S. (Henry W.Longfellow) to Mrs. [Mary Gray
(Card) Dorr; Cambridge, 15 Mar 1865. folder ([2]p.)
441-321F (1) Lowell, James Russell, 1819-1891.
A.N.S. (J.R.Lowell) to C[harles] H[azen] Dorr;
[Cambridge] 28 Nov 1868. folder ([1]p.)
(2) Lowell, James Russell, 1819-1891.
A.L. S. (J.R.Lowell) to [Charles Hazen Dorr]:
(Cambridge) 11 Mar 1869. folders ([6]p.)
ith envelope.
This letter contains ei.ht stanzas and four variant
openings of a DOOM by Lowell (apparently unpublished)
on Stilton cheese.
(?) Lowell, James Russell, 1819-1891.
A.L.S. (J.R.Lowell) to [Charles Hazen Dorr];
[Cambridge] 12 Jul 1869. folder ([4]p.)
(4) Lowell, James Russell, 1819-1891.
A.L.S. (J.R.Lowell) to [Charles Hazen Dorr];
[Cambridge] 12 Aug 1869. folder ([3]p.)
(5) Lowell, James Russell, 1819-1891.
A.L.s. (J.R.L. ) to [Charles Hazen] Dorr;
Paris, 13 May 18 1873. folder ([1]p.)
(6) Lowell, James Hussell, 1819-1891.
A.L.s. (J.R.Lowell) to Mrs. [Mary Gray (Ward)] Dorr:
[Cambridge] 30 May 1866. folder ([4]p.)
(7) Lowell, James Russell, 1819-1891.
A.N.s. (J.R.Lowell) to Mrs. [Mary Gray (Ward) ] Dorr;
[Cambridge] 2 Apr [18--?] folder ([1]p.)
(8) Lowell, James Russell, 1819-1891.
A.L.S. (J.R.Lowell) to Mrs. [Mary Gray (Ward) ] Dorr;
[Cambridge] 18 Jan 1872. folder ([1]p.)
(9) Lowell, James Russell, 1819-1891.
A.N.S. (J.F .Lowell) to Mrs. [Mary Gray (Ward)] Dorr;
[Cambridge] Saturday [18--?] folder ([1]p.)
(10) Lowell, James Russell, 1819-1891.
A.L. S. (J.R. Lowell) to Mrs. [Mary Gray (Ward) } Dorr;
[Cambridge] Tuesday [18--?] folder ([2]l.)
30 Rockefeller Plaza
New York 20, N. Y.
Room 5600
June 9, 1947
Dear Judge Peters:
You wrote me some months ago saying that you had been unable to
close up the Dorr matter because Mr. Serenus Rodick had not yet dealt with
the matters in connection therewith which he was handling for me.
Although I have written Mr. Rodick about the matter on several
occasions since your letter was received, I have had no reply. This
morning I telephoned him. As I surmised his brother's death 80 over-
whelmed Serenus, both with legal work in settling his brother's estate
and with handling the legal work previously carried by his brother, that
he is way behind in all his work, working much too bard, and has not done
the work for me in connection with the Dorr Estate which I asked him to do
much more than & year ago.
I fear Mr. Rodick has been on the edge of a break down, which is
not strange in view of the circumstances. I urged him to take care of him-
self, to get edditional help, which he is trying to do, and asked him to taxe
up the Dorr matter 88 the first thing on the list for me. This he said he
would do and hoped to get at it soon.
I am most regretful at this long delay but do not see what can be
done beyond what I have done. I am hopeful that before long Mr. Rodick
will streighten out the Dorr metters now in his office.
Please regard this letter as confidential. It is written for your
information only, also as an apology for the long delsy in carrying out my
part in the Dorr metter, but, of course, with no slightest criticism of
Mr. Rodick whose difficult situation you and I can both well understand.
Very sincerely,
Cockyiller
Judge John A. Peters
Bar Harbor, Maine.
Noodlown,Museum A-91
1 of a
UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
BOARD ON GEOGRAPHICAL NAMES
DECISION LISTS
NOS. 4504, 4505, 4506
APRIL, MAY, JUNE
1945
2
Indochina, Netherlands Indies, Thailand
DOMESTIC NAMES
Pakse: a town, Laos, on the Mekong River 120 miles north of Stung
Treng; 15 i°07' N, 105°47' E. Not: Pak Se, Pakse.
ALABAMA
Ron : a seaport, Laos, 30 miles north of Dong Hoi; 17 °53' N,
Sand Mountain: a dissected plateau in northeastern Alabama,
106°27' E. Laos: Rôn; not: Rone, Roon.
extending southwestward from the Alabama-Tennessee boundary for
Sam Neua: a town, Annam, in northern Laos 60 miles south of Son
about 80 miles and with a width of 8 to 18 miles; 34 3 30 N,
La; 20 28 N, 104°02' E. Not: Samnua.
85 50 W. Not: Raccoon Mountain, Raccoon Mountains, SandMountains.
Tran Ninh, Plateau du: a plateau in northern Laos southeast of
MAINE
Luang Prabang and southwest of the delta of the Red River:
19 °30' N, F. Not: Plateau du Tran-Nin'.
*Dorr Mountain: a peak 1,270 feet high rising immediately west of
The Tarn about 2 miles southwest of Bar Harbor in Acadia National
NETHERLANDS INDIES
Park, Hancock County; 44°21'20" N, 68 13'00" W. Not: Dry
Mountain, Flying Squadron Mountain.
Liran, Poelau: an island (poelau), Afdeeling Toeal, off the south-
west coast of Wetar; 8 "00' S, 125 45' E. Not: Babie, Eiland
TENNESSEE
Liran, Liran, Poelau Liban, Poelau Lirang.
Tike: a village, Mandar; 15' S, 119° 20 W. Not: Tihe.
Sand Mountain: see listing under ALABAMA.
Tike, Soengai: a stream (soengai), Mandar, about 5 miles long,
WASHINGTON
reaching Straat Makassar at the northwestern coast of Celebes;
1°15' S, 119 20 W. Not: Soengai Tihe.
Franklin D. Roosevelt Lake: the lake, approximately 150 miles
long, formed by the impounding of the Columbia River by Grand
Waikalo: a village, Timor en Onderhoorigheden, on Soemba island,
Coulee Dam, extending northward to the vicinity of the Canadian-
at a bay of the same name; 9°24' S, 119 14 E. Not: Waikola.
United States international boundary; Lincoln, Grant, Stevens,
Ferry, and Okanogan Counties; 48° 25' N, 118°15' W. Named after
THAILAND
Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
Dangrek Mountains: see listing under INDOCHINA.
*Khan Ngoen: Lang Suan is recommended as a second name in paren-
Revision of previous decision.
theses to aid in identification. A railway town on peninsular
Thailand 60 miles north of Tha Kham and 40 miles south of
Chumphon; 9 57 N, 99°04' E. Not: Amphoe Khanngeun, Ban Khan
Ngoen, Khan Ngden, Langsuan, Muang Hlang Suan.
Surat Thani: Ban Don is recommended as a second name in paren-
theses to aid in identification. A town and port on the Gulf of
Thailand 65 miles northwest of Nakhon Si Thammarat; 9°08' N,
99°19' E. Not: Amphoe Ban Don, Ban Dohn, Ban Makham Tia; Ban
Makham Tir, Changwat Surat, Changwat Surat Thani, Surashtradhani.
*Tha Kham: a railway town on peninsular Thailand 70 miles north-
west of Nakhon Si Thammarat; 9 06'30" N, 14'00" E. Not:
Amphoe Dhakham, Ban Tah Kam, Ban Tha Kham, Mondhol Surasdhani,
Muang Surard Dhani, Muang Surasd Dhani, Surasdhani Satthani,
Surasntra Dhani, Surastra Dhani, Surat, Surat Thani.
Revision of previous decision.
3
Rockefeller Center
New York
20
Room 5600
30 Rockefeller Plaza
July 20, 1945
Dear Judge Peters:
Your letter of June 21st about certain properties on Mount Desert Igland
owned by Mr. Dorr and which you thought might be of interest to Acadia National
Park is received.
As to the 80 acres owned by the Rodick Realty Company on Somes Sound,
while it would temporarily mar the view of the shore and particularly from
the Sargent Drive were the timber on this tract cut off, this does not seem
to me to be land that for any other reason the Park requires, nor do I feel
that to preserve it from being cut over justifies its acquisition by the Park.
I am, therefore, returning herewith the blue print which shows this land. *
As regards the other land, I feel that all of it is desirable as an addi-
tion to Acadia National Park. I have corresponded with Mr. Serenus Rodick
about this land since the receipt of your letter and he has discussed it with
Mr. Hadley. What follows represents their view, in which I concur.
The lots you mention on the second page of your letter you say have
been appraised at $4,100. This total includes 26 acres at Otter Creek, ap-
praised at $390. On the tracing which you sent me showing the lots in Bar
Harbor, I have written in the lot numbers as they appear on a comparable
tracing in my files and which Mr. Rodick has verified. These lots, as I
have numbered them on your tracing, are as follows:
No.
4
An irregular shaped lot
500
5- A triangular lot
These two numbers have been added on your
tracing in red by Mr. Rodick, who says they
has 49-52 inc
are included in the price of $4,100 you quote.
7
4 lots
by
10
1 lot
willing
11
half a lot
55
x 12-
1 lot
- 13
half a lot
62
17
1 lot
65
- 20
1 lot
250,
26
1 lot
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
→
1945-46
Details
1945 - 1946