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

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Search
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Metadata
1907-08
1907
Timeline 9/05)
Dorr
1908
=But LL, (Long if arts Open
- Athletic field
- Forestry Photosophy Statement
-Homors Property (12/8/24)
by GBD at BHULA, 1907
-Homans gift (Seligman art.)
-filth from G. Pinchet in Sierra
- Letter from 6. Pinchat (5/27)
N7. respondy t letter (3) for CBD.
Cretaining docation (1500?)
-William Everett on mety's
-CBO "sitting" c Urs Piper-
CBD at his home Thunsday
Published in Proc. Soc Pychical Pes.
Every Club 12/29
(see strep. file) for 1911
-But Arts her owen Johnson.
- Rochefellers 1st west to llaine
-wm Evertt on 2. Jan. meety c
(10/14/68).
GBD at his hence.
Eliot announer his retirent
By April 1909 Lowell 15 actog Pes.
- -Roomelts governor Coferem
e. Sharldand mother
- Jri+ Abby in Bardtarber (July)
for 1st times Nelsan born.
- 1908 is year that GBD as
"ny our action with c HCTPR"
bepinng. GBD to S.A.Elict, 11/11/29
MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS BULLETIN
19
Visiting Committees to the Museum
Notes.
for 1907.
GROUND WAS BROKEN FOR THE NEW BUILDING
THE
Visiting Committees entrusted with the
on April 11. Excavations are proceeding for the
duty of examining and reporting upon the va-
foundations of the power plant and for those of
rious departments of the Museum and branches of
the eastern wing of the main structure.
its activity for the year 1907 are as follows
The Museum has never in its history felt its limita-
tions of space so keenly as at present. The collec-
Administration.
Library.
tions in its keeping, its own possessions and objects
Laurence Minot, Chairman.
C. K. Bolton, Chairman.
loaned, greatly exceed the capacity of both gal-
Arthur F. Estabrook.
Holker Abbott.
leries and storage rooms. Five years ago a large
A. Lawrence Lowell.
Mrs. Henry D. Burnham.
Wallace L. Pierce.
Miss Agnes Irwin.
storage space was rented elsewhere and more has
Mrs. Roger Wolcott.
A. W. Longfellow.
been secured since. Within the past few weeks
the only one of the basement offices which was not
Chinese and Japanese Art.
Collection of Paintings.
also used for storage has been in part given up to
Edward J. Holmes,
Dr. A. T. Cabot, Chairman.
that purpose. The Museum will be obliged to ask
Chairman.
Dr. Henry C. Angell.
the indulgence of its friends during the remainder
Dr. W. S. Bigelow.
Eben D. Jordan.
Mrs. Harold J. Coolidge.
E. C. Tarbell.
of its occupancy of the present building, both be-
Ralph Adams Cram.
F. P. Vinton.
cause it is unable to take advantage of all desirable
Robert Treat Paine, 2d.
offers for loans and on account of the crowded and
Mrs. George Tyson.
sometimes irregular arrangement of the galleries.
Classical Department.
Print Department.
E. W. Forbes, Chairman.
Francis Bullard, Chairman.
THE NEW EDITION OF THE HANDBOOK of the
Mrs. W. Scott Fitz.
Gordon Abbott.
Museum is now in press and will soon be placed
W. Amory Gardner.
Allen Curtis.
on sale. It contains several new features. The
Bela L. Pratt.
H.G. Curtis.
J. Montgomery Sears.
F. G. Fitzpatrick.
type is larger, it has more illustrations, explanatory
Mrs. J. C. Phillips.
introductions to each department have been added,
and there is a location plan for the objects illus-
Educational Effort.
Textile Collection.
trated from each of the collections. The complete
Stratton D. Brooks, Chairman.
Dr. D. W. Ross, Chairman.
book, containing nearly three hundred pages, with
George B. Dorr.
Miss Frances G. Curtis.
over four hundred illustrations, will be sold for 50
Miss Fanny P. Mason.
Dr. J. W. Elliot.
Mrs. R. S. Russell.
Mrs. Bayard Thayer.
cents, postpaid 60 cents, while any one of its six
Walter Sargent.
C. J. H. Woodbury.
sections - Egyptian Art; Classical Art; Western
Art, Pictures Western Art, Miscellaneous Objects
Egyptian Department.
Western Art (except Textiles).
and Textiles Chinese and Japanese Art and the
G. M. Lane, Chairman.
J.T. Coolidge, Jr., Chairman.
Museum and Its History - will be sold separately
Mrs. Frederick Ayer.
Miss Ellen S. Hooper.
at the price of 15 cents; postpaid, 20 cents.
Mrs. T. James Bowlker.
F. G. Macomber.
Augustus Hemenway.
John Endicott Peabody.
Joseph Lindon Smith.
THE ADMISSIONS TO THE MUSEUM for the four
months of January, February, March and April
were 95,890. In 1906 to the same date they
School of the Museum.
were 102,087. The figures indicate an increase
in the admissions over last year, since the daily
ANNUAL EXHIBITION.
attendance of the pupils of the school is not now
registered. Of the total admissions, 51,343 were
The annual exhibition of the works of the pupils
Sunday visitors, as compared with 47,284 in the
was held at Copley Hall from May 24 to May 30.
same period for 1906, and 4,983 were paid ad-
PAIGE SCHOLARSHIP.
missions, as compared with 4,667 for 1906.
This scholarship, entitling the holder to two years'
study of art in Europe, has been awarded to Miss
AN EXHIBITION OF WATER COLORS will shortly
Alice Ruggles of Buffalo, N. Y. Miss Ruggles
be installed in the lobby on the basement floor of
entered the school in October, 1904, and has held
the Museum, reached by the stairway from the
the Helen Hamblen Scholarship for two years.
western end of the corridor of casts. Since the
In the Portrait Class Miss Ruggles took third in
sixth and seventh picture galleries were given up
Concours December, 1904, and the Sears Prize
to oil paintings, no water colors have been shown
of $50 in May, 1905. In the Advanced Paint-
at the Museum. The basement lobby offers a good
ing Class Miss Ruggles won number one in Con-
amount of wall space and a fair light.
cours in March and December, 1906, and in
March, 1907, and was awarded the Ayer Prize
DURING JUNE, JULY, AUGUST AND SEPTEM-
of $100 in May, 1906, and the Ayer Prize of
BER the Textile Room in the basement and the
$50 in May, 1907.
Library will be closed on Saturdays at 1 P.M.
This content downloaded from 137.49.1.13 on Mon, 22 May 2017 14:31:02 UTC
All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms
Page 1 of 1
From Ron Epp: regarding the Transit Route
From
To "
Date 02/18/2011 07:30:36 PM
> Hi Bill,
>
> Thanks for the informative and helpful phone call this morning.
>
> I reviewed my files on the Dorr involvement in the transit line and here is what
> I've got.
>
> The date was January 1907, not 1906, when John Stewart brought to Dorr's attention the proposed trolley
route from Ellsworth to Bar Harbor. The four-page account appears as the beginning of part 2 of The Story of
Acadia National Park, which was not published in Dorr's lifetime and was an editorial construct of Mary Hale
based on manuscript materials at Oldfarm, materials that I don't recall seeing at the Bar Harbor Historical Socirty
Museum.
>
At the ANP Sawtelle Archives (BV.3.f.5.2) is an undated document written by Dorn that is basically concerned
with securing the athletic field with funds from Mrs. Kennedy. It begins with a paragraph on the transit company
surveys done in spring and summer 1907 but lacks the detail of SANP. Mary Hale's son, Richard Walden Hale, Jr.
refers to this topic in his Story of Bar Harbor (1949) where he states that the effect of Dorr's ploy was to keep
automobiles out for another year (p. 177).
Also, a two page essay by the Rev. Edwin A. Garrett, III that I think appeared in the BHHSM Newsletter titled "He
found the Money" refers to Mr. Kennedy as President of the Mt. Desert Transit Company. Raymond Strout has
quite an assortment of corporate papers and may know something more about this matter.
To sum it up, all that I've read seems derivative of what Dorr claims in the SANP. If you find anything more, I'd
appreciate you passing it along. Sorry that I'll miss your presentation on March 10th. If you have some notes, I'd
appreciate a copy.
To reiterate, Elizabeth and I will be arriving in BH (staying at the Atlantic Eyrie) on May 17th and leaving on the
22nd. My JML talk is at 4 p.m. on the 20th. Becky Cole-Will is also trying to arrange an hour long presentation for
the park interpretative staff on the "Superintendent Dorr: Myths, Mysteries, and Facts."
If we hear nothing more about the Chapman archive by the time that I arrive, what do you think about the two
of us spending a quick hour or so surveying at least some of the content in the boxes labelled JDR Jr.?
Hope the two of you enjoy the southern climate.
All My Best,
Ron
> Ronald H. Epp, Ph.D.
> 47 Pondview Drive
> Merrimack, NH 03054
> (603) 424-6149
> eppster2@myfairpoint.net
Ronald H. Epp, Ph.D.
47 Pondview Drive
Merrimack, NH 03054
(603) 424-6149
eppster2@myfairpoint.net
https://webmail.myfairpoint.net/hwebmail/mail/message.php?index=1702
2/25/2011
112
RAILROAD COMMISSIONERS' REPORT.
Petition of the Mount Desert Transit Company, asking approval
of articles of association, and action of the Board thereon.
January I, 1907.
Articles of association of street railroad company organized
under Chapter 53 of the Revised Statutes of the State of Maine,
and Acts amendatory thereof and additional thereto.
We, the undersigned, Clement B. Newbold, a citizen of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. George B. Dorr, Robert
Amory and Fred C. Lynam, citizens of the State of Maine,
residing in the town of Eden, in said State, and John S. Ken-
nedy, a citizen of the State of New York, residing at New
York city in said State. do hereby associate ourselves together
*for the purpose of forming a corporation under the provisions
of Chapter 53 of the Revised Statutes of the State of Maine,
and Acts amendatory thereof and additional thereto, for the
purpose of constructing, maintaining and operating by elec-
tricity, compressed air or animal power, a street railroad for
public use for street traffic. for the conveyance of persons and
property.
The name of said corporation shall be the Mount Desert
Transit Company.
The gauge of road to be constructed and operated by said
corporation shall be four feet and eight and one-half inches.
The places, cities and towns from which, in which and to
which the said street railroad is to be constructed, maintained
and operated, are as follows:
From Ellsworth to the line between the towns of Trenton
and Eden at or near Mount Desert Narrows, so called: thence
to Bar Harbor in the town of Eden: thence also (from said
Trenton line) to Northeast Harbor in the town of Mt. Desert
thence also (from said Trenton line) to Manset in the town
of Southwest Harbor, said road to be constructed, maintained
and operated in the city of Ellsworth, and the towns of Tren-
ton. Eden, Mt. Desert, Tremont and Southwest Harbor, all in
the County of Hancock and State of Maine.
The length of such railroad as nearly as may be, is forty
(40) miles:
The amount of capital stock is one hundred and sixty thou-
sand dollars ($160.000).
Digitized by Google
Original from
PRINCETON UNIVERSITY
2
RAILROAD COMMISSIONERS' REPORT.
113
The number of shares of which said stock shall consist is
sixteen hundred (1600).
The names and places of residence of three persons, a major-
ity of whom are citizens of the State of Maine, who shall act
as Directors of said corporation and shall manage its affairs
until others are chosen in their places, are as follows:
George B. Dorr, residing at "Old Farm," Bar Harbor, Maine,
Robert Amory, residing at "The Eyrie," Bar Harbor, Maine,
and
Fred C. Lynam, residing at No. 8 High Street, Bar Harbor,
Maine.
In witness whereof we, the subscribers, have hereunto signed
our names and stated our residences, and opposite our names,
respectively the number of shares which we, each of us have
agreed to take in said company, this 26th day of December,
A. D. 1906.
No. of
Names.
Residences.
Shares.
John S. Kennedy,
6 West 57th St., New York City,
1,400
Clement B. Newbold,
Jenkintown P. O., Penna.,
50
Robert Amory,
Bar Harbor, Maine,
50
Fred C. Lynam,
Bar Harbor, Maine,
50
George B. Dorr.
Bar Harbor, Maine,
50
Affidavit of Directors of the Mount Desert Transit Company,
as required by Section 3 of Chapter 53 of the Revised Statutes
of the State of Maine.
We the undersigned, George B. Dorr, Robert Amory and
Fred C. Lynam, being a majority of the Directors of the Mount
Desert Transit Company, said Directors being named in the
Articles of Association, to which this affidavit is annexed, hereby
make affidavit that the stock of said corporation, as required
by Sec. 2 of Chap. 53 of said Statutes as set forth in said
Articles of Association, viz., one hundred and sixty thousand
dollars ($160,000) has been in good faith subscribed by respon-
sible parties : that five per cent of the amount of said stock, to
wit. the sum of eight thousand dollars ($8,000) has been paid
thereon in cash to the directors named in said Articles of Asso-
ciation, and that it is intended in good faith to construct, main-
by
Google
Original from
Digitized
PRINCETON UNIVERSITY
3,
114
RAILROAD COMMISSIONERS' REPORT.
tain and operate the road mentioned in such Articles of Asso-
ciation.
George B. Dorr,
Robert Amory,
Fred C. Lynam.
STATE OF MAINE.
County of Hancock, SS.
Dec. 29th, A. D. 1906.
Subscribed and sworn to by the above named Fred C. Lynam,
Before me,
(Seal)
ALBERT H. LYNAM, Notary Public.
COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS.
County of Suffolk, SS,
Dec. 27th, A. D. 1906.
Subscribed and sworn to by the above named George B.
Dorr and Robert Amory.
Before me,
CHAS. HALL ADAMS,
Commissioner for the State of Maine, residing
( (Seal)
at Boston. in said County of Suffolk and
State of Massachusetts.
STATE OF MAINE.
In Board of Railroad Commissioners.
It having been shown to the satisfaction of the Board of
Railroad Commissioners that all of the provisions of Sections
two and three of Chapter fifty-three of the Revised Statutes
have been complied with. this certificate of such facts and this
approval in writing are hereunto endorsed upon the foregoing
Articles of Association of the Mount Desert Transit Company.
Dated at Augusta this first day of January, A. D. 1907.
JOSEPH B. PEAKS,
BENJ. F. CHADBOURNE,
PARKER SPOFFORD,
Railroad Commissioners of Maine.
Digitized by Google
Original from
PRINCETON UNIVERSITY
-
Chebacco IX (2008).
Investing in Acadia:
The Invisible Hand of John Stewart Kennedy
680
THE AMERICAN REVIEW
William J. Baker
lion dol
small be
In The Wealth of Nations (1776), Adam Smith extolled the "invis-
fight an
afterwar
ible hand" of logic linking individual enterprise to the common good.
kind.
Although the relation of personal self-interest to larger social concerns is
This
That su
an arguable topic, Smith's "invisible hand" metaphor is a term potential-
tive and
ly rich with meanings beyond the metaphorical. History is filled with
fluences,
high exc
literal examples of invisible hands working quietly behind the scenes on
York an
projects beneficial to large numbers of people.
America
the taxpa
In the creation of Acadia National Park, John Stewart Kennedy is
to be the
one of those unrecognized, unremembered patrons whose philanthropic
men who
eyes, not
generosity contributed to the common good. Histories of the Park
set on li
invariably focus on the monumental efforts of George B. Dorr, Charles
and not
pile of
W. Eliot, and John D. Rockefeller, Jr., not on Kennedy. They are the
the Cree
dominant players, he an afterthought. In contrast to their fame, the
capacity
New
Kennedy name is not popularly attached to any mountain, historic
to meet
home, or carriage trail on Mount Desert Island.
institution
education
Mention of John S. Kennedy usually evokes questions about his
ever situ
surname. Was he related to that rich and powerful Kennedy clan from
from me
ger. sent
Massachusetts? Was he an uncle or cousin of John F. Kennedy? No, his
aid. Th
American home was New York City, not Boston; his roots were Scot-
owes it
when it
tish, not Irish; his heritage was Protestant, not Catholic; his passion was
that is to
economic investment, not politics.
These
He was an entrepreneurial, managerial wizard, but a private man, not
when pu
a public figure. Kennedy himself is partly to blame for his own invis-
dispositi
THE LATE JOHN NTEWART KENNEDY, OF NEW YORK.
Kennedy
ibility. On projects ranging from hospitals, libraries, and museums in
Whose princely bequests for educational purposes
of servic
New York City to mountain peaks on Mount Desert Island, he ada-
were Announced last month.)
into his
great ins
mantly refused to allow public mention of his financial support.
(3) The New York Public Library, soon
ing of c
to take possession of its monumental home; tion that
Having once made a huge donation to the enlargement of the New
of
cent pro
York Presbyterian Hospital with the proviso that no announcement of
his gift be "proclaimed postentatiously," he similarly put a publicity lid on
all the energetic and financial contributions he made to the early stages
6
7-17.
Davis affiliations 1
2dreader 1900
(1) Massachusetts 141471 19X0.
Cmn. or Lectures xPubs.
" " they c C.S. Sargest, Chees.
lt. Resect Transit Co.
Davis Rolain most Desent Transit Compay
Incoparated 1/1/1907 at request
Dou, Newheld, Genory, Lynam &
Jchn S. Kernedy
Lempt 40 males Ellsonth
Terton
Eder,
Teaton
N.E. Habe,
Monet 5
1, 600 shares, 1400 bought 3 J.S Kenney
50 i. " GDD.
Capitaland at $160,000. 100
Dones a Director, paid $2,500.
are
4.
FORTY-NINTH ANNUAL REPORT
OF THE
RAILROAD COMMISSIONERS
OF THE
State of Maine
WITH STATISTICAL TABLES COMPILED FROM THE ANNUAL
RETURNS OF THE RAILROAD COMPANIES OPERATING
RAILROADS IN THE STATE FOR THE YEAR
ENDED JUNE 30, 1907, INCLUDING
PETITIONS,
DECISIONS AND RULES OF THE BOARD
MADE DURING THE YEAR ENDED NOVEMBER 30.
1907
AUGUSTA
KENNEBEC JOURNAL PRINT
1907
Digitized by Google
Original from
PRINCETON UNIVERSITY
Report of Trees and Planting Committee
1907
GENERAL PLANTING.
The chairman reports that work was done by Mr.
Grant last autumn. in planting on the village streets
and in caring for planting done in previous years. at
an expense amounting to $233.-no work having been
done by the committee since that time. Care of
previous planting, of vines especially, is now necessary
and fresh planting along the roadside where opportu-
nity has arisen. The places of certain trees, more-
over, which were wantonly destroyed a year ago
during the visit of the fleet along the walk on lower
Main street, need to be refilled by others, which can
be obtained from former plantations on the roadside
that It would now be better to thin out. On this
various work $200 could be expended with advantage
If this is more than can be spared from other work
$150 would serve for doing what is urgent in the
committee's work.
VILLAGE GREEN PLANTING.
All the trees planted last year and this are doing
well, with the exception of certain canoe birches at
the western end of the Green which were attacked
last autumn by an insect working its way between the
bark and wood. around the trunk. The trees thus
attacked will need to be replaced. Once established,
the canoe birch is one of the hardiest of trees and not
readily subject to the attack of insect or other dis-
leases, but it is liable to suffer in removal even under
the best conditions and is then subject to such attack
Amph
while its vitality is impaired.
One or two of the large poplars on the northern
side of the lot, which suffered from the drought last
year, are also dying and need to be replaced. Other-
wise the only planting to be done upon the Green is
Frestry
that of a few Norway maples along the southern side
of the long path, corresponding to those planted on
the northern side this spring along a portion of the
walk. These uniting with the others will presently
make this walk a shady one throughout the greater
portion of its length and add considerably to the
pleasantness and beauty of the Green.
For these various plantings on the Green your
committee recommend an appropriation of $200.
After this planting is done but little further appropria-
tion for tree planting on the Green will be required.
FORESTRY.
An attempt has been made this summer by the
Tree Committee. jointly with the president of the
association. to initiate a movement looking toward
investment by the summer residents, either Individu-
ally or in association, In such lands on the island as
an expert may judge to be of permanent forestry value
and not of greater value for other purposes ; and their
scientific forestry treatment for the purpose of busi-
ness Investment under the direction of a competent
expert. The chairman of the committee. having
given some study to the question himself and con-
sulted experts upon it, believes that sound Investment
can be made in such lands on the Island. investment
which would ultimately bring a good as well as perma-
133
nent return.
The forestry conditions on such land upon the
Island are distinctly good. Growth is rapid and pro-
duction quick: the woods which can be grown are
valuable and all the wood grown will always be readily
marketable on the Island itself : and there is a large
extent of land upon the island, many thousand acres
probably-which. while it is of little or no value for
other purposes. would be fertile in tree growth. Such
lands rightly treated would be permanently productive.
and as in good forestry the woods would be merely
thinned from time to time until their main crop of
trees had reached full size and marketable value. not
over two per cent. of these woodlands at most would
ever be cut over in any single year. And this cutting
would be massed each year in special areas selected
with regard to the growth of trees upon them and to
future work. and so selected also as to exert a can-
stant check upon the spread of fires upon the island-
an important matter in forestry investment as for the
landscape. The constant disfigurement now caused
by cutting in small. scattered areas along the roads
country
and paths. and the danger that exists at present from
fires starting or spreading in the brush left in them
which should be bornt. would be avoided under such
Dorr
treatment.
Under it by far the greater part of the forestable
lands upon the island would always have good woods
-and a considerable portion of them old and fine
of
ones-growing on them and subject to good care and
forestry treatment. This would be infinitely better
believe
than the present state of things or anything that could
otherwise be hoped for, and would help. more than
anything eise could do. to ensure the permanent
for
beauty of the island. and to add to Its attraction as a
summer home. Nor would it hinder at all but help
they
the outright purchase of such portions of the older
woods as might seem to be specially important to
fath
keep permanently forested for the pleasure of our
drives and walks. Such portions would be but a
small part of the land capable of good forestry treat-
ment. and piece by piece they could be acquired as
the woods on them became mature. and held as
public reservation.
The chairman of the committee believes that this
scheme is practicable and economically sound. and
that aesthetic results of great importance to the
island would inevitably result from its adoption. There
is no question moreover that the price of wood is
going to advance steadily for many years to come,
until the forest crop becomes a profitable one to grow
in more arid regions than ours and under conditions
less favorable to forest growth.
The first step towards such investment is a
thorough forestry study of the island by a competent
expert and the preparation of a report upon it and
forestry map. This the chairman hopes it may be
possible to get done within the coming year. The
acquisition of land for forestry purposes would follow
after slowly, land being only purchased when it could
be acquired at a price reasonable in view of its own
actual value for the end in view and that of the stand-
ing wood upon it. In confirmation of his opinion in
this matter the chairman of the Tree Committee sub-
mits a letter just received by him from the Forestry
Department at Washington.
GEORGE B. DORR. Chairman.
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
FOREST SERVICE
Washington.
Branch of Silviculture.
September 3. 1907.
MR. GEORGE B. DORR.
Bar Harbor, Maine.
Dear Sir:
Mr. Pinchot has undoubtedly written you that he is
very much interested in your plan for taking care of
the forests on Mount Desert Island. Your scheme
for preserving the forests not for purely sentimental
or aesthetical reasons but also for financial considera-
tions is a very sound one and is in full accord with the
principles of true forestry. A work of this kind suc-
cessfully carried out would be of great value to
forestry in general. and would serve as 2 conspicuous
object lesson to other forest owners and forest inves-
tors of what can be done in this line. The forests on
Mount Desert Island seem to offer a good opportunity
for such an enterprise. and the Forest Service will be
very giad to do ail that it can to help you in carrying
out your plan.
I do not think it will be possible this fail to make
as thorough an examination as would be necessary for
a full and authoritative report on the situation. which
is absolutely essential for your purpose. Unfortunate-
ly. Mr. Cary cannot visit the island this fail I shall.
however. be very glad to send Mr. S. T. Dana. of the
Forest Service. about September 15. to talk matters
over with you and to make a preliminary investigation
of the conditions there with a view to completing the
work next year.
Very truly yours.
(Signed) Wx. T. Cox.
Assistant Forester.
and circulated with The annual
Voted that the report be printed
report of the association.
213
1907
has lately published a brief memoir of Charles
The Emerson society gave Mrs. Howe yesterday the
ith special regard to this phase of his ceaseless
largest audience of the season, while she gave her remi-
rom which I gather more facts than Monroe gives
niscences of an early acquaintance with the Concord poet-
ir years older than Alcott, but died in 1872, 16
sage, and a view of his relation to life and society. She
ier; not, however, until he had seen and described spoke of the early misconception of him in Boston, when
6 of his efforts to introduce the Prussian system of
she first came here about 1837-8 to visit, where her
nal schools. In his Framingham address in 1864
brother had a friendship with Longfellow, and herself with
peaking of the convention of Plymouth county, De-
a distant kinsman, Samuel G. Ward, then of Boston. It
1836:
was he who introduced Emerson to her as an acquaintance,
who was to accompany her back to New York; during which
rge meeting-house of the First parish in Plymouth
journey she endeavored, she said, to convert him from
and I opened the whole matter as clearly and
Unitarianism to her youthful orthodoxy, and reminded him
S I could, --showing that the great work must be-
that Satan is ever roaming about, seeking whom he may
nding a state normal school in Plymouth county. I
devour. To which Emerson replied, "Yes, Miss Ward,
audience to catechise me about my views and
but do you not think the angel gets the better of the demon
1 they did so. The audience warmed themselves
at last?" which was to her rather a new view of the subject.
abod Morton, Esq., deacon of the First parish,
Mr. Malloy and others took part in the brief discussion
said: 'Mr. President, I am glad to see this day.
following, and related the pleasure with which he heard
is well begun. The mass of facts now presented
Mrs. Howe give her lecture on Emerson's relation to so-
lainly prove conclusively the inestimable value of
ciety at the Concord school of philosophy in 1884, and met
seminaries. Mr. Brooks says he wants the first
her socially for the first time at a dinner table that day.
lished in the Old Colony, and so do I, sir; and I
Some allusion having been made to Goethe and Emerson,
$1000 toward its establishment."
Mrs. Howe said, "Do you think that with all his genius
Goethe did so much for society as Emerson?" and it was
:cured the building of the Bridgewater normal
replied that he did not.
nd this was my old friend Morton, father of Mrs.
uncle of my college friend, Edwin Morton, long
(493) May 23, 1907. EMERSON IN A WEEK OF AN-
d with me in many actions--among them the sup-
NIVERSARIES.
hn Brown and the relief of his family. Edwin Mor-
father of Edwin, was a partner of Ichabod, then a
This has been a week of anniversaries and memorials.
us merchant, sending out vessels from their own
The ancient glories and strifes of anniversary week are
Wellingsley, on both sides of which stood the cot-
passed away; but there is still much to be said and done in
nid orchards, of the two brothers. They gave
this last full week of May. It now includes what was not
ney toward the Brook Farm experiment and there-
formerly much noticed, --the birthday of Emerson and of
rassed their property. When the older brother
Mrs. Howe, both which are this week celebrated, although
364, his nephew Edwin wrote and joined in singing
the domestic commemoration of Mrs. Howe comes on the
ral hymn, which I think better poesy than James
actual birthday, next Monday, the 27th
At the Emer-
quoted above:--
son society meeting, --the last of the season, some portions
of Parker's critique of Emerson in 1850 were read, in
ICHABOD MORTON.
contrast to the flippancies of the latest biographer, who
uses Emerson to exalt his own altitude of criticism. The
in have heaven here, if we but live rightly --I.M.]
biographer knew not his victim, while Parker, a man of
competent learning, had known Emerson intimately for a
He dreamed that heaven should come to earth,
dozen years.
And ceaseless toiled the day to view;
O'erborne, he sank before its birth,
(494) May 30, 1907. LOUIS AGASSIZ--WHY EMERSON
And lo! to him the dream is true.
NEVER PRINTED THE LECTURE ON THE FRENCH.
O weary heart! o weary hand!
No more the anxious strife renew !
Louis Agassiz, whose 100th birthday was properly cele-
A Power above the vision planned
brated at Cambridge on Monday, was Swiss by birth and
And heaven indeed has come to you.
early education, but also studied both in Germany and
Paris, and had a degree of loyalty to the science teaching
Sweet May returns, --with leaf and flower
in the French capital which led him to protest against
The garden of his love expands;
Emerson's one lecture on the French national character,
Rewarding Autumn brings her dower,
which he gave in Cambridge while I was in college and
But gives the fruit to other hands!
Agassiz was our geological professor--long before his
So blest is he, and ever blest,
great enterprise of the natural history museum was car-
Who patient SOWS where others reap;
ried forward to success. Having heard the lecture, and
And ever-ripening fields shall best
never hearing more of it, or seeing it in print anywhere,
His ever-growing memory keep.
I once asked Emerson what had become of it. It belonged
to the same period as the lectures on England which made
May 16, 1907. MRS. HOWE AT THE EMERSON
up "English Traits," and that book had been 20 years be-
Y.
fore the world when I asked the question. Emerson replied,
Corp.
18 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston.
June 15th, 1907.
President Charles W. Eliot,
Harvard University,
Cambridge, Kass.
Dear President Eliot,
It would materially help toward the completion of the new
road planned for the development of the land lying to the south of
my own at Bar Harbor the greater part of which has now already been
built at my own expense and that of Mrs Markoe if Harvard College
would place two hundred dollars in my hands to be expended by one
on the building of that section of the road which runs across the
western end of its lot and gives access to it. And on the clearing
of the land adjacent to it from dead trees which now disfigure it
and are a source of danger from fire in summer. I have myself
built the road and cleared the roadsides along the adjoining Chase
land and I hope to be able to Eet the whole road completed so that
it can be used for driving before the summer ends.
Yours truly,
George B. does
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
FOREST SERVICE
Washington.
Branch of Silviculture.
September 3. 1907.
MR. GEORGE B. DORR.
Bar Harbor, Maine.
Dear Sir :
Mr. Pinchot has undoubtedly written you that he is
very much interested in your plan for taking care of
the forests on Mount Desert Island. Your scheme
for preserving the forests not for purely sentimental
or aesthetical reasons but also for financial considera-
tions is a very sound one and is in full accord with the
principles of true forestry. A work of this kind suc-
cessfully carried out would be of great value to
forestry in general. and would serve as 2 conspicuous
object lesson to other forest owners and forest inves-
tors of what can be done in this line. The forests on
Mount Desert Island seem to offer a good opportunity
for such an enterprise. and the Forest Service will be
very giad to do all that it can to help you in carrying
out your plan.
I do not think it will be possible this fall to make
25 thorough an examination as would be necessary for
a full and authoritative report on the situation. which
is absolutely essential for your purpose. Unfortunate-
ly. Mr. Cary cannot visit the island this fall. I shall.
however. be very glad to send Mr. S. T. Dana. of the
Forest Service. about September 15. to talk matters
over with you and to make a preliminary investigation
of the conditions there with a view to completing the
work next year.
Very truly yours.
(Signed) Wx. T. Cox.
Assistant Forester.
and circulatch with The annual
Voted that the e port be printed
report of the association
BAR HARBOR'S NEW TEMPLE.
Special to The New York Times.
New York Times (1857-Current file): Jun 16. 1907; ProQuest Historical Newspapers The New York Times 2001)
pg. SMA3
BAR HARBOR'S NEW TEMPLE.
Copy of Old Greek Shrine Will Be Devoted to Music
and Art to be Opened Next Month.
Special to The New York Times.
Emma Eames and Emilio de Gogorza will
BAP. HARBOR, Maine, June 15.-The
appear.
middle of June finds Bar Harbor's Sum-
series of six concerts has been planned,
including some of the best-known attrac-
mer colony busy establishing themselves
tions of the country. The list is as fol-
for the Summer months, and cottage after
lows: July 13, Mme. Emma Eames and
tottage opening daily. The Newport
Emilio de Gogorza; July 26, Petschnikoff
and Marguerite Hall; Aug. 8, De Pach-
House, one of the largest hotels in town.
mann. Chopin recital: Aug. 9, Barrere
opened to-day, with a good booking,
quintet and Mrs. Francis L. Wellman, née
while the St. Sauvuer opens Thursday.
Miss Emma Juch: Aug. 17. Campanari;
Aug. 23, Bar Harbor Choral Society. For
The Malvern and the Louisburg will not
this concert a number of well-known solo-
open their doors until July 1.
ists of National reputation have been en-
The opening of the hotels makes little
gaged, whose names will be announced
later.
difference to the cottage set, however,
The committee in charge of these con-
which is continuing to arrive daily. The
certs consists of Mrs. Robert Abbé, Chair-
more fashionable clubs are all now open,
man; Dave Hennen Morris of New York,
Secretary; Mrs. John I. Kane, Miss De-
and are being used to considerable ex-
hon, Mrs. Henry Lane Eno, Mrs. Park-
tent, especially the Swimming Club.
man, Mrs. Ernesto G. Fabbri, Louis B.
Among the arrivals of the week have
McCagg. George B. Dorr, Walter Dam-
been Mr. and Mrs. John Stewart Ken-
rosch, Ernest Schelling, Mrs. Miles B.
Carpenter, Mrs. Francis L. Wellman. Mrs.
bedy of New York. with two or three
W. P. Douglass, Miss Baker, Mrs. Alex-
Gests, who have opened Kenarden Lodge,
ander J. Cassatt.
their handsome estate on the shore, for
The first meeting of the Village Im-
provement Association Is called for Tues-
the Summer months. Mr. Kennedy spent
day, June 18. at the Y. M! C. A. rooms,
two days here looking after his interests
and as it is the first meeting of the year,
in the Mount Desert Transit Company,
a large attendance is expected. L. E.
Opdycke of New York is President of
the new electric system here, of which
the society.
be is President. A number of well known
Mrs. J. Montgomery Sears's cottage, The
Summer visitors are Directors. He left
Briars, on the shore, which has been let
to Mrs. Foster Milliken of New York for
for Canada, where he will spend the rest
a term of years, has been sublet for the
DE the month on his annual fishing trip
present season to R. Fulton Cutting of
at the Restigonaho and Cascapardia Sal-
New York, who will arrive about the 20th
of this month to occupy it with his family.
thon Clubs.
Mr. and Mrs. William M. Fleitmann of
Mrs. Henry F. Dimock of New York has
New York were among the Jate arrivals
taken the Cleftstone cottage on Eden
of the week, and will occupy the Pendle-
ton cottage, The Bagatelle, this Summer.
Street, and expects to arrive here the
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Auchincloss of New
first week in July. Mrs. Dimock is prom-
York and family have arrived here for
mently identified with the new Temple
the Summer months, and will spend the
season.
bf Music and Arts, which is nearing com-
Mr. and Mrs. John Erwin of New York
pletion, and which, it is hoped, will be
arrived this week. and will occupy Buena
ready for use this Summer.
Vista, on Eden Street, which they have
had for several Summers.
The new Temple of Music and Arts is
S. Megargee Wright and family. who
expected to be one of the most attractive
have had one of the Roberts cottages on
features of this resort. The building it-
Mount Desert Street for several seasons,
have taken the Lookout cottage on the
self is a copy of an old Grecian temple,
Eagle Lake Road this Summer, and ar-
finished to represent Parian marble. The
rived this week.
building is finished in white stucco, with
Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Bridgehan of New
York arrived Tuesday morning to spend
a red roof. All the lighting will be from
the Summer at Rockhurst, their cottage
the top, after the manner of the ancient
on Mount Desert Street, which is one of
Greek shrines. The walls and ceiling
the show places of the town.
Mrs. Carolyn K. Wright, who had the
of the stage will be constructed on the
Ladd cottage last season, has leased the
same prinolples as the sounding boards
Hinch cottage, on High Street, and is ex-
of the stages in German music halls. The
pected shortly.
Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Emery of New York
Lile roof is of special tiling of Venetian
arrived here this week, opening their cot-
red, made especially for this building. The
tage, the Turrets, on Eden Street, for
Interior finish is of Michigan pine. The
the season.
pillars which adorn the sides and ends are
Bar Hapbor is to have the distinction
of entertaining the Austrian Embassy
the largest wooden columns ever turned in
again this Summer. as a cottage for the
Maine. There is a large logigla on the
members of the Embassy has been leased
front of the building. and on either side
from Frederic May. The members of
of this are large panels in which will be
this Embassy are well-known guests here
placed plaster casts from the Parthenon
and very popular. Other additions are
frieze, which are being imported from
expected to the diplomatic colony here
shortly.
Paris.
The new building has a very attractive
Mrs. Dehon and Miss Dehon of New
situation near the Kebo golf links on the
York were among the arrivals of the
Cromwell's Harbor Road. just east of the
week. and will occupy the Frost cottage
amphitheatre putting green. The location
on West Street, which they have had for
a number of seasons.
Is in a most beautiful grove of trees. The
Mrs. Martin Van Buren of New York
hall has a seating capacity of 380.
The concerts that will be given there
has arrived at the Higgins cottage in the
this Summer will be noteworthy events in
Field, where she has passed many Sum-
mers.
the musical world. A number of commit-
Mr. and Mrs. Lea McIlvaine Luquer of
tee meetings have been held at the new
New York came this week to spend the
building this week to complete details of
season at Eagle Cliff on the Schooner
plans formulated in the early Fall of last
Head Road.
year, and the building will be pushed to
Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Ostrander of
completion at once, to be dedicated July
17, when no less personages than Mme.
New York arrived Monday to open their
cottage here for the season.
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
EAMES DEDICATES BAR HARBOR TEMPLE
Special to The New York Times
New York Times 1857-Current file): Jul 14, 1907; ProQuest Historical Newspapers The New York Times (1851 2001)
pg. 7
EAMES DEDICATES
BAR HARBOR TEMPLE
Copy of Old Greek Shrine Built
for the Summer
Concerts.
THE SEASON'S ATTRACTIONS
First Hop of the Season at the Swim-
ming Club-Dinners, Bridges,
and Receptions.
Special to The New York Times.
BAR HARBOR, July 13.-The new Tem-
ple of Mustc and Arts at Bar Harbor was
dedicated to-day, in the presence of one
of the most fashionable audiences ever
gathered here.
Mme. Emma Eames was the soloist, as-
sisted by Emilio De Gogorza, the bari-
tone. The building, which is close to the
Kebo golf links, and situated in a com-
manding position on the side of a hill.
is a perfect model of an old Greek temple,
both inside and out. It was built en-
tirely by subscription by music lovers of
the Summer residents, and is designed
solely for an art gallery and concert room.
The concert given to-day. was the first
of a series in which the other artist$
are Giuseppe Campanari, Vladimir D6
Pachmann, Alexander Petschnikoff, and
Margaret Hall, the Barrere Quintet. and
Mrs. Francis L. Welman, and the Bar
Harbor Choral Society. The Building
Committee consisted of Mrs. Henry F.
Dimock. Mrs. Robert Abbe, Henry Lane
Eno. George B. Dorr. and George W.
Vanderbilt.
The Concert Committee consits of Mrs.
Robert Abbe. Dave Hennen Morris, Mrs.
John I. Kane. Mrs. Henry F. Dimock.
Mrs. Alexander J. Cassatt. Miss Dehon.
Mrs. Henry Lane Eno. Mrs. Parkman.
I
Ernesto G. Fabbri. Louis B. McCagg.
George B. Dorr. Walter Damrosch. Miss
Baker. Mrs. W. P. Douglass. Mrs. Fran-
/ cis L. Welman. Mrs. Miles B. Carpenter.
and Ernest Schelling.
The first of the season's series of week-
ly hops was given at the Swimming Club
to-night, with one of the largest gather-
ings in attendance ever there.
A number of dinners were given pre-
vious to the hop.
Mrs. J. C. Gerndt of New York enter-
tained at bridge at the Swimming Club.
followed by a pleasant tea. Those pres-
ent were: Mrs. William Macey. Mrs.
Francis L. Welman, Mrs. Harvey Inglis.
Mrs. Walter Dabney. Mrs. E. H. Buckley,
Mrs. Stewart. Miss Macey. Miss Larkin.
Mrs. Anderson. Mrs. Shinkle, Mrs. Win-
throp McKim. Mrs. William L. Fleitmann,
Miss Linzee. and Miss Biddle.
Mrs. Henry F. Dimock of New York
came to-day and has the Clefstone cot-
tage. She came from her Summer home
at South Coventry. Conn., and has as her
guest her daughter. Mrs. Cary Hutchin-
son.
Mr. and Mrs. Philip H. Minis and Mrs.
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
1907
11 April 2019
The archives at the Hill-Stead Museum in Farmington Connecticut contain several
letters from William and Alice James to the owner of the Hill-Stead residence, Theodate
Pope (later Riddle).
These letters written to Theodate in the years 1906-1908 usually reference her sustained
interest in psychical research, an area of professional interest to Mr. and Mrs. William
James for more than two decades prior to this interchange. The archives also contains
photographic evidence of the James's visit there in 1907, and perhaps on other
occasions.
There are repeated references to other researchers and interested parties in this area,
John George Piddington, Richard Hodgson, Hubert Livingston Carrington, and James
Henry Hyslop-and of course George B. Dorr.
A letter from Alice (7.14.1908) is most revealing for she hopes "that(George Dorr's work
of this Past winter will prove to be a solid one. He has tried to make it such and he
certainly has taken good care of the 'light.' He is building a summer cottage for Mrs.
Piper at Owl's Head [Rockport, ME] where she will be near to Margaret Bancroft, and
SO looked after a little." Therein she also refers to the "unwise" efforts of Ethel Sands
who wrote "warning letters to G.B.D."
William, James writes (9.2.1907) to Theodate beginning "A first-rate week (with Dorr at
Bar Harbor, and two hour talk with Carrington last evening." In a letter from Oxford
(5.8.1908) he refers to a letter to Dorr which he now sends Theodate {not included],
remarking that "knowing of G.B.D.['s] recent devotion to the cause and admirable
investigations, [I] felt put out at what seemed an attempt to get at Mrs. Piper from
London, over his head as it was." He compliments Theodate and states that "similar
explanations [were given] to D[orr] which will make him also see it in the true light. He
has struck quite a new lead, and 'Myers' is developing a novel type of manifestation.
There seem to be no end of them!"
William also writes to Theodate (8.14.1907) that "we are going to Geo. Dorr's on the
22nd," after three days with Miss Pope at Farmington.
Ronald H. Epp
Hill-Stead& William James
482
November 1907
November 1907
483
To Ida Minerva Tarbell
The greatest pleasure your book has constantly brought me, for it has
aid close at hand through it all, came from the ever-present assurance
95 IRVING ST. I CAMBRIDGE. Nov 17.0
hat you had cared to send it. The book itself, meanwhile, grows more
Dear Miss Tarbell,
urely memorable. I cannot quite adjust my thoughts, even yet, to all
I thank you for your letter, too long unanswered. It may be (tholl
eterms of it. I am sure, however, that it comes nearer the philosophy
isn't likely) that I shall have some stuff susceptible of popularization.
ward which I have blundered through my fifty years than I should at
happens that just at this moment McClure is accepting a short addre
st have thought it could. That what we call truth is itself conditioned
that I gave at Radcliffe College the other last "address" I shall
the imperfections of our wits and our language is as plain as that the
ever give in my life! Someone from that magazine had interviewed
rth turns. That we live and die in terms of surmise is another little
wife during my absence in the Country about my writing some articl
uth not to be gainsaid. That we need not think in these lesser terms
and she had promised to "submit" that as soon as it was delivered, with
clear. That the terms in which we think, at our wisest, are as far this
the result of their accepting it if I will make it a soliloquy-a least
perfection soon comes to follow. Finality is nowhere within human
an address on a particular occasion. So I must now soliloquize it
That we can always press some way further on the road thither is
have nothing now in sight for a possible "American." But I shan't for
datemakes life at once most despairing and most inspiring.
get!-What a beautiful November.
Paint, old as all this may seem, it will perhaps tell you better than any
Very sincerely yours, Wm Jam
itort to be more precise what the vistas are when I have strayed with
ALS: PMA
from you, during the months of silence. In temperament, I am
Ida Tarbell, previously with McClure's Magazine, was at this time associated with A
more and more the Tory I was born. It is a good world, this, and a very
ican Magazine.
that the same time. Progress takes us into new regions of both sorts.
2WJ's "Social Value of the College-Bred."
who would rather linger cherish the old good- secure that, ill as
mngs
go, they might go worse. You who press on have more confident
not completely sustained, I personally think, by the noble, tragic
From Barrett Wendell
story of human aspiration. But, at heart, we are more at one than
358 Marlborough Street, I 19 November for
careless moments sometimes make us fancy. For what we both
for most is that the truth we leave behind us shall help the time to
Dear James:
The pure delight your letter brings me is dimmed by sense of
towards more righteousness that it has been our own passing lot
carelessly I must have seemed to neglect you all these months.
iffuse.
Pragmatism came to me, a night-mare of a summer was beginning
as pleasant to see Billy the other day. Every hearty message to
dear old Aunt Sarah Barrett, who has no other of her line near by
and to you all.
a stroke of paralysis, which seemed final. She lingered, day by
day
Always sincerely yours Barrett Wendell
I had-gladly, too, for she has been perhaps the most constantly
18 bms Am 1092.9 (683)
lightful of all my kin since I was a baby-to be with her every day
letter of 18 November 1907 is calendared.
ter weeks, she began, most deplorably, to recover a bed-ridden
Arah Barrett was a sister of Mary Bertoldi Barrett Wendell, Wendell's mother.
tence. Incidentally, there were many perplexities-a new thing fo
in just this aspect. It goes on still. She is really better, to survit
definitely. I do not have to see her constantly, though I am therea
Margaret Mary James
ten as possible. From May to October, however, I hardly missed
And it was all I could do-Letters, work, reading, everything well
95 IRVING ST. I CAMBRIDGE. Nov 21.07
the board. And so the weeks passed into months, without a WOW
Peg This is just a note, snatcht into the before breakfast hour,
you; until, for my shame, I didn't write.
others being still up stairs, to say that we are gladly expecting you
p.484
485
for Thanksgiving. We have been having rather busy times, with Sher
I am now hurrying to Harvard Square with your bundle. I suppose
win Gibbens, Miss Pope, etc spending the nights, but it's over. I tod
you got the previous one, also expressed to the Hotel by Adams express.
have got off some extra jobs, and can settle to work on the Hodgson
This one goes by American Express. Please acknowledge receipt!
Piper records, beginning to day. Bill is gone with Roger W. Superscript(2) to the
Yours, as ever, WJ.
Cape-poor things! the weather being SO bad. Your mother is well
ALS: CtY
no headaches. Mrs. Piper is in Boston at last. Geo Dorr also
I
saw
The Mills Hotels were in New York City. James Bates Peterson, WJ's long-standing
him yesterday at Sam Ward's funeral at Mount Auburn 3
Royce is giv
charity, resided in one of them.
ing Lowell lectures, I shall go to night. 4 Also for the 2nd
time
to
Lo!
hengrin at the Castle Square Theatre to morrow night. Think of
3 weeks of that superlative Opera with best seats at 50 cents!! Keep well
To Wincenty Lutoslawski
and give my love to Mary W..6 I'm summoned to bkfst!
Your loving
W.J
95 IRVING ST. | CAMBRIDGE. Nov. 23. [1907]
ALS: MH bms Am 1092.9 (3090)
Dear Luto-Your heartrending letter of yesterday arrives this A.M.-all
1 In his diary for 18 November 1907 WJ notes: "Sherwin Gibbons and his wife for the
the effect of Mills Hotel! Aussi que diable alliez vous faire dans cette
night."
galère? The brutality of their not receiving the package because it was
2 Roger Sherman Warner.
unpaid! I ought to have paid it, but I imagined your feeling pleased at
Samuel Gray Ward (1817-1907), American banker, father of Thomas Wren Ward,
paying it yourself. A similar package (also unpaid) (the second) went
WJ's diary entry for 21 November 1907 is: "Went to Royce's Lowell lecture. Loyalty.
the day before yesterday (or yesterday, I can't remember which, my brain
See letter to Cattell of 21 August 1907.
is SO muddled in these days).
5 According to his diary WJ saw Lohengrin on 15 November and thought the "basi
I
singer" splendid.
hope you wont turn away from/America merely on account of the
6 Mary Worthington.
brutalities of the Mills Hotel. As regards the general question of what
you had better do next, I confess that I have no advice to give. Your
lines of activity-Yoga & Poland-are so remote from anything that I
To Wincenty Lutoslawski
have had experience of, that I have no intuitive impressions. All I know
95 IRVING ST. I CAMBRIDGE. Nov 21. 07
is that one can't build up anything solid all of a sudden. Unless you
Dear Luto-Truly you lead an adventurous life! Your record of
wish simply to be passive, I should not go to Asheville yet. And if you
achievements in your long letter which arrives this morning, is wonder
do wish simply to be passive, there are numerous places in Europe far
ful. You ask me to address you at "General Delivery" which I do as far
more erfreulich than that. Your provincial tour in Massachusetts was SO
as this letter goes, but the bundle of pamphlets that came two days ago,
successful, that I would try to work that line a bit first. Why not go next
I prefer to send by express, as it exceeds the limit of 4 pounds weight,
to Chicago? and see if any opening occurs? I can do nothing in the way
and to send it to the hotel, where I am very sure you will find it. The
of help, for X have no access either to Yoga circles or Polish circles, and
Mills Hotels are charity institutions, almost, built for working men, and
having seen you started in both those ways (I tell everyone that you are
barely [able] to pay interest on plant. I'm surprised that Fletcher
the Yoga of my Energies article{)], I must leave the resultant in the
should have sent you there You must have given him a tremendous
hands of yourself and Time! Don't leave America yet. Wait for some-
impression of your asceticism.-Don' hope for anything more from
thing to turn up!
Lowell, who probably thinks he has done all he can for Poland by hav-
Yours as ever W.J.
ing had you! As for a bank, I have no direct knowledge of New York
ALS: CLY
Banks, but all the large ones must be sound, e.g. the Fifth Avenue B. the
1st, or the 2nd National Banks, etc. You will probably have to be
identified by someone before they will open an account for your check.
Courtesy of Concord tree
C.F.P.R. F.B Sanborn. TableTalk 1981. Transcendental Books.
of
218
1907
seen in his travels. But where did Milton get the
the same effect; indeed, he was one of the first consulted
y of his Paradise Lost? or how could he describe
by Lowell in the matter of the Atlantic, and I was present
ttom of the monstrous world"? or Shakespeare pic-
at some of these colloquies, as a listener. Lowell was
hemia and the plains of Troy, and the landscape and
strongly in favor of making political comment a marked
ces in the "Tempest." Where had Coleridge seen
feature, and proposed a special department for political
asure-dome of Kubla Khan, or the vistas of the An-
censure, with the device of a broom at its masthead, like
lariner? Imagination is the poet's best hold; if he
old Van Tromp's particularly intended to sweep old
t, he can invent a better landscape than Nature can
Buchanan from the seas. It was by adding strongly to
nly furnish.
Parke Godwin's essay on Buchanan's administration that
Lowell sharply offended Godwin. The weakness of the
Nov. 7, 1907. ALFRED WHITMAN AND CON-
Atlantic on the political side has usually been an unwilling-
-HIS SERVICES TO KANSAS--A FRENCHWOMAN'S
ness to take a positive tone and adhere to that. The chief
TATION ON THOREAU.
business of a literary magazine, however, must be litera-
ture; and in that the Atlantic has seldom been surpassed,
ed Whitman, who died suddenly this week at Law-
in its first 20 years.
in Kansas, was the son of a Kansas pioneer and
d graduate, who was very serviceable to Kansas in
(508)
Nov. 21, 1907. SIGNIFICANCE OF SAMUEL
iggle of years against negro slavery. Alfred him-
GRAY WARD, A CONTEMPORARY OF VERY AND THOR-
S at school in Concord, where he became intimate
EAU--EMERSON'S LETTERS TO HIM--MONCURE D.
e Alcotts, and took part with them in dramatic en-
CONWAY, AND SANBORN AND ANTI-SLAVERY--THE
ments. He was one of two lads from whom Louisa
COMMONWEALTH.
made up her composite "Laurie." During the civil
served with his father, a major, in Kentucky, but
One of the earliest surviving graduates of Harvard,
ce lived in Kansas and been one of the active friends
Samuel Gray Ward, died at his house in Washington on
state university, to which 10 years ago the sculptor
Sunday, and was buried at Mount Auburn yesterday. He
presented his bust of Miss Alcott. Alfred's broth-
was in the class of 1836, and among his classmates were
B. Whitman, is a prominent lawyer of Boston
A
Jones Very and Col. Henry Lee. He was of the same age
Frenchwoman, a traveling scholar of the Sorbonne,
as Thoreau, who, if living, would now be 90, and like him
oston pursuing her inquiries in American literature
was an early intimate of Emerson and the Concord group
with a view to her doctor's thesis next year on
of authors. His artistic and poetic temperament inclined
u, of whom she is an admirer. It is only of late
him to a literary life, and he was one of the "Dial" con-
that such scholarships have been granted to women.
tributors, as they were. His father, a banker, insisted
on his following that occupation, and he did so, for more
I Nov. 12, 1907. GENESIS AND BACKGROUND OF
than half a century. He paid the expenses of Channing's
TLANTIC.
first volume of poems in 1843, and occasionally wrote
verse himself. He belonged in the circle at Cambridge
gs were rather better in 1857, when the Atlantic be-
of which Mrs. Prof. Farrar was the hostess (afterward a
d payment was made for whatever came out in its
resident of Springfield), and where Margaret Fuller, her
-column pages. The name seems to have been sup-
friend Miss Anna Barker, daughter of the New Orleans
y Dr. Holmes; but the plan of a magazine or review
merchant, Jacob Barker, and other brilliant young ladies
fice in Boston, but contributors on both sides of the
were at home; and some time after leaving college he
was as old as 1837, and was definitely discussed in
married Miss Barker. It was to his friend Ward that the
1, when Alcott was there in July, 1842, as mentioned
"Letters to a Friend" of Emerson, edited by Prof. Norton,
fragment of his diary in England which alone sur-
were written, from 1838 to 1853, but Mr. Norton is cer-
--the rest having been lost in a box of papers at Al-
tainly wrong in saying Mr. Ward "was a younger man than
as Mr. Norton's English papers were lost in the
Emerson by nine years. That would put back his birth-
lay in 1857. But Alcott wrote, July 21, thus:--
day to 1812, and make him 25 at his graduation, --whereas
he graduated under 20, as was much the fashion in those
ning, at Heraud' S: Barham, Westland Marston,
days, --Emerson himself having graduated at 18, and
and others were there We discussed printing a
George Bancroft at 17. Mr. Ward early traveled and re-
urnal, to be supported by contributions from the old
sided in Europe, and collected engravings (particularly
and the new, and issned quarterly. A good deal was
of the work of Michael Angelo, Guercino and Piranesi),
Heraud and Barham deem Carlyle's interest essen-
among which was the beautiful copy of an ancient Endymion
its success with the public. I put the work on its
which has long hung in Emerson's house. It was Ward's
erits, quite independent of names; and Wright agrees
portfolios which Emerson examined in 1839, and which
e
I gave them the theory of my new journal;
figure in the "Ode to Beauty." Some months before its
es it must meet, the audience it must create, the
publication in the "Dial" for 1840, Emerson sent to Ward
outors it must secure. I proposed that it should an-
Thoreau's poem "Sympathy," which his friend styled an
) something like this: 'The Janus; an Ephemeris of
"Elegy,"
manent in Religion, Philosophy, Science, Art and
3.' My idea was obviously too broad and daring for
For elegy has other subject none.
And to Ward in February, 1843, Emerson confided his
nk Emerson wrote from England in 1847 something to
opinion of Wendell Phillips, when at the Concord lyceum,
2 of
1907
219
1907
invited by Henry Thoreau and his young friends, Phillips
with its cable cut, which finally carried them to the bottom.
had overcome the veteran lawyers of that town in debate on
It cost Conway few or none of his real friends in America,
negro slavery. Said Emerson:--
but it fixed his purpose to remain in England, and the next
year his wife and children went to join him there; his Con-
"The core of the comet did not seem to be much, but the
cord house was sold, and I stored such of his furniture as
whole air was full of splendors. One orator makes many;
Mrs. Conway could not take with her or have sent after her.
but I think him the best generator of eloquence I have met
His career in England and in Europe generally, was a suc-
for many a day, and of something better and grander than
cessful one, and his life, on the whole, a brilliant success,
his own."
in spite of his changes of place and opinion; and I must es-
teem his quiet and sudden death, though away from his
For years Mr. Ward had a home in Boston and a summer
children, a happy exit from a world in which he felt him-
residence in Lenox, afterward attached to the large Shadow-
self lonely.
brook estate of Mr. Stokes; but of late years his home has
been in Washington. Last summer he spent at his grand-
(509) Nov. 28, 1907. THOUGHTS ON JAMES H.
daughter's in Jamaica Plain.-
HOLMES, ONE OF JOHN BROWN'S MEN--THE LIFE OF
Moncure Conway' residence in Washington before the
MAJOR GEORGE LUTHER STEARNS.
STOP
civil war was short and troubled. Dr. Earle heard him
preach there in February, 1856, and he came and dined
The death of James H. Holmes, a young lieutenant of
with Dr. Nichols and Dr. Earle March 23 of that year. In
John Brown in Kansas, was attended by painful circumstances.
his diary the doctor wrote:--
He was about the age of Moncure Conway, and in his sphere,
for a time, did good antislavery work, as Conway did. He
"Mr. Conway is as interesting in conversation/a in the
was the son of a New York broker, well educated, and went
pulpit; a man of superior intellect and of moral qualities of
early to Kansas to act on the free-state side; brave and en-
a very high order; yet his religion is that of the extreme
thusiastic, he joined the small band of Brown in 1856, and
Unitarians. He does not believe in the miracles. Among
again in 1858, and had many adventures under that leader-
his reasons is that not one of the books of the New Testa-
ship. I had often urged him to write out his record of Kan-
ment was written until 50 years or more after the birth of
sas life, and he had promised to do so, but, SO far as I
Christ, and long after his death, --time enough, he thinks,
know, never completed it. He wrote fairly well, and was
for a story to grow considerably, if stories grew then as
for years a journalist, at one time a Vermont
rapidly as now. This heterodoxy does not divide his church
newspaper, and corresponding from Washington for distant
so much as his anti-slavery sermons, which please Horace
newspapers. But he was one of those persons, by no means
Greeley and John P. Hale of New Hampshire, --both of whom
few, who need the direction of a leader to keep them up to
have seen there. But nine families/ have withdrawn be-
the mark. Under Lincoln's presidency he became an office-
cause of one anti-slavery sormon.
holder (secretary of the territory of New Mexico), and
then appeared at Washington in some department office.
In the November following Conway was settled in Cincinnati,
The moral and political tone of Washington is far from ele-
where he remained, preaching, editing and lecturing, till
vating, is one of the most vile and corrupt of modern
he had so effectively divided his parish that when he re-
capitals, -and Holmes fell under influences from which his
signed, in the summer of 1862, and came to Boston to edit
old captain would have guarded him. I fear in later years
the emancipation weekly, the Commonwealth, there was
the instincts and tendencies of the broker got the better of
little opposition to his leaving, though he left many good
the unselfish sentiments under which he enlisted in the na-
friends there. He settled in Concord early in the autumn
tional crusade against slavery. But, as I have noticed in
of 1862, where he had already spent many weeks, nine
other men who failed to live up to their youthful ideal,
years before, and he became a neighbor of my own. I was
Holmes always retained that fraternal feeling which bound
associated with him in editing the newspaper, and took
the antislavery men together, when they were a small but
charge of it in March 1863, when Conway went to England
never discouraged minority. For some years I had lost
for a short missionary tour, as he supposed, and became
sight of him, and was thus unable to make some provision
my London correspondent. He communicated to me, too
for his declining and lonely years. It seems that in his re-
late to write him what a blunder it would be (for there was
treat at Red Bank, N.J., he suffered great privations from
no ocean cable then) his purpose of proposing emancipation
poverty, and when his last illness came upon him, he was
to Mason, as if authorized by the American abolitionists
alone and unable to summon aid for a day or two. When
I showed the letter to Phillips and Garrison, and we all
found, he was taken to the house of a friend where he died
agreed that a brief intimation of his scheme should be given
on the 21st. His friend, John Redpath, a kinsman of Brown's
in my newspaper and an effort be made to cover the retreat
first biographer, James Redpath, went down from New York
that so indiscreet a diplomatist would have to make when
and nursed him until death. Holmes desired to be buried
the letters were made public. Conway's intentions were of
beside his captain at North Elba, where also the slain com-
the best, but he was seldom discreet when left to himself;
rades of Brown at Harpers Ferry had their bones laid at
his excellent wife, then 3000 miles away from him, often
rest under McKinley's administration, escorted to their
moderated his enthusiasm into something at least resem-
funeral ceremonies, near Brown's grave, by a detachment
bling discretion. Upon the whole, I think his blunder did
of United States soldiers sent on from Plattsburg by Elihu
more good than harm, for it unmasked to Europe the big-
Root, then secretary of war. At the burial Bishop Potter
oted folly of the disunionists, in clinging to slavery as the
and Whitelaw Reid were present, among many others, and
life buoy of their new oligarchy; while it was the anchor
the graves are fenced in around the great bowlder upon the
908
1908
Lasting legacy
To the Editor:
May 6 marks the centennial of a
gift to the Hancock County
Trustees of Public Reservations of
two tracts of land beloved to this
day.
(
George Bucknam Dorr described
the donation of the Beehive above
Ocean Drive and the adjacent
mountain lake called "The Bowl" as
"the starting point for gathering the
t
land that I made the foundation for
I
Acadia National Park."
New Hampshire-born Eliza Lee
)
Homans donated these "beautiful,
unique, and wild" acres. She was
the widow of the Boston surgeon
Charles D. Homans. For more than
four decades they had been Mount
Desert Island summer residents.
Her friendship with Charles W.
Eliot - president of the trustees
and Harvard University - provided -
context for her precedent-setting
philanthropy. In conveying the
deeds, she asked Mr. Eliot to publi-
cize the gift but to do so "without
bringing my name in."
Mrs. Homans hoped that her
gift would encourage others to do
the same. Within the next seven
years, through the energetic culti-
vation of trustees and others, 40
parcels of land totaling more than
7,000 acres were assembled. Much
of this property was transferred to
the federal government in 1916
when the Sieur de Monts National
Monument was established. That
same year, work began on the
Homans Path granite steps and
stone archways that ascended from
the Springhouse area.
Bar Harbor resident Alice M.
Long paid tribute to Mrs. Homans
in the August 10, 2006 Mount
Desert Islander. On the centennial
of this gift, we can do its donor no
greater service than to support the
stewardship efforts of the National
Park Service and the Friends of
Acadia.
Ronald H. Epp
Merrimack, N.H.
November 14, 1968
MEMORANDUM
1908
TO:
Mr. Richard Dana
FROM:
Joseph W. Ernst
SUBJECT:
Acadia National Park
I have answered Mr. Rockefeller's questions as far as
possible from material in the Archives. Mr. Sanders of the
Accounting Department is trying to establish final dollar figures
on JDR Jr.'s contributions toward carriage and motor roads and fire
reconstruction.
Mr. Rockefeller asks:
Page 1
1. When did JDR Jr. first go to Maine for the summer?
The Family first went to Maine for the summer in 1908.
They rented Sears Cottage on Weymouth Lane in Bar Harbor.
2. Does the 60 miles include both horse and motor roads?
No, the 60 miles is for carriage roads only.
Page 6
3. What did JDR Jr. give for building of the road up
Cadilac Mountain?
JDR Jr. built the Jordan Pond - Eagle Lake Road from
which the road up the mountain makes its ascent. There are no fig-
ures as yet on his construction expenditures. The government built
the road up the mountain and JDR Jr. emphasizes that full credit be
given to the government. He did make certain suggestions as to lo-
cation which were utilized in construction. JDR Jr. gave $250
toward the expense of the dedication of the Cadilac Mountain Road.
4. What did JDR Jr. give for Ocean Drive?
In 1934 JDR Jr. finished the construction of Ocean Drive
to Sand Beach. North of this point he worked with the government.
In 1935 he offered certain lands to the government to make the ex-
tension possible. His proposal was accepted but there are no par
ticulars on actual construction. The attached copies of correspon-
dence spell out the arrangement between JDR Jr. and the government.
There are no construction costs available as yet.
5. What proportion of costs did the government pay in the
building of Cadilac Mountain Road and Ocean Drive?
This information is not available in the Archives.
-2-
Page 7
6. Is the 60 miles of road on both Park and Hills land,
if so how much is on Park lands?
The 60 miles of horse roads are all on Park land.
7. Did fire reconstruction work go on after 1952?
JDR Jr. continued to clean up fire damage until his death
in 1960. Mrs. Martha B. Rockefeller continued the work until 1961.
There are no total cost figures available as yet.
Page 8
8. In 1931, JDR Jr. had the Brown Mountain and Jorden
Pond Gate houses built for about $80,000. They are stone and wood
structures reflecting Norman architecture. The Brown Mountain house
was given to the Park in 1932, the Jordan house was given to the
Park in 1940.
9. JDR Jr. purchased the Jordan Pond Tea House in 1923
for $40,000. He leased it back to the owners who operated it until
1945.
JDR Jr. gave the house and surrounding land to the Park in
1940.
1.
4.
his he firster to it -
The Lindlow
:-
which of Course caw
to
Easily he done without My dea President Elist . -
They 1908
bringing my home in
-
Idena hhe. writte my
and the putic field
might hope that others
deen of gift to the Hancock
Should do like hrie
County Truster Public
-
Yours truty
Reservahar " of Bee
and certain lots of Saud,
E.d. Homand.
on the other Cruk dide -
and the School Hrad
Lide. - Estrictia by the
3.
2.
grant which I had
the ! but retrietions are
already made ld the
somehmen Lo In will !
Bu. Him agreduct I am trong that I cannot
Company Idia hot
how do anythay in the
put in the dun any
bay of any fift of money
restrictions a to the
but shale hope to do that
nection of any buildings - lath - Thoppe this will
and my great fraud .
children may find a
be considere a hight Example
merry. Gr. Round Established
and I hope ah putheily
4.
northy -
Bar. Harbore
is
that a honderful
Lep 17
is
mouth we have had Thank you By draw
what Inn Sets - and
President Ehis for form
moon. nies :- - aunral
hote aneut my Bee Hive
and meters the -
gift - "Post has -
the perfection - of meather - logical - but I shake be
This and
propter her is hot
a clear East wind
very flad if my action
and a brilliant Lun.
has any inspiration to
thmi.
those others -
Your cordrally
thich he might get
I.d. Homan
the to/o of heropost- owned
88.8 and oorgraph HIHH
- warry 20327 11V
3.
2
by the Schoon Hrad
a better man could
Synoticate - but the
he found for anything
recent death of ml
than Idaace m. Tripts
Chanles Dalton - has
he has bird with me
made it less simple-
his will Ispake
though Ido hot know
for rearly thirty years
He Knons and loves the
to Chifford - Bngham property which for these
Lumed think h from gothers of word
about h - and he
years. he has protection
all adminate dug. . and Letters is of fire
-
gestion Ide - hot think telligent and him
and he minently in
HILL, BARLOW & HOMANS,
TELEPHONE NO. 6411 MAIN
COUNSELLORS-AT-LAW.
53 STATE STREET
ROOMS 1033-1040.
ARTHUR DEHON HILL.
ROBERT SHAW BARLOW.
ROBERT HOMANS.
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS. May 29, 1908.
Charles W. Eliot, Esq., L.L.D.,
Cambridge, Mass.
Dear Sir: -
At the request of Mrs. Charles D. Homans we send you
herewith & copy of the only plan we have of the land recently con-
veyed by Mrs. Homans to the Hancock County Trustees of public reserva-
tions. The parcels of land marked "Eliza L. Homans" are those which
have been conveyed. The parcels marked "Heirs of George H. Homans"
were not owned by Mrs. C. D. Homans and are not included in the deed.
The heirs would very probably be very Clad to also convey
their land to the Trustees, but unfortunately a considerable undivided
interest is owned by minors and no Probate Court would, we think,
consent to the transfer of the minors' interest for nothing.
Yours truly,
Hill,
Forwarded by
PAGE EIGHT
BAR HARB
PUBLIC RESERVATIONS
mountains are under the control of the
It has been found quite necessary
Corporation, and also more shore land
from N
to the future welfare of Mt. Desert
so that people may enjoy these beau-
day. A
Island that a good deal of land be
time spots for public use.
laid aside for public use. When the
Island was first visited by the sum-
RED NOSES
Any k
mer colony everyone had the advan-
Do you suffer the embarrassment of
or by t
tage of walking about as they chose,
carrying around an extremely red
M. Pott:
instead of being confronted every
nose? orare you tortured with a red,
few steps by a sign marked. "No
blotchy or pimply face? if so you are
Trespassing.' It has, however,
foolish to stand it long; it is the
changed to such an extent that at the
July
simplest and easiest thing in the
Church
present time a man who arrives here
world to get rid of. No matter what
blue sto
hardly dares to go beyond his own
might have been the cause, the fol-
rewarde
land, orthe public highway.
lowing harmless and inexpensive
On March 28. 1903, the following
Highbro
treatment will positively remove all
act was passed by the Maine Legis-
27-1+
traces of your embarrassment in
lature, granting certain powers to the
from two to four weeks.
Hancock County Trustees of Public
Get this prescription filled at any
Reservations:-
Drug Store:-Clearola one-half oz.,
Capab
'Be it enacted by the Senate and
ether one oz., Alcohol seven ounces.
Apply 4
House of Representatives in Legis-
Mix and apply to the parts affected
Rectory.
lature assembled. as follows:
as often as possible, but morning and
"Section 1.-The incorporation of
night always allowing it to remain
St.
the Hancock County Trustees of Pub-
on as long as possible, never less
lic Reservations. a corporation or-
Been
than ten minutes. the longer the bet-
ganized at Bar Harbor. Maine under
moving
ter, then you can wipe off the powdry
the Revised Statutes of Maine, Chap-
perfectio
film deposited on the skin.
ter 55. is hereby ratified and con-
and sut
You can get this put up at any
firmed.
ing. Aft
Drug Store. For any skin troubles
"Section 2.-Said corporation shall
this has no equal.
The T
have power to acquire, by devise,
the Sho:
gift or purchase, and to own. arrange,
Eastern
hold maintain and improve, for free
CONCERT AT THE LOUISBURG
about 7.
public use, lands in Hancock County,
Maine. which by reason of scenic
The fourth in the series of Sunday
weather
beauty, historical interest, sanitary
evening concerts at the Louisburg at-
Harbor
advantages, or for other reasons, may
tracted by far the largegst audience of
Bean
be available for the purpose.
the season at these concerts. Fully
them? J
"Section 3.-Lands and improve-
500 people. including cottagers, guests
licious S
ments thereon. held by said corpora-
from the other hotels and local music
Nash ba
tion, for free public use, shall be
lovers. gathered to listen to a most
foot Led
exempt from state, county, or town
interesting program, given by the
day. Be
taxation.
Louisburg orchestra under the direc-
be early
"Section 4.-This Act shall take
tion of Mr. Barth. The orchestra was
First CO1
effect when approved.
assisted by Mrs. Orissa Forrester-
but 15 ce
"Approved March 28, 1903."
Smith, soprano, of Providence, a
The following were the original
guest at the Louisburg, who added
James
incorporators:-George B. Dorr, L.
greatly to the enjoyment of the oc-
his shop
B. Deasy, John S. Kennedy, George
casion.
and has
L. Stebbins, Charles W. Eliot, Edward
Interest centered in the singing of
to-date U
B. Mears, Lea McI. Luquer, and L. E.
Mrs. Smith, a young singegr of pre-
es. Esti:
Kimball.
possessing personality. Mrs. Smith
and all
Until last May this corporation
has a very rich and pleasing voice, of
had not done anything in regard to
remarkable power and flexibility,
S
obtaining land. On May 6th, how-
which she uses intelligently. The
ever, a gift of one hundred and forty-
plano accompaniment/to the first song
GRADIR
seven acres, more or less, was re-
and orchestral accompaniment to her
ceived from Eliza L. Homans This
second, furnished a pleasing contrast.
N
gift is divided into two parcels of
In response to a hearty demand for
land lying between Schooner Head
an encore, she sang "Little Boy Blue"
Sealed
by Florence Buckingham Joyce.
section c
and Otter Creek, in a section called
Mr. Lamson. who has already firmly
in length
the Beehive. The first of these con-
established his reputation as a sym-
received
tains one hundred acres, more or
the first time at these concerts as a
office un!
less, and begins at the west line of
Dr. Hasket Derby's lot, and passes by
soloist. HIs playing is marked by
at which
virility and repose, and his interpre-
publicly,
the south side of Beehive Mountain.
The second parcel contains 47.06
tation of the Liszt "Cantique" so
Plans
pleased/the audience that he was
forms of
acres, beginning near the southwest
obliged to add a charming number, a
may be
side ofBowl Pond and extending along
the southerly ridge of Newport Moun-
gavotte by Gluck.
Selectme,
tain.
Besides these Sunday concerts the
proposal
orchestra plays a miscellaneous pro-
made on
On May 20th the lot of land upon
gram evry night, to all of which con-
Each r
which the Champlain Monument
certs the Louisburg management
bid with
stands was obtained from the trus-
tees of the last will of Linda Dows
cordially invites all music lovers. The
the Town
Cooksey. This piece of land is very
orchestra will give their annual sub-
per cent.
small, being about 11 feet by 6 feet,
scription concert on Sunday evening,
The Su
but it answers the purpose which it
August 16, which has always proved
quired to
serves, and from now on the Monu-
in he or the events of the season.
sum of
contrac
ment will stand on public property.
The
It is felt that these grants of land
FOR SALE
and all b.
will be followed very soon by others
High grade Jersey, milch cows.
in sections which 1. is very important
Inquire at P in Tree Farm, Lamoine,
would be made public property. It
Me
O.
132. Ellsworth, Route
Acadia History
The Bowl, the Beehive, and a Secular Epiphany
By Ronald Epp
Note: This article is adapted from the forth-
On August 29th, 1901 Dr. Eliot and sev-
This conservation commitment did not
coming biography of George B. Dorr, to be pub-
en other charter members of the Hancock
immediately result in systematic activity to
lished in spring 2016 by Friends of Acadia. We
County Trustees of Public Reservations,
secure donations of Hancock County prop-
will feature several excerpts in future Journal
including Bar Harbor resident George B.
erty. The incorporators believed that op-
issues, leading up to Acadia's centennial year.
Dorr, signed a request for incorporation for
portunities would naturally arise but a half
"social, charitable and benevolent purpos-
century later local author Sargent Collier
B
y the end of the 19th century, two
es." Following additional discussion they
would claim (in The Triumph of George B.
decades of summering at Northeast
added to their drafts language that recog-
Dorr) that during these early years the
Harbor had convinced Charles W.
nized the need for property improvements
corporation slept. No gifts were bestowed,
Eliot that public use of private land had
such as laying out and building roads and
no efforts made to acquire them, no toes
been curtailed by the expanding summer
paths.
stepped on.' Historical evidence shows, to
population. On the other hand, the phi-
On the same day that Theodore Roos-
the contrary, that Trustee membership dur-
lanthropy of some influential and gifted in-
evelt assumed the office of President of the
ing the first year more than quadrupled,
dividuals contributed to improvements in
United States following McKinley's assas-
to 55 members. In 1903 two small parcels
the local infrastructure. Summer residents
sination, the incorporators met again. The
were donated-a hilltop site overlooking
provided leadership in sanitation, road and
beginnings of the land trust movement in
Jordan Pond and a 24.5-square-meter site
trail development, and town beautifica-
Maine thus dovetailed with the national
in Seal Harbor, set aside for a Champlain
tion projects-not to mention support for
inception of the Progressive Era. With its
memorial plaque. The membership did not
churches, libraries, and community parks.
roots in Populist politics of the late nine-
increase further until the first substantial
Private ownership of land was both the
teenth century, progressive thinking was
properties were acquired, five years later.
cause and remedy for the preservationist
now united with a national conservation
However, behind the scenes incorporator
problem that a new conservation organiza-
movement-and became a cornerstone of
George B. Dorr and local attorney Albert
tion would face.
Roosevelt's domestic policies.
H. Lynam were actively identifying tracts
of land, researching titles, and cultivating
a philanthropic culture that would soon
bear fruit. In May 1908, President Eliot re-
ceived a deed from summer resident Eliza
Homans (1830-1914) for parcels of land
that proved to be the catalyst for the con-
servation of landscapes that became Aca-
dia National Park. In Dorr's seminal 1942
publication, Acadia National Park: Its Origin
and Background, the donation was acknowl-
edged as "their first important gift singu-
larly appropriate to the trustees' purpose,
beautiful, unique, and wild."
For four decades the Homans family of
Boston had been island summer residents.
The surgeon's widow was the daughter of
a New Hampshire cleric, Reverend Samuel
Kirkland Lothrop, later the head of Boston's
Old Brattle Street Church. In 1868, the
Dorr and Lothrop families had been drawn
closer together when Charles Hazen Dorr
George B. Dorr and Charles W. Eliot, the founding leaders of the Hancock County Trustees of Public
(the father of George B. Dorr) and Eliza
Reservations, at Jordan Pond.
Homan's brother (Thornton K. Lothrop)
8
Winter 2014
Friends of Acadia Journal
The Beehive's distinctive silhouette contributed to the significance of Eliza Homans' precedent-setting gift.
Friends of Acadia/Aimee Beal Church
purchased the substantial Higgens Tract,
confidence was apparently broken, for Dorr
pleted the Beehive ascent took in expansive
which fronted on Frenchman Bay. When
had a Homans family memorial path con-
views of Sand Beach and the Otter Cliffs
Lothrop sold his portion of the property to
structed-a challenging ascent featuring
trailing east and south.
Dorr's father a decade later, the Oldfarm es-
granite steps and graceful stone archways
In the nineteenth century, Hudson River
tate was then developed.
on the steep face of a mountain that would
School painters (Thomas Cole, Frederick
During the Trustees' early years there had
later bear Dorr's name. This was one of six
Church, Fitz Hugh Lane, Sanford Gifford,
been speculation about the signature dona-
memorial trails added to the system from
and Aaron Draper Shattuck) represented
tion that would be needed to energize sub-
1913 to 1916, an accomplishment that
landscape features like the Bowl and Bee-
sequent donations. The friendship of Eliza
pathmaker Rudolph Brunnow attributed to
hive, creating near-reverential public inter-
L. Homans with Charles W. Eliot-culti-
Mr. Dorr. Olmsted Center landscape archi-
est in the natural history of the island. In
vated on Mount Desert Island-provided
tect Margaret Coffin Brown's 2006 study of
The Artist's Mount Desert (1994), John C.
the context for her precedent-setting phi-
island Pathmakers rightly affirms that Dorr
Wilmerding, Northeast Harbor collector
lanthropy. Mrs. Homans offered the Trust-
"envisioned the memorial trails as part of a
and curator of American art, notes that as
ees their first sizable tracts of land, which
plan to enhance the public reservation and
Thomas Cole gazed from Schooner Head
included landforms of singular historic and
improve its eligibility for designation as a
toward the Beehive precipice, he wrote:
artistic interest.
national monument or park."
"This is a very grand scene. The craggy
In conveying the deeds, Eliza informed
By accepting this first gift to the Trustees,
mountain, the dark pond of dark brown
Eliot that she had not put any restrictions
Eliot and Dorr acted not merely as agents
water-The golden sea sand of the beach
in the deed. In a light-hearted manner, she
of opportunity. Each had historical asso-
and the light green [sea] with its surf al-
recognized that it she did not engage the
ciations with the Homans family, and real-
together with the woods of varied color-
Trustees she ran the risk that "my grand-
ized the promotional value of such gifts.
make a magnificent effect such as seldom
children may find a 'Merry-Go-Round' es-
The 140-plus-acre tract lay on the south
seen created in the sun." Pamela J. Be-
tablished there!" On a serious plane, it was
side of Newport (now Champlain) Moun-
langer's Inventing Acadia (1999) argues that
her intent that this gift would be "a bright
tain. It included a glacial cirque historically
Acadia National Park was a product of sce-
example, albeit an anonymous one." In her
known as the Bowl. The site was contigu-
nic monumentalism, preserved primarily as
May 7, 1908 letter preserved in the Records
ous with the craggy, 520-foot granite head-
a response to nineteenth-century American
of the President of Harvard she asked Eliot
land prosaically named the Beehive. From
landscape aesthetics. Mount Desert Island
to publicize the gift but to do so "without
its rounded, bare summit overlooking Sand
became one of the nation's most exclusive
bringing my name in.' Eight years later that
Beach and Schooner Head, those who com-
sacred places, a "product of the cultural
Friends of Acadia Journal
Winter 2014 9
An incomplete painting by Frederic Edwin Church, depicting the Beehive and Champlain Mountain as seen from Great Head. Brush and oil paint, graphite on
cardboard. Gift of Louis P. Church to Cooper-Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum.
work of landscape painters who were also
stage up and down the mountain," and
the summit road entrepreneurs at a time
'enshrined' for their genius in representing
possibly sub-divide the acreage for sale to
when the growing popularity of the au-
the place."
interested parties.
tomobile generated island-wide specula-
Despite such aesthetic considerations,
Before the end of the summer, Dorr re-
tion-and heated controversy-about the
at a practical level how might Dorr add to
peatedly walked the summit of the highest
benefits and risks of this new vehicle to
Eliot's success? Dorr immediately turned
island peak with attorney Lynam, "tracing
island culture. Trustee acquisition delayed
his thoughts to the acquisition of the most
out the boundaries of the land I sought."
public motorized access to the summit
prominent island landmark. He informed
Wasting no time, Dorr triumphantly de-
for the next twenty-four years. Only later
Eliot that he "would see what I could do to
railed the syndicate plan with the financial
would Dorr and his fellow Trustees realize
get the summit of Green Mountain-Cadil-
backing of philanthropist John S. Kennedy
that his success atop the Cadillac summit
lac now." It was a moment of immediate and
and A.H. Lynam's deft legal counsel. In
had made "this Park's creation my major
unifying recognition, a secular epiphany!
his published memoir, Dorr stated that he
interest and work."
Dorr knew that the goals of conservation
quickly purchased from the estate of Dan-
would be best served if he could secure the
iel W. Brewer-a descendent of early Hulls
RONALD H. EPP, Ph.D. has worked in
most topographically significant landscape
Cove settlers-the eighty-five acre "Moun-
university teaching, scholarly publishing,
on the island-the summit of the highest
tain House Lot" where the Brewer family
and academic library administration, and
mountain on the U.S. eastern seaboard.
had earlier entertained guests at their inn
is the retired director of Shapiro Library at
Dorr's quiet acquisition of island proper-
at the end of the rough summit road. Dorr
Southern New Hampshire University. His
ty now escalated strategically. These eighty-
explained that the distinctiveness of this
longtime research into Acadia's early his-
five acres were selected for one particular
exceptional property "lies in its all-round
tory and personages has led to published
reason: their landscape quality. In another
view." This new Trustee property on Cadil-
articles in the magazines and newsletters
letter preserved in the Harvard University
lac Mountain included "every command-
of many Acadia-area organizations. Ron
Archives, Dorr explained to Dr. Eliot that
ing view upon the whole broad summit,
and his wife Elizabeth, who passed away
a syndicate of land speculators intended to
the highest and boldest on our oceanfront,
in 2013, first joined Friends of Acadia in
purchase the summit, on which they held
from Maine to Florida, and the central fea-
1995.
a lease. Their intent was to convey paying
ture of Acadia National Park."
sightseeing passengers on "an automobile
Of secondary importance, Dorr stopped
10
Winter 2014.
Vol.19
Friends of Acadia Journal
MAIN APPROACH TO THE BUILDING OF ARTS
The grove at the left of the building has been utilized for an outdoor theater.
THE BUILDING OF ARTS
AT BAR HARBOR
BY OWEN JOHNSON
I
T greets the eye, in the first surprise of
The stage is not intended for elaborate
its red-tiled roof, its marshaled col-
dramatic representations, and during the
umns, and its fine proportions, like a
first summer only such plays as were pre-
glimpse of some forgotten Grecian tem-
sented on the green, and which have an
ple. Nobly set into the slope of the hill,
outdoor atmosphere could be said to be
with a background of cool groves, and
appropriate. Of such the "Midsummer
accentuating the dark, bare-topped moun-
Night's Dream," one of several given by
tains of the island,-the highest on our
the Ben Greet Company, was the most
Atlantic coast,-the Building of Arts
successful. The classical costumes and
meets the perplexed visitor with the grace-
colors, seen in a stage of open forest, were
ful dignity of a serene age. One listens
suggestively in keeping with the Building
for the echces of a shepherd's pipe or
of Arts at the right of the audience. Men-
seeks among the tree-trunks the flitting
delssohn's music was given by members
passage of a flowing robe.
of the Boston Symphony, concealed in a
If it were nothing but a beautiful mon-
clump of bushes, and the groups of danc-
ument, admirable in mass and in detail,
ers and the tripping processions of wood-
Mr. Lowell's Building of Arts would jus-
land figures gave an antique gaiety to the
tify its existence. But, more than this,
moonlit night. The summer of 1909 will
it is the expression of a unique and inter-
probably see the completion of a Greek
esting purpose. Created by a few public-
amphitheater, which is to be constructed
spirited summer residents to supply a
near-by against the slope of the hill, the
focus for the abundant artistic and intel-
spectators facing the colonnade of the
lectual life of Bar Harbor, the Building
building. With this addition, it will be
of Arts already, in the first short season
possible to give open-air performances of
of its occupation, has produced a marked
Greek and Elizabethan drama, as well as
impression by the creation of a distinct
frequent festivals by the choral society of
musical atmosphere. The high plane of
the village. Orchestral and vocal per-
the season's work in music may be in-
formances will continue to be given in
ferred from the fact that among those
the hall, which by an admirable arrange-
who have taken part are such distin-
ment of doors and windows can virtually
guished artists as Madame Emma Eames,
be thrown open to the breezes in warm
Mrs. Francis L. Wellman (Emma Juch),
weather, while one may get charming
David Bispham, Vladimir de Pachmann,
glimpses of trees and hills. The graded
Cortlandt Palmer, and many members of
lawn at the side of the building will serve
the Boston Symphony Orchestra.
for floral exhibitions, to which at night
1 For the working out of the scheme credit is due to Vessrs George Dorr Henry Lane Eno,
George W. Vanderbilt, Mrs. Henry F. Dimock and Mrs. Robert Abbe
676
678
THE CENTURY MAGAZINE
the shadowed background of the white
building, set with soft electric lights, will
tation of several of the best Greek mod-
lend a fairy illusion.
els. In plan it is rectangular and rests,
Each year the committee will seek for
as do many of the Greek temples, upon
its program events of unusual, even na-
a broad stvlobate in which steps are cut,
tional interest-a Molière comedy with
leading to the main entrance and the log-
Coquelin, a Shaksperian production by
gias. The columns which support the
Forbes Robertson, the appearance of the
roof over the loggias and the porch are
Boston Symphony Orchestra, or the ad-
similar to those of the Erectheum and the
Propylae. The smaller Corinthian order
vent of a great prima donna or pianist.
The influence of such an organization,
of the pavilions is taken from the small
if successful, will be such that insensibly
Odeion, or shrine, found near the Temple
of Olympian Zeus.
this program may widen in scope to in-
clude important exhibitions of painting
One interesting feature of the design,
that in this country is somewhat unusual
or sculpture, or addresses by distinguished
speakers on topics of broad interest.
in so severely classic a building, is the
use of color. The tones are the same as
The Building of Arts, still in its de-
velopment, is an interesting problem, and
were used by the Greeks, although out of
deference to the New England love of
the impulse of which it is the expression
is of deep significance. It is in this coun-
severity they are not used quite so vividly
or over such large surfaces as in Athens.
try the first conspicuous effort on a large
The porch at the westerly end forms
scale to crystallize the diverse elements
the main entrance to the building where
that form the summer colony into a real
three pairs of doors lead to a large foyer
society, having as its objective the highest
separated from the auditorium by the
esthetic and intellectual stimulation-not
piers which support the balcony. The
only to encourage liberally the arts of
America, but to contribute to self-education
stage is at the east end of the building
and has been arranged with a wooden
and to the helpful mingling of city and
sounding-board and movable sides.
village life. The movement is in capable
The auditorium seating 400 is 37 feet
hands and has every prospect of success.
by 70 and is lighted at the level of the
Manifestly, if such great summer colo-
balcony by twelve large windows with
nies as Bar Harbor, Newport, and South-
heavy Greek grilles opening out on the
ampton shall undergo such an evolution
loggias and the porch. Between these
the importance to the artistic life of the
windows are panels of simple Greek
country from the stimulus will be great.
moldings. At each side of the audito-
Perhaps from such sources, removed from
rium are three pairs of doors giving ac-
the conflict of commercialism, may come
cess to the loggias and so arranged that
the beginnings of an intellectual atmos-
the auditorium, the loggias, the proposed
phere of great moment.
amphitheater on the north and the terrace
on the south may be used together. The
ceiling is composed of forty-five large
I
IN view of the fact that this is the first
plaster coffers adapted from those of the
structure of its kind in America for such
Ionic porch of the Propylae. At the
a purpose, some practical details may be
center of each is a large classic rosette,
of interest and use.
the central portion of each alternate one
The Building of Arts is severely classic
being reproduced in glass and in these
in design, and represents a selective adap-
are placed the electric lights.
SITE OF THE BUILDING OF ARTS
Bar Harbor is on the right and the Kebo Valley club on the left.
B3.F9.31
THE BAR HARBOR ASSOCIATION
Building during the past season in
OF ARTS
the series organized last winter by
the Association's Committee on Music,
President's Report Made at the Annual
besides two others of a popular ehar-
Meeting of the Association
aeter and others still for which the
September 16, 1907
Hall was rented. These concerts
(
were of an interest and an artistic
The Building of Arts is done and
distinction notable in themselves
has had its first season. It is now
and thoroughly in accord with the
an accomplished fact, and what those
aim' and object of the Building,
interested in it trust may prove a
The Committee by whose untiring
long career of useful and important
work, under the devoted and inspir-
influence, has aleady began for it.
ing leadership of Mrs. Abbe, they
Beautiful in architecture, simple and
were organized and carried out, and
dignified in character, it is singularly
which is already making plans of
well fitted to its purpose and our aim-
interest for another season, deserves
the encouragement of the ideal in
and has the thanks of all who love
art. The site chosen for it also has
good music and who care for the
more than justified itself by its rest-
maintenance of high standards in it.
ful and inspiring beauty and the won-
Owing to the lateness of the sea-
derful background and setting which
son when the Building was finished
it gives, not to the Building only
and the amount of work involved in
but to everything of an artistic
its completion, it was not possible to
nature, of whatever kind, that takes
arrange for dramatic performance
place at it. The Greek open-air
at it this season-apart from the
theatre on the upper side of the
beautiful and interesting Shakes-
Building remains to build. When
pearean performances given in the
built it will add immensely to the
grove above It by the Ben Greet Com-
effect, as well as to the value for the
pany. Nor was it possible, for like
ends we have in view, of what has
reason, to arrange this summer for
been achieved already. Plans tre
any herticultural exhibition at the
being studied over for it at the pres-
Building. But the Committees in
ent time and the directors hope that
charge of these two branches of the
through the interest felt in its unique
Building's work trust to be able to
character and artistic possibilities
make It serve Its purpose well another
opportunity for its completion
season in these fields also, and are
be found before another season has
already planning to that end
gone by.
The cost of the Building, much
Six concerts were given at the greater than was anticipated by the
architect in a construction largely
ments gotten up for its benefit last
new in character, has been, for the
year and this by Mrs. Dimock, a
the Building's own construction.
splendid contribution to the building
$51,363.00; to which is to be added
fund to which the completion of the
for the completed Building, $1945
Building at the present time is
more, the contract on the steps and
largely due; by $13,000 obtained last
platform of its base just finished and
year from the sale of bonds; and by
completing the construction.
$20,000 advanced the Building this
On grading, loam, drainage, road-
year by the directors, to enable it to
building, under-ground piping for
be finished at the present time and
electric light and telephone wires,
begin its work.
and all other expenses of like nature
Signed,
not included in the construction
George B. Dorr,
statement, $14,203.49 has been ex-
President.
pended. This work also is now com-
Sept. 16, 1907.
plete, with the exception of the Greek
Theatre and the Building's eastern
TREASURER'S STATEMENT
end, and, apart from the bill for the
Receipts
steps, none now remains unpaid ex-
Subscriptions to Stock
$31,200.00
cept the architect's account for the
Donations,
1,310.00
salary and the living and travel-
Borrowed on bonds,
13,000.00
ling expenses of the Clerk of the
Borrowed on Demand Note, 20,000.00
works and certain other sums
Received from Entertain-
paid out by him, amounting in all to
ments,
10,111.31
$2,637.20; and the architect's com-
Received from Rent,
1,193.96
mission, on which no payment has
been made as yet. These bills, except
$76,815.27
this last, the cash in hand will meet.
Expenditures
The balance due the architect will
Construction of Building,
$51,363.01
then alone remain to pay and should
Grading, Road, Drainage and
be paid as soon as possible, so that
other Expenses outside
the Building may stand clear of debt
of the Building,
14,203.49
for its construction, the loans and
Purchase of Land,
5,000.00
bonds apart that made its building
General Expenses,
2,191.78
possible.
Furniture,
292,05
The Building has been paid for by
$31,200 in subscription to stock; by
$73,050.33
$1310 in out-right donation; by $10,-
111.31 brought it by the entertain-
Balance on hand,
$3,764.94
Archurs #
EPRODUCED AT THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES
3/13/02 R679, Cent. Classfiles 1933.49
NFIRA/CP/ 19
Acudic-General Box 791.
lof3
R679/ 1607
^
UNITED STATES
Acadea Box 791.
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
National Park Service
Acadia National Park
P
Bar Harbor Maine
Y
September 25, 1941.
Mr. Newton B. Drury,
Director,
National Park Service,
Washington, D. C.
Dear Director Drury:
A reorganization of our old Bar Harbor Village Improvement Associa-
tion has resulted in placing in the chair as president Amory Thorndike,
one of the town's leading, year-round citizens, grandson of my old friend
Dr. Robert Amory of Boston, one of the original small group that aided me
Park
in the early days in securing, years before the Park was formed, its
present office and headquarters site.
HOQ
Mr. Thorndike, as new president of the Village Improvement Associa-
tion, has taken up with vigor the problem of rescuing our beautiful Build-
Bottom
ing of Arts from the situation which the changing times and the passing,
save myself, of the older generation which built it, have brought about.
Arts
Yesterday evening he came to see me about it and the result of our
talk is this letter to ask if, on the offer of the Building and the lands
to
about it, later, to the Government, with good title and with all indebted-
(ness, taxes and other, cleared away, the National Park Service may be
reasonably counted on to recommend its acceptance by the Government.
The Building was built some thirty-five years ago to take advantage
of the remarkable musical and arts opportunities which offered themselves
at Bar Harbor at that time, and filled its purpose wonderfully for many
years thereafter, along with other uses of meetings, exhibitions and the
like to which it also, in its situation and in itself, lent itself
supremely well.
Then, along with the passing of the old conditions and the people
who were part of them, came my own illness and loss of sight, and the
Building is adjustment to the new conditions of the time failed to be made,
debts arising from accumulating taxes and other causes till, as President
of the Association, I received, this spring, unexpectedly, notice of a
JDRF.
Sheriff's Sale for unpaid taxes. The taxes on account of which the sale
was brought, for the year 1938, the first year's taxes due, were paid by
portaged
Mr. Rockefeller, upon my writing him, he placing the matter in the hands of
Mr. Serenus Rodick, his legal agent and my own, who, with no one bidding
Building
of
against him, purchased the property.
CBD, is Pres. of Building of the Arts Assoc.
preperty
arts
NAL ARCHIVES
CP/R679 CCF,1933-491
of3
Acadia. Box 791
Taxes for three further years, amounting in all to about a thousand
dollars, still remain to be met. These the Bar Harbor Village Improve-
ment Association, under its new organization, generously proposes to
meet, collecting funds for the purpose, if it can be given reasonable
assurance that the National Government will in due course accept the
property, if offered to it free of debt and without obligation. They
would ask only that it should be used along lines appropriate to its
character and the place that it has so long held in the community.
Acadia National Park, on its acceptance, would be enriched by all
that the Building has stood for in the past and by its fitness to meet
the new opportunities the future must inevitably present. The situation,
the Building apart, is unique, looking forth sunnily and southward across
green golf links lawns to the nearby, dominating mountains of the Park,
where the beautiful new road leads up from around the Great Meadow, past
the foot of the wooded Kebo range and the stream that flows down from it,
to ascend, across lands now wholly within the Park, to the very summit
of Cadillac Mountain.
The Park has at present no hall for talks and lectures; and the
Building, become Park property, might be used most valuably not only in
opportunity for telling of the wild life, the plants and forests, and the
geological history of the Park, but also of that of the ocean waters that
surround it, exceptionally rich in oxygen and the countless forms of life,
vertebrate and in vertebrate, such waters breed. The region is remarkably
rich, also, in the story, the human story, of the past that of the first
settlers from across the seas under a grant from Henry IV of France, Henry
of Navarre, to his follower in the Religious Wars, the Sieur de Monts.
The conflict that inevitable arose between these first settlers from
the coast of France and the later-coming colonists who sailed southward
past these coasts to settle on Cape Cod, at Salem and along the shores of
Massachusetts Bay, makes most interesting reading; while the issue of that
struggle and the fall of the French dominion in America creates one of the
most important chapters in all history, leading, as it does, directly on
other
to the birth and early growth of the United States.
uses
Other uses of the Building that I have had in mind and that will fit
1. in well with its title and original purpose are: One, the wonderful op-
portunities it presents for motion picture exhibits along relatively new and
rapidly developing lines, showing in color the whole Acadian region, its
landscape and wild life; two, the new opportunity offered for great music
in recorded form, which may be given, and given again, at relatively slight
expense, not only for the pleasure of music-loving audiences but for the
educational benefit of the younger generation, sensitive as children are to
3 such impressions; and, three, talks by competent exponents on our national
problems, political and economic, and on the policies designed to deal with
them. This last has seemed to me from the start to be a most important
2
UNK CPI R679/CCF, 1933-49 / Acadia box 791 3 of 3
opportunity for the Building, taken over by the Government, in view of
the great and increasing number of citizens from the whole country over
who make Acadia National Park the northern objective of their summer
outings and who will carry back home with them, to ponder and to give
others, the thoughts and ideas that may be given to them here.
her Butter findest ANP " C aftent
In conclusion, let me frankly say that with the long and rich as-
sociation that I have had with the Building and the many memories that
crowd into my mind, as I look back upon all that it has been and stood
for, I would be glad indeed that it should now stay linked, as in truth
it has been, with the whole work it has been given me to do for the
creation of the Park.
With kind personal regards, believe me
Yours sincerely,
(SGD) GEORGE B. DORR
THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES
NARA/CP/ R6791 CCF, 1933 -49 / Acadia, Box 791.
UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
WASHINGTON
ADDRESS ONLY
THE DIRECTOR. NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
0.2-
September 30, 1941.
1906
Mr. George B. Dorr,
Superintendent,
hcadia National Park,
Bar Harbor, Maine.
Dear Mr. Dorr:
I have received your letter of September 25 regarding the
possibility of the Village Improvement Association in Bar Harbor
acquiring the Building of Arts and offering it to the Government
for an addition to Acadia National Park if the National Park Serv-
ice may be reasonably counted on to recommend its acceptance.
Before giving an answer I would like to make some inquiry and
study as to whether the use of the building would aid the inter-
pretive program of the park. I am asking officers of the Branch
of Interpretation to look into this question.
I shall let you know as early as possible my decision. Please
so advise Mr. Thorndike and express my sincere appreciation of his
interest in the matter.
Sincerely yours,
(SGD) NEWTON B. DRURY
Director.
aed:mp
ATTHENATIONAL ARCHIVES
WARA/CP/ R679 ICCF, 1933-49, / Acadian box 791
UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
ADDRESS ONLY
WASHINGTON
THE DIRECTOR. NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
September 30, 1941.
CONFIDENTIAL
MEMORANDUM for the Assistant Superintendent,
Acadia National Park.
Please note the attached correspondence with Mr. Dorr regarding
the possibility of the Building of Arts being donated by the Village
Improvement Association to become a part of Acadia National Park.
Mr. Dorr's letter is an eloquent plea for the preservation of
the Building of Arts by some public or quasi-public agency. As I
remember the building and its location, it is not entirely suitable
for our purposes and probably would involve some administrative re-
sponsibilities that we might not be justified in assuming. AS indi-
cated in my letter to Mr. Dorr, before making a final decision, I
would like to have your views and a report as to the condition of
the
building and what expense would be necessary to make the building
serviceable and the approximate annual cost of maintenance and opera-
tion of the building in the event it could be used in connection with
the interpretive program. Would it be possible to rent the building
at an adequate fee for community and other appropriate uses? The
revenue, of course, would have to be deposited to the credit of mis-
cellaneous receipts. Also, I would like a report from Park Naturalist
Sullivan as to what uses be would suggest in connection with the inter-
pretive program should the building be acquired for the park. Please
expedite your reply.
(SGD) NEWTON B. DRURY
Director.
Enclosure 1701616.
GLENGARIFF
SEAL HARBOR, MAINE
[3]
Sept 3 1908
Charles W. Eliot Eng
Asticou
Dear m Eliot
Enclosed I hand you a plan of the
crest of Barr Hill containing about 4.7 Acnes.
I have had this survey made for the purpose
of deeding the property to the Hancock County Trustees,
as a public reservation.
Access will be given by a path from the Bracy
road which lies to the South, right being reserved
to myself, my heirs & assigns to change the course
of the path under any nicessity arising from the
future development of the balance of my abutting
land.
If will give me much pleasure if you your
co.trustees should dec. de to accept this small
addition to your present holdings.
If you would like toser the bound of the
proposed reservation I should be glad, suiting your
convenience to call for x drive you there
With kind regards to yourself There cliot I
remain Yourstinearly
)
apolytic.
Bar Haroom, Raine. Sept.16, 1908.
Charles IV. Eliot, Ms.
Northoast Haebon, Haire.
My dear Mr. Eliot:-
At the muggestion of Dr. Milkhell Mr. Charles
T. How conveyed to the Pre Harbor Villa Inprovement Agsociation
in September 1906, a tract of wood land CO tailing some forty
(10) acros of land, not for from Hull's Cove. The treet is
known as the "Fawn Pond Park".
This converance was made subject to the condition that,
if the V. I. A. should be dissolved or should desire to aban-
don the property, it must convey the tract to the Town of Fiden
to DO held as a public park.
During the past two yours the V. I. A. has expended
several hundred dollars in opening paths and otherwise improv-
7
ischlines Tohard land
inc
the property. It the it will doubtless continue to
spend each year a moderate amount in the same fashion.
A suggestion has born make by Mr. Kennedy that, in view
of possible doubts arising as to the Association's liability to
pay taxes upon this land, it might be vol. to convey the forty
acres to the Hancock County Trustees of Public Revorvations,
of which you are # the president #, - a course which I understand
Mr. How would among provided your corporation would keep the
treet in opdon as the V. I. A. is teying to do.
Pending F2. examination of the 10.01 questions involved,
allow on to Emgire whether your corporation has, or is likely
to have, sufficient funds available for the purpose Inot indi-
caled, also whother you would care to take over the entorprise.
Sincerely yours,
L.S.
Pres. B. II. V. I. A.
Drasy & Lynam
L.B. Drasy
Attorneys and
A. Lynam
Counselors
Bar Harbor, Maine, Sept. 23, 1908
Rev. Chas. W. Eliot,
Asticou, Me.
My Dear Mr. Eliot:-
Your favor, enclosing deed from Mr. Cooksey to
the Hancock County Trustees of Public Reservations, of four and
seven-tenths acres of land near the summit of Barr Hill, is received.
I have forwarded the same for record. After being recorded the deed
will be placed in the hands of Mr. Mears.
Yours very truly,
100mg
III. 2 I. 85, 839
OFFICE OF
JOHN D. ROCKEFELLEP.4
N
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
LAFAYETTE NATIONAL PARK
copy
BAR HARBOR, MAINE
OFFICE OF THE SUPERINTENDENT
CBD Document Plenning
December 8, 1924.
Dear Mr. Rockefeller:
President Eliot, who faces things frankly, asked
me last summer to set down in writing my ideas and plans for
the development of the Park and for my work's continuance.
And he asked, also, that I take up the work of perfecting
the organization of the Wild Gardens of Acadia whom he and
I have planned to succeed me in its furtherance and direction.
I have been at work on this since people left and plan to
continue until it be done.
One of the things that I have most in mind is
carray road
the development and right future use of the magnificent
system of bridle paths and roads for use with horses which
you are forming and which I believe can be made a feature
SO important that when we both are gone, in years to come,
it will still continue devoted to such use, gathering about
itself a sentiment that will perpetuate it.
In studying the situation over, I have re-
visited old haunts and seen them with new vision. An oppor-
tunity which the more I have studied it becomes more interest-
2
ing is that of extending your road system for use with horses
eastward to encircle Newport Mountain, as the roads now building
do, upon a more extensive scale, the combined masses of
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
LAFAYETTE NATIONAL PARK
BAR HARBOR, MAINE
OFFICE OF THE SUPERINTENDENT
2.
Sargent and its associated mountains.
Mr. Hill has
examined this for me in detail and tells me it presents
no difficulties that cannot readily be over-come. The
grades would be easy, the views of the sea superb, the
road overhanging the shore, while the eastern view, to
Schoodic Head and over Frenchman's Bay, would make a
wonderful contrast to the western one obtained from the
road now under construction on Little Brown's and Sargent
mountains.
This fall I succeeded in obtaining the first tract
3.
of land upon the ocean front the Park as yet possesses --
HOMANS
taken temporarily, till plans shall be worked out for its
development, in the name of the Trustees of Public Reserva-
tions. This is the Homans tract, bordering on the southern
19.08
side ,and overlooking, Schooner Head. It was the summer home
of the donor of our first Reservation tract, given through
President Eliot in 1908, the Bowl and Beehive tract at the
south end of Newport Mountain.
Mrs. Homans' early gift carried with it no access
from the public road except by courtesy, the trail to the
mountains and across a low pass in them to Otter Creek,
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
LAFAYETTE NATIONAL PARK
BAR HARBOR, MAINE
OFFICE OF THE SUPERINTENDENT
3.
which dated back beyond my memory, lying across the Homans
pasture, the pasture of an early farm.
The public road divides this new property into
Synem
302
two portions, the one extending westward to the mountain
receive
foot where it joins the Bowl and Beehive tract; the other,
containing twenty-five acres on the shore between Schooner
Head and Great Head, having a magnificent view up Frenchman's
Bay and across its entrance to Schoodic Head and to the
open sea.
Mrs. Homans' house, a simple bungalow of the
early type, still stands, and will probably, until better can
replace it, be put in order by the Government for public use,
making the land at once available.
The mountain portion of the Homans land, passing
beneath the Beehive, has beautiful woods upon it that have
been preserved by summer resident ownership for fifty year
and that extend into similar woods that came to the Reserva-
tions through Mrs. Homans' gift in 1908. Beyond this the
4
road would pass at an elevation of from 250 to 300 feet above
the sea close below the Cadillac Cliff path, with Gorham
Mountain which is the nearest to the sea of any in the Island
chain, rising immediately above. The road would be approxi-
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
LAFAYETTE NATIONAL PARK
BAR HARBOR, MAINE
OFFICE OF THE SUPERINTENDENT
4.
mately level, running parallel to the Ocean Drive but high
above, and the course not difficult for road construction.
The woods which clothed this land have recently been cut, SO
that no obstacle exists to an unbroken ocean view similar to
but finer than, owing to its elevation, that afforded by the
Ocean Drive.
Around the turn above the Radio Station at Otter
Cliffs the road would pass, still at approximately level
grade and with a similar wide view south-westward, to close
beyond the junction of the Ocean Drive and the Seal
Harbor- Bar Harbor road, where there is good opportunity
to cross beneath in a deep bed of glacial gravel, bringing
it quickly into land already owned.
This section of the suggested road stands by
itself. The Homans site will make undoubtedly a Park
center on the eastern side important for a road system
that would fully serve the Park to reach and that,
like Jordan Pond, will become a terminus of drives and
expeditions.
The road beyond this to Bar Harbor, should
it seem desirable to extend it, would pass first through
other and old woods; then through an open meadow beneath the
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
LAFAYETTE NATIONAL PARK
BAR HARBOR. MAINE
OFFICE OF THE SUPERINTENDENT
5.
east cliff of Newport Mountain, the grandest on the Island
and hidden from the motor road by woods of oak not likely
to be cut; then would slightly rise again, where the Town
road dips, to another splendid stretch of view across the Bay,
overhanging the resident shore, which would bring it to the
valley of Bear Brook and the existing Park and Reservation land
where old roads of wood-road character would carry it to the
Morrell Park property which the Town maintains, and will
doubtless maintain permanently since it received it as a
trust, as a riding school and horse-show center, from which
Bar Harbor can be reached easily across Great Meadow by
direct and grassy ways.
The connection from Morrell Park through the Gorge,
made on the eastern side of the Otter Creek - Seal Harbor
road, to the underneath road-crossing would complete the
circuit of the mountain. In large and in detail, the whole
road would be one of beauty not surpassed by the one under
construction, yet not duplicating this since the views it
opens and the territory are entirely different, as well as
the climbs and various excursions it would give access to.
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
LAFAYETTE NATIONAL PARK
BAR HARBOR, MAINE
OFFICE OF THE SUPERINTENDENT
6.
The distance along the suggested course from the
Otter Creek road crossing to the Homans site would be not
far from three miles, estimated by the map, the circuit
of the mountain as a whole not over eight; and in general
the construction would present no difficulty.
With this road built, the Park would have a horse-road
system crossing the motor one at level grade only at
Jordan Pond, and twice by tunnel, at Eagle Lake and at the
place I speak of, and that would be complete in itself, linked
up with all resort portions of the Island eastward of Somes
Sound and extensive enough and varied enough to make
a permanent and unique feature in its offering to the
public.
Yours sincerely,
George B. Work
John D. Rockefeller, Jr., Esq.,
26 Broadway,
New York City,
1908
By HERBERT J. SELIGMANN
cadia
National Park
MOUNTAIN PLAYGROUND BY THE SEA
D
IVIDED by the broad expanse of Frenchmans
Accordingly, in 1901, the village improvement so-
Bay, Acadia National Park lies like two giant
cieties of Bar Harbor, Northeast Harbor and Seal
paws, one of which includes vast tracts of land on
Harbor appointed delegates, including many summer
Maine's largest island, rugged Mt. Desert with its
residents, to a committee which met and formed the
imposing mountain range, and the other jutting out
Hancock County Trustees of Public Reservations.
to the east in the sloping pink granite ledges of
Among its incorporators were Dr. Eliot, George S.
Schoodic Point where, during gales and hurricanes,
Kennedy, and George B. Dorr who later spent much
hardy souls gather to watch enormous combers sweep
of his life and fortune to advance the cause of the
in from the North Atlantic. In addition to these two
park. A special act by the state legislature in 1903
main sections, the park includes a large portion of
gave the new corporation power to "acquire, hold,
isolated Isle au Haut some 20 miles southwest of Mt.
maintain and improve for free public use lands in
Desert as well as a small section at Islesford on Little
Hancock County
Cranberry Island where the park maintains a museum.
Local landowners and summer residents quickly
Even the acreage of Acadia is not static. When
responded to the program set before them. In 1908
consulted in August 1958, Park Director Frank R.
Eliza L. Homans gave a tract of land above Ocean
Givens gave the total area as 30,751 acres, but by
Drive; the trustees of the Linda Dows Cooksey estate
this time some public-spirited citizens may have
gave land on the drive near Seal Harbor; George B.
added to that figure. Mr. Givens compared the park
Cooksey gave five acres on Barr Hill; Kennedy gave
in its size and problems of administration to a small
funds for the purchase of 100 acres atop Mt. Cadillac.
town. In this he was conservative. During 1957, at-
Two years later George L. Stebbins organized a group
tendance was estimated at 850,000, with 1200 or more
of summer residents to buy a 3600-acre tract which
persons camping nightly at the Black Woods and
included the western slope of Cadillac and all of
Seawall sites. The demand for camping privileges
Pemetic Mountain and the Southern Bubble. In 1912
has been SO great that the time limit, for each party
the executors of Charles T. Howe of Boston offered
has been reduced from 30 to 14 days.
for sale 2000 acres including Jordan and Sargent
In its origins Acadia National Park was unique in
mountains, and $7000 was raised for this purchase.
two ways: it was the first national park to be estab-
Later gifts came from such prominent families as the
lished east of the Mississippi; and it was the first one
Cromwells, Abbes, Hendersons, Markoes, Pryors and
to have been entirely donated by gifts of land and
Lawsons. In all, at this writing there have been 129
money from private citizens. In the early 1900s Bar
separate transactions, the gifts and purchases varying
Harbor was already famous throughout the world as
in size from one acre to large tracts.
a resort area where many of the nation's wealthiest
Among the large gifts have been those of John D.
and most influential families spent their summers.
Rockefeller who, in 1910, gave Beech Hill, the cliff
Among them was Charles W. Eliot, famous Harvard
on the west shore of Echo Lake, and later, as well
president, who for 20 years had made his summer
as building carriage roads and bridle paths, bought
residence at Northeast Harbor and in whose fertile
and gave other tracts. With his cooperation the so-
mind the idea for a park originated. It was he who
called Mountain Road (not to be confused with the
ggested to friends that they form an organization to
summit road on Mt. Cadillac), which passes Jordan
conserve and maintain for the benefit of all people
Pond, was built in 1932.
the natural beauties of Mt. Desert.
(Continued on Page 41)
36
Abbe
1914
check
The birth of the park was not without its pains.
geology and wildlife are provided. All the guiding
In 1913, under threat by the legislature to withdraw
and lecture services of park rangers are without
its tax exemption, George B. Dorr went to Washington
charge except for the boat trips. Whether you are
to urge consolidation of the lands into a national
curious about mountain top plants, marine life in tidal
monument or park. The next year Dr. Eliot, Dorr,
pools, trees, wild flowers or birds, there is a guide
Ernest H. Forbush and Professor M. L. Fernald con-
ready to conduct you. A schedule of these tours
tributed illustrated articles to the National Geograph-
is issued weekly throughout the summer.
ic Magazine describing Mt. Desert Island and urging
Most visitors find that their vacation days are not
establishment there of a national park. The deter-
long enough to let them "do" the park as thoroughly
mined efforts of the conservators bore fruit on July 8,
as they would like. Ordinarily a full day is needed
1916, when President Woodrow Wilson signed an ex-
just to visit beautiful Sand Beach for a swim in the
ecutive order establishing Sieur de Monts National
surf, to watch the combers explode in Thunder Hole
Monument. This was changed three years later to
on Ocean Drive, and then to drive to the top of Mt.
Lafayette National Park and finally, in 1929, to Acadia
Cadillac with its spectacular views of inland forest
National Park. The last act also authorized the in-
and lakes to the north, long vistas of indented coast
clusion of lands outside Mt. Desert Island.
to the east and west, and the stirring panorama of
The problem of administering the Acadia Park of
open sea to the south.
today, a vast and widespread domain of mountains,
In addition to Cadillac, there are at least a dozen
lakes, shores, beaches, campsites, picnic areas, mu-
other mountains that offer exciting fun for both the
seums and highways, would, it seems, tax a small
novice hiker and expert rock climber. There are 100
army of trained personnel. Actually the job is done
miles of trails and footpaths; a wide choice of lakes
under a director with a year-round staff of between
and hidden fresh water ponds available for swim-
20 and 25 persons, to which are added in the peak
ming and fishing; secluded mountain brooks to ex-
summer months of July and August some 25 tempor-
plore, and miles of seashore to roam. Places of special
ary rangers. Each of the regular rangers is a college
interest along the shore are Anemone Cave, Great
graduate, trained for his work by the National Park
Head, Otter Cliffs and Hunters Beach. If one is
Service. The permanent personnel includes eight
seeking a change from the sea, forest and mountain,
rangers and three fire control aides, all equipped
he can watch the brook trout in the "sweet waters of
with cars with two-way radios; four lifeguards sta-
Acadia" bubbling clear and cold from the gravel at
tioned at lakes and sea beaches; two rangers stationed
Sieur de Monts Spring, or study the stone age utensils
at campsites and another at the information desk at
and other artifacts of prehistoric or recent Indians
park headquarters in Bar Harbor. At the latter point
in the Abbe Museum of Archeology. Another re-
visitors can get maps, directions and information
warding trip is a visit to the historical museum at
they may need.
Islesford where the story of the discovery and settle-
Facilities within the park are currently being ex-
ment of the Mt. Desert region is documented.
panded under the Mission 66 program, a nationwide
The traveler will find that there is more to Mt.
National Park Service improvement plan slated to be
Desert than just its park. There are the beautiful
completed in 1966. Development at Acadia is guided
harbors of Northeast, Seal and Southwest, with their
by a master plan that gives prime consideration to
summer fleets of yachts; the fishing villages along the
improving facilities and highways without detracting
western side of the island and the great five-mile
from the park's natural beauties. Each new project
fiord, known as Somes Sound, which nearly splits the
is carefully weighed and planned by experts for-
island. Here, too, are more ponds, woods and hills
esters, naturalists, engineers and architects.
to explore as well as excellent overnight accommoda-
There are few rules imposed upon a visitor to the
tions for those who prefer something more elaborate
park. He is required to respect the park's natural
than a campsite.
resources including its animals, trees, shrubs and
Wherever one goes on the island, he should be
flowers, to drive carefully and to build fires only where
impressed with the emphasis that is placed on fire
authorized. There are no advance reservations for
precautions. There is good reason for this. It is
campsites; the green-clad, friendly ranger on the
difficult today to stand on the summit of bare-ledged
scene issues permits in the order of arriving appli-
Cadillac and imagine that only a dozen years ago
cants.
much of the mountain was a volcano of wind-blasted
In return, the visitor is assured of being able to
flames. At that time one of the worst forest fires in
find his own pleasure in any part of the huge reser-
the nation's history swept across the island, burning
vation he may choose to explore. Every variety of
a total of 17,188 acres of which acres were
outdoor enthusiast may find his preference here. Spe-
within the park. In the bleak days of late November
cial boat trips, automobile tours, walks ranging from
1947, shortly after the last flames were extinguished
short strolls to strenuous climbs, and lectures on
by rains which came too late, one could drive past
(Continued on Page 60)
41
B
ACK in the days when a man could pay his in-
come tax out of his pocket change, people built
great houses for their comfort and great yachts for
their pleasure. Men like Joseph Pulitzer, J. P. Mor-
gan, Cyrus H. K. Curtis and Atwater Kent used
Maine's splendid harbors to shelter some of the finest
yachts the world has ever seen.
These magnificent ships were kept in constant use
through the summer months for entertaining and for
commuting Down East from big eastern cities, and
gave employment to many Maine men who either
worked aboard them or held jobs ashore in businesses
servicing the yachts. Some of these were built in
Maine shipyards, notably at the Bath Iron Works,
which launched eleven in the period 1929-31,
While yachting enjoyed some popularity in this
country in the early 19th century, it was not until the
post-Civil War decades of the 1870s and '80s that the
Golden Era began. Flush with fortunes made in the
new and growing industrial revolution, men with
time and money on their hands turned to yachting for
sport and social prestige. Hundreds of yacht clubs
were established during this 20-year period. Sailing
craft, at first predominant, were superseded by the
large steam yachts which gained increasing favor
after the 1880s. By the turn of the century one often
could judge a man's social and financial status by the
length of his yacht. Big, beautiful, luxuriously ap-
glories of the era.
pointed, these floating palaces were the crowning
YACHTS
OF THE
GOLDEN
ERA
By JOHN C. CALHOUN, JR.
42
B
ACK in the days when a man could pay his in-
come tax out of his pocket change, people built
great houses for their comfort and great yachts for
their pleasure. Men like Joseph Pulitzer, J. P. Mor-
gan, Cyrus H. K. Curtis and Atwater Kent used
Maine's splendid harbors to shelter some of the finest
ACADIA
yachts the world has ever seen.
NATIONAL PARK
These magnificent ships were kept in constant use
through the summer months for entertaining and for
(Continued from Page 41)
commuting Down East from big eastern cities, and
The Tarn near Sieur de Monts Springs between
gave employment to many Maine men who either
blackened mountain walls and suddenly feel that he
worked aboard them or held jobs ashore in businesses
was in a world bereft of color. Today this same
servicing the yachts. Some of these were built in
valley is laced with green, its mountain walls washed
Maine shipyards, notably at the Bath Iron Works,
clean by rains. In one way, the park benefited from
which launched eleven in the period 1929-31.
the holocaust for, while great stretches of forest were
While yachting enjoyed some popularity in this
leveled, new vistas of sea and mountain were opened.
country in the early 19th century, it was not until the
But the great Bar Harbor fire of 1947 brought
post-Civil War decades of the 1870s and '80s that the
more changes to Mt. Desert Island than the destruc-
Golden Era began. Flush with fortunes made in the
tion of 17,000 acres of forest. While property dam-
new and growing industrial revolution, men with
age within the park boundaries was estimated at
time and money on their hands turned to yachting for
slightly over a half-million dollars, damage outside
sport and social prestige. Hundreds of yacht clubs
the park exceeded $11.2 million. Many millions of
were established during this 20-year period. Sailing
the latter figure were represented in dozens of palatial
craft, at first predominant, were superseded by the
summer "cottages" belonging to some of the nation's
large steam yachts which gained increasing favor
wealthiest families, people who had brought world
after the 1880s. By the turn of the century one often
notice to the island resort and some of whom had
could judge a man's social and financial status by the
been principal figures in gathering the lands that
length of his yacht. Big, beautiful, luxuriously ap-
later became Acadia National Park.
pointed, these floating palaces were the crowning
Today many of the extensive foundations of these
glories of the era.
homes still remain, crumbling and overgrown with
weeds. New park roads run near some of these
ruins, reminding passers-by of another era when far-
sighted men used some of their wealth to help pre-
serve the magnificent beauties of Mt. Desert. The
dreams and work of these men have borne fruit, and
the naturalness of the island they knew will remain
after the last traces of their burned mansions are
buried beneath spruce forest.
The park was named Acadia from the commission
granted in 1604 by Henry IV of France to the Sieur
de Monts. It might well have been named Arcadia
for the Greek traditional home of pastoral poetry.
GOLDEN
ERA
By JOHN C. CALHOUN, JR.
ACADIA NATIONAL PARK 75TH ANNIVERSARY 37
Significant dates in the history of MDI and Acadia
1529 - Diego Ribero, a Portuguese mariner,
February 26, 1919 - President Woodrow Wilson
1947 - About 8,700 acres of the park's east side
named Somes Sound Rio de las Montanas. This is
signed a bill making Sieur de Monts National
and many summer cottages were wiped out by a
the first known written mention of Mt. Desert
Monument a national park. Called Lafayette
disastrous fire.
Island.
National Park, the park was the first national park
1954 - One million visitors recorded.
September 1604 - Samuel de Champlain, a car-
east of the Mississippi, and it was the only park
1960 - John D. Rockefeller died. His gifts to
tographer-recorder sent on an expedition by the
made up entirely of private gifts. Dorr became the
Acadia included 57 miles of carriage trails, 17 stone
lieutenant general of New France, Sieur de Monts,
first superintendent at a salary of $1 per month.
bridges, two gatehouses and approximately 15,000
described and identified Mt. Desert as an island
Fall 1929 - Congress changed the name to
acres of land.
and named it L'Isle des Monts-deserts.
Acadia National Park, derived from the French
1966 - Two million visitors recorded.
1613 - A colony of French Jesuits attempt first
name for much of northeastern North America.
1971 - The non-profit organization, the Maine
permanent settlement at St. Sauveur located on
1929 - A 2,000-acre area on Schoodic Peninsula
Coast Heritage Trust of Bar Harbor, was founded
Fernald's Point at the mouth of Somes Sound. The
was acquired for the park from a pro-British family
to encourage long-term protection of Maine islands
colonists were welcomed by the local Indians, but
that had hoped the park's name would be changed
and other properties.
the colony was wiped out by the British. This began
to Acadia, as it was.
June 21, 1979 - Jordan Pond House was
a long period of conflict between the French and
1931 - Cadillac Mountain road completed.
destroyed by fire. It was rebuilt with local contri-
British for control of northeastern North America.
1932 - With a donation from John D. Rockefeller
butions within two years.
1759 - The British defeated the French forces at
Jr., Jordan Pond and Northeast Harbor gatehouses
1980 - Just under 4 million visitors recorded.
Quebec, and Maine became British territory.
were completed.
1986 - After years of local debate and negotia-
1761 - Abraham Somes of Gloucester, sailing up
August 5, 1944 - George B. Dorr died at the age of
tion, Congress passed legislation establishing lim-
from Gloucester for a cargo of staves, so liked the
91. Dorr is remembered as the father of Acadia
its on how much land Acadia can acquire in sur-
area he moved here and settled Somesville, the old-
National Park.
rounding communities.
est town on Mt. Desert Island.
1837 - First bridge was erected connecting Mt.
Desert Island and the mainland.
1840s and 1850s 1 First summer visitors, mostly
scientists, artists and novelists, came to Mt. Desert
Island.
1868 - Steamboat service started running
between Boston and Mt. Desert Island. Island
House, the first hotel, was built near the steamboat
wharf in Southwest Harbor. Other hotels followed
in Bar Harbor.
1880s
Land speculation boomed on Mt.
Desert Island as Bar Harbor became a popular
summer spot for wealthy summer "rusticators"
from Eastern cities.
1895 - The Jordan Pond House, a tea house on
Jordan Pond which is now in the park, was built by
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas McIntire.
1901 - Hancock County Trustees of Public
Reservations was organized by a few of the
island's leading summer people to acquire and pre-
serve the island's beautiful landscapes. George
George B. Dorr rushed into Bar Harbor to buy the land around Sieur de Monts Spring minutes before his option
Dorr was named the first executive officer. Other
on the property was set to expire. A group of developers were standing by at the Village Green with cash in
members included Harvard University President
hand, ready to take over the option. This ceremony at the picturesque spring took place sometime around the
Charles Eliot, George Stebbins and Lea Luquer.
turn of the century. Today Sieur de Monts is the site of the Abbe Museum, which houses a collection of Native
*Jan. 1, 1903 - Maine State Legislature granted the
American artifacts from the area, and Wild Gardens of Acadia. PARK COLLECTION
trustees a charter making it a tax-exempt corpora-
tion whose purpose was "to acquire, by device, gift
or purchase, and to own, arrange, hold, maintain,
or improve for public use lands in Hancock
This group watches over Acadia
County, Maine, which by reason of scenic beauty,
ost parks and historical sites have
the park administration.
historical interest, sanitary advantage, or other like
M
groups that support their programs.
This year the Friends helped persuade the federal
reasons may become available for such purpose."
Friends of Acadia has been doing this
government to commit to raising half the money
Land on the summit overlooking Jordan Pond and
in Acadia National Park since the
necessary to restore John D. Rockefeller's carriage
a tract near Seal Harbor were the first two parcels
group was founded in 1986.
roads and create an endowment for their perpetual
given to the Trustees.
The group's mission is to help protect and pre-
care. The group also has helped establish an Acadia
1908 - The Beehive and the Bowl marked the
serve the park. That has meant working with the
Youth Conservation Corps to work in the park.
Trustees' first significant acquisitions. Cadillac
Congressional delegation to boost the park's bud-
For more information about the group, write:
Mountain (then called Green Mountain) and Sieur
get, organizing volunteer work crews to restore
Friends of Acadia, P.O. Box 725, Bar Harbor, ME.,
de Monts Spring were added next.
trails and roads, and monitoring actions taken by
04609, or call (207) 288-3340.
January 1913 - Legislative lobbyists questioned
the tax-exempt status of the Trustees. This sparked
George Dorr's quest to establish a national reserve.
The Trustees owned about 5,000 acres on Mt.
Desert Island.
Recycling in the park
March 4, 1913 - George Dorr arrived in
Washington, D.C. to start his fight to save the
cadia National Park
glass, 2,387 pounds of plastic
the park again this summer in
future park.
A
was one of five parks
and 2,006 pounds of aluminum.
almost all the frequently visited
1915 - Automobiles were allowed on all of Mt.
nationwide chosen
Coastal Disposal, a Southwest
locations. Bins also have been
Desert Island after a bitter battle between residents
last year for a pilot
Harbor company, collects the
placed in island towns 1 in Bar
who wanted to preserve peace and quiet on the
recycling program sponsored by
material from the bins and trans-
Harbor they are on the pier, in
island and those who favored automobiles. Cars
Dow Chemical Co. and
ports it to Augusta where it is
front of the First National Bank;
were allowed in Bar Harbor in 1913.
Huntsman Chemical Co.
separated and sold to manufac-
in Mt. Desert, they are at the
July 8, 1916 - Sieur de Monts National
About 130 big plastic bins
turers.
Somesville fire Station and at the
Monument was signed into law by President
were placed throughout the park
From July to December about
Parkman Mountain Parking
Woodrow Wilson. George Dorr was named first
last summer and in several
11 percent of the total annual
Area in Northeast Harbor.
custodian of the monument.
island communities. By the end
waste from Acadia was recycled,
Material does not need to be
1917-1940 - John D. Rockefeller Jr. financed the
of August, more than 24,478
according to Dow officials, who
separated when it is placed in
design, construction and maintenance of the car-
pounds of recyclables had been
hope to reach 20 percent his year.
the bins, but should not be heav-
riage road system.
collected - 20,085 pounds of
The bins have been placed in
ily contaminated by food.
2/18/19.
Ellen Bullard
Clark's Bostm Blue Book, 1908
Ps. 46.. Resedents of Commonwelle ave
/I 3 the Williams. Bellard
n Stapler is
Mrs Katherine "i
Flash K
Miss Ellen
11
P4.99. # 18 Mr. georg B Dore
H 20 Mrs C.P. Curtis
H 30 the this Henry Parknon
# 45 Mrs Mrs. Ellerton L. Dorr
is
20 ALBERT MEADOW
BAR HARBOR
MAINE
25 Sepr.1908
bean In. Euch
In. beasy
advises me that ow V.
I.A. is legally liacle to
taxation upon ito noh
earate
In addition 5 found and
Park we ones one and me
quarter acces of wood laud
in to Village here, under
similar obligation shin.
twice is as a pack.
Ir Receus to rea now that
the arrange ment perposed
2.
by you would be a do.
Dirable me for no tomate
in bet caseer, and 2
Hall Lay to onlye of before
me association next
Summer.
Ihave conveyed tor
mischell (at whose in
Hance In. How your
four end Pack) your
suggestion againing to
lader land
on Sayer and Jones
mmufains, and shall too
glad to Canner ricate 5
you the result as soon
us Iow apprised of
if
Verykeer IMM
x.2 opdyaho
beautiful lon
HUA. Records of the Pres of Haward u., C.W.E. B83
[Purchase of Cadillac Summit]
4.
Bar Haln
Sept. 281908
Dear President Shit
got a price Green the
active da for its tof of
Montain $3000 for Our hundred
acus belonging to the Brave family
him- - Thea I went, unit ON
mutchell, the and he
Authorized the They for the
(sic) Haucoek County Pathe Law intervicester
Who Mork Kit qualter u/ however
3.
2.
Ifond that of the hear, Hr
product a third of
undivided, had given Qu often
On his third for $1000 to
Man hamid Moran, a heal that
x atter Speculative to Ran Hain
The often - war grum John month
ago, in Connection unit au attember
to peerius the Cream Monstan had.
Moran leasut of an luquey Nu
Dear made for the
2
3.
approval of hig gift Weigh
list him, Thum, and yru
acknowledgement ofit in the
Allociation's ham will be
a tom Cc of pleature 5 him
the Kinning will key the
main , third of du Muchan
topig
He has also shoka to hus today
the totas of newfert 10 Sargert
of the of beening
4
6.
and I thing that he ma,
dong lo
durit u hair to Cale this
mail, X am
that
Gange B. DOH
not :- Pack
210
Bar Karbor, Kaine.
September 29th, 1908.
President Charles 17. Eliot,
Harvard College,
Carbridge, Mass.
Dear President Eliot,
I wrote in haste last right to catch the mail and
it has just occurred to ne that I spoke of the Hancock County Public
Lands Association in My letter instead of the Hancock County
Trustees of Public Reservations. Kr Deasy has charge of the matter
and will see that all is in due legal form when title is taken of
Homans:
the property.
Cadillac
The owners of the remaining third have also acquired possession
of the Green Mountain Road Corporation which has a right of endment
domain for road and toll-house purposes, but not for a hotel, from
the Eagle Lake Road to the swedit of the mountain. It has not
exercised its right however with regard to the hundred aeres in
question though it has done so over the land below. The exercise
of this right in condernation of land for roadway across the lot
that occupies the swedt night be held to seriously injure the
value of the latter in ownership and as two thirds of the cost of
such condemnation would be paid to the trustees I doubt if the
owners of the rondway will exercise their right at present.
They have a plan to make this road into an automobile road,
running an autonobile stage NO and down the mountain, and the whole
matter is involved with the automobile question here.
No house upon
2
the surrit could be built however while we hold a two thirds interest
in the property except by its division into separate parts and I
think that our interest
----
that is, the interest of the public
lios in postponing such division as long as possible, if we cannot
obtain an aution sale of the property and division of the price
obtained instead of a land division. such division by sale is mare
in Maine apparently, although cormon in other states; the excep-
tional character of the property however, as a mountain-top whose
sole value lies in its all-round view, night lead to a judgement in
favor of sale instead or land division in this case.
Yours sincerely,
Sing B. NAM
I
2.
[oct.2,1908]
Bar Garbor, Maine.
matters which are calculated to keep the pic-
turesquoness of the localities uninpaired.
My dear President:-
We have spent quite three hundred dol-
I am sure you will be
lars on the Fawn Pond and it was so well man-
very much gratified at the result of Mr.
aged that no sign of interference by man now
Dorr's efforts about the Hancock County Park
disturbs there the lover of Nature.
business. I had this morning a long conver-
In my interview with Mr. How, I think it
nation with Mr. How, who tells me he will fa-
came out D cetty clearly that he himself would
cilitate in every way next summer the trans-
next year convey to the Hancock County Park
fer of the Fawn Pond to the Park, with the
Association a large tract of land, probably
agreement that the Villiage Improvement Asso-
fifty to seventy acres, lying between Eagle
ciation shall care for it, let us say for
Lake Road and the road up Green Mountain.
five years. It will be a matter of fifty
This, if I mistake not, will take one, per-
or sixty dollars a year, but in fact on all
haps two, of the best trails up the mountain,
lands we acquire we shall need some thought
will lie of course on the eastward side and
as to expense for forestry, paths, and other
will be a most valuable acquisition. I may
40 acre Fawn Fend
HCTPR
Harvard University Archives.
Records of the President. C.W.Eliot. B.83
3.
ask, however, at Mr. How's request, that you will not speak of
this for the present I send you this because I know it will
gratify you to feel that a larger public interest has been
awakened in the matter.
I shall be in Boston at the end of October and hope then
to
have the pleasure of seeing you. I must make some kind of
an of ^icial visit to Harvard to see the Carnegie laboratory of
nutrition.
Yours very truly
S. weir mituney
October second, 1908.
To President Eliot,
Harvard College.
B Kert.
R.H., 2003.
Abby Aldrich Rockefeller
by centuries of erosion, dominate the landscape. Rich forests of
spruce, fir, and pine flourish safely in wilderness areas, and over
five hundred species of wildflowers bring a riot of springtime color
CHAPTER 10
to the hillsides or hide undisturbed in moist and secret haunts. The
climate is by turn intimidating and soothing, as fog and rain, sun-
light and gentle winds chase each other endlessly.
John Cabot discovered the island in 1497. Samuel de Champlain
named it in 1604. In 1613 the French Jesuits established a mission
and a settlement, only to see it destroyed by the English, who
claimed the region by virtue of the Cabot explorations. The land
remained part of French Acadia, however, until France finally re-
linquished it in the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713. Under English
the
jurisdiction Mount Desert developed as a fishing and lumbering
center. In the middle of the nineteenth century, city folks became
attracted to the island's possibilities for recreation-trout fishing,
hiking, canoeing, sailing, activities that had been eschewed by the
A
bby had been in and out of bed all winter with a cough and
residents of the older summer colonies, where stately rituals of a
rheumatism and was now four months pregnant. When she
more elegant order prevailed. Even when Bar Harbor became a
learned that Dr. Thomas was spending the summer in Bar Harbor,
playground for millionaires, it never took on quite the lush charac-
Maine, she decided to follow him there for her delivery. On June
ter of Newport. The fêtes were somewhat quieter, the villas, with
19, 1908, the entire household began the exodus. "We assemble at
their wood-and-shingle style, became known as cottages, and active
No. 13," John wrote, "where we have supper, and at eight o'clock
sports remained an essential diversion.
the train leaves with the residue, sixteen strong.
We arrive at
The family occupied Sears Cottage, a rented waterfront house
1:30 P.M. tomorrow.
on Wayman Street, owned by Evelyn Walsh MacLean. On June
"Abby is very well and I think will stand the journey nicely.
28, John left for Tarrytown to check up on Kykuit's progress. In
The children with their new socks, which leaves their knees bare,
his absence Abby occupied herself with quiet tasks. "Mrs. Barnes
will not mind the heat." The immediate family was four, the rest
and I have been putting the bassinet
together," she wrote. "I
were staff-including stablemen to look after the horses. The train
showed it to the children, little John wanted to get in and try it,
was the Bar Harbor Express out of Grand Central, north to Ban-
and Babbie thought it had better be put in her room, if she was
gor, and then east on the Coastal Line to Hancock. Passengers and
going to take care of the baby."2
horses boarded the Mount Desert ferry for the eight miles across
She was reading Emile Zola's Rome- "His views of the R.C.
Frenchman Bay, to be met on the island side by buckboards and
church and socialism and Dogma I found very sympathetic." And
victorias.
she asked John to order two more books for her, On the Training of
Nowhere along the Atlantic seaboard is there such an island as
Parents by Lawrence Abbott, and a text on Chinese porcelains by
Mount Desert. Its haunting beauty is as ever-changing as the sea
Cosure Maukhouse.
itself, Great granite cliffs, pounded by the surf, rise starkly from
John returned from New York on Sunday, July 5. Three days
the ocean floor. More than a dozen mountain peaks, worn smooth
later, at 12:10 P.M., Nelson Aldrich Rockefeller was born, named
128
129
BERNICE KERT
Abby Aldrich Rockefeller
after Abby's father. To celebrate his safe and healthy arrival, John
kind of old money, gave the villages their special flavor, their ca-
presented her with an "alluring" piece of jewelry. Two weeks later
chet. The golf course was only nine holes and the clubhouse medio-
he was back at Kykuit to supervise the last details before his parents
cre. Tennis courts were plentiful, if indifferently maintained.
moved in.
Sailing parties that meandered around the many small islands were
"The rain yesterday kept the children in the house and I could
Abby's favorite outdoor recreation, especially if they turned into
have them with me most of the time " Abby wrote him. "We
all-day picnics. Sunday sermons were delivered by the prominent
are getting our share of fog now but I don't mind.
Fog was
clergy of several denominations who took their holidays in North-
part of the New England climate that she loved. She often said
east Harbor.
how thankful she was that the Lord did not place her life inland,
John no longer commuted regularly from New York, but formed
that she was not really happy unless she was near water, the ocean
the habit of bringing his work with him. The mass of detail he was
was the best, but she would settle for a river. Ending her letter on
handling, as Senior began to shift projects to him, was endless. His
a note of tenderness, she wrote how much he meant to her; neither
drive for perfection, his passion for "taking pains," dominated his
the children nor all the luxury with which he surrounded her could
thinking. He did not care for sailing, not the way Abby did. He
make up for his absence.
expected her to reserve her afternoons for him, SO that he could
John was hungry for such words. "I am glad your happiness
take her driving or hiking with him over the footpaths, pausing at
depends so much upon me," he replied. "I should hate to have you
Jordan Pond House for tea, toast, and jam.
just moderately glad to have me with you; my feelings are SO ar-
With the end of the season Abby was back in Tarrytown to
dent." Nothing could make up for her physical presence, the
enjoy the pageantry of the Hudson-Fulton celebration of the ter-
chance to touch her, to feel her closeness. It was an intensity that
centenary of the Henry Hudson exploration of the Hudson River
for him always bordered on desperation. The question, not yet
in 1609, and the centenary of the first use of steam navigation on
answered, was how he would deal with competition for that close-
the river by Robert Fulton. John disposed of all the tickets sent to
ness from his own children.
him by virtue of Senior's contributions and was satisfied to watch
A year later, in 1909, the family returned to Mount Desert.
the illuminated regatta, fireworks, etc. from Kykuit's perch. For
This time they rented in Seal Harbor, like its neighbor, Northeast
Abby, however, the exhibitions were of much greater interest.
Harbor, a quiet, low-profile enclave. Charles William Eliot, who
The Metropolitan had rounded up an extraordinary loan exhibition
had transformed narrow, sectarian Harvard College into a demo-
from New York collectors of Dutch paintings-Rembrandts, Hal-
cratic, illustrious university, was one of the first summer visitors to
ses, and Vermeers.
build his house in the area. A colony of distinguished scientists,
At a time when the Met was overwhelmingly Europe-oriented,
jurists, and architects gathered around him, some of whom, like
Henry Kent, the greatest museum administrator of his era, decided
Eliot himself, were already known to Abby and John. Christian
to mount an exhibition of American industrial arts from 1625 to
Herter, who did some of the early work on poliomyelitis, was the
1825. Abby, who had been nudging John into "used furniture
brother-in-law of Abby's friend Adele Herter. Simon Flexner,
stores" for years, saw her taste vindicated. For the first time since
head of research for the Rockefeller Institute, and his wife, Helen,
the Philadelphia Centennial of 1876, "grandmother's old things,"
returned every summer.
stored for years in America's attics, received the attention that had
Rich, patrician families, representing the Protestant elite, were
been reserved for the decorative arts of Egypt, Greece, and West-
regulars, among them the Clarks of Philadelphia and the Hannas
ern Europe.
of Cleveland. A deliberate shabbiness, characteristic of a certain
In October she paid a visit to Dr. Thomas. He confirmed what
130
I
HARVARD EXTOLS ELIOT.
New York Times (1857-Current file): Dec 12, 1908; ProQuest Historical Newspapers The New York Times
12/14/08
pg.03
HARVARD EXTOLS ELIOT.
Overseers, Accepting President's Res-
ignation, Say He Is Educa-
tional Leader.
Elist
CAMBRIDGE Mass., Dec. 11.-In ac-
cepting with reluctance the resignation of
President Charles W. Ellot, the oversers
of Harvard Colege have placed on record
a resolution of admiration and esteem.
The resciution in part is as follows:
Called to the Presidency in early man-
hood, he has administered the affairs of
this university for forty years with emi-
nent skill and fidelity. Its vast develop-
ment during his term of service has been
'mainly.dire to his wisdom. his strong con-
victions, his enterprise and zeal. prompt
to initlate reforms and fearles yet pru-
dent in pressing them, he has, by his con-
structive energy, transformed Harvard
College into a great university and at
True same come nas excelled an influence
on the educational forces of the Nation
which has largely shaped their policy, so
that he stands to-day the leader in his
age. and generation.
The Harvard University Gazette an-
nounces the appointment of Edward
Waldo Forbes as Director of the William
Hayes Fogg Art Museum in place of Prof.
Charles H. Moore. whose resignation has
recently been announced, to take effect
Sept. 1, 1903. Mr. Forbes has been promi-
nently identified with the artistic inter-
ests of Boston and Cambridge for sev-
eral years.
CROKER SEES DR. BULL.
Comes from Lakewood to Spend Half
an Hour at Friend's Bedside.
The condition of Dr. William T. Bull
was so much improved Thursday that he
was permitted by Dr. ynkoop. his at-
tending physician. to receive a visit from
his life-long friend. Richard Croker. Mr.
Croker motored to town from Lakewood,
N. J. as soop as he learned that Dr. Bull
would be permitted to see him. and they
spent half an hour together. Dr. Wvn-
koop said last night that his patient was
much brighter as a result of the visit.
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner Further reproduction prohibited without permission
ORGANIZED UNDER THE LAWS OF MAINE.
GREENMOUNTANGARRIAGE ROAD CO.
OF BAR HARBOR, ME.
8.7
CAPITAL STOCK $25.000
PAR VALUE $5.00
This Certifies, that L. B Deary
is entitled to
-One
Shares of the Cahital Stock of the
Green Mountain barriage Road Co.
Transferable on the books of the Company by Assignment
dorsed hereon and surrender of this certificate.
In witness whereof the seal of said Corporation and the
signatures of the President and Treasurer are hereunto affixed
Dated at Bar Harbor. maine, this 312 day of fec 1908
Innory Treasurer George President. Rs Nort
ORGANIZED UNDER THE LAWS OF MAINE.
GREENMOUNTAIN CARRIAGE ROAD CO.
OF BAR HARBOR, ME.
86
9998
CAPITAL STOCK $25.000
PAR VALUE $5.00
This Certifies, that Geo. B. Dorr
is entitled to
ninety nine hundred annuity eight Shares of the Cahital Stock of the
Green Mountain Carriage Road Co.
Transferable on the books of the Company by Assignment en-
dorsed In hereon and surrender of this certificate.
witness whereof the seal of said Corporation and the
signatures of the President and Treasurer are hereunto affixed
L. Ateam
Dated at Bar Harbor, maine, this 31st day of Die 1908-
George Bobler
ARTICLES OF AGREEMENT.
In accordance with the provisions of the Revised Statutes of the
state of Maine, chapter 48, section I6, we the undersigned, whose res-
idences are stated opposite our respective signatures, hereby associ-
ate ourselves together by these written articles of agreement for the
purpose of forming a corporation under the laws of Maine, to purchase,
lease, or acquire a right of Way over a strip of land extending from
the summit of Green Mountain in the town of Eden, Maine, to somewhere
near its base, and over said strip of land to locate, construct and
operate a toll road.
Said corporation shall be located at Bar Harbor in the town of
Eden in the county of Hancock in the said state of Maine, and shall
have its office at said Bar Harbor. The first meeting of said corpor-
ation shall be held in accordance with section I7, of said chapter 48,
for the purpose of adopting a corporate name, adopting by-laws, defin-
ing the purposes of the corporation, the amount of capital stock, val-
ue of shares, choosing all necessary officers, and whatever else may
be necessary for the proper organization of said corporation, at Hamor
Block at said Bar Harbor on the fifth day of July, A. D. I888, at 7 X
o'clock P. M.
Dated at Bar Harbor, Eden, Me., this 20th day of June A. D. I888.
Names.
Residences.
Eiling Hamas
Bar Horbas me
it 9 loan
DECLARATION OF TRUST.
WHEREAS, we, the undersigned, George B. Dorr, L. B. Deasy and
Albert H. Lynam, hereby acknowledge that there has been transfered
to us ten thousand shares believed to be all the capital stock of the
Green Mountain Carriage Road Company, a corporation organized under
the laws of Maine and established and located at Bar Harbor, Hancock
County, in said state. Said stock is included in three certificates
to wit; Certificate No. 86 for nine thousand nine hundred ninety-
eight (0,998) shares issued to George B. Dorr; Certificate No. 87
for one share issued to L. B. Deasy and Certificate No. 88 for one
share issued to Albert II. Lynam.
Now we acknowledge and declare that theentire consideration,
to wit; the sum of Five Hundred Dollars ($500.00) paid for said
stock was paid by the Hancock County Trustees of Public Reservations,
a charitable corporation organized under the laws of said state of
Maine and established and located at said Bar Harbor.
We therefore declare and agree that we do hold and will hold
said stock in trust for said Hancock County Trustees of Public
Reservations and that we will manage and dispose of said stock for
the sole use and benefit of said last named corporation.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF we the said George B. Dorr, L. B. Deasy and
Albert H. Lynam, have hereunto set our hands and seals this thirty-
first day of December, A. D. 1908.
Signed, sealed and delivered
in presence of
I, George B. Dorr of Eden, Hancock County, Maine, having been
elected one of the Directors of the Green Mountain Carriage Road
Company corporation at a meeting held this day at the office of
Deasy & Lynam, Bar Harbor, Maine, do hereby acknowledge that I have
received due and sufficient notice of said meeting and do hereby
waive any other or further notice thereof and consent that the two
other Directors constituting a majority and quorum of Directors may
proceed to elect officers in my absence.
December 30th, 1908.
George B. Wars
Law Offices at
Henry McHall
Maine.
Ellsworth, Me
July 29, 1909.
In re Green Mountain Carriage Road Co.
Hon. L. B. Deasy,
Bar Harbor, Maine.
Brother Deasy:
Yours of the 28th inst. received returning the assignment
from Mr. Greely to me in re certificate number 71,646 shares, which
certificate was supposed to be lost.
Enclosed please find herewith the original certificate
number 71 assigned by Mr.Greely to George B. Dorr of Eden, Maine,
as requested by you. Have forgotten what kind of an assignment or
assignments I gave myself but it seems to me that either my assign-
ment of the supposed lost certificate ought to be returned to me or
else some memorandum made thereon to show the original certificate
has been found and transferred as per your request direct from Mr.
Greely to Mr. Dorr. Will you kindly look at my assignment of the
supposed lost certificate and let me hear from you further.
Very truly yours,
P? S. Have left date of enclosed assignment blank as I did not
know the date of my previous assignment and it occurs to me that
this probably should be dated as of a fixed date so as to correspond
with your records where you count this cez tificate as present
The holder's
on
represented at any meetings. Kindly let me know what date you fill in.
HEH/S
STATE OF MAINE
Office of Attorney-General
Augusta, Me.,
August 23,
191 5
.
To Hon. John E. Bunker, Secretary of State of Maine.
I, O. H. Dunbar, Assistant Attorney-General of Maine, hereby
certify that I have received satisfactory proof that the
GREEN MOUNTAIN CARRIAGE ROAD COMPANY
a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Maine, has
ceased to transact business, and is therefore, under Chap. 47, Sec. 3 I,
R. S. of Maine, excused from filing annual returns with Secretary of
State, as now required by law, SO long as its franchises remain unused.
Yours very respectfully,
O. H. Dunbar,
Assistant Attorney-General of Maine.
A true copy of excuse sent to the Secretary of State for filing.
Attest:
Assistant Attorney-General.
ORGANIZED UNDER THE LAWS OF MAINE.
GREENMOUNTAIN CARRIAGE ROAD CO.
OF BAR HARBOR. ME.
68
646
CAPITAL STOCK $25.000
PAR VALUE $5.00
This Certifies that L. A Enury - is entitled to
Six hundred forty Six - Shares of the Cahital Stock of the
e
Green Mountain Carriage Road Co.
Transferable on the books of the Company by Assignment en
dorsed hereon and surrender of this certificate.
In witness whereof the seal of said Corporation and the
signatures of the President and Treasurer are hereunto affexed
Dated at Bar Harbor, maine this 8th day of Sept. 1891
Treasurer
Jro I Higg President. ms
ORGANIZED UNDER THE LAWS OF MAINE.
GREEN MOUNTAIN CARRIAGE ROAD CO.
OF BAR HARBOR. ME.
88
CAPITAL STOCK $25.000
PAR VALUE $5.00
T
This Certifies, that Albert 16 type been is entitled to
Our
Shares of the Cahital Stock of the
Transferable on the books of the Company courrage by Assignmenton
Green Mountain barriage Road Co.
dorsed hereon and surrender of this certificate.
In witness whereof the seal of said Corporation and the
signatures of the President and Treasurer are hereunto affixed
maine this 319 day of Dic 1808
lads
For value received
hereby sell, assign and trans=
For value received I hereby sellbassign and trans=
fer to
fer to Geo B. Derr.
of
of Barkarber Eder, Maine
Shares
the within 646
Shares
of the within described stock, and do hereby constitute
of the within described stock, and do hereby constitute
and appoint said
and appoint said
Attorney to transfer the same on the books of the Com=
Attorney to transfer the same on the books of the Com=
pany, with full power of substitution in the premises.
pany, with full power of substitution in the premises.
18
18
Witness :
Witness : a.a. ford,
Life Jersing
For value received
hereby sell, assign and trans=
fer to
of
Shares
of the within described stock, and do hereby constitute
and appoint said
Attorney to transfer the same on the books of the Com=
pany, with full power of substitution in the premises.
18
Witness :
Jan. 27, 1917.
Collector of Internal Revenue,
Portsmouth, N.H.
Dear Sir:
The Green Mountain Carriage Road Company, a Maine
corporation, has no property, has ceased to transact business
and on that account has been excused from filing returns to the
State of Maine. In the past it has made returns to your
office. Will it be necessary to do si in the future ?
Yours truly,
AHL/C
OFFICERS AND COMMITTEES FOR 1908
GARDINER M. LANE, President
FRANCIS L. HIGGINSON, Treasurer
ARTHUR FAIRBANKS, Director
BENJAMIN IVES GILMAN, Secretary of the Museum
FRANK H. DAMON, Assistant Treasurer
STANDING COMMITTEES
Committee on the Museum
THE DIRECTOR, Ex Officio, Chairman
THE PRESIDENT, Ex Officio
FRANCIS BARTLETT
WILLIAM STURGIS BIGELOW
ARTHUR T. CABOT
J. TEMPLEMAN COOLIDGE, JR.
FRANCIS L. HIGGINSON
A. W. LONGFELLOW
DENMAN W. ROSS
Committee on the School of the Museum of Fine Arts
THE PRESIDENT, Ex Officio
THE DIRECTOR, Ex Officio
J. TEMPLEMAN COOLIDGE, JR.
Finance Committee
THE PRESIDENT, Ex Officio
ROBERT D. EVANS
THE TREASURER, Ex Officio
MORRIS GRAY
NATHANIEL THAYER
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COMMITTEES
Appointed in Pursuance of By-laws Proposed at the Annual Meeting,
Jan. 16, 1908, for Adoption at the Following Meeting
Committee on Annual Subscriptions
A. SHUMAN, Chairman
ANDREW G. WEBSTER
ELWYN G. PRESTON
JUDGE M. J. MURRAY
JOHN S. LAWRENCE
MAJ.-GEN. WILLIAM A. BANCROFT
BERNARD J. ROTHWELL
Advisory Committee on Education
CHARLES W. ELIOT, Chairman A. LAWRENCE LOWELL
STRATTON D. BROOKS
MISS FANNY P. MASON
MRS. R. C. CABOT
MRS. R. S. RUSSELL
REV. ARTHUR T. CONNOLLY
WALTER SARGENT
J. RANDOLPH COOLIDGE, JR.
MISS ANNA D. SLOCUM
GEORGE B. DORR
PROF. H. LANGFORD WARREN
ARTHUR FAIRBANKS
PROF. J. H. WRIGHT
GARDINER M. LANE
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1907-08
Page | Type | Title | Date | Source | Other notes |
1 | File folder | File Contents. 1907: Building of Arts opens; Forestry Philosophy statement by GBD at BHVIA, 1907; Letter from G.Pinchot in Sierra responding to letter [?] from GBD; William Everett on meeting with GBD at his home, Thursday Evening Club 12/09; B of Arts by Owen Johnson. 1908: Athletic Field; Homans Property; Homans Gift; Letter from G. Pinchot containing donation $500; GBD "sitting" with Mrs. Piper published in Proc Soc. Psychical (see file 1911); Rockefeller's 1st visit to Maine; Wm. Everett on 2 Jan meeting with GBD at his home; Eliot announces his retirement, By April 1909 Lowell is acting Pres; Roosevelt's Governor's Conference R. Shackland Mather; Jr + Abby in Bar Harbor (July) for 1st time as Nelson born; 1908 is year that GBD describes as "my own active work with HCTPR" beginning. GBD to S.A. Eliot, 11/11/29 | 09/05 | Compiled by Ronald Epp | |
2 | Bulletin | Visiting Committees to the Museum for 1907 | No date | Museum of Fine Arts Bulletin | |
3 | Email from Ronald Epp to Bill Horner re: the Transit Route | 02/18/2011 | Personal email of Ronald Epp | ||
4-6 | Report excerpt | Mount Desert Transit Company petition, January 1, 1907 | January 1, 1907 | Princeton University.Railroad Commissioners' Report | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
7 | Journal excerpt | Investing in Acadia: The Invisible Hand of John Stewart Kennedy | 2008 | Baker, William J. Investing in Acadia. Chebacco IX. pp 7-17 | |
8 | Notes | Massachusetts Horticultural Society and Mount Desert Transit Company | No date | Compiled by Ronald Epp | |
9 | Report title page | Forty-ninth annual report of the Railroad Commissioners of the State of Maine | 1907 | Augusta Kennebec Journal Print, 1907 | Original from Princeton University |
10-12 | Report | Report of Trees and Planting Committee of the BHVIA, inc USFS letter | 1907 | Jesup. BHVIA.1907 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
13 | Textbook excerpt | Emerson anniversary | May 23, 1907 | F.B.Sanborn. Table Talk, 1981. CFPL | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
14 | Letter | Letter to President Eliot from George B. Dorr re: road building | June 15th, 1907 | HUA. Records of the President of Harvard U., CWE Box 83 | |
15 | Letter | Letter to George B. Dorr from USFS Wm. T. Cox re: preserving the forests | September 3, 1907 | US Dept of Agriculture, Forest Service | c.2 |
16 | Newspaper article | Bar Harbor's New Temple, Building of the Arts | Jun 16, 1907 | New York Times.Proquest | |
17 | Newspaper article | Eames Dedicates Bar Harbor Temple, Building of the Arts | Jul 14, 1907 | New York Times.Proquest | |
18 | Notes | Notes on the archives of Hill-Stead Museum, inc. references on George B. Dorr, 1907 | 11 April 2019 | Compiled by Ronald Epp | |
19-20 | Textbook excerpt | Letter of William James re: meeting with George B. Dorr and Mrs. Piper | Nov. 21, 1907 | Correspondence of William James. I.K.Skrupshrelis, E. Beresky (eds).Vol.11: U. of Virginia Press,2003 | |
21-22 | Textbook excerpt | Significance of Samuel Gray Ward | 1981 | F.B. Sanborn. Table Talk.1981.Transcendental Books. | Courtesy of Concord Free P.L. |
23 | Date page | 1908 | Ronald Epp | ||
24 | Letter to Editor | "Lasting Legacy" and May 6 centennial of Homans gift 1907 | May 1, 2008 | Mount Desert Islander. Ronald Epp | |
25-26 | Memorandum | To Mr. Dana from Joseph W. Ernst re: JDR Jr contributions toward carriage and motor roads | November 14, 1968 | RAC.OMR.III.2.F.B83.F.821 | |
27-30 | Letters | Letters to President Eliot re: HCTPR and Homans gift | 1908 | HUA. Records of the President of Harvard U., CWE Box 83 | |
31 | Letter | Letter to Charles W. Wliot from Hill, Barlow & Homans re: land gift to HCTPR | May 29, 1908 | Forwarded by J.W.(?) from V.5 | |
32 | Record | Land gifts to HCTPR | 1908 | HUA. Records of the President of Harvard U., CWE Box 83 | Appeared in Bar Harbor Times[?] |
33-35 | Journal article | "The Bowl, the Beehive, and a Secular Epiphany" | Winter 2014 | Ronald Epp. Friends of Acadia Journal. Winter 2014 | |
36-38 | Journal article | "The Building of Arts at Bar Harbor" | Sept. 1908 | Owen Johnson. Century Magazine Vol. 76 (5).Sept 1908 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
39-40 | Report | The Bar Harbor Assoication of Arts President's Report | Sept 16, 1907 | ANPA [?] B3.F9.31,32 | |
41-43 | Letter | Letter to NPS Director Newton B. Drury from George B. Dorr re: Building of the Arts | September 25, 1941 | NARA /CP/RG79/1933-49/Acadia Box 791 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
44-45 | Letter | Letter to Mr. Dorr from NPS Director Newton B.Drury re: Building of the Arts and adding it to ANP | September 30,1941 | NARA /CP/RG79/1933-49/Acadia Box 791 | |
46 | Letter | Letter from George B. Cooksey to Charles W.Eliot re: Barr Hill land gift | Sept. 3, 1908 | HUA. Records of the President of Harvard U., CWE Box 83 | |
47-48 | Letter | Letter to Charles W. Eliot from L.E.Opdycke re: Fawn Pond Park land gift | Sept.16, 1908 | HUA. Records of the President of Harvard U., CWE Box 83 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
49 | Letter | Letter to Charles W. Eliot from Attorney Deasy re: receipt of land from Mr. Cooksey | Sept.23, 1908 | HUA. Records of the President of Harvard U., CWE Box 83 | |
50-55 | Letter | Letter to Mr. Rockefeller from George B. Dorr re: plans for Lafayette NP inc.road building | December 8, 1924 | III.2I.85,839 | Department of the Interior. National Park Service letterhead |
56-59 | Magazine article | Acadia National Park: Mountain Playground by the Sea" | 1959 | Downeast Magazine.RAC.III.2.I.B.74.f.761 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
60 | Journal excerpt | Significant dates in the history of MDI and Acadia, 75th anniversary | No date | B6.F3.7 [?] | source faint |
61 | Notes | Notes from Clark's Boston Blue Book 1908 inc. George B. Dorr | 2/18/19 | compiled by Ronald Epp | |
62-63 | Letter | Letter to Mr. Eliot from L.E. Opdycke re: Fawn Pond and other land gifts | 25 Sept.1908 | HUA. Records of the President of Harvard U., CWE Box 83 | |
64-67 | Letter | Letter to President Eliot from George B. Dorr re: Kennedy land gifts and Green Mt (Cadillac) | Sept.28, 1908 | HUA. Records of the President of Harvard U., CWE Box 83 | |
68-69 | Letter | Letter to President Eliot from George B. Dorr re: Green Mt | September 29, 1908 | HUA. Records of the President of Harvard U., CWE Box 83 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
70-71 | Letter | Letter to President Eliot from S.Weir Mitchell re: Fawn Pond land gift | Oct.2, 1908 | HUA. Records of the President of Harvard U., CWE Box 83 | |
72-73 | Textbook excerpt | Rockefellers in Bar Harbor and birth of Nelson Rockefeller, 1908 | 2003 | Bernice Kert. Abby Aldrich Rockefeller. 2003 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
74 | Newspaper article | President' Charles W. Eliot's resignation | Dec 12, 1908 | New York Times.Proquest | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
75-84 | Stock certificate | Green Mountain Carriage Road Co. stock articles of agreement and correspondence | Dec. 31, 1908 | Chapman Archives.JDR Jr. Papers. Box 143.R9. | |
85-86 | Annual report | Officers and committees for 1908 | 1908 | Museum of Fine Arts Bulletin, Boston. Annual Report for 1908 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |