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

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1913-14
1913
1914
Charles W-Eliot
Maine legislative effort to
new one HCTPR status.
-MDI82-founding
(see Showhload, mather, p.169)
I
Himans Property
map
Publication proverting
Seal Harbor VIS report (8/20)59)
establesnet of LNP(Seligman)
- Charles Simporm begins work for JDRIr
- Dana letter (10/12)to Jr.
H.W Smyth (8/23), copper about
of appreciation forted tactor deed
automobile on MOT
-GBD's with on two trails,
- Kabahdu Forest Reserve Bill for
N.P. status. lee Rolde. Three years before SMM
letter (2/25) 15 from CWEliot
Jr.
A Hora of UDI by Johnson ("The islands
)
- Character definiting Trails
First Public Annowent of Plato
-Hadleyp 11-page rejoinder to
form ANP.
current II "bouldaree of ANP,"
-Establishment of Seel Co.
incl. Jr.'s involved beg. in 1914
(12/15)
-Erat to Houston re qual of GBD+
advocate it Desect UP. (3/13)
-Eliotto Pres Wilson (4/14) commandy
6BO and plan for smm.
-Death of John Huir(1838-1914)
- -Death of S.W Mitchel(1829-1914)
ITS ORIGIN AND BACKGROUND
19
ACADIA NATIONAL PARK
telephone rang and, answering it, I found on the line Mr. Harry
Lynam, my friend and legal assistant at Bar Harbor, who said:
Its Origin and Background
"Mr. Dorr, I think you will wish to know that a group of them
down here have got together and have introduced a bill in the
State Legislature, now just convened at Augusta, to annul the
charter of our Trustees of Public Reservations corporation."
GEORGE B. DORR
Answering, I said: "I will take the train down to Augusta to-
night. Meet me there tomorrow and we will see what can be done."
Arriving at Augusta, I went straight to the Augusta House,
where, during sessions, practically all members of the Legislature
make their home, the hotel becoming in effect a club where the
members meet and talk together, visiting about from room to room,
when the Legislature is not in session or committee meetings being
held.
As it chanced, my friend, the Hon. John A. Peters of Ells-
worth, was Speaker of the House that year. He had aided me pro-
fessionally in various matters at Bar Harbor and I knew him well.
I
told him what had brought me down and he took the matter up
at once with interest, realizing its importance. He made me at
home in his rooms at the hotel, where his friends and members of
the House came to talk the business of the sessions over, and to-
gether, at other times, we went about ourselves and visited leading
members who might have influence in our matter. In fact, we made
a most thorough campaign of it, winning friends and votes so that
PRINTED BY
BURR PRINTING CO.
when, ten days or SO later, our bill came up for hearing the action
BANGOR. MAINE
of the committee on it was a foregone conclusion.
1942
At the beginning of January, 1913, I was at my home in Bos-
The representative from Bar Harbor, questioned by the Com-
ton, with every intention of spending the winter there, when the
mittee, had himself no good word to say for the measure, stating
20
ACADIA NATIONAL PARK
that he had not entered the bill of his own initiative but at the
request of others, and added that, personally, he did not favor it.
In bringing about the defeat of this measure, much water had
flowed beneath the bridge since I came down; it had been a new
experience to me and made me realize on how unstable a basis our
Reservations rested.
Returning that night to Boston, I thought it over as I lay
awake and decided that the only course to follow to make safe
what we had secured would be to get the Federal Government to
accept our lands for a National Park, deeming them well worth it.
In the morning, having breakfasted, I went out to Cambridge to
see President Eliot and tell him what had happened - for as yet
he knew nothing of the matter nor the danger that had threatened.
I told him also of the thought of how to meet it that had come to
me that night as I returned.
President Eliot was at first opposed, being naturally of a mili-
tant mind, and said that we could meet such attacks as they arose,
as the University had done when the city of Cambridge under-
took to tax its lands and buildings. To this I replied that the cases
were widely different; that the University had back of it a great
and influential body of alumni, while in our case if Mr. Lynam had
not been on the watch and let me know what was going on and I
had not been able and willing, dropping all else, to go down to
Augusta and, with Mr. Peters' friendly assistance, defeated the at-
tack, all, even now, would have been lost. He thought a while,
then said:
"I believe you are right! When will you go on to Washington?"
It is here that the story of our National Park begins, born of
the attack upon our Public Reservations' charter.
EPORTS, CONSTITUTION, BY-LAWS
AND
LIST OF MEMBERS
-
G.B.D. in 1913.
OF
CENTURY ASSOCIATION
FOR THE YEAR 1918
New York
The knickerbocker press
1918
Original from
Digitized by Google
UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS
AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN
C
Extracts of Letter from Fred C. Lynam to George B. Dorr.
January 6, 1913.
George B. Dorr, Esq., President,
Mt. Desert Transit Company,
18 Commonwealth Avenue,
Boston, Mass.
Dear Sir:
Some time ago you stated that a request had been made
that I should make up a list of the properties owned by the Mt.
Desert Transit Company, estimate their values, and perhaps make
some recommendations with reference to their disposition.
With this in view I beg leave to submit the following:
Athletic Field and Adjacent Property.
Bar Harbor, Maine.
This embraces substantially the property bounded on the
north by Livingston Road, on the east by Main Street, on the south
in part by Cromwells Harbor Brook and Road and in part by land of
Edgar Scott, and on the west by line drawn from Cromwells Harbor
Road to Livingston Road about 85 feet west of Ash Street. It
will be seen that there is some land north of the Livingston Road
with an irregular north line belonging to the Transit Company.
To arrive at an approximate value of this tract of land
I have made certain divisions.
First Division. The property between School Street and
Ash Street I have marked off into lots 100 feet square. Say twelve
lots at $500. per lot, $6,000.
C
George B. Dorr, Esq., -2-
Second Division. The property west of Ash Street I have
divided into lots 85 ft. X 100 ft. There would perhaps be seven
lots at $400. per lot, $2,800.
Third Division. The part of the property south of
Livingston Road and between School Street and Main Street, now
occupied in the season for a base ball, foot ball, and cricket
field. Should this tract be divided into lots it would make
about eighteen lots, each 100 ft. X 115 ft. in size, at say $600.
per lot, $10,800.
Fourth Division. The lots north of Livingston Road, a
part of which is now occupied by the Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A.
tennis courts, may be worth $2,000.
A total for the whole property which we have called
Athletic Field and Adjacent Property $21,600. The prices made
on all of these small lots are low. The prices suggested are
for the lots on an average. Some are worth more and some are
worth less in accordance with their location in the different
divisions.
Referring especially to the third division, and perhaps
I should include also a part of the fourth division, it would seem
a regrettable necessity that would demand the selling of this
property in small lots for the building of comparatively small
houses. It would materially affect the desirability of the
C
Extracts of Letter from Fred C. Lynam to George B. Dorr.
January 6, 1913.
George B. Dorr, Esq. President,
Mt. Desert Transit Company,
18 Commonwealth Avenue,
Boston, Mass.
Dear Sir:
Some time ago you stated that a request had been made
that I should make up a list of the properties owned by the Mt.
Desert Transit Company, estimate their values, and perhaps make
some recommendations with reference to their disposition.
With this in view I beg leave to submit the following:
Athletic Field and Adjacent Property.
Bar Harbor, Maine.
This embraces substantially the property bounded on the
north by Livingston Road, on the east by Main Street, on the south
in part by Cromwells Harbor Brook and Road and in part by land of
Edgar Scott, and on the west by line drawn from Cromwells Harbor
Road to Livingston Road about 85 feet west of Ash Street. It
will be seen that there is some land north of the Livingston Road
with an irregular north line belonging to the Transit Company.
To arrive at an approximate value of this tract of land
I have made certain divisions.
First Division. The property between School Street and
Ash Street I have marked off into lots 100 feet square. Say twelve
lots at $500. per lot, $6,000.
George B. Dorr, Esq. -3-
Kennedy Estate opposite. It would mar the fine outlook from
Lower Main Street in which the Athletic Field now plays so
important a part. Moreover the fact must be emphasized that
all of the building lots suggested in the above divisions would
be purchased by year round residents. The demand for such
property is limited. Already there are in the market more
desirable house lots than purchasers. The increase of popul-
ation of permanent residents in the town according to the last
census was but 62 in ten years. This fact does not necessarily
reflect upon the prosperity of Bar Harbor, but is in consequence
of its being a summer resort. I should question if it would be
a good business proposition to place on the market more than
those lots mentioned in division first and second, and perhaps a
few lots in division four. The value of these lots and their
salability would be greatly enhanced by maintaining a part of the
property as a permanent park.
Yours very truly,
Fred C. Lynam
Treasurer.
THE BAR HARBOR RECORD
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 9-9, 1913
DESIGNS FOR
PULITZER
THE MT. KATADIN RESERVATION
NEWHOPE FOR THE CLAM
RIZE ON VIEW IN LIBRARY
George B. Dorr, In Boston Herald
Connecticut's Success With the
50,000 WINNER FOR PLAZA
Mt. Katahdin, described in the lat.
fractory Bivalve
est Geological Society's report upon
man Statue Will Be Moved and
it as the grandest mountain in New
By H. M. SEDGEWICK
England, is a vast block of ancient
East 59th Street Park En-
granite round which the Penobscot
trance Remodelled
river flows in northern Maine, divid-
For the first time in the histor
ing at its base. Isolated by the
the world, clams have been gi
river valieys which enclose it, with
when transplanted. The experir
1e five designs submitted to the
massive forest-clad shoulders and
begun last fall on an immense
ph Pulitzer fountain competition
deep basins left by ancient glaciers
at Block Island, has succeeded
honors of which were awarded
between them, it faces boldly south-
its success is a matter of world-
Carrere & Hastings, have
been
ward, rising to the height of a full
importance. The achievement
vn at the Public Library. The
mile above the distant sea and mak-
a direct bearing upon the sca
of $50,000 was left by Mr. Pu-
ing one of the most striking land-
of food, the world over and a
r for the fountain to be placed
scape features in the East. Around
more direct relation to the disapp
he 59th street plaza at the en-
it upon every side, and stretching un-
ance of the clam in this country,
cc to Central Park, in New
brokenly from it to the Canadian
ticularly in the regions where it
: city
border, lies the greatest natural fish
once frequent.
hers in the competition were
and game preserve in eastern North
Civilization, manifested in a
Kim, Mead & White, Arnold W.
America; around it also lies one of
of forms, has driven the clam
nner, H. Van Buren Maganigle
the best watered lake regions in the
its old haunts till it is a rare o
John Russell Pope.
world. of great extent. linked by de-
between Maine and Pennysv
lightful waterways and wooded to the
Farther to the north and to the
speaking of the design submit-
by his firm, Mr. Hastings said
water's edge.
it is still obtainable, but it bad
as the problem of circulation at
Wild as this region still seems, the
to become a luxury nearly as
plaza entrance to the park was
destructive tide of human life is
sea duck, till the success of th
e greatest importance, that phase
swiftly mounting into it, and
to
periment which has been repo
he question had to be kept con-
save the beauty of this noble moun-
State Senator Franklin L. H
tly in mind It required, he
tain, protecting its forests from waste
author of a number of invention
ared, practical provision for the
ful cutting and the deen-burning fires
have revolutionized the oyster
ement of vehicles as well as
that inevitably follow it upon such
shellfish industry, had charge O:
strians. Economy was another
rocky slopes to protect the wild lite
experiment. He is president
er which had to be taken into
of the region and create a great re
American Oyster Company.
sideration also, as well as the
serve which will supply the neighbor-
whose auspices the work was att
ing regions as this life becomes ex-
ed.
gn for the fountain, in case the
should not be of a wmind to act
hausted there: and to maintain the
Great Fresh Pond, on the we
even flow of a great navigable river
nce in changing the plaza.
shore of Block Island. was sei
with important opportunities
for
ne winning design calls for a
for the experiment, the first, o
water power upon it, Mt. Katahdin
park space in the middle of
large scale of the kind. The
should surely be included among the
present plaza. This will take
ernment experiments into the
great park reserves which the feder-
he small plot just north of the
ject have been in cramped quz
government is now making with
derbilt house at 58th street. as
and have never succeeded
wise foresight in the East and whose
as the plot in which the Gen-
control of the pond, which has 3,
relation to the great centres of popu-
Sherman monument stands. But
frost of about four miles. was
lation in the country and their needs
180 includes a large area of the
ed the town meeting vote from
must give them in the future an im-
ent wide stretch of asphalt. This
Shoreham, the town name of the
mense importance.
e will be divided by 53th street
ony of Block Island, New Shor
bill for this purpose is now before
having meantime secured these
and each plot will be of equal
the national House of Representa-
natona Around the plot will
vileges from Rhode Island by
tives, awaiting action
Introduced
space for traffic of equal size
Intive grant. One of the difficia
Representative Guernsey of Maine
ill aldry. A balustrade will In-
in profecting the experiment has
It has the full endorsement of the
cach on the Inside of which
the Impossibility of securing
state and. important to our whole
garden plota and on the out-
sized shore front for the purpo
eastern country 28 the opportunity
Investigating
The
which * 111 be a aldewalk
cry
has
1st this bill should have the indorse
nfal trees are called for
fably gone up that the native
ment also, and the best assistance.
design.
disert must be protected and
*111
surround
all who recognize the great. DICS-
not lear his Hyellhood and the
ont
of
conserving
ics. "an no: purchased from
of
and
Plantine the Clams
bushels
C. 1916
974."
/
(2
CI
c.l
FIRST PUBLIC ANNOUNCEMENT
ACAD
HISTORY
OF THE
PLAN TO FORM A NATIONAL PARK
UPON MT. DESERT ISLAND
TAKEN FROM
THE EIGHTEENTH ANNUAL REPORT
OF THE
AMERICAN SCENIC AND HISTORIC
PRESERVATION SOCIETY
NEW YORK
1913
THE Society has been consulted recently with regard to
the generous purpose of summer residents upon the coast
of Maine to offer the Federal Government in the near
future a superb tract of land for a National Park on the
beautiful Island of Mount Desert, where the grand coast
scenery of the region culminates and whose early discov-
ery and occupation by the French confer on it except-
ional human interest.
Mount Desert Island, which is about thirteen miles
wide by sixteen long, is a boldly uplifted mass of ancient
rock lying off the central part of the Maine coast in latitude
44° 25' north and longitude 68° 20' west. It is enclosed on
either side by noble bays and diversified remarkably by
mountains, lakes and inlets of the sea, the highest eleva-
tion on it, Green Mountain, being 1,527 feet high. It is
famous as a summer resort.
A few years ago a group of summer residents there incor-
I
AMERICAN HISTORIC PRESERVATION SOCIETY
AMERICAN HISTORIC PRESERVATION SOCIETY
porated themselves under the title of the Hancock County
gether with the lakes and marshes and the one deep fiord
Trustees of Public Reservations, with the object of ac-
on our Atlantic coast which lie among them. The comple-
quiring and holding for the public lands important to it
tion of this purpose will create a wild park of remarkable
on Mount Desert Island and in the region round about
beauty, unique character and great variety of landscape
it. President-emeritus Charles W. Eliot of Harvard Uni-
feature, and one that will afford exceptional opportunity
versity became president of the Association and Mr.
for wild life protection.
George B. Dorr of Boston, vice-president and executive
To assure the permanence of such a park, and place it
officer; while such men as Bishop William Lawrence of
under a control whose ability to take full advantage of the
Massachusetts, Dr. S. Weir Mitchell of Philadelphia, and
opportunities it offers and whose sole interest in the public
Messrs. John S. Kennedy, David B. Ogden, Henry Lane
good shall be established on the surest footing, it is pro-
Eno and Dr. Robert Abbe of New York City have taken
posed to convey it to the Federal Government as a gift
active interest in the Association's work.
to the Nation. From the National point of view, this is
The Association now holds between 5,000 and 6,000 acres
an opportunity of unusual advantage. The mountain
upon the Island in one continuous reservation, including
range on the Island is not only exceedingly bold but its
its highest mountain peaks and the greater portion of
mountains are the only ones south of Labrador on the
the water-shed of the lakes between them from which
Atlantic coast, with the exception of a few lower peaks
the water supplies of its residential parts are chiefly drawn.
such as the Gouldsboro and Camden Hills - in its vicinity.
The area also includes much forest land, with deep valleys
From the higher summits of these mountains one looks
which offer admirable shelter for wild life, open marshes
out over forty or more miles of sea to the horizon. while
and pools suitable for wading and aquatic birds, streams
the ancient granite masses which compose them have
on which beavers formerly built their dams and which
been shaped by ice-sheet grinding into forms of striking
would make fit homes for them again, and the best oppor-
picturesqueness.
tunity along the whole Maine coast for preserving and
In view of the unique landscape character and excep-
exhibiting the native flora. The latter comprises, besides
tional beauty of the tract intended; in view of the fact that
characteristic trees and shrubs, interesting plants and wild
no other opportunity for the establishment of a national
flowers which - like the Mayflower and the wild orchids
park upon our North Atlantic coast is ever likely to pre-
of the region - are liable to be exterminated as the coast
sent itself, or can so favorably; and in view of its accessi-
becomes more thickly settled unless protected in such
bility by land and sea from the great eastern centers of
shelters.
population and the rapidity with which these centers are
As opportunity to do so at reasonable cost shall offer, the
growing and the wild regions of the country losing wild-
Association hopes to increase its ownership till it includes
ness, it can scarce be doubted that the Government will
the whole range of Champlain's "Monts deserts," from
avail itself of the generosity of the donors and accept the
twelve to fifteen miles in length, which extends across the
splendid gift when it is offered.
Island - offering magnificent views of sea and land to-
2
3
OFFER TO THE GOVERNMENT
May 3, 1916.
:
To THE SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR,
THE HONORABLE FRANKLIN K. LANE,
Washington, D.C.
SIR:
On behalf of the Hancock County Trustees of Public
Reservations, State of Maine, I have the honor to offer in
free gift to the United States a unique and noble tract of
land upon our eastern seacoast, for the establishment of a
National Monument.
The tract offered is rich in historic association, in scien-
tific interest, and in landscape beauty. And it contains
within itself the only heights that immediately front the
open sea with mountainous character upon our eastern
coast.
It contains also, owing to past glacial action and its own
variously resistant rocky structure, an extraordinary vari-
ety of topographic feature which unites with the climate
caused by the surrounding sea to fit it beyond any other
single locality in the East for the shelter, growth, and per-
manent preservation of a wide range of life, both plant
and animal.
It forms a striking and instructive geologic record. And
it constitutes the dominant and characteristic portion of
the first land, Mount Desert Island, to be visited, described
and named by Champlain when sailing under De Monts'
orders in exploration of the New England coast.
The papers I inclose herewith explain in detail the
thought and purpose of the offered gift, with the reasons
which have led us to the conviction of its exceptional
public value and worthiness to be accepted.
I remain, Sir, with respect,
Sincerely yours,
GEORGE BUCKNAM DORR
4
Charles W. Eliot to David F. Houston
Cambridge, Mass.,
March 13, 1913.
Dear Mr. Houston:
May I present to you my friend Mr. George B.
Dorr of Boston and Mount Desert, who proposes to seek
an interview with you to discuss the practicability
of converting a large portion of the area of the
Island of Mt. Desert into a national park.
I have been familiar with the beauties and
needs of that island for forty-seven years and have a
summer residence there, and find Mr. Dorr's project a
reasonable and a beneficent one.
Mr. Dorr is a man of great public spirit, and
gives a large part of his time to promoting the intellect-
ual and material interests of Bar Harbor and the beautiful
island on which Bar Harbor is the largest resort.
He
has strong interest in agriculture, horticulture, forestry,
and landscape architecture, and has much practical knowledge
on every one of these subjects. His interests, however,
are not at all commercial. His object is always to
make good use of these applied-science subjects in the
promotion of the public welfare.
2.
(September 16, 1910)
TO see
me a great pleasure yesterday.
You gave already made of the reservations, and the
the promise progress in the immediate future, was a great satisfaction.
Sincerely yours,
Charles W. Eliot.
4
18 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston.
March 15th, 1913.
Henry L. Higginson, Esq.,
Boston, Mass.
Dear Mr Higginson,
I an going over a mass of old family letters belonging
to the time of my great grandfather, william ward of Salem, and
my grandfather Thomas wren Ward of Boston, ship captain, merchant,
and for many years Barings' agent in America - in which office
he was succeeded sixty years ago by my uncle, Samuel Gray ward.
My grandfather kept up a private correspondence with Mr Bates, of
Barings' firm with whom he had an intimate personal friendship
dating back to early Salem days - from 1829 to the time of his
1858
death in [1857]
Mr Bates' private letters to him, for most of this
time, I have; my grandfather's similar letters to Mr Bates I also
have, with certain gaps, in letter press copy. Matters of political,
social and economic interest were discussed between them in these
letters, making them valuable studies now in the history of their
time and the thought of the period. These old letters, in original
or copy, I want to lodge -- with what sidelights on them I can fur-
nish -- in part with the Massachusetts Historical Society and in
part at the Library of Harvard College, in which my grandfather
took great interest as college treasurer and an active member of
the corporation. And some of them, of historic interest, either I
or the Massachusetts Historical Society will publish for students
in the history of that time.
2
My grandfather intended to use the material contained in his
various personal correspondence for writing a history of his period-
as he tells in one of his last letters to Mr Bates - but died soon
afterward and much of the material for this which he then had was
destroyed, among it the letter press copies of the letters he wrote
to Mr Bates from 1834 to 1839, which I greatly need in order to com-
plete these letters' story of the time. Do you suppose that there is
any possibility of my grandfather's original letters of period
amoung
the
being still extant England.
There would be nothing in them of a
character to make it desirable they should be kept private now, nor
did my grandfather regard them as containing material that might not
be used even in his own day. And if these letters of his to Mr
Bates have also got destroyed, do you think there would be any possi-
bility that my grandfather's letters to Barings' House, touching upon
the political and business matters of the period, could be obtained.
They would enable me to complete my own study of the time and be
valuable for future students.
One thing more, my grandfather frequently referred to various
other American houses of that time, with whom he had business or
friendly relations, by their numbers in Messrs Barings' books, while
at other times using their own personal or firm names. It would
help me greatly in my work if I could obtain the names corresponding
to the se firm numbers used by Dr Bates and my grandfather, partly
by connecting the names and numbers in the correspondence and partly
by enabling me to seek here for other letters of the period among
our friends. For any assistance you can give me in regard to
this, or suggestion you can make, I shall be most grateful. Believe
me to remain, as always,
Yours sincerely,
[GBD]
PROFILE REGARDING: Charles P. Simpson (1848-1928)
Charles P. Simpson, son of Paul and Hannah (Dyer) Simpson, was born in
Sullivan, Maine September 19, 1848. His paternal grandmother was Hannah Sullivan,
daughter of Daniel Sullivan for whom the Town of Sullivan was named. The Simpsons
and Sullivans were among the earliest families to settle the town in the 1750's.
Charles was the third generation and youngest of five children, the four older
children were girls. His father, Paul, died in August 1849 when Charles was not
quite a year old. A great deal of his early education and learning was taken over
by his mothers' brothers, Asa, Herrick and Ephraim Dyer, who lived in Sullivan
until the late 1850's and early 1860's. The Dyer brothers left Sullivan to find
work in the West (Nebraska, Nevada and California).
In 1868, Charles left Sullivan to join his Dyer uncles in the Western states.
He was tutored in engineering by his Uncle Herrick who was doing land surveying
in California. Uncle Herrick eventually became County Surveyor in Alvarado, Calif.
After a few years in California and Nevada, Charles settled in Nebraska where he
invested in a saw mill and also did land surveying. He was part owner in the
saw mill/lumber yard with his brother-in-law, Ed Austin, who had married his sister
Helen. The Austins had also left Sullivan to find work in the West.
In 1874, Charles married Mary Walworth from Zanesville, Ohio, and they had
three children by the time they returned in Sullivan in 1880.
Charles set uo his own engineering and surveying office in Sullivan, and through
the next forty years or SO he worked throughout Hancock and Washington Counties
doing many types of engineering which included: property surveying, road construction,
surveying for the railway line between Ellsworth and Machias. Between 1886 and early
1900's he surveyed many properties on Mount Desert Island
(the Kebo Valley Golf
Course in 1887, private property in Northeast Harbor and Seal Harbor)
and others.
He began working for John D. Rockefeller, Jr. in 1913, and worked from the very
beginning with Mr. Rockefeller in building the first Carriage-Horse Roads around
Mr. Rockefeller's Seal Harbor property. Charles continued as Mr. Rockefeller's
engineer until he became ill in 1922. (He was then seventy four years old) Charles'
son, Paul took over the engineering work for Mr. Rockefeller and continued as the
chief engineer until 1940.
Charles was eighty years old when he died in 1928.
see 1922 i Paul D Singson
PROFILE REGARDING: Paul Dyer Simpson (1876-1963)
Paul Dyer Simpson, son of Charles P. and Mary (Walworth) Simpson was born
in
St. Paul, Nebraska March 10, 1876 while has father was working for several years
in the Western states. Paul's early education was in the Sullivan schools and he
graduated from Sullivan High School in 1894. He then worked with his father in
the engineering/surveying field until the Spanish American War. He enlisted and
served with K Company, First Maine Regiment, most of the time of several months
spent in Georgia.
Returning home following the war, Paul entered the College of Engineering at
the University of Maine in 1899 and graduated in 1903 with a degree in Civil Engi-
neering. Following graduation he served one year as a graduate assistant in the
Civil Engineering Department working under Dr. Harold S. Boardman, Dean of the
College of Technology.
Leaving the university in 1904, Paul was employed by the United States Reclamation
Service, Department of Interior, and worked as District Engineer for the next eight
years in the Western states. The Reclamation Service was involved in conducting
geological surveying, irrigation and water supply, and many other government projects
on interstate canals. This was new territory for our government and many people
from the East were settling "out West.'
Paul was considered an outstanding water resource authority during his work
with the Reclamation Service. He also played a major role in the development and
settlement of the western states with the work he did with irrigation, building dams,
and reclamation data as a government engineer.
Paul returned to Maine in 1912 and for a while worked with his father in his
engineering office at Sullivan. He later was City Engineer for the Towns of Augusta
and Bangor, and also worked for the Maine State Highway Commission.
He later began assisting his father with the engineering work on the Rockefeller
Estate in Seal Harbor, and when his father became ill in 1922, Paul succeeded
him
as Mr. Rockefeller's engineer on the building of the carriage roads and bridges.
He was chief engineer on all aspects of the carriage road construction through to
1940 when the work was completed and Mr. Rockefeller turned the majority of the
carriage roads and bridges over to Acadia National Park. Paul continued his engi-
neering work in private practice, but remained as a consulting engineer to the
Rockefeller family until he retired in 1954 at the age of 78.
During the World War II years Paul worked for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
as a construction engineer while the Air Force Bases were being built in Bangor and
Limestone, Maine. Paul was 87 years old when he died at Seal Harbor in 1963.
Su 1973 ié
Charles
Simpson
Historic American Buildings Survey/Historic American Engineering Record
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the Indiana whose paths they used. This vision was rooted in
it
economic opportunity, and although before the middle of the
nineteenth century it involved the transportation and exchange OE
natural resources, after this period it shifted to take advancage
of the rise of tourism on the island. Summer vacationers, on the
other hand, arrived on Mount Debert with preconceived notions
concerning road use. For them, roads and the growing number of
automobiles represented both the city they were trying escape as
well as a direct threat to the isolated beauty of the ialand. It
was these two competing visions, one of summer residents and the
other of year-round locals, that George Dorr tried to mediate in
GBD's this clash of
1909. Although the 1932 ceremony dedicating the Cadillac
Mountain Road successfully concealed these divisions behind a
cheering crowd, a spirited band, and a number of supportive
speeches, they still lurked about as Dox: and Rockefeller's
son
snipped the ribbon that would officially open the new road.
THE BSTABLISHHENT OF ACADIA NATIONAL PARK
The repcal of the automobile ban in 1913 failed to leasen the
community tonsions that had bubbled to the surface during the
preceding decade, If anything, the revocation heightened them.
1913 revoration Repeal of tensions. auto "heig there for
In response a number of wealthy summer residents, including
George Dorr and John D. Rockefeller, Jr. took independent
action. While these actions were shaped by the social contention
community
have
of the past, they were also important for the future of Mount
Desert Inland. In establishing what would become Acadia National
Park and by constructing carriage roads within it, both Dorr and
JDR
Rockefeller laid the foundation of their shared vision concerning
the relationship between motor roads and the park. Little did
GBU
vision
they know, however, that this vision, like the automobile ban of
a decade earlier, would also be challenged,
"shared
road
tpa
The Carriage Reads of John D. Rockefeller, Jr.
The repcal of the automobile ban in 1913 alarmed John D.
required
Rockefeller, Jr. Having recently bought a 150-acre estate on
Barr Hill above Seal Harbor, he was concerned that the
incroduction of cars to Mount Desert Island would threaten the
tranquillity he had worked so hard to achieve. 'One of the
things that attracted Mrs. Rockefeller and me most to Mount
Dosert Island scme twency years ago was that there were no motors
on the ioland," Rockefeller told the editor of the Bar Harbor
Times. "I greatly deplored the pressures to open the island
roads to motors, and was one of those who opposed their admission
to the last.' In many respects this aversion to the car was
"Undated and untitled article by Bar Harbor Times editor
Albion Sherman, folder 1079, box 109, RG 2, OMR, Rockefeller
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indicative of Rockefeller's broadar suspicion of modern society.
"I believe Mr. Rockefeller had a gertuine diacaste for the garish
advances of civilization," wrote National Park Service Director
Horace m. Albright of his personal friend. "60 he took every
opportunity he felt possible to step in and save his fellow
humans from the onslaught of the crippling effects of an
industrial society." Rockefeller himself admitted as much,
stating that he "would like to see Mount Descrt Island invaded as
little by modern standards of life as possible. It is
in
direct response to this 'invasion' that Rockefeller began
building carriage roads.
In many ways Rockefeller's childhood prepared him well for his
carriage road projects on Mount Desert Island. As a young boy he
had helped his father develop the carriage road system at che
Family's summer estates, first at Forest Hill just outside
Cleveland and then in Pocantico Hills when the Rockefellers moved
to New York City, It was during these years that Rockefeller
learned the finer points of laying out a road and refined his own
landscape philosophy. At Pocantico Hills, for instance, his
roads tended to follow the contours of the land whenever possible
and nought out views which provided a sequence of experiences
that reflected what Rockefeller felt were the best features of
the land. Many of the carriage roads he built on Mount Deport
Island were of aimilar design.
when the family moved to New York City in 1875, frequent ridea in
Central Park also began to affect Rockefeller's thoughts
concerning carriage roade, yet here the influence was social
rather than technical. When the Rocketellers arrived in New
York, Central Park was nearly completed. Its construction had
begun after wealthy carriage owners, fearing that the expansion
of the city northward would deprive them of rustic nites for
leisurely carriage drives, successfully lobbied the state
legislature for a new park in the center of Kanhattan. Even the
final layout of the park appears to have been designed primarily
with elite carriage owners in mind. In order to ensure
uninterrupted carriage riding, park designers Calvert Vaux and
Frederick Law Olmeted banned omnibuses, hacko, and street
Family Archives, RAC.
"Horace M. Albright, Diaries. Personal collection of
Marion Schenk, studio City, California, quoted in Roberts, 6.
to Charles K. Savage, 17 May 1955. folder
1078, box 109, RG 2, OMR, Rockefeller Family Archives, RAC.
"For Rockefeller's experience in road design at Forest Hill
and Pocantico Hills, see Roberts, 11 & 293.
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railways from park drives and restricted city traffic, most of it
commercial, to aunken roads cutting across the park. Drivers who
could not afford their own horse and carriage, therefore, were
separated from the park, seeing only high stone walls as they
passed through it.
George Dorr's Park
In many ways Rockefeller's early experiences involving carriage
roads échoed that of Dorr and the creation of Acadia National
Park. Like Rockefeller, Dorr and the mon who gathered together
at Northeast Harbor in 1901 to discuss the preservation of land
on Mount Desert were reacting to the rise of tourios and the
threat it pased to the island's isolated beauty. *Place after
place where I was in the habit of walking or pienicking has been
converted to private uses," wrote Charles Eliot in his letter of
invication for this meeting. 33 Also like Rockefeller, these mon
were wealthy summer residents most of whom resided permanently in
Boeton, Philadelphia, or New York City. In many ways, then, mon
like banker John Stewart Kennedy, railway executive George W.
Vanderbilt, and merchant William J. Schieffelin, who at this
meeting formed the Hancock County Trustees of Public
Reservations, were of the sare net which had supported the car
ban of 1909 and who had sufficient financial resources to take
carriage drives in Central Park with John D. Rockefeller, Jr.
Yet whereas Rockefeller built carriage roads to keep the
automobile at bay, these men bought up land on Hount Desert
Island in order to check its development for tourist.
The Hancock County Trustees of Public Reservation was incorpo-
rated in 1903 and immediately began acquiring land for protec-
tion. Although the first EWO parcels were located near Seal
Harbor, in time a number of tracts were bought and donated
throughout the castern half of Mounc Desert Island. Dorr, for
instance, who would spend much of his family fortune securing
GBD's
fortune
land fox the park, purchased and then donated the ravine between
Picket Mountain (now Huguenot Head) and Newport (since 1908,
Champlain) Mountain, and helped buy the top of Cadillac Mountain
(with funds provided by John 5. Kennedy) from the Brewers. More
purchases and donations by various parties followed until by 1913
Por analysis of the elito nature of Central Park and its
carriage drives see Clay McShane, Down the Asphalt Path: The
Automobile and the American City (New York: Columbia University
Press, 1994), 33; and Elizabeth Blackmax and Roy Rozenzweig, The
Park and the People: A History of Central Park (New York :
K. Holt and Co., 1994).
"Quoted in Goldstein, Tragedies é Triumphs, 10.
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the Trustees had preserved approximately 5,000 acres of land on
Hount Depert Island.
Feeling economically threatened by this transfer of land from the
private into the public domain, that same year the island's
failing timber industry attempted to have the Trustees' tax-free
status revoked. In response, Dorr convinced the Trustees to
protect their reservations for all time by offering them to the
Department of the Interior. and on 3 July 1916 the Sieur de Monts
National Monument was dedicated. When the monument was reauthor-
ized as Lafayette National Park three years later, it became the
first national park east of the Mississippi and the only park in
the country created solely from donations of private land.
Inicially called Lafayette in honor of the ioland's colonial
heritage, it was renamed Acadia in 1929, As one of his early
official jobs as the monument's first auperintendent, Dorr
reported that 101,255 tourists and 15,361 automobiles visited the
17,500.
park by October of 1916.
Rocksfeller's Motor Roads in Dorr's Park
JORFrs
to
HCTPR
Although Rockefeller had donated $17,500 to the Trustees in their
effort to have their lands designated a national monument, he had
donations
openly expressed reservations about such A move. "DO you not
feel, he wrote to Reservation founder Charles Eliot in 1915,
"that the establishment of this monument will bring an undesir-
able class of tourists to Bar Harbor in their automobiles who, if
automobiles are admitted to the south aide of the Island, will be
a real nuisance to the residents there? The majority of remi-
dents on the south side of the island lived in the exclusive
summer communities of Seal and Northweat Harbors. For
Rockefeller, then, the monument had the potential of exacerbating
the threat posed by his old semesis-the automobile. And his
fearn quickly proved correct. Ever since he had begun construc-
ting carriage roads around his Seal Harbor estate, motoriats had
attempted and often succeeded in driving on them. with the
creation of the national monument and the donation by Rockefeller
34Lonard E. Brown, Acadia National Park, Maine: History
Basic Data (Washington, DC: National Park Service, Office of
History and Historic Architecture, Enstern Service Center,
February 1971), 68-72.
"Richard Warden Male, The Story of Bar Harbor: An Informal
History Recording One Hundred and Fifty Years in the Life of &
Community (New York: Ivcs Washburn, Inc., 1949), 200.
"Rockefeller to Charles Eliot, 26 February 1915, folder
1047, box 105, RG 2, CMR, Rockefeller Family Archives, RAC.
6/10/2002
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of many of chese carriage roads to it, this illegal practice
continued with increased frequency. Even more alarming
to
Rockofeller was the rising pressure motorists were placing on
park officials to officially cpen up the carriage roads to cars
as well.
JOR
Ir.
Rockefeller's response to this intensified invesion of what he
did
motor
called "modern life' was surprisingly similar to his reaction a
decade earlier when cars alone threatened his island solitude.
why
Whereas than he had constructed carriage roads in order to kcep
Id
scenc
the automobile at bay, after the creation of the Sieur de Monta
?
National Monument he decided to build acenic motor roads in order
to appease automobilists and thus keep them from rumbling down
his prized carriage roads. The preservation or the horoc roads
from INSPECTION of motors, Rockefeller explained, "has for all
time been doubly assured in that the motor road affords as fine,
as varied, ao extensive, and as incimate views of the beauties of
the Park as do any of the horse roads. Although be envisioned
his motor roads CO be an scenic as his carriage roads,
Rockefeller also demanded that they remain independent. TO
accomplish this he decided to use bridgen, grade separations, and
gate houses to maintain the, distinctivenees of both systems.
Like in Central Park, then, Rockefeller's motor roads in Acadia
would be physically separated from the carriage road system.
decision
to
estable
Although the ceremony stop Cadillac Mountain in 1932 would have
us think otherwise, the decision to build motor roads in Acadia
National Park, like the decision to establish the park itself,
ANP
devere
was not indicative of a conscious depire on the part of
consions
the
Rockefeller and Dorr to open up the island's natural beauty to
visitors of all backgrounds, This had already begun indepen-
dontly of these two men. Rather, both the establishment of the
park and the decision to construct its motor roads were for the
to
open
most part defensive reactions intended to control this democrat-
ination process. Although many on Kount Decert Island at first
isl
applauded both men's attempt to channel the growth of tourium, it
of
all
was not supported by all. The timber interests who in 1913 had
attempted to revoke the Trustee's tax-free status, for example,
to
This
were only one of many community factions who disagreed with both
Dorr and Rockefeller's vision concerning the motor roads both meri
began building in 1927.
had already begues then
backgrounds.
indepredent
of
"Frederick Law Directed, Jr. to Rockefeller, 11 July 1930.
Folder 127, Box 125, RG 2, OMR, Rockefeller Family Archives, RAC.
"undated and untitled article by Bar Harbor Times editor
torals
in
pack
Albion Sherman. op cit.
mater
to
"centra
dimocratication
an
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SIEUR DE MONTS PUBLICATIONS
B6.F6.2
SIEUR DE MONTS PUBLICATIONS
VII
Man and Nature
GEORGE B. DORR
A paper written in 1913, when plans now realized for the
creation of a national park upon Mount Desert Island
were first brought forward.
The question of Public Reservations is of paramount
importance in the eastern portion of our country, where
we have already got a dense population swiftly created
and swiftly growing denser without apparent limit.
Magnificent reservations have been created in the
West, with wise prevision; nothing similar, save the re-
cent first establishment of national forests in the North-
ern and the Southern Appalachians, has yet been
undertaken in the East, with its far greater human need,
its beautiful scenery, ready accessibility and perma-
nently productive territory.
We are passing into a new phase of human life where
men are congregating in vast multitudes, for industrial
purposes, for trade and intercourse; the population of
the future must inevitably be many times the popula-
tion of the present, and the need of conserving now,
while there is time, pleasant, wholesome breathing-places
for these coming multitudes is great. How great, we
can with difficulty realize in our country yet so newly
occupied and in a period so new of growth and vast
3
industrial change, but what such open spaces in the form
of commons have meant to England in the past, the long
struggle to prevent their enclosure by the few shows
strikingly, and what is lost by their absence in densely
peopled regions of China, where every rod of ground is
given up to the material struggle for existence, the ac-
counts of all returning travellers tell.
But it is not a question of breathing-spaces and physi-
cal well-being only; it goes far beyond that and is deeply
concerned with the inner life of men. With Nature in
her beauty and freedom shut out from so many lives in
these industrial and city-dwelling times, it is going to
become-has, indeed, become already-a matter of su-
preme importance to preserve in their openness, in their
unspoiled beauty and the charm of their wild life, their
native trees and plants, their birds and animals, the
places where the wealth or significance of these things
is greatest, the places where the influence of Nature will
be felt the most or where the life with which she has
peopled the world, and man or chance has not destroyed,
may be enjoyed and studied at its fullest.
The times are moving fast in the destruction of beau-
tiful and interesting things. The lost opportunity
of one year becomes the bitter regret of thinking
people in a few years more. Valuable and inter-
esting species of birds, that were still familiar a genera-
tion since and that might have added to the delight or
wealth of the world forever, have now become extinct-
as hopeless of resurrection as if we had known them
only in fossil forms. Many a landscape and forest-land
that should have remained forever unspoilt and public
in the crowded eastern regions of the future has been
ruined needlessly or locked up in private ownership.
In nothing is conservation needed more than in saving
all that is economically possible of the pleasantness and
freedom of Nature in regions accessible, even by travel,
4
tillin
trees North Carolina. on the left; Virginia, on the right
to the vast, town-dwelling populations of the future; in
preserving the features of scientifie interest or land-
scape beauty that widen men's horizon or quieken their
imagination. City parks and playgrounds, valuable and
necessary as they are, cannot do this, nor can cultivated
fields and motor-traversed roads. The bold hilltops and
mountainsheights which the ancient Hebrews felt were
God-inhabited; the clear springs in Syria over which the
Greeks built temples through whose ruined stones the
crystal water still comes gushing; the sacred groves of
Italy and Druid oaks of Northern Europe, tell a story
of the deep influence of such things upon the hearts and
lives of men, an influence we cannot afford to lose today
in our mechauism-shrmken modern world of immeas-
urably growing population.
By taking thought in season, little need be sacrificed
to secure incaleulable benefits in Nature's wilder near-by
regions, in her grander landscapes that lie within the
reach of busy men; in refreshing forests, not too lim-
ited; in picturesque and open downs beside the sea; or
along the pleasant, wooded side of streams with unpol-
luted water. When coal becomes exhausted, water-power
or other form of energy will take its place, but nothing
will ever compensate for natural beauty permanently
ruined within the narrowing bounds of modern life.
Life will always be a compromise between conflicting
needs, but its needs are not material only. Man's future
is deeply concerned with recognition of its spiritual side,
and if there be anything in the world, next to the oppor-
tunity to gain the necessities of life, to meet disease or
find the means of education, that should be kept open to
right use by all, it is the wholesome freedom of Nature
and opportunity for contact with her beauty and many-
sided interest in appropriate tracts. The day will ulti-
mately come when to provide such will be felt to be one of
the most essential duties of the state or greatest privileges
of wealthy citizens. For wiser and better gifts than
6
these, to be public heritages forever, it were hard to find.
Permanent as few others can be, they will only gain with
time, in beauty often and in richness of association
always. Changes in science or social organization, al-
tered standards of artistic interest or change in char-
itable method will not destroy their value.
There are landscapes and tracts of land which for their
beauty and exceptional interest-or their close relation
to important centers-should be inalienably public, for-
ever free to all. Our metropolitan parks and reserva-
tions are a first step in this direction, as are the national
parks out West, but with increasing private ownership
and rapidly increasing population, the movement is one
that will need to go far eventually.
The earth is our common heritage. It is both right and
needful that it should be kept widely free in the portions
that the homes of men, industry and agriculture do not
claim. Personal possession reaches out at widest but a
little way, and passes quickly in the present day, gath-
ering about itself little of that greater charm which time
alone can give. If men of wealth would spend but a
fraction of what they do for themselves alone, with brief
result, in making the landscape about them beautiful for
the benefit of all in permanent and simple ways, the
result would be to give extraordinary interest-of a
steadily accumulative kind-to every residential section
of the land; and it would tend, besides, to give all men
living in or passing through it a sense of personal pos-
session in the landscape instead of injury at exclusion
from it, and to give them, 100, a freedom of wandering
and a beauty by the way which do not lie within the reach
of anyone today.
And with such gifts would also go the pleasant sense
of sharing, of participation in a wholesome joy which
each recurrent year would bring afresh. No monument
could be a better one to leave behind, no memorial pleas
anter-whether for one's self or others-than gifts like
8
B6.F6.6
these that make the earth a happier, a more interesting or
delightful place for other men to live upon.
That this movement must grow, no one who has thought
upon the matter can doubt-the movement for public
parks and open spaces, near or far, not as playgrounds
simply but as opportunities for Nature in her deep appeal
and various beauty to remain an influence in human
life; for places, too, where such features of wild life
as may coexist with man can be preserved, and where
plant life, whether in forest growths or the infinite detail
of flowering plants and lowly forms, may still continue a
source of health and happiness in man's environment.
The movement will grow, as all great movements do,
because a great truth - man's need for Nature - lies
behind it. The essentially important thing is to save
now what opportunity we can for its expansion later.
Our Duty to the Future
JAMES BRYCE
Extract from address delivered when ambassador to this
country, urging the importance of creating national
parks and forest reservations in the Eastern States
before the opportunity was lost.
I have had experience in England in dealing with this
question, having been for some years chairman of a
society for preserving commons and open spaces and
public rights of way, and having also served on the com-
mittee of another society for securing to the public places
of national and historic interest. Thus I was led often
to think of what is our duty to the future, and of the
benefits which the preservation of places of natural
beauty may confer on the community. That is a problem
which presents itself not only in Great Britain but all
over Europe, and now you in America are tending to
10
Giant Pine-trees in the n
become what Europe already is. Europe is now a popu-
lous, and in parts a crowded, continent; you, too, will
some day be a populous, and ultimately, except in those
regions which the want of rain condemns to sterility, a
crowded continent; and it is well to take thought at once,
before these days confront you, how you will deal with
the difficulties which have met us in Europe. So that you
may not find too late that the beauty, the freedom and
primitive simplicity of nature have been snatched from
you. Of all those pleasures the power to enjoy which has
been implanted in us, the love of Nature is the very
simplest and best. It is the most easily accessible; it is
one which can never be perverted; it is one of which you
cannot have too much; and it lasts from youth to age.
Then, too, there are the literary associations which clothe
many a wild or lovely spot with poetry. The farther a
people recedes from barbarism, the more refined its
tastes, the more gentle its manners, the less sordid its
aims, so much the greater is its susceptibility to every
form of beauty, SO much the more do the charms of
Nature appeal to it. Delight in them is a test of civiliza-
tion.
Now, let us remember that the regions and spots cal-
culated to give enjoyment in the highest form are lim-
ited, Although and are you being have constantly set a wholesome encroached example upon. in creat-
ing the National Parks you have, there are still other
places where National Parks are wanted. There is a
splendid region in the Alleghenies, a region of beautiful
forests, where the tulip trees lift their tall, smooth shafts
and graceful heads one hundred and fifty feet or more
into the air, a mountain land on the borders of North
Carolina and East Tennessee, with romantic river val-
leys and hills clothed with luxuriant woods, primitive
forests standing as they stood before the white man
drove the Indians away, high lawns filled with flowers
12
B6.F6.8
and traversed by sparkling brooks, containing every-
murmur of a streamlet, the rustling of the leaves,
thing to delight the heart of the lover of Nature. It would
and the birds singing among the branches. No better
be a fine thing to have a tract of three or four hundred
service can be rendered to the masses of the people than
thousand acres set apart there for the benefit of the
to preserve for their delight wide spaces of fine scenery.
people of the South and Middle Atlantic States, for whom
We are trustees for the future; we are not here for
it is a far cry to the Rockies.
ourselves alone. These gifts were not given to us to be
Then there are the Northeastern States with their
used by a single generation, or with the thought of one
mountains and forests. No other part of Eastern Amer-
generation only before our minds. We are the heirs of
ica can compare with this for the varied charms of a
those who have gone before and charged with the duty
wild and romantic nature. And as wealth increases in
we owe to those who shall come after; and there is no
other parts of the country, as the gigantic cities of the
duty which seems more clearly incumbent on us than
Eastern States grow still vaster, as population thickens
handing on to others undiminished opportunities and
in the agricultural and manufacturing parts of Ohio and
facilities for the enjoyment of some of the best gifts
Pennsylvania, of Indiana and Illinois, the love of nature
that the Creator has bestowed upon his children.
and the desire for health-giving recreation will draw
more and more of the population of those cities and
states to seek these spots where Nature shows at her
loveliest. Do not suffer, therefore, any of the charms
they offer to be lost by want of foresight now.
Save your woods, not only because they are one of
your great natural resources but also because they are
a source of beauty which once lost can never be recovered.
Preserve the purity of your streams and lakes, not
werely for the sake of the angler but also for the sake
of those who live on the banks, and of those who come
to seek the freshness and delight of an unspoiled nature
by the lake or river side.
Keep open the long ridges that lead up to the rocky
summits of your mountains; let no man debar you from
free access to their tops, or from enjoyment of the broad
prospects they afford.
And keep wide woodland spaces open within the reach
of cities, where those who seek quiet and the sense of
communing with Nature can go and spend whole days
enjoying one spot after another where Nature has pro-
vided her simple joys-mingled shade and sunlight
falling on the long vistas of the forest, the ripple and
14
15
1975
/,
The first important gift of land the Hancock
County Trustees of Public Reservations
received
was
some
Chair
that of the Bowl and Beehive which forms the
see
N-dx
end or Champlain (Newport) Mountain. This
gift of
award eight
was given by Mrs. Charles D. Homans of Boston who Elieft
-tract
a building site
had acquired # in the purchase of
hand upon the shore
below A That gift to the Trustees led
on to my acquiring during the years 1908 to 1912
the lands that constituted the first gift to the
Government, those of the Sieur de Monts National
Monument, which did not include, however, Mrs.
Homans' gift, that being separated from those that
formed the Monument by lands in private hands extending
over the summit of the mountain.
3
Mrs. & Homans died arrow years laber her land
Large
upon the shore WAVES offered sale at a set
were
by her executors. No one purchased it, it being a
$ 15 for herefecutors price IE ata
given
time when the building of homes the
new summer on
Island was coming to an end in a reaction from the
earlier boom, and the property remained unsold and
S Laury
unoccupied.
In 1913 I learnt that the executors were
at
If
anxious to close the property out and would dispose
The
of it, to be included in the National Park, at a
only
price which was but a fraction of what they originally
Club
asked.
The Park at that time owned no frontage on the
shore. At the price set by the Homans' trustees, the
(Sugon't method Homans
day Mo Island
[GB.Dorr]
the
At a meeting of the Executive Committee of the Bar Harbor Water
Company, held at the office of Mr. Stephen Baker, 40 Wall Street, in the
City of New York, on the 24th day of March, 1915, there were present:
Mr. Lee, the Chairman, Mr. Baker, and Mr. Ogden. Mr. Dorr was also
present and submitted his report to the Committee verbally on behalf
of the sub-committee of the Board of Directors charged with the duty
of acquiring lands or easements in lands on the water shed of Eagle
Lake, that it was possible for or on behalf of the company to acquire
for a sum not to exceed $8,000, certain lands which are described more
particularly in a letter to Mr. Dorr from Mr. Fred. c. Lynam, the
President of this Company, dated March 15, 1915,
After discussion the following resolutions were presented:
passed
Resolved, that a sum not to exceed $8,000 be and hereby is appro-
priated toward the purchase of the following lands or easements there-
in for the protection of the water of Eagle Lake, viz:
A. Eleven or more acres on the east shore of the lake, at one
of the termini of the old Green Mountain Railway, and a lot at the
south end of the lake, sometimes known as the Burr lot, containing
over one hundred acres, both lots being owned by Mr. W. M. Roberts
and both having desirable water frontages.
B.
Property nominally owned by the Hancock County Trustees
of Public Reservations, but of which Dr. c.c. Morrison holds & tax
deed, this lot being located on the water-shed of Bubble Pond or
Eagle Lake or both.
C.
A lot owned by R. H. Kittredge south of property purchased
of Kittredge by or on behalf of the Water Company a year or two
ago and bordering on a small brook that drains into Eagle Lake.
Resolved further that the title to the said pr emises be vested in
the name of the Hancock County Trustees of Public Reservations, sub-
ject to the like covenants and restrictions as are contained in deeds
to said trustees of other property similarly acquired by or through
this company.
-2-
said property or for the payment for easements thereon and for such
incidental legal expenses as may be necessarily incurred, the Com-
pany's share of such expenses not to exceed the sum of $500., pro-
vided that the remainder of such purchase monies and of such expenses
be paid by a person or persons other than the Bar Harbor Water Company.
Resolved further that in case the said Trustees of Public Reserva-
tions shall at any time hereafter desire to cede or convey to the Un-
ited States for park or reservation purposes any portion of the lands
now held by them which are subject to restrictions in favor of this
company, then and in that case Mr. L. B. Deasy is requested to confer
with such Trustees as to such modifications, if any, of the said re-
strictions as shall be necessary in order to carry such cessions, or
conveyances, into effect and as shall nevertheless efficiently safe-
guard the interest of the public and of this company and the purity
of the water of Eagle Lake and report the same to the Water Company's
Board of Directors with his recommendations in respect thereto.
Resolved that the President or Treasurer of the Company be, and
are hereby respectively authorized to borrow the said sum of Eight
thousand Dollars ($8,000), or so much thereof as may be necessary, upon
the note, or notes, of the Company or by the issue of bonds to be se-
cured by the mortgage upon the Company's property, in accordance with
the terms thereof, for the purpose of carrying out the provisions of
the foregoing resolution.
Mr. Dorr then made a statement in regard to a camp and camp site
on the west of Eagle Lake, known as the Perkins Camp, stating that he
had purchased the same on behalf of the Company for the sum of $800.
and had paid $500. of the purchase price. On motion it was resolved
Here, Maine was acting as a pioneer. The federal government
"Forestry," he snorts, "is getting your men into the woods, get-
had set up a program of grants to states that would organize fire-
ting grub to 'em, hiring bosses that can whale spryness into human
fighting protection for their forests, and Maine received one of the
jill-pokes and can get the logs down to Pea Cove sortin' boom before
first three grants of $10,000.
the drought strikes. That's forestry!" jill-poke is what loggers call
Not all of this newfangled stuff-forestry fire protection, war-
the one log responsible for setting up a jam and which, when it's
dens, and other conservation measures-went down well with the
removed, allows the rest to float downstream again.)
old-timers in the woods. Holman Day, a Maine journalist turned
This antediluvian attitude toward forestry and forest protec-
novelist and movie-maker, wrote several works of fiction about the
tion also passed away with the change in forest ownership and
lumber industry. King Spruce is probably his best-known work-a
usage. The paper companies saw they might need to grow trees,
potboiler that would draw derisive smiles today, but serves well as a
themselves, to ensure a steady supply of wood to their mills, and
piece of history, an artifact of an era. It has been said that the "King
some of the large landowners realized modern forestry methods
Spruce" of the title, the fictional Umcolcus Lumbering Association,
could help their bottom lines. Imperceptibly, the Dwight Wades pre-
and its equally invented owner, the Honorable John Davis Barrett,
vailed, the John Davis Barretts saw the light, and the Pulaski D.
was patterned on Llewelyn Powers and his Aroostook empire.
Britts were routed 1-exactly as happened in King Spruce.
When the hero, a progressive-minded school teacher, Dwight Wade,
And with forestry's ascendance on the conservation scene-as
comes to Barrett's office to talk about the "science of forestry," he
epitomized by Gifford Pinchot, creator of the U.S. Forest Service
immediately encounters resistance.
and close confidant of Teddy Roosevelt, there also grew up the
"A man would have pretty much hard work to convince me
dichotomy within the movement expressed in the personage of John
that it is a science," Barrett replies, and as Holman Day has him
Muir, the preservationist - a dichotomy still contained today in the
comment, with some contempt, "As near as I can find out, it's guess-
question: Do we continue to allow logging in our national forests or
work, and poor guesswork at that."
do we set large areas of them aside as roadless wilderness?
Wade isn't to be put off; he's a pretty bumptious young man,
Holman Day was a good friend of Percival Baxter who, to most
once a star footballer, and-secretly - the boyfriend of Barrett's
Mainers, is seen as the ultimate champion of a land-saving ethic in
daughter. "I hoped," Wade continues, "that such a large owner of
the state. In another of his novels, All-Wool Morrison, Day used
timberland had begun to take interest in forestry and would, for
Baxter as the prototype for the hero, but in this instance, it was Bax-
experiment's sake, put these young men [his students] upon a section
ter the progressive taking on monopolistic industry, as Percy did, in
of land this summer and let them work up a map and a report
his epic 1920s fight with the Central Maine Power Company. Percy's
"What do you mean, that I'm going to hire them to do t-pay
quarrel with CMP was not that they wanted to build a dam on the
them money?"
Dead River, but they wanted to do it on two public lots belonging
"The young men will be performing a real service, for they will
to the state and were refusing to pay rent. He actually didn't start
plot a square mile and
talking about saving land--that is, Katahdin-until 1919.
"If there is any pay to it, I'd rather pay them to keep off my
But this aspect of conservation had already appeared in
lands
"
Maine. The efforts of George Bucknam Dorr and his fellow summer
At that moment, the real villain of the story, the Honorable
residents at Bar Harbor to launch what eventually became Acadia
Pulaski D. Britt, a state senator and officer of the company, breaks
National Park began as far back as 1901. The passage by Congress
into the conversation with a diatribe against newfangled fellers that's
in 1911 of the Weeks Law that allowed the Federal government to
been studying in a book how to make trees grow.
acquire private land and set the stage for the White Mountains
302
The Interrupted Forest
2
National Forest also aided the Mount Desert project, which finally
had never seen a great pumpkin pine, Merrill added, "We can con-
became a reality in 1917.
struct half a dozen Panama Canals while a white pine is growing."
The following year, 1918, witnessed the very quiet transfer of
lis final comment, vis-à-vis Guernsey's bill, was: "If Congress can-
some 33,000 more acres of private Maine land into U.S. government
not be induced to act, why should not our legislature take action and
ownership. It is not well known even today that a portion of the
create a state reservation?"
White Mountains National Forest is in Maine, in the Evans Notch
Professor Merrill could hardly have foreseen how his wistful
region, abutting the New Hampshire border in the westernmost
question would be answered. Nor could Percival Baxter when, in
part of the state. At one time in the nineteenth century, an unincor-
1919, he first proposed his plan for a Mount Katahdin Centennial
porated town of 300 people existed around a lumbering operation at
(state) Park to celebrate Maine's 100th anniversary in 1920. His fail-
this site on the Wild River, which had originally been cleared by a
ure to move the Augusta lawmakers was as complete as Guernsey's
runaway slave before the Civil War. Called Batchelder's Grant, it is
attempts with the Solons in Washington, D.C. A prime reason for
generally cited by the name of its post office-Hastings-after the
his inability to persuade them--ever offering to kick off an acquisi-
three brothers from Fryeburg and Bethel who created the Wild
tion fund with two years of his salary-was the stiff resistance of the
River Lumber Company following the Civil War (in which two of
Great Northern Paper Company, engineered by Garrett Schenck
them - Gideon and David-received battlefield promotions to
and Fred A. Gilbert, who both had no love for Percival Baxter. The
major). When the Hastings' business and family line declined in the
best Percy could do was get a law passed allowing the state to accept
early years of the twentieth century, their holdings were sold with-
private money to buy the area and-supposedly fomented by Sena-
out much fanfare, first in New Hampshire, then in Maine, to the
tor John Francis Sprague- status of game preserve for the moun-
U.S. Forest Service.
tain and surrounding land.
Meanwhile, a similar status was being sought for Katahdin.
Garrett Schenck lived out the latter part of his life as the mod-
Or rather, the bill put into Congress in 1913 by Congressman
ern-day lord of a fiefdom. His influence in the Maine Republican
Frank E. Guernsey of Dover-Foxcroli would have produced a
Party was strong, if not paramount. Schenck would send out word
combination forest reserve (the name then given to national forests)
of his preferences among Republican candidates-Parkhurst over
1913 and national park. It has been said Guernsey was induced to take
Milliken for governor, Hale over Fernald for U.S. senator-an it
this action by one of his constituents, John Francis Sprague, pub-
had a weighty effect. Ironically, it was Governor Frederick
lisher of Sprague's Journal of Maine History, and later a state senator.
Parkhurst's death after one month in office that allowed Percy
Among Guernsey's arguments in a 1916 speech, after he'd intro-
Baxter, then next in line as president of the senate, to become chief
duced his bill a second time, was the absolute necessity of saving
executive. The doughty old Dutchman not only fought Baxter on
the forests around the headwaters of Maine's rivers and streams. In
the political scene; he also refused to deal with him as a fellow
language that would resonate today, Guernsey declared: "In our
businessman, when, no longer in office, Percival tried to buy Great
state is the last remnant of the virgin forest that once swept the
Northern's interest in the township containing the mountain.
whole Atlantic Coast. Something must, and will, in my opinion, be
Schenck didn't reside in Millinocket, nor even in Maine, but
done to preserve it."
tightly controlled events in the town his company had erected in the
On this occasion, another speech by Professor Lucius Merrill
wilds. An ardent Prohibitionist, he had written into the deeds of the
of the University of Maine emphasized Katahdin and its watershed,
local houses GNP owned (most of them) that the occupants could
threatened by "the axe of the lumberman and the fires which too fre-
be evicted if they sold liquor from them. In a scene straight out of
quently follow the axe." Lamenting that in the "Pine Tree State," he
feudalism, Schenck responded to the plea of one Antonio Allisio,
304
The Interrunted
OFFICE OF
BAR HARBOR WATER COMPANY
BAR HARBOR. MAINE
COPY.
May 2, 1913.
W. H. L. Lee, Esq
Chairman of the Executive Committee,
Bar Harbor Water Company.
Dear Sir:
EAGLE LAKE WATER SHED.
Some two or three years ago in consequence of the
increased tendency to build on the shores of Eagle Lake and
especially in consequence of operations having been commenced
for a good sized dwelling very near the lake, it was thought
wise to procure as much of the water shed as could be purchased
at reasonable prices. It was decided that some of this
property should be purchased and held by the Hancock County
Reservations, the money being furnished by the Water Company.
Ad a result of the authority given by the Directors lots were
purchased, as has been previously reported, controlling perhaps
a little more than 40% of the entire distance around the lake.
The cost of these purchases, the larger portion of which is
owned by the Hancock County Reservations and the smaller
portion by the Water Company, was $28,937.23.
RECENT PURCHASES.
On December 18 I wrote a letter to the Chairman of
the Executive Committee advocating the purchase of property
on the west and southwest portions of the lake, providing
these purchases did not total an amount exceeding $19,000.
OFFICE OF
BAR HARBOR WATER COMPANY
BAR HARBOR. MAINE
-2-
A copy of this letter was sent to Mr. Dorr, who was in close
touch with the matter, and as a result of his comments to the
Executive Committee the Committee authorized the expenditure
of not exceeding $20,000.
It may be well to explain at this juncture that the
property, the purchase of which I recommended, was some six
hundred or more acres of land claimed by different owners who
had purchased definite portions of the property and recei ved
a warranty deed for their payments. There was, however, a
serious cloud on the title. The case involving the title was
to be tried in the April term of Court of this year. There
would have been no difficulty on account of this trouble with
the title in purchasing the different properties at a low price,
but for the fact that the warranty of the titles was apparently
perfectly good, the warrantor or at least his heir being amply
able to make any loss good to those holding the property.
In pursuance of the authority given by the Executive
Committee we obtained from some of the owners an option on
their holdings and at the same time secured an option from
the claimants of the property who were not in possession.
We then proceeded to negotiatewith the different purchasers who
were in possession of the property. In consequence of there
being so many owners, and in the case of one of the properties
SO many heirs to be consulted, and the prices asked for the
OFFICE OF
BAR HARBOR WATER COMPANY
BAR HARBOR. MAINE
-3-
properties to my mind at least SO excessive, the work has been
necessarily slow and at times tedious and annoying.
The
total asking price, exclusive of commissions of the real
estate agent, amounted to $24,200. The total amount finally
paid for the properties, including commissions and attorneys
fees, was $15,842.24. This does not mean to my mind that the
Water Company has got an exceedingly good trade in the property,
but it does mean in my opinion that the properties have been
secured at as low a price as was possible under all the
conditions.
I estimate roughly that the total shore line on
Eagle Lake, not including indentations, is about four and one-
half miles in extent. The property that we have just secured
I should say included about one and one-half miles of this
length of sho re. With what we heretofore purchased it seems
to me that we now control a little over two-thirds of the shore
line. Nearly all of the remaining portion is owned by Mr.
W. M. Roberts, the only exceptions being about sixteen rods
owned by John Rich; about eight rods owned by the Estate of
Margaret Perkins; a narrow lot owned by the Brewer Ice Company;
and seventeen rods owned by the Brewer Estate and W. M. Roberts.
The total cost of this shore line, with the land in the
water shed, which I have roughly estimated as being two-thirds
of the entire distance around the lake, will thus be seen to
have amounted to $44,779.47.
OFFICE OF
BARHARBOR WATER COMPANY
BAR HARBOR. MAINE
-4-
ACTION AGAINST WARRANTOR OF THE DIFFERENT TITLES.
Referring to the claims of certain parties not in
possession of the property as having been purchased by the
Water Company as a part of the policy of acquiring the tract
of land above described, the title from them was taken in the
name of a third person, so that the Water Company is now
through this third person in a position to attempt to enforce
the rights of the grantees of whom the Water Company has
purchased against this warrantor. As the Water Company had
to pay $3500. besides some legal fees to make the title good
it seems proper that this right should be enforced against
the warrantor, and at the risk of spending a few hundred dollars
in Court without any return we have thought it well to authorize
the attempt to secure remuneration from the warrantor through
Court proceedings.
I have no further recommendations to make at the
present time with reference to acquiring additional properties
on the lake, except that the matter be discussed at the meeting
of the Directors held perhaps at the time of the annual meeting
this summer.
Yours very truly,
(Signed) Fred C. Lynam.
President.
The following was written by Herbert Weir Smyth, Professor of Greek in Harvard
1413
University, and published in Bar Harbor Life, August 23, 1913. It is a good account of the
meeting.
a-76
AUTOMOBILES
THE MOUNT DESERT TOWN MEETING
Now, glory hallelujah, hip, hip, and three times three,
Mount Desert town, of fair renown, from autos will be free,
In Eden Town they rage around, with horrid smell and soot,
And make Bar Harbor's streets unsafe for those who go afoot;
But Northeast and Seal Harbors are in Mount Desert Town,
Then Rockefeller, Junior, with name of mighty power,
And the autos in town meeting, have there been voted down.
Who overlooks Northeast and Seal from out his lofty tower,
The voters of Mount Desert, they one and all, came there,
Spoke quietly, but forcibly, against the auto plan,
In motor boats and buckboards, and some upon Shank's mare.
And showed, although a billionaire, he was a modest man.
The anxious rusticators furnished transportation free
Then Prichard, of Seal Harbor got up and said, "me too;"
And with their wives and daughters came the voting for to see;
and Dr. Minot of Northeast, whose Boston blood is blue.
In fact so many summer folk attended at the hall
And then uprose Charles Clement--the great and only one,
That very many voting men could find no seats at all.
Who, in times past, had said he thought the auto ought to run;
The meeting opened solemnly, with Judge Knowles in the chair,
But now he said he'd changed his mind--his thoughts he never hid,
Who said he'd do his duty, and endeavor to be fair,
He'd vote against the auto, though no other fellow did.
Then Stebbins of Seal Harbor, a summer man of note,
Then Grindle--great physician, their Solon wise and true,
Who claims to live within the town, and thus obtains a vote,
Who gave them pills, and cured their ills, and helped them make statutes too,
Moved that the rusticator, although they had no right,
Called their attention to the fact that next to its pertaters,
Should be allowed to talk upon the subject of the fight;
The State of Maine should cherish most, its crop of rusticators;
And as no one dissented, this was very quickly done,
hat the town always had performed whate'er the latter wished,
And everyone was free to talk and then began the fun.
And if it failed to do this now, it surely would be dished;
First, Kimball, of Northeast, who keeps the famous Hostelry,
Besides he showed that auto cars though made for pleasure uses,
Where Northeast's men and maidens meet in weekly revelry,
Could bring to town cheap labor, and other great abuses.
Read letters from some millionaires who wished a summer home
The voters now were saying, with an impatient note,
But would not patronize his house if autos did not come
We' let these windy fellows talk--let's get to work and vote.
He said, if by their vote this day they kept autos away,
Mount Desert men have level heads--they know a thing or two,
He'd close the Kimball House next year, and more he could not say.
We did not need this tiresome talk to teach us what to do.
Then Melcher, who to Northeast had come these many years,
So out they turned, the summer folk, and when the count they wrote,
Read the rusticators' protest and chronicled their fears
They'd kept the autos out of town by an enormous vote.
That if the auto was allowed to come within the town,
So glory hallelujah, hip, hip and three times three;
Its prestige would soon be destroyed--its business would run down
Mount Desert Town of fair renown, from autos will be free.
Then Eliot, the grand old man, head of the Harvard clan,
Who's squeezed the world's best literature into a five-foot span,
Who knows all things there are to know, and keeps advice in store
And hands out all that you may ask, and sometimes even more,
Said that they'd kept his taxes down, and showed their common sense;
And if they'd keep the autos out, he thought 'twould be immense.
By tales of men who only came because autos were barred
Then Stebbins, who's a canny man, countered on Kimball hard,
The Dr. Edward Dunham--he of the gentle voice,
Whose courteous ways, the quiet deeds have long made Seal rejoice,
Opposed
the
urred
auto auto nursance and urged the votero there
RICHARD W. HALE
HALE & GRINNELL.
LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE
FRANK W. GRINNELL.
ATTORNEYS AND COUNSELLORS AT LAW,
FORT HILL 510.
ROGER D. SWAIM.
16 CENTRAL STREET, BOSTON, MASS.
JOHN M. MAGUIRE.
CABLE ADDRESS, "HAFIS, BOSTON."
October 27, 1913.
H/Th2 o
George B. Dorr, Esq.,
Bar Harbor, Maine,
and
18 Commonwealth Avenue,
Boston, Mass.
Dear George:
The land in Bar Harbor belonging to the heirs of
George H. Homans is two acres or so on Schoolhouse Hill and
one hundred and ten (110) acres running from the present
Bowl Reservation to the Otter Cliffs Road.
I understand that I can get you quitclaim deeds
to the Trustees of Public Reservations of one undivided
third of this and of several undivided eighteenths. I have
a plan before me and know the title.
I should be very glad to be of service to the Trus-
tees in this matter drawing deeds, ascertaining facts in
recital of title, etc. and getting signatures. I think I
should probably get at least two-thirds and make it easy ulti-
mately to acquire the remainder.
I should think it would be reasonable if I did this
work, which would be considerable, for the Trustees to pay
for the copies of deeds, recording fees, etc. which would be
necessary. That would be a trifle, say not over twenty (20)
dollars, nearer five (5) dollars.
Shall I go ahead?
Yours very truly,
R.
on
[R.W.Hale]
The islands and headlands scattered along the deeply embayed
coast of eastern Maine - an ancient, water-worn land-surface
flooded by the sea -- yresent one of the most interesting examples
to be found upon this continent of the marked effect of looal 011-
matic conditions uyon the distribution of the fauna and the flora.
But nowhere else upon that coast oan this be seen 80 strikingly as
on the beautiful island of Mount Desert whose rooky heights and
wooded valleys, whose deer, odol, intervening lakes and sun-warmed
pools and marshes, fresh and salt, offer conditions uniquely favor
able for a rich boreal flora - extending here much further south
than on the neighboring mainland - and for a southern one which,
in interesting contrast, reaches here its northern limit in important
species. And associated with this flora there is - as one might
say with practical certainty there must be from knowledge of the
plants alone fauna.
This island occupying a contral position on that broken and
extensive COAST and thruat out with various and lofty elavation
into a sea that surges round it with exceptional tidal volume, mod-
ifying alike its summer heat and winter cold, holds the key to the
biologio situation in that region and must unquestionably be in fu-
tura the best and onjor dependence of scientists in working out its
marry interesting problems of associated plant and insect life.
On th no flora of the IRland there has been already long since
sublished ancessetient oatalogue of plants, and rion material for
2
a much full.er 11 st is only waiting opportunity for publication now;
ho correspondingly thorough study of the invertebrate fauna has
been made AR yet but AS to the rich results which it will yield,
when opportunity for thorough study comes, we can draw a sure con-
clusion from the fragmentary record that exists - and notably of
late from a most interesting collection of Lepidoptera, containing
over one hundred and fifty anecies of moths, made by Dr Charles
Sedgwick Minot, president of the Boston Natural History society, in
whose collections they are placed.
The collection made by Dr Minot contains among the Geometrids
one wholly new species, Diastictis anaturta, and a new variety of
Therina ficellaria, as well as a specimen of Alois sulphurea and
several specimens of Eustroma cunigerata and Hydreomena contracta,
which have not been recorded from the eastern United States since
Prokard wrote his monograph in 1876 and which it was feared had
becama ext inct through this region. A specimen of Rheumoptera
gerosii, recently described from British Columbia, and specimens of
Mesoluca aurata and Cleora indicataria were also found, while in
the Nootuids were the following rare and interesting species:-
Bryophila Insidula, Diyhthera fallax, Caradrina multifera, Drobata
illocata, Peridroma occulta, Paragrotis mollis, Orthosia, ralla,
Glaea inulta, Eyiglaoa pastillioans, Polyohrysia formosa, Musia
balluca and Autographa mayaa.
This will give, to m tomologists at least, a good idea of what can
be found upon the Island in the important Lapidoptera group and is an
excellent indi cation 88 to what we may anticipate on further search in
other orders, 88 well AB of the exceptional richness of the IRland
(1) Secomens of this species extremely rare; have been found
as yet in the white Mountains and at Mt Desert only.
(2) This species was originally described from Maine by
Packard in 1576 and until found at Mt Desert by Dr Minot had not
been reported in the east since Paokard's time but only found in the
Rooky Mountains and the Paoifio states. It had been thought to be
perhaps extinet in this region unt11 re-discovered now by Dr Minot
by whom two appolimens were collected in the North East Harbor section
of the Island.
(3)
18 also a species of which specimens were recorded by
PROKARD in 1876, and not reported in thin region since. It 18 es-
pecially interest.ine because Dr Minot obtained a series bridging
over an apparent gap between a banded form described by Packard and
the other described by walker which had been thought to constitute
perhaps a different species.
(4) Not. found anywhere since desoribed by Paokard in 1876
the
Hure
them
t111 found in last week of Sept omber by Dr Minot, who obtained a large
A
number of them.
(5 and 6) Rare moths, represented in the society's collection
only by the Mt Desert specimens.
(7) Has only been found in British Columbia and at Mt Desert,
and nowhere else 88 yet. The specimen obtained from Mt Desert is
the only are in the Boston Museun's collection.
(1) Diastiotis anaturia.
(5) Autographa
(2) Alois sulphurea
(6) Polychrysia formosa
(3) Eustroma cunigerata
(7)
Rheumoptera georgii
(4) Hydriomena contraots
3
astthe natural habitat of a wide range of inseat life, and of rare
species.
we cannot hope to see the invertebrate fauna of the region
which this island 80 well represents studied with true soientific
thoroughness for years, for many years perhaps, ttocoome. It 18
surely a matt er of no slight importance, then, to preserve while
yet it can be done its characteristic and exceptional features for
future study in a place 80 widely and uniquely representative of
them, RO accessible to students and possible still to save in its
natural condition and protect from destructive influences.
Curam
Natural History
Dec 26 1913
10/13/21, 8:15 PM
Charles Willison Johnson -Wikipedia -
WIKIPEDIA
Charles Willison Johnson
Charles Willison Johnson (October 26,
Charles W. Johnson
1863 - July 19, 1932) was an American
naturalist who specialized in entomology
(especially Diptera) and malacology, making
significant contributions in both fields. He
was a mentor and inspiration to many
students and young scientists such as
William J. Clench (who founded a
publication named Johnsonia in his honor).
Johnson was Curator of the Wagner Free
Institute of Science, 1888-1903, then was
Principal Curator at the Boston Society of
Natural History, 1903-1932.
He assisted Henry Augustus Pilsbry with
The Nautilus, an important American
malacological publication. Although both
were credited on the title page as "Editors
and Publishers", Johnson was the business
CHARLES W. JOHNSON
manager and Pilsbry was the editor, with
Charles W. Johnson
Johnson acting as editor when Pilsbry was
Born
October 26, 1863
on extended field expeditions.
Morris Plains, New
Jersey
Biography
Died
July 19, 1932
(aged 68)
Charles Johnson was born to Albert Fletcher
Brookline,
Johnson and Sarah Willison Johnson in
Massachusetts
Morris Plains, New Jersey. He attended
public and private schools at Morristown,
Nationality USA
New Jersey. At age 17 he moved to St.
Scientific career
Augustine, Florida, and threw himself into
an intensive and energetic study of the
Fields
entomology,
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Willison_Johnson
1/3
10/13/21, 8:15 PM
Charles Willison Johnson - Wikipedia
area's fauna. His activity caught the eye of
malacology
Joseph Willcox, a trustee of the Wagner Free
Institutions
Wagner Free Institute
Institute of Philadelphia, who was in Florida
Academy of Natural
on a field trip. Willcox invited Johnson to
Sciences
become the Wagner's curator, SO in 1888
Johnson
moved
to
Philadelphia,
Boston Society of
Pennsylvania and took up that post. During
Natural History
his fourteen-year tenure, he greatly
Influenced
William J. Clench
improved and modernized the Institute's
collections. He also was asked to curate two special collections of the Academy of
Natural Sciences in Philadelphia.
In 1903 he accepted the post of chief curator at the Boston Society of Natural
History at the passing of the previous curator (Professor Alpheus Hyatt). He
remained at that position until his death at age 68, in Brookline, Massachusetts.
On January 14, 1897 he married Carrie W. Ford in Philadelphia. Her father was
a prominent Philadelphia personality, known for his extensive collection of
shells. They had no children; she died July 16, 1931 at Brookline.
His co-workers estimated that during his lifetime, Johnson had published at
least 130 articles on the topic of entomology, and at least 100 articles on
molluscan subjects.
Sources
The Nautilus, 1963 3(https://archive.org/stream/nautilus18861961amer#page/
116/mode/1up) Johnson's entry in the Author Index.
Psyche 39 (1932) (http://psyche.entclub.org/39/39-087.html) The
Entomological Publications of C. W. Johnson
The Nautilus, 1933 (pp. 129-134) (https://archive.org/stream/nautilus46amer
#page/129/mode/1up) Obituary
The Boston Society of Natural History 1830-1930 (https://archive.org/stream/
bostonsocietyofn00bost) Centennial history of the Society (Johnson's portrait
is on p. 91)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Willison_Johnson
2/3
4/22/2017
The Memorials of Acadia National Park
Donald Lenahan blog.
6 For information about them see
http://ccclegacy.org/ccc_worker_statue_program.htm
1 of
Posted by Don Lenahan at 4:45 PM
6 comments:
G+1 Recommend this on Google
Ale 1913
Monday January 26. 2015
New Facts Concerning the Cross on Flying Mountain
Since publication of the October 2014 blog article about the cross on
top of Flying Mountain in Acadia National Park, additional
information has emerged. Thanks to Hannah Stevens, archivist at the
Northeast Harbor Library, and a letter she discovered in records of
The Knowles Company founder Belle Smallidge Knowles it is now
known the cross was erected on Flying Mountain in 1917.
The letter, signed by William Draper Lewis and Lincoln Cromwell,
Knowles
inter alia, states that it was the intent to have a granite cross built on
the mountain to commemorate the 1613 establishment of the French colony on
Fernald Point. However, they felt they needed to test the cross's acceptability to area
residents. They thus first erected a replica wooden cross.
Lewis, a Philadelphian, and Cromwell, a New Yorker,
both Northeast Harbor summer residents, were members
of a committee attempting to acquire the mountains
surrounding Somes Sound on Mount Desert Island, ME.
In 1917 Lewis purchased Flying Mountain from the
Fernald family and that same year turned it over to the
Hancock County Trustees of Public Reservations.
Cromwell purchased Acadia Mountain also in 1917. He
likewise then donated it to the HCTPR that year, as a
Lewis
memorial to Rev. Cornelius Smith and his wife, Mary.*1
Smith-Wheeler Memorial on Acadia Mountain
Lewis and Cromwell were members of the HCTPR. It was through the land
acquisitions of this organization and its gift thereof to the U.S. Government that
Sieur de Monts National Monument was established in 1916.*2 Additional
acquisitions led to the expansion of Sieur de Monts NM and its renaming to
Lafayette NP in 1919 and subsequently to Acadia NP in 1929.*
Due to the letter we can deduce from whom authorization was obtained to install the
cross on Flying Mountain in 1917. Yet the committee seemingly never gave its
endorsement for construction of the planned granite cross, as the wooden cross
continued on Flying Mountain until its natural demise in the mid 1920s.
Footnotes:
1 The bronze memorial reads, "Acadia Mountain given to the public in memory of
Rev. Cornelius Smith and his wife Mary Wheeler who were pioneers of the summer
colony at Northeast Harbor 1886-1913." Their daughter was Cromwell's wife,
Mabel.
2 The first land gifts to the HCTPR were in 1908 from George and Linda Cooksey of
New York and Seal Harbor (Barr Hill and the Champlain Memorial land off Sea
Cliff Drive [now named Cooksey Drive; the memorial was moved in the 1970s to a
-
Boston and Bar Harbor (The Bowl and The Beehive).
3 The 114 year-old HCTPR still exists and serves as the governing body of
Woodlawn, the historic estate of George Nixon Black, Jr., in Ellsworth, ME.
Note: Knowles photograph is from The Knowles Company website.
Posted by Don Lenahan at 3:49 PM
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G+1 Recommend this on Google
Wednesday October 22. 2014
The Cross on Flying Mountain, Acadia National Park -- a Mystery Unraveled
Just south of the summit of Flying Mountain, at the entrance to Somes Sound on
Mount Desert Island, are unexplained pieces of iron -- eyebolts, rod and a brace --
embedded in a horizontal granite surface. The site overlooks Fernald Point to the
south.
Eyebolts
Cut rod and brace
4/22/2017
The Memorials of Acadia National Park
3
4.
What these iron relics are is revealed in a 1924 Bar Harbor Times photograph, which
shows a cross on top of Flying Mountain.*1 The accompanying caption reads,
"President-emeritus Eliot of Harvard, the earliest summer resident on the Northeast
Harbor shore, stands on Jesuit Field [Fernald Point], at the site of the French
Missionary Colony at the entrance to Somes Sound, briefly established in 1613." 2
Bar Harbor Times
The wooden cross was designed for Aimee (Rotch) Sargent, wife of Winthrop
Sargent, summer residents of Northeast Harbor, by the architectural firm Cram &
Ferguson of Boston. *3 The cross stood about 30' high. Near the base of the cross
were the letters A M D G, which stand for Ad Majorem Dei Gloriam, [For the
Greater Glory of God], the motto of the Roman Catholic Jesuit Society of Jesus.
4/22/2017
The Memorials of Acadia National Park
4 of 4
Northeast Harbor Library
The year the cross was erected is unclear, but it might have been in 1913 in time for
MDI's August Tercentenary celebration of the French-Jesuit St. Sauveur settlement
in 1613 on Fernald Point.*4 The cross was gone by 1927, when it was reported it
had toppled over in a storm and was not replaced. *5 The reason for not replacing
the cross is not known. However, to commemorate the 1613 settlement nearby Dog
Mountain had been renamed St. Sauveur in 1918 at the request of George B. Dorr,
custodian of the new Sieur de Monts National Monument. Also, Aimee Sargent died
in 1918 and was preceded two years earlier in death by her husband. These events
would have weighed against the cross's replacement.
It is interesting to note that Aimee Sargent was the sister of Arthur Rotch of the
Boston architectural firm Rotch and Tilden that designed St. Saviour Episcopal
Church in Bar Harbor and other structures on Mount Desert Island. Ralph Adams
Cram of the above-mentioned firm Cram and Ferguson had earlier worked at Rotch
and Tilden. Thus the cross's link to Cram and Ferguson becomes evident.
The cross's site is easy to find, as the Flying Mountain trail cuts directly across it.
The aerial map depicts the salient features mentioned above and includes the ANP
and private property boundaries on Fernald Point.
Flying Mtn
cross site
private land
Flying Mtn trail
Acadia NP
private land
Fernald Pt
*Footnotes:
1 Bar Harbor Times, March 19, 1924, p. 3.
2 Eliot retired as president of Harvard in 1909, a position he had held for 40 years.
That same year he was elected president emeritus of the university.
3 I wish to thank Ethan Anthony of Cram & Ferguson Architects for his research of
company files over the course of many months.
4 For more about this historic settlement see my blog posts dated September 27,
2012 and June 8, 2013.
5 Bar Harbor Times, June 15, 1927, p. 8.
GPS coordinates:
Flying Mountain cross site: N44° 18.110' W068° 18.863'
Flying Mountain summit: N44° 18.130' W068° 18.858
Posted by Don Lenahan at 11:48 AM
No comments:
Paper upon need or public renervation.
Written with reference to
oo Oxistion plans COP Mount Desert Totand
George BC DONAL
The question of Public Reservation is of par
importance An the castorn portion of our
country where w have already got a dense population
Firth orgated and woring denser Without
Opporent HOLDER Many have been made in
the thinly cotifed not hose population 4mg
pharacter or the country must ever remain
compared with the TOTAL witoredy permanently
tho Rook. Mountain foot-httle
castraray with 10" LOTEL day railroading and
accessibility, bather lake and BOOK
WO Aro passing into Show phase or human life
where mentile congro thing 1. vant sultitudes, for
industrial purposes, for trade and intercourse; the
po ulation on the future must inevitably be many times
the population of the present. and the need of con-
serving now while there 18 time pleasant, wholesome
breathing places for these coming multitudes is great.
How great, we can with difficulty realize in our country
yot so newly occupied and in a period so new of growth
and vast industrial change, but what such open spaces
in the form of Commons have meant to England in the
past, the long struggle to prevent their enclosure by
the coursehord strikingly, and what is loat by their
absonoo 13 denadit peopled rogtons of China where
overs rod returning
of ground is tiren up to the material
the accounts
travilor tollo
But if 13 not a question of breathing spaces
And physional woll-being only R goes Tar beyond that
and dooply concerned each 366 inner The of men.
with Nature In Ltn duty and Greedom shut out from
so many belton in that industries and oity-dwelling
timel going Ato become I has indeed become the
ready I itter of suprome diportance to proporto
1m their oponness In their unepotted beauty And the
interest of their wild of their native trees
and plant.) their Birds and animals, the places where
the interest and human significance of these things
is greatest, the places where the influence of Nature
may be felt the most or where the life with which she
has peopled the world, and man or chance has not
destroyed, may be observed and studied in Its rullest.
The times are moving rast in the destruction
of beautiful and interesting things The lost oppor
tubity of one year becomes the bitter regret of
thoughtful people in a few years mora. Valuable and in-
toresting species of birds that were still familiar a
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growing population.
By thing thought Inscenson fittle need
be includuable bonerits in
natural Wilder region in her grander land-
coupon that lie ulthin the reach of busy menj in re-
treating forestan not too simited on picturesque and
Open downs besidon the BORT OF along the pleasant's
fooded 12th unpolluted weter When
cord becomes examined water power on other form of
oner x WT takotato place but nothing with ever
pensate Cor beauty Jemmently ruined with-
the bounds of modern 11re+
the (111 a compromise of many
interests where akoh and over-side must got and
Bived But the 16 also an organio whole, where, as
in the old Roman Table of the stomach and the brain.
that won the people back from their revolt, each part
must starre if the other be not redj and 1, there be
anything in the world, next to the opportunity to gain
the necessities of attrop to meat disease or find the
means of education, that should be kept open to the
right use of all it is the wholesome freedom of nature
and opportunity for contact with its many-sided in-
tereat and beauty in appropriate tracts, The day will
ultimately come when to provide such 1111 be felt to
be one of the most essential duties of the state or
03 works different For Ader
better though tompo public hereta 08
Pox nent 8 LOW
achors only gin with hames MY
ity often Frichnear of Sociation
changes 1 Colonee OR social ora nation, Altered
of interest ON change M ohari-
table-method destroy choin Valuet
There Tra Handscaper And tracts of land
which for athorn boauty And Exocutional interest -
or thoir along do important centers -
should be 3.1. Golover free to allo
Our metropolitic 020 And are x
New Ctop a one Middation Yucro the actional
papka out LOOK with Engrouning private ownership
and rapidly increases population the movement is
one that win need to go far eventually
The earth is our common heritage. It is
both right and needful 1t should be kept widely free
in the portions that the homes of men, industry and
agriculture do not claim. Personal possession reaches
out at widest but a little way, and passes quickly
in the present days gathering about itself little of
that greater charm which time alone can give. If
men of wealth would spend but R traction of what
they do for themselves alone with brief result, in
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the pappley who should
acquire them In idequate and surricient
portion ly and ward them us procious heritagoo
(a) That the pation States and individual offizons
should GOO proto to other to conserve in every possio
blo and interest of the
natural thinuto a duty not to be lost
Hight of mathe Prepence of other
passing too bo provided Con that
X one who
school tter Landoubt THE the move-
parko and open Opacost near or far,
opportunities for
nature. in RD and beauty to re-
Atronoes human Letter for placest too,
where of as many 00-exist
with man make propered andwhere plant stice,
whether ID forest growths Orischo infinite detail
of flowering plants and 2012 forms, may still remain
a part of manya environment.
The movement will grow, as 011 great
movements do because & great truth DO man's need for
nature M Ties behind ttd The essentially important
thing is to BRYO now what opportunity we can for its
expansion anters
9
WEIR MITCHELL WON FAME IN TWO FIELDS
New York Times (1857-Current file); Jan 5, 1914; ProQuest Historical Newspapers The New York Times (1851 - 2001)
pg. 9
WEIR MITCHELL WON
Dr. S. Weir Mitchell.
FAME IN TWO FIELDS
Dead Author and Physician Was
the Most Noted Philadel-
phian Since Franklin.
FIRST NOVEL DUE TO ENNUI
Wrote It to Evade Boredom at 53-
Better Known as Writer Than
Nerve Specialist.
PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 4.-The death
of Dr. S. Weir Mitchell, noted author
and physician, at 3 o'clock this morning,
as announced in a late edition of THE
NEW YORK TIMES, was due to influenza,
the seriousness of which was accen-
tuated by his advanced age. He was in
his eighty-fifth year. Funeral services
will be held on Tuesday, Jan. 6.
Dr. Mitchell was stricken last Monday
with what was at first thought to be a
mild attack of grip, and until yesterday
no apprehension was felt. His condi-
tion, however. became grave last night,
and the distinguished patient did not
rally, the end coming a few minutes
later. Members of his immediate family
were with him during the last hours of
his life.
Dr. Mitchell's fame both as a physi-
cian and author was international, al-
though he probably was more widely
known as a writer of fiction. His last
book appeared a few months ago under
the title of Westways." A year ago
he published "John Sherwood, Iron-
master," and among his other works
of fiction were "Hugh Wynne, Free
Quaker," The Adventures of Fran-
sois," François Villon," Character-
istics," 'Francis Drake," "A Ma-
© A P A
deira Party," and "Dr. North and His
Friends."
Dr. Weir Mitchell long ago achieved
Noted Physician and Author, Who Died Early Yesterday Morning.
distinction of a sort that made him con-
spicuous in contemporary history as a
man without either predecessor or com-
peer in the varied quality of his genius;
paper on Crotalus Poison before the
only three other Americans on the rolls
moreover, there is no one on the horizon
National Academy of Science.
at that time, Alexander Agassiz, George
of public affairs who shows promise of
In 1862. he began h.s three years'
W. Hill, and Sinon Newcomb.
quite following in his 100tsteps. lie
work as an army surgeon, having spe-
was the most celebrated Philadelphian
cial charge of soldiers suffering from
How He Came to Write Fiction.
since Benjamin Franklin, and, while
nervous disorders and wounds involving
Dr. Mitchell's fiction and verse re-
biographers appear to see a parallel be-
the nervous system. This was perhaps
tween the lives of these two illustrious
the beginning of a career that gained
vealed the versatility of his genius. On
men, the twentieth century writer is
for him a world-wide reputation as a
Feb. 10, 1912, he attended a dinner of
inclined to attribute to Dr. Mitchell a
neurologist.
breadth of view and a complexity of
Dr. Mitchell followed no beaten path
the University of Pennsylvania alumni
admirable characteristics wanting in the
in his medical work; he explored fields
at the Waldorf and there he told how
many-sided diplomatist.
hitherto untrodden by any member or
he came to be a writer of fiction. In
One writer says of Dr. Mitchell that
the medical profession, and so his fame
in this direction does not rest on the
response to the complimentary remarks
he held a position as an eminent physi-
cian, who is also a distinguished au-
fact that he did something a little bet-
made by other speakers, he said:
thor, but that he will hereafter be re-
ter than others, but because he was an
What you have said of me as a sef-
garded as an eminent author who is
investigator who uncovered truths hid-
entist and physician and as a writer of
also a distinguished physician. It is
den from the eyes of science. Between
fiction and verse obliges me to be per-
certain that he was the possessor in an
the years 1852 and 1894 Dr. Mitchell's
sonal. When success in my profession
scientific and professional publications
gave me the freedom of long Summer
unwonted degree of sympathy, intuition.
and intellect, and that the union of
numbered no fewer than 125.
holidays the despotism of my habits of
It is of small import to enumerate
work would have made entire idleness
these, coupled with a love of work, pro-
these professional publications from the
mere ennui. I turned to what except.
duced a man distinguished as a physi-
pen of Dr. Mitchell. An incident, vari-
for stern need would have been my life-
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
2
cian, a novelist, a poet, and a historian.
ously related, serves better to indicate
long work from youth-llterature-and
His fame in each of these sphere he in-
his minence as a physician. This is
bored by idleness wrote my first novel.
vaded was sufficient for a lasting me-
the version as attributed to Dr. Mitchell
There is a lesson for you-never be idle.
morial to any single individual.
himself:
In any land but this such an experi-
His Father a Physician.
An American. suffering from some
ment as a successful novel would have
nervous disorder, journeyed to Italy to
injuriously affected the professional
The purely perfunctory part of Dr.
consult a celebrated Italian neurologist.
career of a medical consultant, or so I
Mitchell's history shows that be was
But you are from America? said
was told by an eminent English physi-
the Italian.
cian. I need not say that this is not
born in Philadelphia on Feb. 15. 1829.
Yes."
the American way of looking at life. If
His father, John Kearsley Mitchell, was
Why not, then, take the Vermichelli
you give your best to medicine and the
a Virginian, and also a physician. He
treatment?
law. you may write novels or verse, or
What's that?' inquired the patient.
play golf or ride the wildest colt of
established himself in Philadelphia,
'What! You don't know the treat-
hobbies."
where as a practitioner and professor
ment of the famous Dr. Veir Mitchell of
Dr. Mitchell's fiction is of an endur-
in the Jefferson Medical College he
Philadelphia?
ing quality. His first novel, In War
And the Italian sent the American
earned a wide reputation as a leader
Time," did not appear until he was 53.
home to be cured.
In the next twenty-five years he pub-
in his profession. The elder Mitchell
The story as related by friends of Dr.
lished twenty-one volumes, The Red
also wrote several poems and short
Mitchell is to the effect that the physi-
City appearing when he was 78.
stories which were considered meritor-
clan himself, while visiting Paris, suf-
Hugh Wynne, François, Dr.
lous productions.
fered a recurrence of a nervous ailment
North and His Friends," and others
S. Wier Mitchell was one of eight chil-
attributed to overwork. Without di-
have a constant vogue.
dren. Three of his brothers served in
vulging his identity, he called on a spe-
the civil war. He was graduated from
cialist with whose name he was familiar
His " Ode on n Lycian Tomb."
Jefferson in medicine in 1850, after he
as being that of a man famous in both
Critics have said that the leading
had been obliged to give up his studies
hemispheres.
on account of ill-health. It is notable
see that you are an American,"
motive of Dr. Mitchell's later verse
that Dr. Mitchell early in life attracted
remarked the French physician, after
reaches its finest expression in his
the attention of that other great Ameri-
some preliminary conversation.
can physician-author. Oliver Wendell
Yes,' replied Dr. Mitchell, "I am."
Ode on a Lycian Tomb." which reads:
Holmes, They met at the home of the
And from what city do you come?'
What gracious nunnery of grief is here!
elder Mitchell, and so pleased was Dr.
inquired the Parisian.
One woman garbed in sorrow's every mood;
Holmes with some of the yound doctor's
Philadelphia," said the visitor.
Each sad presentment celled apart, in fear
verses that he gave him a copy of his
And do you mean to say that you,
Lest that herself upon herself intrude,
own 'Ballad of the Constitution,"
a resident of Philadelphia, come to me
And break some tender dream of sorrow's
which Dr. Mitchell cherished through-
to be treated when there resides in
day,
Here cloistered lonely, set in marble gray.
out his life.
your home city the most famous nerve
specialist in the world? exclaimed the
A Research Worker,
o pale procession of immortal love.
Frenchman.
Forever married to Immortal grief!
In the decade preceding the civil
To whom do you refer?" asked the
All of life's childlike sorrow far above,
author.
Past help of time's compassionate relief:
war, Dr. Mitchell published many
To Dr. S. Weir Mitchell. of course,"
These changeless stones are treasuries of re-
works on subjects pertaining to his
replied the specialist, and to think
gret
that you have never heard of him! he
And mock the term by time for sorrow set.
profession. He was a research work-
exclaimed in conclusion, raising his
er in the best sense of the word, de-
Cold mourners-set in stone so long ago,
hands in astonishment.
voting a good deal or his attention to
In 1908, Dr. Mitchell was elected a
Too much my thoughts have dwelt with
poisons. particularly the chemical na-
thee apart.
foreign Fellow of the Royal Society of
ture of snake venoms. His monograph
Again my grief is young: full well I know
England, the oldest and most dis-
on rattlesnake poison was brought Sut
The pang reborn. that mocked my feeble art
tinguished scientific society in the
With that too human wall in pain expressed,
by the Smithsonian Institution, and a
few years ago he read an important
English speaking world. There were
The parent cry above the empty nest.
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
Dr. S. Weir Mitchell
The Committee appointed for the purpose reported
through Dr. Brunnow an appreciation of Dr. Mitchell
prepared by Miss Minot and a tribute by Dr. Taylor
to Dr. Mitchell's eminent qualities as a physician, and
upon motion the same were adopted and ordered to be
entered upon the records of the Association.
Dr. iMtchell was so universally beloved and admired
and his personality, his life, and his great achievements
in science and literature are so well known to the
world, that it is difficult to add to his praise and to
say anything that hiars not already been better said else-
where. But of one point in his full and many-sided
career this is indeed the place to speak: of his love
for Bar Harbor and his active concern in the interests
of the village, and especially in this Society.
He found renewed strength, refreshment, and in-
spiration in his walks over the wooded slopes and
rocky heights of this island; every afternoon saw him
setting out for a ramble, and he has often said, that
when alone among the hills, his best thoughts came to
him for the poem or the novel then in his mind. He
did a great deal to make these beautiful paths well
known, often taking his friends or even strangers up
the mountains or into the woods; and no more delight-
ful companion could be imagined, full of eager interest
18
and all kinds of information about the island and its
natural wonders. He furthered the objects of the
Village Improvement Association in every possible way
and as only he could, obtaining for it several gifts of
large tracts of land and subscriptions for its various
undertakings; and it was owing to his suggestion that
the Village Green was secured to the Association.
During his tenure of office as Chairman of the
Roads and Paths Committee he was untiring in laying
out new trails, and he continued his interest in this
work by suggestions and assistance to his successors.
Only last autumn he planned a path to open up an al-
most untrodden part of the island, the region lying be-
tween Eagle Lake Road and Fawn Pond, with Young's
Mountain as its principal summit. May we hope that
this plan will be carried out as a fitting memorial to
him and as an expression of our reverent admiration
of his noble character, his lofty ideals, his brilliant and
versatile mind, and of our undying gratitude for all he
did on behalf of the welfare of this island.
Chap. 12
COPY
Coskos Club
Washington, D.C.
Jan. 27, 1914.
Dear Mr. Lynam:
I send you back these deeds. Dr. Palmer, the Ass't Chief
of the Biologic Survey and leading man in the Federal Service in
the Gov't's bird protection work, went with me two days ago to see
the Chief Clerk of the Land Office, Mr. Frank Bond, who will pre-
pare the papers for the Sec'y of the Interior & the President to
sign and whose advice is likely to be conclusive in the matter.
And he was most encouraging; thought I had by now abundant
material to show cause for acceptance (this of course not to be
spoken of outside as yet, as Sec'y Lane has not been as yet been
spoken to about the matter & I don't want it to come to him in the
talk of others first, but from myself) and that the thing to do was
now to push the deeds, etc. along as rapidly as possible.
As Dr. Palmer said to me, everything is favorable at the moment
but change is always going on - in men & influence, & points of
view, and we may lose this opportunity by waiting.
What Mr.
Bond wants & will be strict in exacting is
1
A set of deeds for
filing, in due legal form, each one of which will set forth as a
preamble that the land is deeded to the Gov't - under the title
of "The United States of America" I for the purpose of creating a
National Monument, or park, of historic, scientific & scenic interest
(i.e limiting it to these & similar uses). And ending with the
statement or condition that if abandoned by the United States - i.e.,
no longer retained by them for such purpose - it shall return to the
donating association, not be sold or otherwise disposed of.
11
An outline map, or drawing showing clearly the bounds of
2
3 Gov't ownership, (not only in lots as acquired, for future
reference but) in a well defined outline, continuous so far as
possible, & drawn so as to make as few separate tracts as possible.
or doubtful points of new beginning in survey description.
The
Morrison claim tract he would include in the Gov't proclamation,
but we had best come to some agreement with Morrison if possible
lest he make trouble over the transfer, later. Please let me
know what you and Mr. Deasy think is possible.
III)
A Surveyor's description of the whole outline, not mace
in elaborate detail but from point to point, and outlining the
lake shores as well as land bounds. Where these are Great Ponds
& do not themselves pass in the ownership such lines could pass
back of the actual shore or over the water, according to the indent-
ations, or curving of the shore, from point to point, several
hundred feet perhaps spart.. the idea being to establish a general
location, for filing with the map, & making doubly clear all start-
ing points of survey mentioned in the deeds. The Newport Mountain
tracts Mr. Bond would omit at present, leaving these for the present
with the Association, till more is obtained, or perhaps letting
this whole mountain pass - enclosed by the Ocean Drive - into the
charge of the holding corporation. If the corporation should ac-
quire funds for development later on, this might be best. Or
if
the Gov' should make appropriation later for such development, the
other plan. It also might be easier to acquire the lands for the
Trustees' present holding, than to seek them in the Gov'ts name.
These Newport Mt. lands should ultimately extend to the Ocean front
by the Cadillac path & Thunder Hole.
3-s
Similarly, #18 lot Mr. Bond thought best omitter for the
present. The Champlain Monument should pass to the Gov't, it
seems to me. It will help to emphasize the historic interest, &
the Gov'ts reasons for establishing the monument. The Green Mt.
Carriage Road should .lso pas. to the Gov't, with the land to which
it gives access.
The lands with various claims upon them had best have those claims
settled where possible before proclamation
I wish you and Mr.
Deasy would talk this over and let me know what can be done in your
opinion. The Water Co rights, of course. etc. are all right. But
the rights to cut wood or for a railway - if still existent, which
I did not suppose it to be - or claim to ownership under tax or
other deeds if likely to make trouble, etc. etc. The tract we do
convey we want to be as free as possible for the broadest public
use, & free from likelihood of litigation or rights in dispute, to
discourage the Gov't in assuming control or in holding and making
developments later.
I have had a great deal of hard work to do to bring things to so
favorable a point. & death or accident - even premature publica.
tion of intention in the papers I might lose us what may else be now
looked on as at least for upon the way to accomplishment. And I
have got powerful support enlisted here I do not want to lose by
waiting. Hence the more repidly we can move the better
The
Gov't will probably take considerable time when the papers reach it
also, & the matter should be concluded as early in the Spring as
possible, when I can get the papers to take it up while people are
again becoming interested in country life & nature.
Three of my Nat. Geographic Articles are now done & accepted,
and the illustrations - some 18 in all - chosen. And Dr. Eliot is
at
work
on
his.
The series will come out about the first of
June, Deo volente.
And Country Life in America will print another, which it has
asked me to write upon the Gardens of Bar Harbor, at about the same
time , with further illustrations. And
Mr. Grant La Farge -
one
of the leading architects in New York - has offered to write
another yet upon the Arboretum & Wild Garden scheme for the chief
Architectural magazine in the Country. so that, if all goes well in
the meantime, the whole subject should be well & widely placed before
the public. AS it also will be by the mere fact of the Gov't
proclamation of the Monument, if it does proclaim it, as it will be
the first to be established this side of the Rockies and must thus
assure considerable interest & attention.
I have been working rather too hard to get things along while
all seemed so favorable, & have been laid up with a bad cold but
now am better &about again.
I shall return to Boston in a day or two.
Yours sincerely
George B. Dorr
Jan. 27, 1914.
Source 2 "Garden Approaches to the
National lloncoment. Sieur de llonts
Publications XVII:
ditions. It has received the warm approval, not only of the
Secretary of the Interior and National Park Service but,
survey the great triumphs of landscape art in the Old World, the
of architects and gardeners and botanists of international
clearer it becomes to us that those who designed and built and planted
authority and reputation.
them worked with knowledge and in sympathetic understanding of
the natural surroundings and resources, the native flora of the region
Among them all, none has said a better word of hopeful-
and the trees and plants that could be grown in it successfully; that
ness and encouragement regarding it than the writer of the
they were the very antithesis of paper performers, inspired by hazy
letter-written in the earlier stages of the undertaking-with
views derived from the perusal of seductive catalogues.
I have an invincible belief in our need for the completest study of
which this paper closes, Mr. C. Grant LaFarge of New York,
past examples. I shall not rest until we have added a Fellowship
a director of the American Institute of Architects, trustee and
in Landscape Design to our American Academy in Rome. But I also
am sure that the men who are to do great work in this country and
secretary of the American Academy at Rome, an architect of
our vision hardly tells us yet how marvellous it may be - must
wide experience who has made a lifelong study also of our
know. to their fingertips, what this country offers of trees and shrubs
native flora and these garden plants.
and flowers and all growing things, and what may be done with them.
When they know this, and use their knowledge, we shall have Ameri-
GEORGE B. DORR.
can gardens. To acquire this knowledge under present conditions
is well-nigh impossible. The country is too vast; its flora too scattered.
Even the most superb examples of wild growth are but stimulating
Dcar George:-
suggestions, not made available by opportunity for close study and by
certainty of what transplanting, cultivation, care and breeding will
The papers which you have asked me to examine, setting forth the
project for developing a wild-life sanctuary and tree and plant exhibit
accomplish.
Your plan offers all this. If you succeed with it, I SCC all those
and experiment station on Mount Desert Island, seem to me to
who would equip themselves with what their art demands of them
describe a plan of comprehensive and striking interest. You ask me
flocking to it from all quarters of the country. It would be a god-
to tell you what I think of it. It appeals to me on so many sides
send, not only to those who live in approximately similar regions-
that I can hardly deal with them all. As one long concerned with
there is none just like it-but to those others whose lives are cast in
the question of preserving our native fauna in the only effective ways,
far less interesting places, of dull topography and limited flora.
such as game refuges and laws protecting migratory species, there is
can think of no one thing that could be done in America, more greatly
much I should like to say on this phase of the scheme as well as on its
to contribute to and to advance the art and the practice of American
splendid aspect as a permanent great natural pleasure ground for
many people. But these I must pass by to emphasize a specific
landscape design. Good luck to you.)
point which strikes me forcibly, in view of my professional convictions.
Sincerely yours,
Our community is aware but dimly, and in spots, of the tremendous
(Signed) C. GRANT LAFARGE
strides being made in the art of architecture in America. Only those
January 22, 1914.
who, with open minds and trained eyes, contrast the body of our
performance with its current equivalent in the Old World can appre-
ciate it, and realize that it is cause, not for boasting but, for ardent
hope and constantly greater effort. Many forces are at work, among
them none stronger than the rapid and sure elevation and increase of
our educational methods.
Along with our architectural advance must go that of the sister
art of landscape design. There is no need for me to point out to you
the intimacy of the alliance or the urgent necessity that equipment
for the practice of the latter be, both theoretically and practically,
of the fullest.
No constructive art can achieve its full development while those
who practice it think in terms of its expression upon paper, and not
in terms of the materials they have to use. There is only one way
to gain the power to use these materials; that is, to have a close
and comprehensive personal acquaintance with them. The more we
18 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston.
February 9th, 1914.
Mr A. H. Lynam,
Bar Harbor, Maine.
My dear Mr Lynam,
when I was in New York a few days ago I went to see Mr
William H. Bliss with regard to his wife's land on Newport Mountain.
I told him what we were seeking to accomplish, both in regard to
the National Monument and the Trustees Board. He was greatly inter-
ested at the thought of what might be accomplished by the latter,
and asked me to let him have ray papers on the subject to go over
with his wife. I think that SO far as his influence with her extends
we shall get the land, but that he may probably prefer to have it
pass - for the present at least - into the keeping of the Trustees
Board, as giving more definite assurance of control in sympathy
with his adjoining ownership. with reference to this, he suggested
of his own accord making the boundary pass not through the woods
immed lately below the mountain but down below these woods upon the
meadow - far enough off to lead a path along below the cliff in
the open with opportunity for view. This seems to offer an oppor-
tunity important to take if possible and one that it will be wise
not to let wait.
Mr Bliss asked me if I would let him have some map showing in
a general way their property and its relation to the mountain sides
and summit, and also to Professor Brunnow's land and the land he gave
2
draw out - in a diagramatic way / such a map yourself, one that
will enable him to talk the matter over intelligently with his wife.
Just where the line should be drawn upon the meadow I cannot tell
from memory with certainty but should think it ought to lie not far
from the foot of the rising ground which Peach has cultivated and
where he has kept his bigs at different times. One has to get
fairly well off there in order to get the most striking view of
the cliff above the beech trees; but I think the path might best
go part way up the slope of this cultivated rise, with space enough
below for planting out any disfigurement that might be made upon
for
the meadow and eeping manure piles, pig-yards and the like hereafter
at
a distance. will you take such opportunity as you will find
to go and take a look at it and write me word - sending me up a
plan also if you can ?
I do not want to do anything to make Peach conversant with the
matter at this stage, as he would be certain to write to Mrs Bliss
in hindrance of it. Nor would my plan involve disturbing his occu-
hent
pation of this land in a way to lessen present to Mr Bliss.
I
simply want to secure the land for path-development hereafter.
Yours truly,
G.B. Dost
Charles W. Ellot to Hon. Woodrow Wilson
17 Fresh Pond Parkway
Cambridge, Mass.
April 14, 1914.
Dear Mr. President:
May I commend to your friendly attention my friend
Mr. George B. Dorr, of Boston and Bar Harbor, who has in
mind a plan for a National Monument at Mount Desert Island
which seems to me to be of high value, and capable of
effective execution.
I am thoroughly acquainted with Mr. Dorr's plan,
and I am in full sympathy with him as to its merits. No
private person has the least pecuniary interest in it, and
on Mr. Dorr's part it is wholly a work of public spirit.
I am, with high regards,
Sincerely yours,
Charles W. Eliot.
Hon. Woodrow Wilson.
MOUNT DESERT NURSERIES
BAR HARBOR
MAINE
21. May 1914.
Dear Sir.
we have dispred of the Nurseries
branch al North East Harbor to
Mr Kirk who took possession last
Monday The first payment and
the fapers connected with the
transfer are in' the hands of
Messrs teasy and hyman awaiting
a meeting J the Corporation.
Mr Kirk does not propose to occupy
the house rented by you from M.
bandage. will for take up the matte
of the lease with them?
fours truly
A.Y. shatche.
George B. Dorr Easy
18 Commone earth.,Ave:
Boston.
WESTE UNION
Form 2259 B
NIGHT
SETTER
THEO. N. VAIL, PRESIDENT
RECEIVED AT the WESTERN UNION BUILDING, 195 Broadway, N. Y. ALWAYS OPEN
MAY 27TH 1914
I R YP 330 PAID NL
(1)
BAR-HARBOR MAINE MAY 26TH
X1176
DR CHAS W ELLIOTT,
HARVARD CLUB,
NEW YORK
AM SENDING OUT CALL IN YOUR NAME FOR MEETING SUBJECT RESERVATION
TRUSTEES NEXT THURSDAY BAR-HARBOR TO AUTHORIZE DEED AND TRANSFER TO
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT FOUND EVERYTHING FAVORABLE AT WASHINGTON BUT
S6
PROMPT ACTION STRONGLY URGED BY DR PALMER ASSISTANT CHIEF BIOLOGIC
3
SURVEY ON ACCOUNT OF THE PENDING CHANGES IN STAFF AND BECAUSE OF
toothy
IMPORTANT BEARINGS OF OUR UNDERTAKINGS HERE ON OTHER CONSERVATIONAL
WORK. HE APPROVES WARMLY THE PLAN OUTLINED IN MY LETTER TO YOU FOR
APPALACHIAN AND ATLANTIC COAST SYSTEM OF WILD LIFE BIRD AND PLANT
PRESERVES WHICH CARRIED OUT UPON LIBERAL SCALE HE SAYS WOULD HAVE
my
RESULTS AT THIS TIME ESPECIALLY OF INCALCULABLE IMPORTANCE IN A
DIOLOGIC WAY DR COVILLE CHIEF BOTOLIST AGRICULTURAL DEPT AND THE
HIA
2.
WESTE
UNION
Form 2280 b
ANUNION
NIGHT BETTER
THEO. N. VAIL, PRESIDENT
RECEIVED AT the WESTERN UNION BUILDING, 195 Broadway, N.) Y. ALWAYS OPEN
IR YP 330 PAID NL,
(2)
BAR-HARBOR MAINE MAY 26TH 1914
UNITED STATES FORESTERY SERVICE DONT SAY THE SAME AND OFFER
COOPERATION IN DRAWING UP EFFECTIVE PLAN PALMER SAYS WORK ALONG
SIMILAR BROAD LINES LATELY BEGUN IN GERMANY WITH GOVERNMENT
COOPERATION, HE IS ANXIOUS NO DELAY MOUNTDESERT SCHEME HOWEVER AS
INFLUENCE OF SUCH ACTION GREATLY NEEDED NOW IN VIEW OF OPPORTUNITY
1914
IMPORTANT TO SECURE ELSEWHERE EDITOR NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC ASKED ME
July
AS YOU HAD PREVIOUSLY IF 1 COULD OUTLINE PLAN FOR UNDERTAKING OF
NATIONAL- SCOPE WHICH OURS HERE WOULD ILLUSTRATE AND MAKE PART OF
I SHOWED HIM COPY LETTER TO YOU WHICH HE APPROVED WARMINGLY AND
WISHES TO PUBLISH ALONG WITH YOURS MINE FERNALDS AND FORBUSHS IN
JULY ISSUE MAGAZINE TO SHOW NATIONAL CHARACTER OF AIMS WE ARE
PURSUING HERE I HAVE AGREED IF YOU APPROVE I TELEPHONED YOU REGARDING
CALL FOR MEETING MRS ELLIOTT ANSWERED MY STENOGRAPHER SENT YOU BY
3.
WESTER UNION
Form 2289 B
RUNION
NIGHT BETTER
(3)
THEO. N. VAIL, PRESIDENT
RECEIVED AT the WESTERN UNION BUILDING, 195 Broadway, N.) Y. ALWAYS OPEN
IR YP 330 PAID NL
BAR-HARBOR MAINE MAY 26TH 1914
MESSENGER MAY TWENTY FIRST COPY LETTER REFERRED TO ALREADY READ
BY YOU COPIES OF THE PAPER REFERRED TO IN MARGIN OF LETTER BY
WALLACE AND OTHERS SENT TO YOUR HOUSE THIS AFTERNOON BUT CAME AFTER
YOU HAD LEFT MRS ELLIOT SAYS MY TRIP TO WASHINGTON PREVENTED EARLIER
SENDING GOVERNOR CONSIDERS YOUR PAPER A MOVING AND EFFECTIVE STATEMENT
AND HE AND PALMER BOTH THINK THE JULY ISSUE GROUP SUPPORTED BY OUR
ACTION HERE WILL EXERT STRONG INFLUENCE,
GEO B DORR,
452 AM MAY 27TH
the
Cambridge, Case.
June 1, 1914.
Dear Mr. Dorr:
ct
1 have sent to Jerome D. Greene your
abbreviated statement called "What I Propose, 11 the map
of the project, all the abbreviated citations from other
authors that you have sont ne, with the list thereof
which you provided. All the articles on the list were
included. To-day I have received from you the article
entitled "The Treatment of Readsides;" and I have read
it with much satisfaction. It reminds me of sentimente
which Charles entertained. Did you mean INC to include
this article with the papers I have forwarded to Hr.
Greene? If so, I have failed to accomplish your pur-
pose; and you had better mail this paper to him.
The enclosed list of persons and societies
was among the papers I received from you; but 1 did not
find it alluded to in any of then; so I return it to you.
I found also the enclosed sheet which seens to relate to
PHIN
come different matter.
Sincerely yours,
George B. Borr, Psq.
Appleton Papers., TTOR. B.6.f.19.
Appleton letter (June 5, 1914) to George F. Peabody.
Describing the history of solicitation in a letter explaining why the subscription funds
were being returned, Appleton states that:
"The Boston part of [Dorr's] Committee seems to have dissolved early, leaving only Mr.
George B. Dorr. He and I did everything we could think of to push the matter along and
even guaranteed the $50,000 [of the $200,000 estimated cost] which we supposed was
the only condition necessary. There was opposition at the various hearings before the
City of Cambridge Council
the project became politically impossible."
In a similar letter explaining why politics "spoiled thee whole thing," (July 15, 1914) to
Francis Shaw, Appleton identifies the "Roman Catholic Hierarchy" as among the
opponents.
26 East 37th Street,
New York, July 15, 1914.
Francis Shaw, Esq.,
Wayland, Mass.
Dear Frank:
The further explanation of the enclosed check is
that ten or twelve years ago you subscribed $1.00.00 toward
the cost of building a boulevard approach to the Harvard yard
from the Charles River Parkway. You were assured at the
time that the City of Cambridge would build such a parkway
GTDP
at a cost of about $200,000.00, provided Harvard on would
assume one-quarter of the cost.
George Dorr and I at once
guaranteed $50,000.00 and did all that we could to put the
thing through. Some opposition developed among property
holders. I thought it a strike at the time, although the
Roman Catholic Hierarchy were the persons involved. At any
rate, the thing became politically impossible. I have held the
money for 3. long time and feel that now there is nothing for
me to do but to consider the project abandoned and return the
subscriptions.
The accumulated interest amounts to 61,866%. It is
a disappointment that this fine approach to the yerd could not
have been accomplished but the loss of it will not be so much
felt in the future since in the meantime the large property has
been bought and is held for the college benefit/between the
river and Mt. Auburn Street, a portion of which is already
utilized for the Freshmen Dormitories. This property, when it
finally comes into the college hands, will give an opportunity
for some sort of a driveway through the grounds from the river
to Mt. Auburn Street and then a further approach to the yard
through Linden Street, which, by reason of the controlled
borders may become a sort of private way.
HRA
If anyone should feel disposed to give money to the
Riverside trustees, the owners of that property, which is to
be the second college yard, would be happy to receive it and
apply it toward development of the property for appearance
sake.
2
Recently the Freshmen Dormitories have been built on this
land.
In due time the remaining portion of the land now
covered with houses and buildings will come into possession
of the college and be formed into another college yard.
Through this new yard bordered on the riverside by the Fresh-
men Dormitories an opportunity will exist for a driveway
through to Mt. Auburn St. and from Mt. Auburn St. a contin-
uation to the old yard via Linden Street, which later be-
ing controlled on either side by college interests, may be-
come in effect a private way. Thus, although the public
plan has been abandoned something similar may be looked for
in time through the college property when the means are pro-
vided.
Should any of the subscribers whose money is now
returned care to send back the whole or part to the Riverside
Trustees of which I am one, the holders of the title to the
new yard property such sun will be used to devel op as above
set out in their discretion.
The college I am informed is now seeking from its
own resources means to clear of existing tenements a small
tract immediately behind the new Freshmen Dormitories in or-
der to give more suitable surroundingsto these fine build-
ings.
Very truly yours,
[F. R. Appleton, Jr.]
Mount Desert Islander
8/18/2005
SECTION 1
PAGE 9
Rockefeller generosity built Acadia
Editor's Note: The following
much of their time and money
is the third of a four-part series
to make Acadia National Park a
about Acadia National Park's
It was
unique and beautiful place. The
founding fathers.
trustees began acquiring prop
By Paul S. Richardson
only fitting
erty that eventually became Aca-
dia National Park.
John D. Rockefeller, Jr. was
that Mr. Rockefeller was
In 1915, the automobile ban
born Jan, 29, 1874 in Cleveland,
on Mount Desert Island was
Ohio the fifth child and only
able to see the fruition
lifted. This encouraged Mr.
son of Baptist parents. From his
father he learned a love of the
of his dream of
Rockefeller to build a system of
carriage roads away from the
outdoors and the skill of build-
26.2 miles of motor roads
noisy smoking belching autos.
ing roads. He believed that na
It was Mr. Rockefeller who envi-
ture is evidence of God. He
from mountaintop to the ocean
sioned and built the 57 miles of
loved riding and driving horses
carriage roads between 1913 and
and was reported to be an ac-
and 57 miles of
1940. With cars now permitted
complished driver of a four-in-
on the island, he realized that a
hand.
beautiful carriage roads and bridges
system of motor roads would
In 1908 John D. Rockefeller,
also be needed. The Jordan Pond
Jr. and his family summered in
before he died in 1960
Eagle Lake Road, which he
Bar Harbor so his wife Abby
at the age of 86.
built, established the standards
(Aldrich) could be near her doc-
for road design and quality of
tor, who was summering in Blue
work which have made the
Hill. Their third child, Nelson
park's motor roads so beautiful.
Aldrich Rockefeller, later to be
In 1947, before all the motor
the second vice-president of the
With the completion of his
training in the West. However,
roads were completed, he saw
United States born in Maine,
cottage, and having bought ad
in 1921 Paul Simpson had to re
the destruction caused by the
was delivered on Aug 8 in Bar
ditional land around Little Long
place his father when the elder
great forest fire and contributed
Harbor. In all, the couple had
Pond, Mr. Rockefeller began
Simpson became ill. Mr. Rocke
funds and crews for the cleanup
SIX children. Along with Nelson
building carriage roads on his
feller walked all the road sites
and to maintain all the carriage
they had a daughter, Abby, and
property. in 1913. The first car
with the Simpsons and knew all
roads on park lands.
sons John III, Laurance,
riage road began at the entrance
the station points on every plan.
It was only fitting that Mr.
Winthrop and David.
to the Rockefeller property, fol-
He greatly influenced the degree
Rockefeller was able to see the
The Rockefellers returned to
lowed the eastern side of Barr
of the grades, the style of the
fruition of his dreams of 26.2
the island for the next two sum
Hill and continued south along
granite coping stones, the cre
miles of motor roads
from
mers, renting houses at Seal
Little Long Pond. The roadwork
ation of views and the natural
mountain top to the ocean
Harbor, a quiet village away
was done by road contractors
appearance of the roads. The ex
and 57 miles of beautiful car-
from the many social activities
Alanson E. Clement and
traordinary capabilities he dis-
riage roads and bridges before
of Bar Harbor. In 1910 they
Chauncey D. Joy and was com
played in the design and execu-
he died in 1960 at the age of 86.
bought Samuel Fessenden
pleted in June 1914 at a cost of
tion of the carriage road system
No other man has given so
Clark's house, "The Eyrie, with
$14,321.40 (This amount would
earned him an honorary mem-
much for SQ many people as this
150 acres on Barr Hill for
be equivalent to $176,440 in
bership in the American Society
quiet man with his love of na-
$26,000. The Eyrie originally
1988, according to the Bureau of
of Landscape Architects.
ture's beauty.
had 65 rooms; after several years
Labor Statistics.)
In September 1914, Mr. Rock
Reporter LaRue Spiker wrote
of remodeling and expansion, it
In the early days of building
efeller received George B. Dorr's
in The Ellsworth American on
contained 107 rooms, 44 fire
carriage roads it appears that
letter introducing himself and
July 20 1978: The Eyrie, famed
places and 22 bathrooms.
Mr. Rockefeller was in charge of
his activities with the Hancock
summer residence of the late
Also in 1910, John D Rocke
all the layouts for the roads, As
County Trustees of Public
John D. Rockefeller, Jr. is gone
feller, Jr. made what he called
he began to conceive other
Reservations, He indicated that
from the Seal Harbor scene, but
one of the most important de-
roads, he realized he would need
President Eliot, a mutual friend,
the thumbprint of its owner will
cisions of my life." He decided to
help with the design and surveys
had told him of Mr. Rocke-
remain on Mount Desert Island
give up his day-to-day. business
in order to keep ahead of the
feller's interest in protecting and
for a long time to come.
ROCKEFELLER FAMILY ARCHIVES
management and become a phil-
road crews. In 1916 he was for
developing land for public use.
anthropist. He realized that his
tunate to hire Charles P. Simp
This was the beginning of a long
Writer Paul S. Richardson is a
National Park and to
great wealth should be directed
son from Sullivan who was an
and lasting relationship between
local historian and resident of
ge roads.
to worthy projects.
expert engineer from years of
two great men who gave so
Otter Creek.
DAVE H. MORRIS
19 EAST 70 IN STREET
NEW YORK
October 5th, 1914.
My dear Dorr:-
I have been to see Henry B. Anderson, attorney for
the estate of George W. Vanderbilt, and have talked over with him
the Building of Arts matters. Everybody concerned is anxious to
help along the Building of Arts, and the only reason why the trustees
of the estate are unable to donate the three one thousand dollar
bonds of the Building of Arts and to pay one fifth of the $20,000.
note endorsed by George Vanderbilt for the Building of Arts, making
one transaction hinge on the other, is that it would be illegal
to do so. The two transactions are entirely separate, and by no
twist of logic can they be connected because the parties of the re-
spective transactions are different. In the case of the bonds,
you have the trustees with a minor infant on the one side, and the
Building of Arts on the other side. Whereas in the case of the
note, you have the five endorsers on the one side, and the Bar Harbor
Banking & Trust Co. on the other side.
It seems that the total amount of the first mortgage
bonds is $15,000., and Anderson asked me whether the Building of
Arts, together with the real estate, was not worth that sum. As
I think it is worth that amount, I had to answer yes. Therefore,
these first mo rtgage bonds, in my opinion, are worth par. As the
owner of these bonds, Cornelia Vanderbilt, is a minor only fourteen
-2-
years old, she cannot donate these bonds to the corporation, nor
can the trustees on her behalf do so, nor can the court appoint
any
one to do SO for her. The only thing the trustees can do
on behalf of the estate is to sell those bonds for their market
value.
I assume that Mr. William K. Vanderbilt might be induced
to purchase these bonds at their market value and donate them to
the Building of Arts Association if it can be shown to his satis-
faction that his brother George W. Vanderbilt promised to you,
as the president of the Building of Arts Association, that he in-
tended to make a gift of these bonds with the coupons attached
to the Association, and that his death prevented him from carrying
out his intention.
I have always understood that when Mr. George Vander-
bilt received these three one thousand dollar bonds for the money
he loaned the Building of Arts Association, that he always con-
sidered the loan in the nature of a gift, and my belief is re-
enforced by the fact that he never cut any of the coupons on the
bonds, but I am unable to make a more positive statement to the
trustees, SO unless you can make a positive statement of your own
knowledge or get some one else to make such a statement, the trus-
tees will be placed in an awkward situation. I believe that Mrs.
George Vanderbilt never even knew of the existence of these three
bonds, and therefor has no information in regard to the transaction.
I understand the trustees are perfectly willing to pay the
$4000. on the note SO as to be relieved from further liability,
but as stated before, this payment is entirely an independent trans-
-3-
action and cannot be hooked up with the other one.
As some of the other owners of the remaining bonds
may die and thereby create a similar situation to the one we
now have on hand, might it not be advisable to get them all to
donate and hand in the remaining bonds as soon as possible so
that there may be no further uncertainty and the transaction
finally cleaned up.
With kindest regards,
Yours as ever,
George B. Dorr, Esq.,
Commonwealth Ave.,
Boston, Mass/.
AN JOURNAL OF SCIENCE.
NEW HAVEN, CONN., October 12th,1914.
Mr. John D. Rockefeller, Jr.,
New York City.
My dear Mr. Rockefeller:
The quiet and refreshing
life of Seal Harbor seems rather far off now that we are back again
in town, with all the burden of obligations, the noise and hurry,
and everything else that that involves. I do not, however, wish
to have the season close without expressing to you the appreciation
which I have of all that you have done to make our part of Mt.
Desert 80 permanently attractive for those of us who are fortunate
enough to have our summer homes there. It is a great satisfaction
to be able to think of that fine area of woods and hills between
Barr Hill and Jordan Pond as owned by you, and that it will be
developed not commercially, but with an eye to the natural beauties
in which it is so rich. The acquirement of the Beech Hill prop-
erty, of which Mr. Stebbins has told me, is another step which
means a great deal to all the lovers of nature on the Island, and
it is certainly a most broadminded and generous thing for you to
secure this wonderfully attractive spot before it has been taken
possession of by others who might injure its scenic beauty, or
place obstacles in the way of its enjoyment by the summer residents
on the Island.
The new Barr Hill road, which we owe to you, is one of the
great attractions about Seal Harbor, and this will be still more
the case when the work now projected, carrying it on to Jordan Pond,
CAN JOURNAL OF SCIENCE.
NEW HAVEN, CONN.
is complete. I went over the road early in the season, and again
a couple of months later, and was interested to see with what
judgment you had cut out the unimportant trees so as to give a
succession of rarely beautiful views, and also allow the fine
pines on the eastern slope to gain their best development.
We are fortunate in that you personally take BO keen an interest
in this particular kind of outdoor work, and are able to study it
from the standpoint of one to whom the natural beauties are the
prime element.
Personally, as you know, I am one of the oldest of the com-
paratively recent comers to Seal Harbor, and it has been very in
teresting to watch its development since 1895. The fact that a
year or two previous, Mr. Cooksey had acquired so much property,
and that the treatment of this fell into the hands of Mr. Stebbins
and some of the other gentlemen of the Cooksey connection, who had
the same interests, has resulted in giving the place as a whole
a character which I am sure is not possessed by any other summer
resort
in
the country. It is a great refreshment to those of us
who have thrown in our lot with the place to spend our free time
in the summer under conditions of scenery and climate which are
BC delightful.
In the hope that the winter may pass peacefully with you all,
and that another summer may find us once more in Seal Harbor,
I am
Very sincerely yours,
[Edward Salisbury Dana]
ber of Boston Authors' Club. Among his recent publications are:
"The Pilgrims and Other Poems," 1907: "A Teacher of Dante,"
1907: and "Peace and Progress," 1904. His translations include
"Anna Karenina" and other works of Count Tolstoi, and novels
by Valdes, Verga, Von Scheffel, Daudet, and Von Koch, and num-
*LO
erous volumes, of which the best known is the so-called multi-
BOR
variorum edition of the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam, in two
and
volumes. Resides at "Hedgecote," Jamaica Plain (Boston), Mass.
MAH
and has a summer home, "The Moorings," at Ogunquit, Me.
CHD
GEORGE BUCKNAM DORR.
BORN in Jamaica Plain (now Boston), Mass., December 29, 1853.
DIE
Son of Charles H. and Mary Gray (Ward) Dorr.
In Europe five years, spent in study and travel. Continued
his studies as a graduate student at Harvard and elsewhere sev
*W
eral years. Travelled again in Europe and visited Greece, Egypt,
BOR
and the Holy Land. Has given much attention to the study of
Emi
plant-life and to landscape gardening at his summer home at
DIE
Bar Harbor, Mt. Desert, Me. Member of Somerset and Tavern
Clubs of Boston. Resides at 18 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston.
JO
JAMES DWIGHT.
BOR
BORN in Paris, France, July 14, 1852. Son of Thomas (Harvard,
(Ha
1827) and Mary Collins (Warren) Dwight.
MA
MARRIED January 12, 1887, in Boston, Mass., to Elizabeth Iasigi.
CH
CHILDREN: Dorothy, b. July 15, 1888.
B
Alfred Warren, b. July 28, 1889, d. May 4, 1893.
Ma
Ruth, b. January 18, 1891.
M.
Philip Joseph, b. March 16, 1892.
Elizabeth, b. February 24, 1894.
Bos
Richard Warren, b. April 30, 1903.
Harvard of Medical School, receiving degree of M.D., June 25,
Mass. Practiced 1879. Relinquished medicine Hospital in one Nahant, year.
House physician at Boston Lying-in
for a while in Boston, and in summer
the active practice of medicine some years
and publisher of two books. President of United States Lawn
ago. In 1881-83 prominent in lawn tennis matters as a player,
Bo
Tennis Association, 1901-12. Member of Somerset Club of
An
M
[ 32 ]
1
five enemy
ATHLETIC FIELD TO BE MADE PUBLIC TAKK
overy was
Saturda
sk penalty
romise
defense
Gift Of Mrs. J. S. Kennedy This Week Makes Possible Best
Real
offen.
red early
of first
Park In State-Plans Being Made For Rest Room
pick up
town, the YMCA and YWCA are
meeting in 1913. At the lower
to match
October 3, 1914
Pomroy
George B. Donr, Erneabo G. Fab-
end of what - formerty School
The best public park for Ber
bm, Augustus Thorndike, Charles
street,
the
road
now
swung
hreat came
Harbor, or any city ON town of
F. Paine, Guy E. Torrey, A. S.
off bo the right, making the turn
Bar Har-
its size in the state, a public rest
Rodick, and A. H. Lynam. The
into Cromwell Marbor road in this
Niche
off follow-
room with all accessories, and
bown will have the use of the
direction more essay and not
der Vie
nd TD and
shaded walks leading out from it
park given in trust with the stir
around a sharp angle former-
First
he yerdage.
to all the mountain paths is made
pubation of keeping it in good
ly.
Harbor
n Cameron
possible by the gift of
condition for a public park.
Grossing Oromwell Harbor
al, Ber
first downs
Mrs. John S. Kennedy, Hour Hur-
It in the plan of Mrs. Kennedy
road, the Gorge road will be
Riche
d it looked
bor's beneficent summer rem-
and the board of trustees to deed
constructed across the pro-
Lawren
headed for
dent, who has thin werk conferr-
over at once the hand that is now
panty of Mr. Dorr parallel
Harbor.
aimed an
ed to trustees for the perpetual
occupied by the YMCA and
and at some little distance to the
Josep
but new his
public user the athletic field,
YWCA tennis counts to them res-
right of the brook intersecting
tin M.
e end zone
so-ralled, including the YMCA
pective unsociations By the
what is now known as Ledge-
Berti
let, and the
and the YWCA tennis courts,
changing of the position of one
dawn extension and continuing
G. Sau
ver.
comprising in all more than m x
of the courts it will be possible.- to
on as the Gorge road, this name
Leabe
reached
acres of bund.
put in two in its place, thus giv-
being given the section of the ex-
in the third
Young,
This handsome gift of Mrs.
ink two courts to essets of the are
tension below the point of inter-
d off right
John
Kennedy's, donor of the brauti-
sociations.
section. The upper section of the
nd galloped
ful new YWCA building. which
extension will become a part of
Young
At the end of the strip north of
pushed out
last year belonged to the Mount
the interneting road other than
Ledgelawn avenue proper. This
Char
lucksport 2
Desert Transit Company. in which
that occupied by the tennis
road across Mr. Dorr's property
Bar H
llowed with
the late Mr. Kennedy was a share
court. it is the plan of the trus-
has already been laid out and ac-
Harbor
the TI)
holder. was given over to the
in interest the town in the
cepted by the town. Mr Dorr
Vera
tackle for
trustees as soon as Mrs. Kennedy
burding bungalow for
kindly the right of way
Associa
score now
had acquired the sole right to the
athletic teams tn keep their togs.
From this as a starting point.
Geor
11 minutes
property.
for is rest room for visitors in shaded walks will lead out to all
sociate
The trustees who hold the
In. supplied with lavora
the mountain paths The one on
product
I
property to the deeded over is the
times and all accessories. and to Main street will lead out : lo-
arly in the
Williar
REGIONAL SCHOOL
have stationed there during the wer Main, and a new path to be
Desert
qualifies
instructed along the lower end
nitutes mid-
Continued from Page
Pau
tter Mean-
rive information i., touria's as : of the park u follow the course
Sawtelle.
of
Northeast
Harbor the wall pleasure of the Gorge road below rom-
1. Me
Lon
por wall act as implementation
Millings
they
well Harbor road will give a
more
may wish to know about the
chairman.
walk to paths in that sec-
Catalano,
too loose: to
Refreshments were served at
tion. Shaded walks also lead
t the
the conclusion of business activi-
Work has already been done to
along both sides of Park road
L White,
of
issue the park one of the most
ties by hostesses Ann Avery, He-
which has been extended over to
Lovia R. c
d his
len Bunker, and Elizabeth Wood-
beautiful in in seen anywhere
Glen Mary park, giving that park
Huston, iren
mith
under the direction of George B.
worth.
distinction. These walks will
from
Dorr, who has always had the
SEAL HARE
circle up to where the children's
will
best interests of Bar Harbor at
DRIVE SAFELY
shelter house in Glen Mary Park
er of
heart and who has done so much
PREVENT ACCIDENTS
is now to be placed.
bowling
toward beautifying this natur-
contact M
ally beautiful resort. The whole
park has been set out with borde-
(NOTE: Due to the warm
Allow an
ring trees which will make a
public response to the special 50th
safety,
shaded walk around it. There is
anniversary section in the July
way Safety
already a walk on the Main St.
9, Bar Harbor Times, we have
ing too
side, and the same on Park road,
decided to follow the pattern of
of accidents.
under which Livingston exten-
that section and occasionally
sion will from now on be known.
publish stories of local historical
Courtesy to
At the lower end of the field is
interest copied from the pages of
vitally import
the grove of pines. On the west-
the Times and former MDI news.
Highway Safe
only side of the park have been
papers. The story above appeared
cautious dri
set out three rows of ash trees
in the October 3, 1914 Times.)
pedestrians ti
30 feet apart which will form a
double mall in which will be
placed sottees.
The lower end of School St. has
been widened to 50 feet opposite
the park, and from now on this
motion will be known as Gorge
road, the right to change names
of both this and Livingston ex-
tension having been given to Mr.
Dorr by the town at its annual
pictured above rolled, without a driver
parking space near the Harbor View
gon bus, crashed through the railing
Vincent A. Craig
d came to rest upside down near the
PIANO TUNER
mpany. The auto belonged to a visitor
Bangor 942-9195
re injured.
Call Mrs. Pearl Wescott
s called to the accident by Oliver Spear
Bar Harbor 288-3105
th of Bar Harbor.
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1913-14
Page | Type | Title | Date | Source | Other notes |
1 | File folder | Folder contents. 1913: Maine legislative effort to revoke HCTPR status; Homans Property; Seal Harbor VIS report; Charles Simpson begins work for JDR Jr; H.W. Smyth poem about automobiles on MDI; Katahdin Forest Preserve Bill for N.P. status Three years before SMM; flora of MDI by Johnson; First Public Announcement of Plato Form ANP; Establishment of Seal Harbor Realty Co. 1914: Charles W. Eliot; MDIBL founding; map; publicaton promoting establishment of LNP; Dana letter to Jr. of appreciation for Seal Harbor deed; GBD's work on two trails, letter from CWEliot to Jr.; Character defining trails; Hadley's 11 page rejoinder to C.W. Eliot II "boundaries of ANP," incl. Jr's involvement beginning in 1914; Eliot to Houston re qual of GBD to advocate Mt. Desert NP; Eliot to Pres Wilson commending GBD and plan for SMM ; death of John Muir; Death of S.W. Mitchell | No date | Compiled by Ronald Epp | |
2-3 | Textbook manuscript | Acadia National Park:its origin and background | 1942 | George B. Dorr | |
4 | Title page | Reports, Consitution, By-laws and List of Members of Century Association | 1918 | University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign | GBD in 1913; Annotated by Ronald Epp |
5-8 | Letter | Letter George B. Dorr from Fred C. Lynam re:Athletic Field and adjacent property | January 6, 1913 | Chapman Archive. f.1926. [Dorr Foundation] | |
9 | Newspaper article | The Mt. Katadin Reservation by George B. Dorr | January 29, 1913 | Boston Herald and reprinted in The Bar Harbor Record | Annnotated by Ronald Epp |
10-12 | Public announcement | The Plan to Form a National Park upon Mt. Desert Island | 1913 | taken from the Eighteenth Annual Report of the American Scenic and Historic Preservation Society New York; ANPL Library Vertical File | |
13-14 | Letter | Letter to Mr. Houston from Charles W. Eliot re: Dorr character | March 13, 1913 | JML 1, f.5 | |
15-16 | Letter | Letter to Mr. Higginson from George B. Dorr re: Ward papers | March 15th, 1913 | MHS. T.W.Ward papers.B8.F5 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
17-18 | Profile | Biographical information on Charles P. Simpson | No date | RAC.Simpson Family. IV.3A.10.8.1 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
19-23 | Website | Acadia National Park Motor Roads | No date;accessed 6/10/2002 | http://memory.loc.gov. Library of Congress | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
24-30 | Series publication | Sieur de Monts publication: Man and Nature by George B. Dorr | 1913 | ANPA B6.F6.2 | |
31-32 | Manuscript draft | Homans Property | 1913 | ANPA B2.F9.2 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
33-34 | Meeting report | Bar Harbor Water Company committee report | March 1915 | Chapman Archive. JDR JR. Papers. B.143.D4 | |
35-36 | Textbook manuscript | Katahdin and Forestry in Maine | 2002 | Neil Rolde. Interrupted Forest. Tilbury House, 2002 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
37-40 | Letter | Letter to W.H.L. Lee from Fred C. Lynam re: Bar Harbor Water Company and Eagle Lake watershed | May 2, 1913 | Chapman Archives. JDR Jr. Papers. B.143.D4 | |
41 | Poem | "Automobiles" by Herbert Weir Smyth | August 23, 1913 | NHLA 300th Anniversary of Discovery + Naming of MDI; originally published in Bar Harbor Life | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
42 | Letter | Letter to George B. Dorr from R.W. Hale | October 27, 1913 | Chapman Archive. JDR Jr. Papers. B.143.R3 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
43-46 | Manuscript excerpt | Natural History of MDI as published in Boston Society of Natual History,Charles W.Johnson (curator) | Dec. 26, 1913 | Dorr Papers.B2.F5 | |
47-48 | Website | Charles Willison Johnson biographical information | 10/13/21 | wikipedia.org | |
49-52 | Blog | Cross on Flying Mountain | October 22, 2014 | Memorials of Acadia National Park, Donald Lenahan | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
53-59 | Report | Paper upon need of public reservations in the East, by George B. Dorr | c.1913 | Dorr Papers. B2.F1 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
60 | Date page | 1914 | Ronald Epp | ||
61-62 | Newspaper article | Life and death of Dr. S.Weir Mitchell | Jan. 5, 1914 | New York Times. Proquest. | |
63 | Committee report | Dr. S.Weir Mitchell | 1914 | B.H.V.I.A. Minutes. Jesup Memorial Library | |
64-67 | Letter | Letter to Mr. Lynam from George B. Dorr re: property deeds and surveys | Jan. 27, 1914 | Chapman Archive. File 2063.HCTPR | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
68 | Publication excerpt | Development of a wild-life sanctuary and tree and plant exhibit on Mount Desert Island | January 22, 1914 | Garden Approaches to the National Monument. Sieur de Monts Publications XVII | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
69-70 | Letter | Letter to Mr. Lynam from George B. Dorr re: Bliss land on Newport Mountain | February 9th, 1914 | Chapman Papers. JDR Jr. Papers. B.142 | |
71 | Letter | Letter to President Woodrow Wilson from Charles W. Eliot, commending George B. Dorr | April 14, 1914 | JML 1, f5 | |
72 | Letter | Letter to George B. Dorr from A.E.Thatcher re: Nurseries in Northeast Harbor | 21 May 1914 | Chapman Papers. JDR JR.Files. B143. D7 | |
73-75 | Telegram | To Charles W. Eliot from George B. Dorr re:plan for Federal Government | May 27th, 1914 | HUA. C.W.Eliot Papers. B.95 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
76 | Letter | Letter to George B. Dorr re: map and proposal of project | June 1, 1914 | HUA.CWEliot Papers. B95 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
77 | Notes | Appleton letter and papers | No date | Ronald Epp; Appleton letter dated June 5, 1914 | |
78-79 | Letter | Letter to Francis Shaw from F.R. Appleton, Jr. re: Harvard Yard approach | July 15, 1914 | Appleton Papers. B.6.f19 | Annotated by Ronald Epp |
80 | Newspaper article | "Rockefeller generosity built Acadia" | August 18, 2005 | Mount Desert Islander. Paul S.Richardson | 1 of 4 part series on Acadia Founding Fathers |
81-83 | Letter | Letter to George B. Dorr from Daniel Morris re: Building of the Arts | October 5th, 1914 | Chapman Papers. JDR JR. B143.D4 | |
84-85 | Letter | Letter to Mr. Rockefeller from Edward Salisbury Dana re: acquisition of MDI properties | October 12th, 1914 | RAC III.1.II.77.783.c2.Dana | |
86 | Class Notes | Biographical record of George Bucknam Dorr | 1914 | HUA.Class of 1874.10th Report 1914 | |
87-88 | Newspaper article | Athletic Field bcomes public park | October 3, 1914 | Newspaper not referenced |
Details
1913 - 1914