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

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Metadata
1921-22
Don'Timeline
1921
2/17/07
1922
Charle, W. Eliot
-
Dorr H.Eno represents the
- S.Mather & A.Commerce visit
wild Gardees of Acade Assoc.
t Meet in Princeton c Harpswell
LNP, stay at old Farm Arno
reviews JDRJr. Plan
hab. Trustees
- LNP Annual Ppt 1921 (9/12)
- -Schoodic Acquisition Begins.
MODB t bridle pattal Cadellow,
See 1928 for Finality.
education publication, hail system
- 6BD to Jr. re motor noal 10/14/22
at ZNP
-LNP" Consolidation: New Phase
- Lynamletter to fr. (2/26) u
letter CBD JORFr. 9/12/22
property acg., including Dow
-JORJr. on Art and Nature 5/26/22
working Relationship.
inspecting properties.
-Seventeen properties boyer
-June 23 visit h Conner
by 6BD in eay 1971 Listing
1 re JDRJr. (5/21/22) letter
-MOIBL MDI. 29th Report.
-Annual Rpt. 1922 instruction
-Davi Lorn letter to u Dakgree
to reduce to 1 page (8000 words)
(MDIBR) referry to 6B0 (916/21)
(5/12/22)
-SHUIS (1921) engaged in cooperation e
- -Danis salary (12/8)
other VIA'S in exponse to smm LNP.
- GBO to Commerciane Part office
Also intro. of beavers.
- SED to Jr (12/28) re wood cutting
(images) in guest detail
- -Attorney Lynam (7/27) re
forestry standards
Fr to Simpleon (via Foulds 18.117) on
acquisition 2 lates for $9,700 for GBD.
4 stage carriage lond upansion.
- Jr.t Lynam is Bubble Jara
- Diot to 680 (4/21) re transfer of MOTBR
from Harpoverell Suchey Cofe
of Park boundaries. Simpson works
Pend. (1/21). will $ for survey
for Dorr + Jr.
- MOIBL Estableshood BackarJoy bhst-Nates
CBO handwritin letter (7/22)to Commerce
- Dorrs indebledness e. 1920 (7/29)
re mother need for photographer shireld
- Dorr calls Jris road system (8/15/40)
President visit ANP
-CBD to Commerce orrest duts!
the" child of my suggestion. "Dyet
-Dorr Station
culture of
-Letter Commerce (9/14)by Bttrendent
critical of park management
Paul Simpson succeedifoller
- 6B0 to Eaton (6/15) re LNP origins
and publications.
-Begin ningo of Echo take Camp
Appulached 1924
-BHT 7lag Raising(8/9) at Tital
Echo Lake 10 6BD, Chapter
1922
(3/20)
-BHT reprent if Commerar Rpt to
mother M Pach Roads Plan re
Hearings in D.C Anpt Praises 4BD!
-Eliot to Jr. (7/22) he GBD's pracefor Jr.
Is this 1st Eliat entach to Jr.??No'
-Jr. buy (9/8) 25 acres of Charles Clerect
-In to GBD (8/14) he Park Plan le roaddevel.
land From Stebbins through 6BD"
Elist to Dorr (4/21) m Happwell Sedisbory
Core tremster OF MOIBL.
- 7/26 Commerce to CBD approval for
-Elist to Dunham (4(26) r death of
pack road + trait plan.
hicheshood + Est. Dunham lectureling
-Stebbins to Mrs Dunham (4116)on death of
husband; dso Jr. letter (8/30) re " ;
Jr. on Dunham at llemonal Seura BAlso
letter from U. Dahlgren TB. Farrand.
-CBD on Uan'o War Valley t W.D. Lears
and Thorner Lawson. Jone
-Commercial espection Report (1922), plases GBD-
for S.T. Mother
-BHT (3/26/24) in Connerer's Visit in 1922.
-BHT (10(1) erroneas article on auto
Road to top of champlain (sic) ut.
- See Quin HAER let Rd.
essay Also in Cakellae File. Adthnization
Landscape Architecture
A QUARTERLY MAGAZINE
Official Organ of the American Society of Landscape Architects
Vol. XI
JANUARY, 1921
No. 2
"HANDS OFF THE NATIONAL PARKS"
By the late CHARLES P. PUNCHARD, JR.
I
CAN think of no better title for this article than the above which
is borrowed from a recent news bulletin of the National Parks
Association.
These five words should act as a danger signal to every lover of the
National Parks. They should arouse his indignation and patriotism
just as thoroughly as any other signal of warning which might be dis-
played before the public, and particularly at this time when the National
Parks are experiencing at all times of the year a popularity which was
not anticipated for many years to come, and when, nevertheless, they
are functioning under difficulties of lack of funds as never before.
The National Parks were never in more danger than they are at the
present time. Recently there has sprung up an insane desire on the part
of certain individuals commercially to exploit these national recreation
grounds for pecuniary gain, and the astounding part of the situation is
that the promoters of these commercial projects seem to select the most
popular parks and the most interesting scenic spots, or have selected
areas which are favorite haunts for game, some of which is on the point
of extinction, and the preservation and increase of which is vitally
important.
There is not only the question of game and scenery to be considered
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54
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE
in the exploitation of these areas, but also the question of flora, topog-
raphy and other natural physical features which combine to make them
interesting to the student and the tourist.
Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming, ever since its establishment
has been jealously guarded by Congress against such commercial
exploitation, but within the past year a bomb shell has landed in our
midst, in the shape of an irrigation project which contemplates the
taking of a large portion of the southwestern corner of the park for
reservoir sites, and the possibility of the use of the Yellowstone Lake,
Heart Lake, Shoshone Lake and Lewis Lake for additional reservoirs.)
The southwestern corner of Yellowstone Park is the home of the
Yellowstone Moose, a species which is on the point of extinction, and
only its protection by law and the protection of its natural habitats
has succeeded in increasing its numbers slowly but encouragingly, until
at the present time it is possible to see one of these interesting animals
crash through the brush as one travels south from Yellowstone Lake to
the Jackson Hole country.
Heart Lake, Shoshone Lake and Lewis Lake are beautiful bodies of
water, completely surrounded by the typical dense Yellowstone forest
of lodgepole pine.
On the shores of Yellowstone Lake and these smaller lakes are to
be found natural phenomena such as geysers, hot springs and paint
pots equally as interesting and beautiful as the more widely advertised
and more frequently visited specimens on the well-traveled park roads.
Lack of funds has retarded the construction, by the Park Service, of
roads to one or two of these lakes, but such projects are on the programme
of the Superintendent of the Park for future development.
Aside from the loss of scenic areas and wild game caused by their
commercial projects, there is another dangerous aspect to be considered,
which if once established will affect the whole National Parks policy.
This danger is the matter of precedent. Once the wedge has entered
it can be driven home with surprising ease. Unforeseen and possibly
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"HANDS OFF THE NATIONAL PARKS"
55
unlimited similar projects may become established throughout the
National Park system.
Yellowstone National Park is not the only National Park under
fire at the present time. Recently there has developed a project to dam
the waters of the Merced River in Little Yosemite Valley, Yosemite
National Park, California.
The reason given for this undertaking is irrigation, but when the
matter is pressed and the promoters of the project cornered, they admit
that the real reason is power to be sold in the San Joaquin Valley
below.
It will be found on careful examination that the underlying motif
in all projects which contemplate the construction of mountain reser-
voirs, is power. Daily it is becoming more and more apparent, and an
accepted fact, that very little of the water to be retained by the great
Hetch-Hetchy dam will find its way to the watermains in the streets
of San Francisco, but on the contrary will be used to develop power for
use in the San Joaquin and Sacramento Valleys.
Regarding the Yellowstone project, I have recently been informed
that Secretary Payne has taken a very definite and positive stand against
this legislation as dangerous to the whole National Parks system and
policy. This is indeed encouraging news, still it is not the time to drop
this matter, but the time to press it strongly and impress on the minds
of the members of Congress the danger from such projects to these
national playgrounds, and the necessity of forestalling any future
projects.
In some of the National Parks grazing is temporarily permitted in
the more remote regions. During the war as an emergency measure,
other areas were opened to grazing with the result that the following
year similar demands were made for this purpose, the precedent argu-
ment being used in presenting the demands. This has been overcome to
a certain extent, but grazing has not and cannot be eliminated from the
National Parks until all the patented land within them has either been
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56
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE
eliminated by a change of boundary or has been purchased by the
government.
To exclude some of these areas is quite impossible on account of their
location well within the Park, and any alteration of the boundaries
would seriously affect the administrative and scenic conditions.
Grazing in National Parks can do no good. Cattle and sheep soon
strip the small mountain meadows of their limited amount of feed and
constant travel to and from water holes and streams destroys good trails
and roads and also makes many new trails which to the inexperienced,
and persons unfamiliar with the country, are very confusing. Aside
from this the pollution of the streams is to be considered.
A herd of cattle or sheep can cause more destruction to mountain
roads and trails in one season than all the freshets and storms of
a
corresponding period. National Parks must be National Parks or
cattle ranches, they cannot be both
Crater Lake National Park, Oregon, is only beginning to enjoy again
the carpet of wild flowers which grew so profusely at the time the area
was thrown open to sheep grazing.
Repeated attempts have been made by the National Park Service
to obtain money for the purchase of such privately owned lands as are
within the National Parks, but so far Congress has not seen fit to provide
funds for that purpose.
Unfortunately the National Parks have inherited many conditions
which are not agreeable, but it is part of the broad programme of the
administrative officers to correct these conditions as time and money
permit; in the meantime our Parks are visited by persons who are
always ready to criticize on general principles, who do not appreciate
the larger work of organization first and the laying of the foundations
for the finish which will come later, but who blindly select some tem-
porary unimportant detail which can well wait until such time as the
necessities are provided for or at least started.
Of course none of us are infallible, and the best of us are bound to
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"HANDS OFF THE NATIONAL PARKS"
57
make mistakes unless we are miraculously good guessers. But it is
nevertheless exasperating when, after careful study with collected data
from innumerable sources, after a careful balancing of all factors, and
accommodating our work to available funds and local conditions, and
with all these considerations solving our problems as best we can under
the circumstances, we are sometimes rudely confronted by persons who
appear on the scene suddenly, look over our problems hastily and, de-
parting, sum up the situation in words to the effect that we have missed
the opportunity, and this or that should have been done; but at the same
time they carefully and cleverly avoid mentioning any specific and
consistent remedy for the problem or the condition.
The friends of the National Parks should bear in mind more con-
stantly than they always do, the newness of the whole movement and
the difficulties under which the small personnel is now working, and be
sure when they criticize that it is really "constructive criticism."
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE AND THE ONE
HUNDRED FIFTY-TWO NATIONAL FORESTS
By ARTHUR H. CARHART, Landscape Architect
Recreation Engineer, U. S. Forest Service
LA
ANDSCAPE and recreational developments are in a pioneer stage
in the National Forests of our country. These vast public
grounds, more than any other areas, are the last that remain of
unscarred wildness and almost undiscovered natural beauty. In no
other field of professional Handscape architecture is there such an area
of land under one management to be planned. Here is a new and un-
equalled opportunity for development.
The National Forests are situated in twenty-four of the States.
The Forests which are nearest the boundaries of the country are the
lake-land of the million-acre Superior National Forest in Minnesota,
the Chugach and Tongass Forests of Alaska, the Angeles of California,
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Pg. 1 of 7
January 12, 1921.
Dear Mr. Rockefeller:
I delayed answering your letter of recent date concerning
the widening of the Bar Harbor Bridle Paths till I could consult --
the consent and co-operation of the Town being involved -- two members
of the present Selectmen's Board on whose discretion and silence I
knew I could rely: Mr. E. G. Fabbri, who went on the Board with me
six years ago and has remained upon it ever since, and who is now
spending the early winter with his family at Bar Harbor; and Mr. C.
E. Dow, manager of the Mt. Desert Nurseries, who became a member of the
Board last year and possesses to an unusual degree the confidence of
the Town. They have now met and consulted together, and I have an
answer from them, signed by both. In it they express great interest
in yoursuggestion and the possibility opened up by its accompanying
but suggested only -- offer. They approve it as embodying a valuable
extension of the scheme and, with a single limitation which they regard
as essential at the present time, both in operation and for presentation
to the Town, will give it their support and influence as members of the
Board -- which would I think unquestionably result in its adoption.
The recently adopted scheme for a combined Town and Park Bri-
dle Path system starting from the Bay Drive between Bar Harbor and Hull's
Cove and extending across the island, both east and west of Eagle Lake,
to meet with yours - which is what the present plan ultimately contem-
plates -- was not adopted by the Town without encountering considerable
opposition on economic grounds, and Mr. Fabbri and Mr. Dow unite in
2
considering that it would not be wise to approach the Town at the pres-
ent time with a suggestion of widening the entire system and opening
it for driving use, which would raise at once two controversial ques-
tions, construction expense part; one economic: the greater annual
cost involved in the maintenence of a widened way to be maintained in
suitable condition for use by wheeled vehicles; and the other, legal:
whether the Town at the present time actually has the legal right to
exclude motor-driven vehicles from any public way it may maintain.
To meet this last objection - which would, of course, be
fatal if not met in case of widening - there are two methods: First,
to obtain from the State Legislature the legal right for the Town to
lay out and make expenditure upon, as part of its road system, ways re
served for horseback and horse-driving use alone, and to reserve them;
or, second, to lead these horsback and driving roads through sections
of Park or Reservation land, and especially, where possible, to make
them enter through such; as over lands so hold the Town will neither
condomn a way nor make expanditure but truet to national park and con-
tribution funds for construction of such portions, and for their main-
tenance.
The first course, that of obtaining special rights from the
Legislature, has the three objections, (1) of leaving the matter in un-
certainty for at least the next two years, as the State Legislature -
whose meetings are bienniel - is already in session now and the time
for entering new bills will shortly lapse: (2) of arousing opposition
within the Town if understood to carry with it any plan for widening
which would make it physically possible to drive motor vehicles, of any
3
sort, over them, as exclusion of them would mean increase of police ex-
pense - of which the Town is always chary - and not improbable legal
controversy with motorists, disputing the Town's right to keep them
out; and (3) of leading to pressure on the Town from motorists to open
the way, once built, to use by motors.
The second method avoids these difficulties, no one disputing
the right of the National Park to maintain within its bounds whatever
regulations the National Park Service may decide ,while the expense
during the summer months of maintaining a special guardian to insure
observance of the Park Service rules regarding these ways, and to main-
tain the ways own good condition, would lie well within the possibil-
ities of the annual appropriations now granted to the Park.
This plan of obtaining motor vehicle exclusion through the
co-operation of the Park has now already been adopted by the Town in re-
gard to all that portion of its system yet laid out which lies to the
east of the Breakneck road, where lands already held by the Park, or for
its acceptance, have made such an arrangement possible. And Mr. Fab-
bri's and Mr. Dow's suggestion is that your offer be made -- should you
decide to make it - as applying to this portion only of the system at
the present time, leaving that which lies to the westward of the Break-
neck road to be dealt with later, after the proposed widening has been
carried out over this section and after portions of the way beyond, to
the westward, shall have been acquired as park lands, giving opportunity
for the Park's co-operation in securing motor vehicle exclusion and in
providing guardianship for its enforcement. And they ask me also to
convey to you from them, as members of the Board, their warm appreciation
of your generously suggested offer, and sense of the importance of the
4
change which you suggest, taken in conjunction with the intention fi-
nally to connect these ways through the National Park lands with your
present system to the south.
I have been giving you their opinion. My own, which you ask
for, coincides with theirs. To attempt more at the present time than
they suggest would be liable - and likely - to defeat the whole; to
accomplish this, would inevitably lead on to more. I think decidedly
that what you suggest is much to be desired, over all main branches of
the future system, which would then become single and connected ulti-
mataly from your own entrances on the Seal Harbor and Brown's Mountain
roads to the Bay Drive along the Island's northern shore. And it would
make a wonderful system.
I am enclosing a map on which I have marked the intended Bar
Harbor bridle pathe with their southward connections, as now planned
and accepted as a goal to work for.
The northern area, taken right
advantage of, is remarkably adapted to the purpose. The connected
range of Young's and McFarLand's Mountains - abrupt only at the north-
ern end, rising to the height of over 700 feet above the sea, and jut-
ting out far beyond any other northern elevation on the Island -- offers
easy roading to its summits, for bridle path and driving purposes, and
views as fine as from the higher mountains, while the wholearea is nat-
urally well watered and wooded, wild and picturesque. The portion
utilised of the Breakneak road, marked on the map in red as are the
in-
tended bridle paths, while it would still legally remain open to use by
motors, is rerely used by them, owing to the long, steep hill by which
only one can approach it from the Hull's Cove end, and the intention
5
is to widen the connecting portion to ample safety and maintain on it
an ourthy surface suitable for horseback use. The land it loude to on
the south, though not so shown upon the map, liss wholly now within the
Reservation bounds, and Reservation and Park lands stretch thence un-
brokenly southward until they meet the mountains and the mountain passes.
I have marked the northern entrances to the Bar Harbor Bri-
dle Path eyeten as now planned: A, B, and C - with D as a remoter but
contemplated possibility.
At A the system takes its northern start at a turn on the Bay:
Drive nearly opposite the old red-brick Hamor house just north of Hull's
Cove, and follows up thence the valley of Hull's Cove brook, which comes
down from the Breakneak ponds. This valley furnishes the only break,
and offere the only pass, in the long rock well of the northern bluffs
between Bar Harbor and the Norway Drive.
At B a second but subsidiary entrance is obtained at the sum-
mit of the old, practically abandoned, Corkscrew kill road which the
Bay Drive, blasted out at the bluffs' foot along the shore, replaced.
This road - once part of the old stage route from Bangor to Bar Har-
bor -- is nov practically availble from the Hull's Cove end alone, unless
for horseback use, its original northern outlet having been secrificed
to create is site for the Henderson house, built upon its course; but
a steep substitute way, laid out as a winter ico road from Witch Hole
Pond before Bar Harbor took it s ice from Eagle Lake, gives present op"
portunity for bridle path connection with the Duck Brook side. The
land at its summit, where entrance is marked, and for a mile beyond
6
following the outlined course, belonge now to the National Park, being
a gift to it from the Bowler family made last winter after Robert Bow-
ler's death but following his desire.
This tract, a hundred or more
acres in extent, takes in two-thirds of the shore of Witch Hole Pond
and is finely wooded, the woods on it having been cared for and pro-
tected by the Bowler family for nearly forty years.
At 0 connection is again obtained with what is known locally
at Bar Harbor as the New Eagle Lake road but is marked on the more re-
cent mape "The Champlain Road," leading from How's Park with its sur
rounding group of summer residences and various connections with the
town
to
Eagle Lake. This entrance, too, is over land which the Nation
al Park is in process of acquiring as a gift from the Hendersons, from
whom and from Dr. Abba the National Park has now received or is in process
of receiving the whole of Duck Brook ravine from this point down to the
Bay Drive.
With this much explanation, I think what I have outlined on
the map will make all clear to you. What I have marked in red is what
is planned. What is marked both in red and ink the Town now proposes
to develop for bridle path use next summer. What of this last is marked
in ink with a solid line is what Mr. Fabbri and Mr. Dow suggest might
be widened in accordance with your plan; what is marked in ink with a
broken line following the course of a century-old wood road built for
early lumbering -- is what they think it would not be wise to suggest
widening or opening to driving use at the present time.
On this there
is as yet no park-land ownership, and opening it to driving the ques-
tion of expense apart - would bring up inevitably the whole legal
7
question of the Town's right without a special enabling act of Legis-
lature to restrict its use.
Mr. Fabbri, Mr. Dow and I, all feel, however, that if widen-
ing these ways and opening them to driving as well as riding use is
ever to enter into the plan, now is the time to initiate it, before
the Town and public have become accustomed to look on them as bridle
paths alone - taking the opportunity to embody it in the scheme that
this entrance portion offers with its extensive park control.
Mr. Harry Lynam has just met me by appointment on his way
north. I have given him a copy of your letter regarding the Sargent
mountain options and he will take the matter up at once of securing what
you outline in your letter, if he finds it can be done within the lim
its set and that the lands described are sufficient -- of which I find
I
cannot be wholly sure from memory -- to secure the necessary roadway.
If not, he will report to 116 again before taking action.
He will also
get what options he can secure upon the northern side.
The options will be taken in my name, and I will then give
you as paper transferring them or the lands' ownership to you, which
would not be recorded.
Yours sincerely,
[G.B.DorT]
Mr. John D. Rockefeller, Jr.,
26 Broadway,
New York City.
Transcription of typed two-page G.B. Dorr signed document held by Raymond
Strout. Undated: estimated timeframe by R. Strout, 1921-22.
"Lafayette National Park is more, however, than a recreational and historical area.
It forms a magnificent geological movement, and is unique in the opportunity it
offers for preserving and exhibiting in a single tract our northern flora. Lying in
this belt, passing through the Adirondacks and White Mountains, where from the
Great Lakes east the boreal forest descends to meet the Appalachia, the Park with
its ocean-tempered climate and remarkable diversity of landscape form is filled
peculiarly to illustrate within a single tract, readily explored, the vegetation of a far-
extended region, once densely forested.
The sea surrounding it, fed by the Arctic Current, abounds in life rich in forms of
interest to the marine biologist or student of our sea-food resource. And the Great
Atlantic Coast migration route of birds nesting in the North, originating in remote
antiquity, passes by and over it, affording them-as the whole coast did once-safe
resting ground and sanctuary on their way.
Through the long years to come, with their loses and vicissitudes, this Park,
extended to a wider bound, must serve increasingly as a means to conservation and
an opportunity for study, valuable alike to the [knowledge of science] to the artist,
architect, and landscape planner."
3/20/1921
University Club, New York
Dear Mr Rockefeller
I was not able, on account of snow and for other causes, to
get until within the last few days the information I needed from Bar
Harbor relating to the cost of widening the town park joint bridle path
The question concerns at the present time that portion of the
path lying between the Breakneck road, near the ponds, and the old
Corkscrew Hill road This section of the path has, I find, a measured
length of 6554 feet - approximately a mile and a quarter - two thirds
of this, and somewhat more, lies over land belonging to the National
park, given the Government a year ago last winter The rest lies over
land purchased by the town since last November for the purpose of their
path, the town paying for what it tock - which extends also across the
Breakneck road, to the westward, and eastward to the Champlain road, $100
per acre
This town third utilizes an old wood road, whose width - of
7 to 8 feet of open way - establishes the width of the path as originally
intended, unless narrower in special sections At the other end, next
the Corckscrew Hill road, there is at wider road, some seven or eight
hundred feet in length, and built for driving, that would need no further
widening This was built by the owners in the "boom" time. The section
between these two involves new construction, and my intention has been
for the present to construct over it only a narrow bridle path, to con-
nect these wider portions and be widened later. I must limit my ex-
penditures on the park's behalf to $1,000 this year for bridle path con-
struction I may, and doubtless shall, be able to spend more another year
The town has appropriated $3,500 since its meeting in November
for bridle path construction, including surveys and the purchase of land,
some of which was given but for the rest of which it has had to pay at
the rate just stated - $100 per acre, for strips fifty feet in width,
containing the intended path
It has now secured, east and west from this, some miles of
way and stands practically committed to that much development, though
this is probably a beginning only of a more extensive system
The commencement of an extension southward through the Valley
of upper Breackneck pond to connect with the wooded parklands west of
Eagle Lake has also been secured, only three fourths of a mile remain-
ing to complete connection And what I now am aiming at is a main-line
bridle path and driving road extending ultimately from your system in
the south to the Bay Drive and these northern parklands The way lies
open for it
To return to the question of widening and its cost, the land
offers good roading, firm under foot and without visible ledge; with
no steep slopes to be encountered, or other exceptional cause of ex-
pense The land is wooded but the woods are open The chief cost of
widening lies in the fact that most of the portion needing new con-
struction calls for side-hill work, where the expense of a narrow,
single way is little more than on the level but where expense increases
2.
3/20
in a rapid ratio with widening, and the deepening cuts and fills which
it involves There are also a couple of wet hollows to be crossed, at
the head of valleys, but they are not broad
What, upon consideration, seems to me wisest would be to widen
the path across this section the least possible, at the start, to make
driving possible, and to aim at retaining over the whole the essential
character feature of a bridle path although a wide one, open to driving.
This would at once save the principlo, embody it in the under-
taking, and avoid opposition from any who might not wish to see it lose
its dominant bridle path character, or might fear it would.
The time is opportune The two members of the Bar Harbor
Selectman's Board whom you will remember I consulted privately in
December, when you first wrote me on the matter, Mr C E Dow, manager
of the Mt Desert Nurseries and Mr E G Fabbie, both of whom strongly
favor the proposal, have just been reelected on the Board; and Mr Dow
has been made its chairman
The town and park together will expend this year in the
neighborhood of $1500 on this section, in accordance with the original
intention The cost of widening, to adriving width, could hardly,
under the conditions I have outlined, be less than this, using all econ-
onl; and might prove more The work is too new in character, and too
much remains to be worked out as it goes on, to make it possible to
draw up advisedly exact specifications; nor could I contract it out
where the Government does not bear the whole expense, but share it.
On the other hand, the opportunity for the establishment of
a broad policy in the matter is important, in my judgment, and should
not be lost What I would suggest, therefore, is that you should con-
tribute -- if you so incline to do -- whatever sum, not to exceed
$1500. the amount of town's and park's joint expenditure this year on
the same section, you may desire to expend on it this year
I will charge myself with the economic expenditure of the
amount and do with it the best I can to secure the result intended and
establish the principle of a wider way If more than $1500 should, in
the end, prove to be needed, I will also, if still in position to do so,
contribute further toward it, from park funds, another year
I
shall be going down to Bar Harbor in a couple of weeks'
time with reference to the establishment of a marine biological labor-
atory this summer at Salisbury Cove, on the land secured for such
purpose there a few years since, the opportunity to utilize which under
favorable auspices now seems to have arisen And while I am there I
could start work upon the path, as the ground will then be open and the
time favorable for burning brush
Yours sincerely,
(ggd)
George B Dorr
B6.F8.1 ANPA
File 1921
Bulletin of
THE MOUNT DESERT ISLAND BIOLOGICAL
LABORATORY
1937,
(FORMERLY THE HARPSWELL LABORATORY)
MEMBERS
Founded by John Sterling Kingsley in 1898
Howard B. Adelmann, Cornell University
Eli K. Marshall, Jr., Johns Hopkins Uni-
James B. Allison, Rutgers University
versity
OFFICERS
Gerrit Bevelander, New York University
Samuel O. Mast, Johns Hopkins University
Louise DeKoven Bowen, Chicago, Illinois
Roy W. Miner, American Museum
WARREN H. LEWIS
Hermon C. Bumpus, Waban, Massachusetts
Dwight E. Minnich, University of Minne-
Earl O. Butcher, Hamilton College
sota
Carnegie Institution of Washington
Esther F. Byrnes, Philadelphia, Pennsyl-
Stuart Mudd, University of Pennsylvania
President
vania
Frank J. Myers, Ventnor, New Jersey
Robert W. Clarke, Yale University
Herbert V. Neal, Tufts College
DUNCAN STARR JOHNSON
William H. Cole, Rutgers University
Thurlow C. Nelson, Rutgers University
Edwin G. Conklin, Princeton University
Stanley J. G. Novak, Boston City Hospital
The Johns Hopkins University
Ulric Dahlgren, Princeton University
George H. Parker, Harvard University
Vice-President
George B. Dorr, Bar Harbor, Maine
Robert F. Pitts, New York University
Edward K. Dunham, Jr., New York City
David O. Rodick, Bar Harbor, Maine
GUY E. TORREY
J. T. Halsey, Tulane University
George B. Roth, George Washington Uni-
Robert W. Hegner, Johns Hopkins Univer-
versity
Bar Harbor, Maine
sity
Harold D. Senior, New York University
Treasurer
Hope Hibbard, Oberlin College
James A. Shannon, New York University
Margaret M. Hoskins, New York University
*Herbert N. Shenton, Syracuse University
DWIGHT E. MINNICH
Duncan S. Johnson, Johns Hopkins Uni-
Homer W. Smith, New York University
versity
Heinz Specht, U. S. Dept. Industrial -
University of Minnesota
Percy L. Johnson, Missouri Valley College
giene
Secretary
Abram T. Kerr, Cornell University
Benjamin Spector, Tufts College
Warren H. Lewis, Carnegie Institution
Guy E. Torrey, Bar Harbor, Maine
DAVID O. RODICK
Frank R. Lillie, University of Chicago
Donnell B. Young, George Washington Uni-
Bar Harbor, Maine
Clarence C. Little, Jackson Memorial
versity
Laboratory
E. Lorraine Young, III, Harvard University
Clerk
Edward F. Malone, University of Cincin-
nati
WILLIAM H. COLE
Rutgers University
ASSOCIATE MEMBERS
Director of the Laboratories
John Hampton Barnes, Philadelphia Penn-
E. Lee Jones, McLean, Virginia
sylvania
Mrs. Walter G. Ladd, Far Hills, New Jersey
TRUSTEES
Cecil Barret, New York City
Mrs. Morris Loeb, New York City
Gist Blair, Washington, D.C.
Theodore Marburg, Baltimore, Maryland
To serve until 1937
Robert E. Blum, New York City
C. L. Marlatt, Washington, D.C.
Richard E. Byrd, Boston, Massachusetts
Henry Morgenthau, New York City
*WILLIAM H. COLE. Rutgers University
Myra Fox, Bangor, Maine
Mrs. Henry Morgenthau, New York City
ROBERT W. HEGNER, The Johns Hopkins University
Mrs. Alexander Gordon, Baltimore, Mary-
James F. Porter, Chicago, Illinois
*WARREN H. LEWIS, Carnegie Institution of Washington
land
David Riesman, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
E. K. MARSHALL, JR., The Johns Hopkins University
Thurlow M. Gordon, New York City
R. E. Schuh, Brooklyn, Maine
DAVID O. RODICK, Bar Harbor, Me.
Thurlow M. Gordon, Jr., Princeton Univer-
sity
STANLEY J. G. NOVAK, Boston City Hospital
Died Jan. 6, 1937
To serve until 1938
LOUISE DEKOVEN BOWEN, Chicago, I11.
HERMON C. BUMPUS, Waban, Mass.
*ULRIC DAHLGREN, Princeton University
GEORGE B. DORR, Bar Harbor, Me.
HERBERT V. NEAL, Tufts College
*GUY E. TORREY, Bar Harbor, Me.
To serve until 1939
J. T. HALSEY, Tulane University
DUNCAN S. JOHNSON, The Johns Hopkins University
CLARENCE C. LITTLE, Jackson Memorial Laboratory
DWIGHT E. MINNICH, University of Minnesota
HAROLD D. SENIOR, New York University
*HOMER W. SMITH, New York University
* Members of Executive Committee
2
3
Cambridge, Mass.,
21 April 1921
Dear Mr. Dorr:
Henry L. Eno told me some weeks
ago about the proposed transfer of the Marine
Biological Station from Harpswell to Salis-
bury Cove.
It seemed to me a very desir-
able achievement.
Does it not suggest the
completion of the organization of the Wild
Gardens of Acadia and the organization of a
committee to raise an endowment for it? The
sooner it is announced the better.
I hope your health has been
pretty good this winter, and that you are
taking some care of yourself.
Sincerely yours
Charles Elion
Mr. George B. Dorr
The Wistar Institute,
Philadelphia, Pa.
April 22nd, 1921.
Wild Gardens of Acadia Association,
Bar Habor, Maine.
Dear Sirs:
At a meeting of the Trustees of the Harpswell Laboratory
held at the above date and location, the agreement to lease the
land at Salisbury Cove from the Wild Gardens of Acadia Association
and to move the Harpswell Laboratory activities to the land so
leased was ratified and signed by our treasurer.
The lease which
the Wild Gardens of Acadia Association offered us was approved and
the Director was requested to write a letter to the officers of the
Wild Gardens of Acadia Association stating our understanding and
interpretation of this lease.
In regard to paragraph four, the phrase "And for none
other except as may be essential or important to the furtherance
of such end," the trustees interpret that as permitting them in
addition to laboratory buildings and equipment to erect and
construct tents, cottages or habitations for the students, research
workers and assistants on the land and to receive a rental for
these accommodations.
In regard to paragraph five the phrase "this lease shall
ipso facto cease and become null and void;" it is understood that
in case of war or like emergency that if both parties agree to
the suspension of the activities of the laboratory this clause in
the lease will not operate.
2
In regard to paragraph five, the words "to make improvements,"
the trustees understand and interpret this to mean "to make
improvements that may be approved and consented to by the trustees
of the Harpswell Laboratory."
Mr. Dorr expressed the wish to have a cottage and wharf on
the Eastern end of the land and I agree to this and my consent was
confirmed by others of the trustees.
I would suggest as a modus
operandi that the Harpswell Laboratory and its friends collect the
funds for this improvement, build it according to Mr. Dorr's wishes
and lease it to him without rental as long as he cares to have it.
The greatest part of this "improvement" would be to have Mr. Dorr
with us.
Very sincerely,
Uhic Dullgren
UD/L.
[c. 1911]
ARTICLES OF AGREEMENT BETWEEN THE HARPSWELL LABORATORY CORPORAS
TION OF SOUTH HARPSWELL, MAINE, PARTY OF THE FIRST PART, AND
THE WILD GARDENS OF ACADIA CORPORATION OF MOUNT DESERT ISLAND,
MAINE, PARTY OF THE SECOND PART, CONDITIONING THE TRANSFER OF
THE HARPSWELL LABORATORY FROM SOUTH HARPSWELL, MAINE, to
MOUNT DESERT ISLAND, MAINE.
The two parties above mentioned agree that the transfer of
the Harpswell Laboratory from South Harpswell, Maine, to Mount
Desert Island, Maine, shall be effected under the following
conditions:
l.
That the Harpswell Laboratory shall transfer its
activities to Mount Desert Island.
2.
That the Harpswell Laboratory Corporation of South
Harpswell, Maine, shall become a member of The
Wild Gardens of Acadia Corporation and be repre-
sented on its Board, the present organization of
the Harpswell Laboratory remaining as at present
incorporated.
3.
That The Wild Gardens of Acadia Corporation desig-
nate for occupancy by the Harpswell Laboratory a
tract of land to be set apart from the lands now
held by it at Salisbury Cove, Maine, the boundries
of said tract to be determined in consultation be-
tween appointed representatives of the Harpswell
Laboratory and The Wild Gardens of Acadia.
4.
That the Harpswell Laboratory undertake as its
purpose and aim to establish and maintain a lab-
oratory for scientific study and investigation,
as stated in its certificate of incorporation
from the State of Maine.
5.
That the Harpswell Laboratory agree that in the
event of its ceasing to exist as an active
Biological Association the lands leased to it in
accordance with the aforesaid designation shall
revert to the control of The Wild Gardens of
Acadia.
6.
That the Wild Gardens of Acadia agree to use its
best endeavor to promote the interests, scientific
and financial, of the Harpswell Laboratory, and to
secure for it such other stations in that region
as the future may determine as desirable.
Wild Garden of George Acadia B. Wast
Henry Lane Ew
VIS
1921
6
SEAL HARBOR
VILLAGE IMPROVEMENT SOCIETY
7
INTRODUCTION
PRESIDENT'S REPORT
The Society in presenting its twenty-first
Most of the activities of the Society are
annual report desires to call the attention of
carried on by the Committees appointed for
all visitors to Seal Harbor to the work it is
that purpose and are fully described in their
doing for the general comfort and welfare, and
reports which follow.
to ask a continuance of the liberal support
There are, however, a number of matters
given it in the past. Its only revenue is from
of general interest which may be summarized
voluntary contributions and the more general
here.
they are the more efficiently can the work be
One of these is the increasing co-operation
carried on.
between this Society and other Associations
All visitors to Seal Harbor as well as resi-
having similar purposes at Bar Harbor, North-
dents are cordially invited to join the Society.
east Harbor and Southwest Harbor. Among
No formality is necessary to become a member.
the influences leading to this co-operation is
The handing in of a name accompanied by
the growing appreciation of the importance
one dollar to the treasurer of the Society,
tutes membership. Life membership, $25.
1921
tept.
of considering the welfare of the whole Island
Mr. George L. Stebbins, at his office, consti-
as well as that of individual communities,
springing in some measure from the transfor-
mation of the Public Reservations into a
Suggestions in regard to its work will be
National Park. An evidence of this broaden-
gladly received by the Executive Committee
from any member of the society.
ing point of view was the appointment of
delegates from the above-mentioned Societies
The attention of temporary residents is
to consult with the Custodian of the Lafayette
called to the fact that the entire current re-
National Park with a view to harmony in the
ceipts are expended each season SO that they
development of policies and co-operation in
receive the benefits of any contributions made.
their execution.
1921
8
SEAL HARBOR
VILLAGE IMPROVEMENT SOCIETY
9
Of more local interest are certain ad-
Other administrative functions carried
ministrative functions undertaken by the So-
on by the Village Improvement Society and
ciety. In agreement with the Town of Mount
annually requiring considerable outlay are
Desert, the administration of the Village
what in military parlance is called the "po-
Green, generously given to the Town by
licing" of the Village street and the Beach,
Mr. Rockefeller, has been delegated to the
rendering these public places orderly and tidy.
Village Improvement Society, which has under-
Also the maintenance of certain rights of way
taken to use its endeavors to develop this
for the convenience of the public.
property in accordance with the wishes of
The Society has also, when occasion
the community insofar as it has the means
arose, assumed other public administrative
to do so. As stated in the report of the Com-
duties not otherwise provided for. Last sea-
mittee charged with the details of this under-
son it cared for the disposal of garbage and
taking, it has been possible hitherto only to
other wastes, voluntarily acting as fiscal agent
clear up the grounds and prepare them for
in establishing the new method of disposal
such future development as may be determined
reported by the Sanitary Committee.
upon and rendered possible by funds now
lacking.
In conclusion, it is hoped that the activities
of the Society have met with the general
Among the obviously desirable improve-
approval of the community, and that it may
ments to the Village Green, are facilities for
confidently rely upon the co-operation and
resting under the shade of such trees as have
financial support of all who are interested in
attained sufficient growth SO that children and
the welfare of Seal Harbor.
adults can gather together in a more sheltered
RICHARD M. HOE,
place than is offered by the beach. Another
President.
important improvement would be a con-
venient path across the Green towards the Post
Office.
25, 1921
FIVE CENTS A COPY
NUMBER 360
NCE PROGRAM WEIR MITCHELL STATION
EMORIAL DAY
WILL OPEN JUNE 25
5-25-1921
and Legion Plan
10 Exercises
Work Being Rushed on Laboratory and Other
PAGE
STARTS AT 1.30
Buildings at Salisbury Cove-The
CoL 6. 7
Three Wars, Fraternal
Summer Course Outlined
d Schools in Line of
Order For the Day
Attractive booklets have been ro-
Wednesday, July 6
ing program for Memorial
colved here announcing the opening
1) Morning: Lecture and work on
1 the headquarters of the
of the Harpewell Laboratory for Bio-
the protozoa.
Parker Post, Grand Army
logical Research and Study which in-
Afternoon: Lecture and work on
blic and the George Edwin
clude the program of the twenty-third
the ecological relationship of
American Legion.
session which will be conducted at the
animals.
norial Day at all Army
laboratory's new location, the Weir
Thursday, July 7
Stations the National Flag
Mitchell Station at Salisbury Cove,
od at half-staff from Sunrise
and which will begin June 25th and
2) Morning: Lecture and work on
cen will be hoisted to top
extend through September 10th.
the protozoa.
I and remain there until
The preface page is Illustrated by R
Afternoon: Lecture on the ecology
of animals.
fine cut showing a glimpse of cliff and
accordance with Military
sea and made from a photograph loaned
Friday, July 8
and It is requested that
by Supt. George B. Dorr of Lafayette
3) Morning Lecture and work on
implaying flage on Memorial
National Park. Another photograph
the Porifera.
ollow these regulations.
that of Sand Beach, occupies the con-
Afternoon: Lecture on the differ-
that proper respect may
cluding page of the booklet.
ention and specialization of ani-
he National Flag on Memo
The preface is:
mals.
d other occasions, it is re-
THE HARPSWELL LABORATORY
Saturday, July 9
t when the National Colors
Founded by John Sterling Kinghley, 1898
4) Excursion in row-boats and launch
arade that all men and boyn
BOARD OF TRUSTEES
on Frenchman Bay to tow for
colors, stand at attention,
Members ex officio
protozoa and to study smaller
and remain so until the
JOHN STERLING KINGSLEY, Univ. of III.
forms of life obtained. After
e passed
Director Emeritus and President of
two hours the catch will be
CB M. HONTER, Commander
the Corporation
studied in the laboratory.
James E. Parker
ULRIC DAHLGREN, Princeton University,
Post No. 105, G. A. R.
Monday, July 11
Acting Director
II H. KINGSLEY, Commander
MILTON J. GREENMAN, The Wistar
5) Morning Coelenterata
George Edwin Kirk
Afternoon: Lecture on animal life
Institute, Treasurer
Pont No. 25, A.
1.
histories.
Members
morial Day Program
11. C. BUMPUS, Brown University
Tuesday, July 12
M. Yankeo Division Band
D. S. JOHNSON, Johns Hopkins University
6) Morning: Coelenterata.
Dirge at American Leglon
Vice President of the Corporation
Afternoon: Lecture and work on
arters.
F. R. LILLE
University of Chicago
animal taxonomy
National Colors will be holnted
IL V. NEAL
Tufts College
of Staff.
G. H. PARKER
Harvard University
Wednesday, July 13
Assembly
F. J. PORTER
Chicago, III.
7) Morning: and Afternoon:
Forward G. A. R. and
H. D. SENIOR
New York University
Excursion and shore collecting
in Legion H. Q. Cottage
E. B. WILSON
Columbia University
at Halibut hole for Hydroids.
to Main Street, Main Street
J. L. CONEL
New York University,
Towing on way for jelly-fish
Desert Street, Mt. Desert
Secretary of the Corporation
and Ctenophores.
o Cemetery.
Work on the laboratory is now fast
Thursday, July 14.
Exercises G. A. R. and
an Legion at Soldiers and
nearing completion. This is being done
8) Morning Platyhelminthes.
under the direction of Willis C. Paine.
Afternoon: Lecture on animal dis-
Monument in Cemetery, con-
with saluting dead with Firing
The old Leland place has been repaired
tribution or Zoogeography.
and Taps.
and will when finished make a very
Friday, July15
M. Line of March proceeds up
attractive home to be occupied by
y) Morning Platyhelminthes.
Desert Street to Ledgelawn
Director Dahlgren and his family.
Afternoon: Lecture and work on
e, Ledgelawn Avenue to LivJ
The new building is situated well
food of animals.
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 8)
out on the point, and is a substantial
wooden structure, long, quite low, with
Saturday, July 16
many windows and presenting a most
10) Excursion. Fielding excursion to
NDY
attractive appearance.
codledge or Halibut hole and
The entire program
(CONTIN&ED ON PAGE &)
at of
lly pre-war prices)
n's Fountain Pens
Book of Every Mem-
Bank Strength
Every Emergency.
ig Company
Proprietors
174
OUR SEACOAST NATIONAL PARK
APPALACHIA.
VOL
XV
PLATE XXXVII
Our Seacoast National Park
By GEORGE B. DORR
THE Appalachian Mountain Club stands uniquely as an
organization in our eastern country for interest in mountain
scenery and movements for its conservation. To it is largely
due the establishment of the White Mountains National
Forest, a great conservational measure. In the same belt of
latitude as it and the Adirondack Mountains of New York,
the Empire State's great forest playgound, lies, far to the
westward, the oldest and most widely known of our National
Parks, the Yellowstone; to its eastward, still in the same belt
of latitude, lies one of the youngest, the Lafayette, situated in
old French territory on the coast of Maine and representing
singly in the great system of our national parks contact with
the ocean and inclusion of nationally owned coastal waters in
its recreational territory.
Lafayette National Park lies surrounded by the sea, occupy-
ing as its nucleus and central feature the bold range of the
Mount Desert Mountains, whose ancient uplift, worn by
STEPPING STONES ON THE KANE PATH. LAFAYETTE
immeasurable time and recent ice-erosion. remains to form the
NATIONAL PARK
largest rock-built island on our Atlantic coast. (Tisle des
Monts déserts," as Champlain named it with the keen descrip-
tive sense of the early French explorers.
The coast of Maine, like every other boldly beautiful coast
region in the world whose origin is non-volcanic has been
formed by the flooding of an old and water-word land surface,
which has turned its heights into islands and headlands, its
stream courses into arms and reaches of the sea, its broader
valleys into bays and gulfs, The Gulf of Maine itself is such
an ancient valley, the deep-cut outlet of whose gathered waters
may still be traced by soundings between Georges Bank and
Nova Seotia, and whose broken and strangely indented coast,
twenty-five hundred miles in length from Portland to St.
Croix-a straight line distance of less than two hundred miles
is simply an ocean-drawn contour line marked on its once
bordering upland.
At the center of this coast. the most beautiful in eastern
North America, there stretches an archipelago of islands and
island-sheltered water-ways and lake-like bays wonderful
THE TARN, LAFAYETTE NATIONAL PARK
August 1921.Vol. 15. Appalachia
APPALACHIA. VOL. XV
OUR SEACOAST NATIONAL PARK
175
region-and at its northern end, dominating the whole with
its mountainous uplift, lies Mount Desert Island whereon the
national park is placed.
Ultimately it is intended that the park shall be extended to
other islands in this archipelago and become, by the establish-
ment of some simple houseboat system under the direction of
the National Park Service, a water park as well as land one.
For these are national waters, held by the United States in as
absolute possession as its western forests and other public
lands from which the great western parks were formed. and
their recreational possibilities in connection with the park are
boundless.
Mount Desert Island was discovered by Champlain in
September, 1604, sixteen years and over before the coming of
the Pilgrim Fathers to Cape Cod. He had come out the
previous spring with the Sieur de Monts, it Huguenot gentle-
man, a soldier and the governor of a Huguenot city of refuge
in southwestern France, to whom, the December previous,
Henry IV, 'le grand roi, had entrusted establishment of
the French dominion in America. De Monts' commission,
couched in the redundant. stately language of the period, is
SNOW-SHOEING IN THE PARK, WINTER OF 1920. THE SUPER-
still extant and its opening words are worth recording. SO inti-
INTENDENT OF THE PARK ON THE PATH CALLED
mate and close is the relation of the enterprise to New England
EVELYN'S MILE
history:
Henry, by the grace of God King of France and of Navarre. to our
dear and well beloved friend the Sieur de Monts, Gentleman-in-Ordinary
to our chamber, Greeting! As our greatest care and labor is and has
ever been since our coming to this throne, to maintain it and preserve it
in its ancient greatness, dignity and splendor, and to widen and extend
its bounds as much as may legitimately be done, We. having long had
knowledge of the lands and territory called Acadia, and being moved
above all by a single-minded purpose and firm resolution We have taken,
with the aid and assistance of God, Author, Distributor, and Protector
of all states and kingdoms, to convert and instruct the people who in-
habit this region, at present barbarous, without faith or religion
or
belief in God, and to lead them into Christianity and the knowledge and
the
profession of our faith and religion; having also long recognized from
accounts of captains of vessels, pilots, traders, and others who have
frequented these lands, how fruitful and advantageous to us, our states
and and subjectsmight be the occupation and possession of them for the great
evident profit which might be drawn therefrom, We in full confi-
dence in your prudence and the knowledge and experience you have
APPALACHIA. VOL. XV, NO. 2
CAMP LIFE IN LAFAYETTE NATIONAL PARK
176
OUR SEACOAST NATIONAL PARK
OUR SEACOAST NATIONAL PARK
177
gained of the situation. character and conditions of the
try of Acadia from the voyages and sojourns you have made in it coun-
property of the English crown. Warfare followed till the cap-
neighboring regions, and being assured that our plan and resolution and
ture of Quebee in 1759, when settlement from the New Eng-
ing committed to your cure you will diligently and attentively, and be
land coasts began. To the Province of Massachusetts was
less valorously and courageously, pursue them and lead them to comple- not
granted that portion of Acadia which now forms part of Maine,
tion-have expressly committed them to your charge, and do constitute
extending to the Penobscot River and including Mount Desert
you by these presents, signed by our hand, our lieutenant general, to
Island, which it shortly thereafter gave "for distinguished
represent our Person in the lands and territory, the craste and confines
of Acadia, to commence at the 40th degree of latitude and extend to the
services" to its last Colonial governor before the breaking of
46th degree: And We order you throughout this territory as widely as
the Revolutionary storm, Sir Francis Bernard, the title to it
possible to establish and make known our name and authority subject-
being later confirmed to him by a grant from George III.
ing to these and making obedient to them all the peopledwelling therein,
In September, 1762, Governor Bernard sailed from Fort
and by every lawful means to call them to the knowledge of God and
William in Boston Harbor with a considerable retinue, to
the light of the Christian faith and religion.
view his new possession, and kept a journal that may still be
De Monts, sailing in the spring of 1604, founded his first
seen. He anchored in the "great harbor of Mount Desert."
colony on an island in the tidal mouth of a river at the western
just off the present town of Southwest Harbor. which he laid
entrance to the Bay of Fundy-Baie Françoise he named it,
out with his surveyors; he explored the Island, noting its fine
though the Portuguese name Bahia Funda, Deep Bay, in the
timber, its water power for sawmills, its good harbors, its
end prevailed-which two centuries later, in inemory of it, was
abundance of wild meadow grass. "high as a man," and of wild
selected to be the commencement of our national boundary,
"peas"-heach peas perhaps-for fodder, and its wealth of
While he was at work on this he sent Champlain in an open
fish in the sea. He had himself rowed up Somes Sound, a
vessel with a dozen sailors to explore the western enast. A
glacial fiord which deeply penetrates the Island, cutting its
single, long day's sail with a favoring wind brought him at
mountain range in two, and which he calls the River, as in that
nightfall into Frenchman's Bay, beneath the shadow of the
region other inlets of the sea are called today, following an old
Mount Desert Mountains, and his first landfall within our
French usage. And he visited Somes, one of the earliest
national bounds was made upon Mount Desert Island, in the
settlers from the Massachusetts shore, then building his log
vicinity of Bar Harbor.
cabin at the Sound's head where Somesville is today, and
walked across to see a beaver's dam nearby, whose "artificial-
A few years later the Island again appears as the site of the
first French missionary colony established in America, whose
ness" he wonders at.
Then came the Revolution. Bernard's "stately mansion" on
speedy wrecking by an armed vessel from Virginia was the
the shore of Jamaica Pond and his far off island ou the coast
first act of overt warfare in the long struggle between France
and England for the control of North America
of Maine both were confiscated, he taking the king's side and
In 1688. seventy odd years later, private ownership began,
sailing away from Boston Harbor while the bells were rung in
jubilation. And Mount Desert Island, once the property of
the Island being given as a feudal fief by Louis XII to the
Sieur de la Mothe Cadillac-the later founder of Detroit and
the Crown of France, once of that of England, and twice
Governor of Louisiana, who is recorded as then dwelling with
granted privately, became again the property of Massachu-
setts. But after the war was over and Bernard had died in
his wife upon its eastern shore and who still signed himself in
his later documents, in ancient feudal fashion, Beignetti des
England, his son, John Bernard, petitioned to have his father's
ownership of the Island restored to him, claiming to have been
Monts déserts.
loyal himself to the colony, and a one-half, undivided interest
In 1713, Louis XIV, defeated on the battlefields of Europe,
ceded Acadia-save only Cape Breton-to England: and
in it was given him. Then, shortly after. came the grand-
daughter of Cadillae-Marie de Cadillae as she signed herself
Mount Desert Island, unclaimed by Cadillae, became the
178
OUR SEACOAST NATIONAL PARK
-and her husband, French refugees of the period, bringing
letters from Lafayette, and petitioned in turn the General
Court of Massachusetts to grant them her grandfather's
possession of the Island-asking it not as of legal right, how-
ever, but on a ground of sentiment the gratitude of the colonies
to France for help given in their war for independence And
the General Court. honoring their claim. gave them the other
half. Then it sent down surveyors and divided the Island,
giving the western portion, including the town of Southwest
Harbor that his father had laid out, to John Bernard, who
promptly sold it and went out to England, and died governor
of one of the West Indies, being also knighted; aud the eastern
half, where Cadillac once had lived and where Bar Harbor,
Seal and Northeast Harbors are today, to Marie de Cadillac
and her husband-M. and Mme. de Grégoire-who came to
Hull's Cove on Frenchman's Bay and lived and died there,
selling their lands, piece by piece, to settlers. It is from these
two grants made by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts to
the granddaughter of Cadillae and the son of Bernard. each
holding originally by a royal grant. that the Government's
present title to its parklands spring. History is written into
its deeds.
During the first half of the nineteenth century Mount Desert
Island still remained remote and inaccessible, except to coast-
ing vessels, but fishing hamlets gradually sprang up along its
shore, the giant pines, whose slowly rotting stumps one comes
upon today among the lesser trees, were cut and shipped away,
town government was established, roads of a rough sort were
built, and the Island connected with the mainland by 0 bridge
and causeway. Then came steam, and all took on a different
aspect. The Boston and Bangor steamship line was estab-
lished; a local steamer connected Southwest Harbor with it
through Eggemoggin Reach and Penobscot Bay, a sail of
remarkable beauty, and summer life at Mount Desert began.
The first account of it we have is contained in a delightful
journal kept during a month's stay at Somesville in 1855 by
Mr. Charles Tracy of New York, the father of Mrs. J. Pier-
pont Morgan. Sr., who came with him as a girl and has the
journal still. The party was a large one-twenty-six in all-
and filled Somes's Tavern full to overflowing In it, besides
OUR SEACOAST NATIONAL PARK
179
Mr. Tracy and his family, were the Rev. Dr. Stone of Brook-
line, Massachusetts, with his family; Frederick Church, the
artist, and his sister; and Theodore Winthrop, killed after-
ward in the Civil War, who wrote "John Brent," with its once
famous description of a horse. They climbed the mountains,
tramped through the woods, lost themselves in them-half a
dozen of them--and slept by a campfire in the wild; drove over
to Bar Harbor, then on to Schooner Head, where they slept at
the old farmhouse, climbing the then nameless "mountain
with the cliff" that shadowed it at sundown, and drinking by
the pitcherful such milk as New York could not supply. Then,
like Hans Breitman, in elimax to their stay, they gave a party,
importing by the boat to Southwest Harbor the first piano the
Island had ever seen, and inviting to it the islanders and
fisherfolk from far and near. It was a great success. They
danced, they sang songs, they played games, and had a lobster
salad such as only millionaires can have today, keeping up
their gayety until two o'clock in the morning, when their last
guests-two girls from Bar Harbor who had driven themselves
over for t-hitched up their horse and left for home in spite of
remonstrance and the offer of a bed. Such was the beginning
of Mount Desert social life!
Ten years later, when the Civil War had swept over like a
storm, summer life began in earnest at Bar Harbor, compelled
by the sheer beauty of the spot. No steamer came to it till
1868; then, for another season, only once a week. No train
came nearer than Bangor, fifty míles away with a rough road
between. But still it grew by leaps and bounds, the new com-
ers overflowing the native cottages and fishermen's huts,
sleeping in tents, feeding on fish and doughnuts and the abun-
dant lobster. The native cottages expanded and became
hotels, simple, bare and rough, but always full. The life was
gay and free and wholly out of doors -boating climbing.
pienicking, buck-boarding, and sitting on the roeks with book
or friend. All was open to wander over or pienie on: the
summer visitor possessed the Island. Then lands were bought,
summer homes were made and life of a new kind began.
It was from the impulse of that early summer life that the
movement for public reservations and the national park arose,
springing from memory of its pleasantness and the desire to
180
OUR SEACOAST NATIONAL PARK
OUR SEACOAST NATIONAL PARK
181
preserve in largest measure possible the beauty and freedom of
One important aspect of our national parks and monuments
the Island for the people's need in years to come The park,
is that they, unlike the to follow economic
as park, is still in its beginning. When first accepted by the
lines are absolute sanctuaries, islands of shelter for the native
President as a national monument, it contained. by estimate,
life in all except noxious forms. Like the monasteries in the
five thousand aeres in a tract that included the highest moun-
middle ages that sheltered-all too fragmentarily-the litera-
tain peaks upon the Island, lying to the eastward of Somes
ture and learning of the classic period, they are a means of
Sound in the Cadillac grant. Now it contains approximately
incalculable value for preserving in this destructive time the
twice that acreage and stretches across Somes Sound to include
wealth of forms and species we have inherited from the past
the western peaks and a wide frontage on the shore. Its lands
and have a duty to hand on undiminished to the future, so far
have been throughout a gift to the Government coming from
as that be possible.
many sources, and much personal association is linked closely
In this aspect of a wild life sanctuary, plant and animal,
and inseparably with its formation. It is still growing, and
Lafayette National Park is remarkable. Land and sea. wood-
with the contiguous land-locked ocean waters, beautiful as
land, lake, and mountain, all are represented in it in wonderful
lakes and nationally owned like it, to extend out oute, there is
concentration. In it, too, the northern and temperate zone
no limit to the number to whom it may give rest and pleasure
floras meet and overlap, and land climate meets sea climate,
in the future. coming from our crowded eastern cities, from
each tempering the other. It lies directly in the coast inigra-
which it is accessible by land or water, rail or motor car.
tion route of birds, and exhibits at its fullest the Acadian
The question that was met and decided in the park's crea-
forest, made famous by Evangeline, and the northerninost
tion was whether our national park system should be really
extension of that great Appalachian forest which, at the land-
national in character, including all great types of landscape
ing of De Monts, stretched without a break from the St.
in the country and extending its nearby benefit to all its
Lawrence to the Gulf. This forest is the oldest, by the record
people. or restricted to the grand but wilder western regions
of the rocks, and the richest in existing species of all the mingled
where the Government still holds vast tracts of mountainous
broad-leaved and coniferous forests in the temperate zone.
or arid land. In this the question is not dissimilar to that
And it possesses, also, a rich biologie field in the neighboring
which was decided likewise along the lines of a broad national
ocean, the parent habitat of life. Deeper waters apart. the sea
policy a few years since by the establishment of the White
beach and tidal pools alone form an infinite source of interest
Mountains and other eastern national forests, possible of
and study; while the oceanic climate, like that of the land. is
accomplishment by purchase only.
profoundly different from the climate to the southward, off
The answer to the question often raised of state and national
the Cape Cod shore.
parks lies, it seems to me, in this: Will the resort to them be
To take advantage of this biologie opportunity, an associa-
principally drawn from. and their benefits received by, the
tion has been formed under the name of The Wild Gardens of
people of the state in which they lie, or the people of the nation
Acadia, to utilize in conjunction with the Government the
generally-t people of many states? This question was
opportunities offered for research and study. A marine bio-
strikingly answered in the case of Lafayette National Park last
logical laboratory is to be established this coming summer on
summer, when a register placed on the 17th of July at
the
land secured for the purpose, bordering the pure, deep-chan-
Sieur de Monts Spring entrance to the park, near Bar Harbor,
neled waters of upper Frenchman's Bay, where work will be
was found at the beginning of September to have been signed
done and lectures given on the marine life of the region and its
by people from thirty-five different states-thousands in num-
biological relations, under the direction of Professor Ulrie
ber but relatively few from Maine, whose long and deeply
Dahlgren, of Princeton University, and other biologists in
penetrating coast line and many lakes provide abundantly for
association with him.
its people in pleasant, nearby ways.
BHHS
MOIBL file
September 8, 1921.
Prof. Ulric Dahlgren
Director Obs. Laboratory
Weir Mitchell station
Bar Harbor, Me.
My dear professor Dahlgren:
Your letter of the fifth reached me yesterday. I
have had a talk with Mr. Dorr this morning in regard to the
subject of that letter and he advises very strongly that we
should comply with the suggestions that you make in respect
to needing the property to the Laboratory instead of the
wild Gardens. My family therefore have agreed that that
shall be gone under a deed which shall contain some sort of
a clause limiting the use to which the property shall be
put to biological study, with a clause or reversion in case
of a failure so to use it for 8 fixed number or years, say
three.
There is only one possibility which may prevent
our accomplishing this desirable result. A8 I think I told
you, I am purchasing the property from a number of cousins
who each have a small interest in it and in each case I
have told them that I purchased for the purpose of convey-
ing to the Park. A conveyance to the Laboratory, while aub-
stantially a compliance with this statement, 1s not literal-
ly so, and before conveyance is made perhaps I will think it
is necessary to let them know of the slient change in plan.
I an not anticipate however any difficulty on this point.
There stands on the property & small house and a
barn. They are both in bad repair. They are occupied by
a man of the name of Pettengill and his family and I am
anxious that they should remain as tenants ouring the win-
ter. It would be a great hardship to turn them out now
and I don't suppose you will need to occupy the property
until the sering is pretty well advanced ano meanwhile it
might be an advantage to have it occupied by respectable
people.
I am sorry that I will not be able to get up to see
you and Mrs. Dahlgren before you leave.
Very sincerely yours,
omo
REPRODUCED AT THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES
NARA,CP, R679. CCF, 1907-39. Acadea.
Annual.
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
LAFAYETTE NATIONAL PARK
BAR HARBOR, MAINE
1921 Avenue (2nd) Rpt.
OFFICE OF THE SUPERINTENDENT
LNP
Pg.1.f.00
Dept. 18, 1981.
Dear
Lr:
I Our enclosing 0023 or my annual report.
have Areas Cornerd to 10. Ibright
grended to the revilar report of
two very interesting 10 orts,
one
Johnson of Johns Dupkins University
"obsortimities for the Botanist in lafayette National
your" She other by Major Barrington Moore on "Scientific
portulities O: the Larayette National Park." 30th
acceps MPC or great value, coming as they do from men
widely Colover in the scientific world. I trust that they
may be sound userl i connection with my report.
Cordially yours,
the Director,
supt.
National Bark service,
Department of the Interior,
sshington, D. C.
REPRODUCED AT THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES
2 of 10
KATIONAL PARK
ANNUAL REPORT
by
George B. Dorr, Superintendent
National Park has advanced rapidly during the past year,
both in territory and in public recognition of the place it holds as the
enstorn and seacoest representative of the great national park system. That
the Federal Government should have become the possessor and guardian in the
moonle's interest of the greatest piece Of seenery on our eastern coast and one
or the most splendid coastal Landscapes in the world wins constantly increas-
in commendation as the fact is recognized.
Visitors come to it - largely by motor now - from half the states
in the Union, Many bringing camping outfits with them, the park having happily
on ortunities to suit all comping needs by shore Or lakeside or in the woods.
Lying IS the Party does within easy touring distance from great city
populations, the development of motor camping as one of its important fe tures
i collain to be Paid.
During the past season over two hundred motor-campers have utilized
U.O came sites of the Park and have left enthusiastic over its hospitality,
sad 11 points to a great increase next year in motor camping, an increase
that will be limited only by the development of good camping opportunities and
the vabilicity given to their existence.
-1-
REPRODUCED AT THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES
3 of 10
The most important event in connection with the Park that has happen-
ed during the past year is the establishment on its border, attracted by its
night
oro: once, of what promises to become one of the great biological stations,
marine
and land, of the world.
The Wild Gardens of Acadia Corporation, an-
WGX
proached Inot fill by the Harpswell Laboratory for Biological Research formerly
at Humpswell on Cusco Bay, Imine, placed at its disposal for a new
home a tract of land it had been holding for such purpose upon the Island's
northern shore; on this a laboratory building has been constructed, research
has been carried on, and lectures given upon marine biology.
Ultimately it is intended to cover every field of biology, animal
and vegetable, represented on Mount Desert Island or in its neighboring
ocean,
one the presence of the Luboratory, with the men o;' distinction in all
branches of natural science which it will Creat to it, , and has indeed already
to it this FOSCOR, will add element 01 extraOrdinary scientific
t to 1LL atical Park
Crofessor Ulric Dahlgron of Princeton, the director of the Laboratory,
tai
the result of his exploration of their that the ocean waters
Count Dea rt are 10000 tionally rich in northern fanna and flora
amortmiti or their study; and two of his associates who
ying the land SPOS of the to M., ald : living museum of the region
life, Dr. Duncan D. Johnson, Professor of Botany at Johns Hopkins
University,
major Barringto Moore, former president of the Ecological
ociety of America, have kingly risten, at the Park superintendent's request,
onts to initide in this report, which 20°C herowith appended.
-2-
REPRODUCED AT THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES
4 0 t PO
The Town of Bar Harbor has actively cooperated with the
Indayette National Park Service in giving publicity to the Park, in furnishing
information to ico visitors, and in providing for their housing Of its own
Antitistive, it has : laced attractive and conspicuous signs bearing the Part's
reason
impertant points on all the principal high-roads leading to it from
ed and from the Canadian border at St. Croix, pointing the direction
the violance. Next year it plans to extend these signs to Boston
to rebec.
Souther way in which the Town has cooperated with the Park during
the that our and been in the construction of bridle paths leading to or ex-
form imp those Tuilt or building in the Park, obtaining from the State Legis-
during its Diemial session last winter the right to lay out and con-
ruct bridle withs and driving podd for use with horses, from which motor
volicles
shill
be
excluded.
For this purpose the Legislature has Liven the Town
the 0.010 o OPS 02 condemnion and other rights which it has for the laying out
and
construction of other public ways. Under this power ways fifty feet in
with have Scen lain out by the Town in order that apple room might be recerved
for the preservation of their beauty. This action on the Town's part will
be
post conditions in obtaining fitting approaches to the lands of the
Date by 700 $ or by nor e, while the Town bas shown itself similarly
O: 30 outerstin vi th the Puris in regard to motor road approaches.
licine Time always been horse-breeding state, and great
1
here t is tilcen in the Park not only a point of interest for motorists
till in used care enjoyed in those days of motors
-
form deporture to the ark in every have been acquire thin
-3-
REPRODUCED AT THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES
50F10
the
19 t your to the sides to the Park domins, out of interest in this
development.
Coucher
Great interes Imo, list Saun taken during the past year in the
storin
long well-engineered lines, as a motor road, the old
Net.
Road
backboard 10th to the sunit of Cadillac mountain, tice strenit also Of the
I.D.
Mirbeen landred 0.0 twenty-ouvon feet above the sea, from whose
Ti
riche.
This road, when built, will be one or the great scenic motor roads
the conti No other elevation upon our costeru coast conguies with the
DOTAL
time
or the well in Allitnde, read it till be worth, alone, lon otor
to obt in the splas in vioro 01 Impo and water, of mountain, lake and
the 2086 is ive will other, culturating at the su mit in a suporb
or
00004 to The survey for the road is being made now
dreation.ru ent, 2210 a Lei it of is thousand feet
11th not 0 coodin sin or cent for like _ruster por-
tis
2101 one at & sizle golfr. to ten Dr I' cent.
The national Park office at Bar Herbor, placed on a site created
for
it,
will oly the MO: sing of the well with the broad green 01 the
ic
15 10 or the Date in front, is 120% become the focal point to
all souriot trivol to the region naturally turns, and it 1: us to dolling
widely 'POM every ortic ....I the covetry even the furthest, this
in the how grant in the interest : about hat is needed above all are
colligitions on ll subjects connected with the Park, historical and scientific.
The
these is constant and the educational Opportunity great, Alilo
the
our
and
to
history
REPRODUCED AT THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES
6 of 10
Who of so beto resulted helpfully
0.20
to
is
it
is orvice, its chief clerk - Benjamin
ley - having spent two months last inter at achington, lonning
thric or 17.7 shirt sun office 0.0 admistin in its LORK at it period
needed, while is it should moure in the future on
OCOPORE scale - as it has Already continued to do - and invaluable
UNROLL in the Government service needing the refreslment
of
media air, its woods card mointains and cool northern see.
It l worth noting in this connection that at the nowly coteblished
1002 country boren - E your bo: & - how is 0.1 furnishod through
follow veels, each poon, to some thirty-five people,
Tobroufter in likely to The limitor opportunity for 10 ing.
lace in OE Locaries offers such spleuvie Opyor-
37 to 3 M with 1 00
landscape form, itc bere-towned grenite mountains, itc
Idelificent outlooks mon may an ocean. The development
is on ungent need, of I'm most opcontial lills and
Pendition jet unbouched, while mony clso of the 016,
discribed free 121 carlier >criod, need reconstruction to
LC
for
to
use
tiem.
-5-
REPRODUCED AT THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES
7.of 10
OPPORTUNITIS FOR THE BOTMIST
IN THE LAFAYETIE NATIONAL PARK
by
Duncan i. Johnson
A
ten & eeks stay on Mount Desert Island had loi the writer to appreciate
keenly
"now exceptional are the advantagos it offers to the botanist. During
this
time
he nee body lss ocean and bay shoros calli has trampod over eight
oi 1 to
highout Pross rook-ribbod Cadillac Mountain to the densely-forestod,
nose-covered poties os Bernard Countain
A beautiful moonlight night, spent in
cam
on the sun as ON Countrien, a cloar thousand feet directly above the
ocean'
eage, as dollowed by a survise of surpassing splendor over the 10-voiled
SOC.
Arter those one cannt refain from comparin the scenic
charms
of Mount Discort with those alvea J onjoued in Europe, in the out indies, in
the southern Annalachions and in the mountaine 01 Arisona and California. Iiere
210.00 is form to combination intimes views of rucged mountains, surf-Tringed islands,
villages scattered along beautiful shores, and sparkling lakes and Days dotted with
white salls. Hourt Descrit has, furthertope, the always fascinating attrac ion of an
unbounded occur horison. Those for enjoyment and recupora-
tior the Ladeyette National Parric offers to any out-door man and not alone to the
botonist.
In more strictly botanical aspect Mount Decert is quite unique when com-
pered
1th all oth I' parts of our Atlantic coast. There is here a number of plant
species reveries ly large for so limited il area, including many plants of quite
iverce distributional relationships. In direct consequence of the highly varied
topography of the Island there 10 1so a BPC t V riety or ecological types.
-1-
REPRODUCED AT THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES
8 of 10
Nowhere on our eastern coast, save in the Lafayetto Na tional Park, is there so ele-
vated a region having a really moritime climate, and nowhere else is there afforded
oppor tunity to study a vertical section of so varied a vegetation. This ranges from
the roll and brown seaweeds below tide-level, such as coor at Schnoner Head and in
the bountiful tide pools of Anemone Cave, up to the stunted, \ind-blown pines, spruces
and birches OF the dry sunnitis of Champlain or Callillac Mountain. Between these
extremes are CO be sound many intero ting types of vogetation, including sphagmen
boye full of cranborry, cotton grass and pitcher plants; thickets of sheep laurel,
rhodora and Labrador tea; mats of crowborry, bear-berry and rock cranderry; and
finally in the Park itself, sylondid ev rgreen foretts of pine, spruce, balson and
hemlock, and decidious forests of oaks, birch and maple.
This varied vegetation of course affords or our tuni ty for many sorts of
Dotonical invostigation, such as detailed studios o: the development OIL physiology
of individual species. Invos tigation of the distributional limits 01 species found
on Mount Decert is of great interest, as this Islnd seems to be the northern limit
of many southorn types, and the SO ther. limit of certain arotic ones.
A detailed study of the ecology of distribution of forests and other
végotational types 01 this moritine mountain range should yield especially important
re ults.
The significance of these findings would undoubtedly be greatly emphasized
by is commurison . ith the results of a study now being Rado of the vegetation of a
similar topographic area at Carnol, on the Pacific coast.
-2-
REPRODUCED AT THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES
90f10
Moore,
SCIMITIVIC OPPORTINITIES OF NICE
LAFAYETTE NATIONAL PARK
With advancing civilization, aroas on which natural conditions still
oxist are rapidly dininishing, and one of the most important runctions of the
National Parks is to preserve for scientific study parts of our flore and fauna
undisturbed by outside agencies.
0.2 special interest to the biologist are the tension points, or
riooting lacos of different habitats. They offor the excoptional opportunities
for studying controllin influences, different groupinge of plants and animals,
and the resyonse of living organisms to their environments
The Ierayette
National Party tension points of unsual in coreat, and is Secullarly
favorable 201 such research.
the predominent vegetation is natthere with 321 approciate mixture
of arotic-alpino clements, yet southern please cover large areas and sometimes
ovor mingle with those from colder regions. At sea level, here and on neighboring
islands, there is a luxuriant growth of crowberry (Umpetru) nigrom) hich olsewhere
in this latitudo is found only on Airbino mountain sunits, while bayberry (Myrica
caroliniensis), sweet forn (Coretonia porigrina) and other inhibitents of warner
regions are nevortheless abundant. For wenty yours a group of Javanese pine
(Sciadopytis vorticillita., i troo so sensitive that it is killod by the cold
at the Brooklyn Botonic G rden, and also the cucumbor tree (Marnolle commital
have been driving on the Island without protection.
-1-
REPRODUCED AT THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES
10 of 10
The forests of Mount Desert rppresent a stretch of country exten ing from
southern New Jersey to Labrador. There are pure stands of pitch pine (Pirus rigida)
with an understory of huckloberry (Gaylussacia bacoata) and bear-berry (Arctostaphylos
uvo-ursi) such as are found in Now Jersey.
hito pine frequently takes possession
of abundoned farm land, and is ofton soon ith oak or with spruce, fir, and sometimes
with booch and sugar 123210. as in central and northern Now England. Pure spruce, and
SDYROO and PAY, GOVEN extensive 02028, as in denade and in the Adirondack Mountains
above 2500 Yeat ocovation. Each stand has practically the same composition as that
found in the locality in which it occurs abn dantly, as well as a large proportion
of the usual associated plants; and ench association is reproducing vigorously
and mintaining it olf.
The institution 01 the insects appeare to slow the same contact of northern
and there form an the plants. Dr. Us W. Johnson of the Boston Society
of Notated History has collected Dipters or vinged incepts on the Island for 2 number
of
years and has Comm them extrnordinarily varied.
That there should be this concentration is plants and animals from such
Riversa holitate on the limited land we occur surrounded - included within
Lafayetto National Park is in itself a matter of the first scientific interest.
That these contrasted groupe successfully maintain themsolves indicates contrasts
correimonai sly strong in the environment of the various parts of the Park. The
underlying Gambos of such growings require study 02 climate, soil, physiography,
ocean currents, and hi tory. It is particularly fortunate that this truly
remarkable 2302 is to be neeperved in its natural condition
Ellsworth, Maine.
September 14th, 1921.
Mr. George B. Dorr,
Bar Harbor, Maino.
Doar Mr. Dorr:-
Paul Simpson at "Seal Harbor is working for
you in some Park work. An important sale has been made
at Seal Harbor in which Mr. Hoe and other well known
people there are interested and a now family is coming
in, evidently of considerable wealth, whose interest in
our propositions could be profitably stimulated. Partly
for those reasons and knowing that it would be all right
with you and having a fow hours work by & surveyor to be
done in connection with this sale I refer to, I have
taken the liberty to tell Paul Simpson that I would make
it all right with you on his leaving the work for & while
this afternoon.
Don't bother to reply to this but don't discharge
Simpson because he loft the job for a short timo at my
request.
Yours truly,
[John A Peters]
page
20
THE NORTHEAST HARBOR
VILLAGE IMPROVEMENT SOCIETY
21
Coal, removing garbage,
gravel
119.00
Report of the Paths and Trails Committee
Cost of water sports
314.16
For the Year 1921
New Towels
340.75
Wages of employees
680.00
Fare of employees
63.30
With a few trifling exceptions, no work of
Board of employees
281.50
any consequence was undertaken by the Com-
Superintendent's salary
500.00
mittee during the year 1921, other than con-
A. L. Manchester 7 1-2 per
structing the trail mentioned in the report
cent gross receipts
425.35
for 1920, from the summit of Brown's moun-
A. L. Manchester rent of new
tain to the Notch Road, thence through the
house
168.75
woods to the Giant Slide Trail, and opening
A. L. Manchester rent of old
up the old trail from the summit of Little
house
80.00
Brown's mountain to the Giant. Both of
Special commission to super-
these trails have been extensively used-es-
intendent
105.61
pecially the latter-- which affords a very at-
tractive way of reaching the summit of Sar-
$4720.74
gent mountain.
Digging the pool
349.20
A short trail was constructed from the one
New Bath houses
2137.56
through the woods to the Giant Slide Trail
$7207.50
to a connection with the trail over Little Brown'
Balance
1246.20
Mt. which permits a tramp over both Brown's
and Little Brown's mountains and thence
$8453.70
to the summit of Sargent without recourse
LUCILE A. WOOD,
to the public highway. As the beauties of
Treasurer.
the North face of Brown's mountain and those
of Little Brown's and Bald Peak become fam-
pg. 2 of3
22
THE NORTHEAST HARBOR
VILLAGE IMPROVEMENT SOCIETY
23
iliar these trails will be among the most popular
on the Island
the trails on the very beautiful and interesting
All of the trails were well maintained dur-
mountains west of Somes Sound.
ing the year and few if any, complaints were
Mr. Dorr has agreed to provide for the use
received.
of the Committee out of the Government
In 1922 it will be necessary to repaint and
appropriation for the maintenance of the
reletter all the iron signs, erected some years
Lafayette National Park during the fiscal
ago, and it is estimated that the cost of this
year, ending June 30th, 1923, a sum not ex-
work will be about $100.
ceeding $375, on condition that the money
A supply of wooden signs has been provided
shall be expended upon trails located in the
and few additional ones will be required dur-
Park and that the Committee shall provide
ing 1922. The important trails have been
and expend a like sum in the construction and
marked with cairns or signs or both and no
maintenance of other trails located without
trouble should be experienced in finding the
the Park area. If the Committee's expendi-
way over them.
tures are less than $375 the Government al-
The springs which have been developed
lowance will be reduced to the same amount.
have been a source of much comfort to many
In other words Mr. Dorr, subject to the con-
walkers and the members of the Society and
dition above stated, has agreed to provide a
their friends are again urged to inform the
sum equivalent to the Committee expenditures
Committee of any others they may discover.
but not to exceed $375. None of this govern-
The revised Path and Island Maps were
ment allowance will pass through the hands
issued and put on sale about July 1st, 1921,
of the Committee or its authorized agent.
and have given general satisfaction. There
A similar arrangement has been made with
should be a further revision of the Island
the three other Paths and Trails Committees.
map and perhaps it would be wise to prepare
The Committee deeply appreciates Mr.
and publish a special map clearly delineating
Dorr's action and considers the arrangement
a satisfactory one, especially as it is under-
flage 30F3
VILLAGE IMPROVEMENT SOCIETY
25
24
THE NORTHEAST HARBOR
REPORT OF THE COMMITTEE
ON ROADS
stood all the work to be done shall be in ac-
cordance with its directions and plans and un-
der its sole supervision.
August 16, 1922.
Towards the end of the season some com-
At its last annual meeting the Village
plaints were received with resp ect to the con-
Improvement Society passed a Resolution
dition of the Bridle Path, between the en-
recommending the Town to vote an appro-
trance and the Rye Field and during 1922 it
priation for oiling a strip of road as an experi-
will be necessary to have the path between
ment to demonstrate the most efficacious
these points regravelled. The cost of this
and practical method of laying the dust during
work will approximate $200.
the summer months.
The Committee expended during the year
In conformity with this recommendation
for labor on Trails $216.09, labor on Bridle
the Town, in March of this year voted an ap-
Path $76. and for wooden signs, $95.90. a total
of $387.99.
propriation of $5,000 and specified that of
this amount:
The Committee again desires to express its
1. $1,500 be used in preparing the roads
appreciation of the good work done by Mr
T. A. MeIntire in supervising its operations.
and applying calcium chloride from Seal
Harbor to Asticou Corner.
Mr. McIntire's services have been rendered
2. That 40 barrels of light oil which was
without compensation, other than the satis-
on hand left over from last year be applied
faction he has derived from helping the cause.
from Asticou Corner to Ice House Hill, Harbor-
The thanks of the Chairman are due to the
members of the Committee and to the men
side.
who have done the hard work, especially Frank
3. That heavy oils and Tarvia B. be ap-
B. Lowrie.
plied from Ice House Hill to Neighborhood
House.
WILLIAM JAY TURNER,
Chairman.
922
[1.9.1922]
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
LAFAYETTE NATIONAL PARK
BAR HARBOR, MAINE
OFFICE OF THE SUPERINTENDENT
STUDY FOR PERMANENT DEVELOPMENT OF LAFAYETTE NATIONAL
PARK LAND AREA
The total land area of Lafayette National Park, acquired
or possible on Mount Desert Island, is limited narrowly in com-
parison with the areas of the great western Parks of similar
resort, set aside in wilder territory. The aim of the Nation-
al Park Service, accordingly, is to develop it intensively, so
as to bring out to the full its beauty, interest, and useful-
ness to the public.
To this the tract lends itself remarkably in its extra-
ordinrey concentration of landscape feature and its exceptional
fitness for the preservation of the native regional life, plant
and animal, in wide variety.
In this latter respect the Park, unique in its eastern
situation among the land areas under National Park control, can
serve importantly. as it can also, with its striking scenery
and wide resort, in promoting recognition of the beauty of
nature and the importance of preserving it as a national resource.
with these ends in view, it seeks the Park's development within
its Island bounds by foot trails and ways for use wi th horses,
312370
301VA33 XAA9 JANOITAN
riding
or
driving,
rather than by motor-driven vehicles,
ROBRAH-RAB
whose swift passage diminishes space and makes impossible No
30830
lingoring or detailed observation.
One motor road, of any considerable length, alone
enters into this plan, a road survoyed during the peet sum-
mer from the public highway to the summit of Cadillac Moun-
tain, the high point of the Park, the Island, and our easte m
coast. After long study and many trials a route has been
secured, between four and five miles in length, that has no
equal in the eastern states for beauty and breadth of out-
look, for variety and interest of view; it also has a grade
not exceeding six per cent at maximum, an easy grade for
motorists, and wide, safe curves.
This road, when built, will be a unique feature in our
esstern states. There will be nothing like it in the e country
to the eastward of the Rockies, and it alone, as a landecape
feature, will draw motorists from far and near. Beyond this
single road, it is planned not to invade the natural beauty
of the parklands or their value as wild life sanctuary, but
to secure, as opportunity may come, striking points of interest
upon the mainland as outliers of the Park - such as the Schoodic
Mountains, Bluehill, tracts on the shore of inland lakes within
easy motoring distence from Bar Harbor that afford good fishing
ROIRETMI 70
ROBRAH RAB
and good bathing, or geological feature of exceptional
3HT TO BOFFO
interest, such as the great snake-like esker that winds
for miles over the level plains between Bangor and Cherry-
field; and to utilize the Federal or state aid motor roads
leading to them as excursions for the motorist vieitor to
the Park.
In addition to these, for more distant excursion,
Lafayette National Park has what is unique to it in the
whole Park system, unlimited opportunity for excursion by
water through island-sheltered water-ways to yet other points
of interest and beauty.
Reserved in broad sections for foot trails, bridle
paths, and driving roads the National Park lands upon the
Island become at once of wide extent, fitted to occupy the
visitor with objects of fresh interest for days or weeks
together, while ways of such a character will not detract
from, but in the end - taken back by nature - will add to
the interest and charm as well as the accessibility of the
landscape they exhibit.
These lands, as they are divided by motor-highways
through the mountain passes of the Island chain, fall nat-
urally into separate groups. The central of these groups,
ROIRATUI 30
EDITATE NRA9
JANGITAN ETTAYARAJ
HOBRAH RAB
and the broadest, containing the great variety of landscape
to 301730
feature, is that lying between the deep pass to the westward
called the Notch, where the old road runs from Somesville to
Northeast and Seals Harbors, and the pass occuried by Bubble
Pond, and in seeking to give emphasis to the wild life Banc-
tuary aspect of the Park, an aspect that must steadily grow
in importance and interest as the years go by, it is planned
to distinguish this section, containing Eagle Lake and Bubble
Pond, Jordan Pond, Aunty Betty's Pond and Upper Hadlock Pond;
containing Pemetic Mountain and the Carry pass, the Bubble
Mountains and Southwest pass, Sargent Mountain, Penobscot
Mountain with its amphitheater, and Parkman Mountain with its
peaks and passes, together with the woodlands associated with
these, as the "Sanatuary", an area devoted to wild life, both
animal and plant, and destined to remain, according to inten-
tion, undisturbed forever by motor intrusion.
On either side of this area there are, to the eastward,
two mountain areas - road enclosed, according to fact or in-
tention; and to the westward the great natural feature of
Somes Sound finra with its bordering mountains, and, separated
from this by the road to Southwest Harbor, an area containing
Beech Mountain and Beech Cliffs, the various peaks of Western
Mountain, Echo Lake and Long Pond - in their picturesque south-
ern portion.
70
JANOITAN
NAR
Each of these areas has its own special character and
SWIMM HORBAH SAS
BHT 30 301790
interest, but none other offers the important wild life ap-
portunity this central one possesses; in it, guarded by
rangers and undisturbed by motor travel, wild life in every
form appropriate to the region and desirable to retain should
quickly become abundant and teme, a delight to the observer.
The inclusion of such an area, set aside and devoted to such
use, should add immensely to nthe interest taken in the Park,
to the pleasure it will give and the support it should re-
ceive, and to its educational value and the effects of it,
whether in the life, plant or animal, it helps directly to
preserve, or in the inspiration that it gives toward the es-
tablishment of areas of similar intention elsewhere will be
important and far reaching.
The scheme outlined lacks possibility of complete ful-
filment at the present time, because lands that are essential
to it have yet not been secured, but it involves no lands
devoted now to other uses or that we may not hope to get. And
it marks out the courses the National Park Service in its
development of the Park would wish to follow.
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
LAFAYETTE NATIONAL PARK
BAR HARBOR, MAINE
OFFICE OF THE SUPERINTENDENT
January 9th, 1922.
Mr.
John D. Rockefeller, Jr.
26 Brondway
New York City
Dear Mr. :ockefeller:-
The work involved in the study I
have been making for the permanent development of the Park
along the lines we have di scussed has grown as I have be-
come immersed in it, and seems greater now than ever. But
I have accomplished enough to present a scheme for approval
to the National Park Service, and to win approval for it;
and enough to show the great possibilities that oven out
along the lines that we have held in view. My first aim
has been to givs unity to the design, and make the Park a
0
single and organic whole. Other aims I have held steadily
in view have been practicability of carrying out and like-
lihood of permanence in what is planned, and the creation
of a plan that would be approved at Washington and whose
wisdom and appeal to public interest would obtain for it a
sunnort that would grow only stronger as the years go by
ROIA3TNI 3HT 70
Mr. J.D.R.Jr.
XRAS - JANOITAN
1-9-22
XHA9 JANOITAN ETTEYARAJ
ENIAM ROBRAH RAB
and it is carried out. so that no shifting of administra 3HT 70
301770
tion would be liable to lead to affect it.
These things, after much thought and study and many
days spent in the field myself, I think I have accomplished.
The result differs in detail in one respect from what we
had in mind, but I think on studying it you will find it
good. And from the National Park Service point of view
the change seems essential.
[G.B.Par]
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
LAFAYETTE NATIONAL PARK
BAR HARBOR. MAINE
OFFICE OF THE SUPERINTENDENT
STUDY FOR permannet DEVELOPMENT OF LAPAYETTE NATIONAL
PARK LAND AREA
The total land area of Lafaaette National Park, acquired
or possible on Mount Desert Island, is limited narrowly in com-
parison ith the areas of the great western Parks of similar
resort. set aside in wilder territory. The aim of the Nation-
81 Park Service, accordingly, is to develop it intensively, so
as to bring out to the full its beauty, interest, and useful-
ness to the public.
To this the tract lends itself remarkably in its extra-
ordinray concentration of landscape feature and its exceptional
fitness for the preservation of the native regional life, plant
and animal, in wide variety.
In this latter respect the Park, unique in its eastern
situation among the land areas under National Park control, can
serve importantly, LS it can also, with its striking scenery
and wide resort, in promoting recognition of the beauty of
nature and the importance of preserving it as E. national resource.
With these ends in view. it seeks the Park's development ithin
its Island bounds by foot trails and ways for use with horses,
2.
ROISETTI -70 THEMTRA930
JANOITAN
riding or driving,
rather NSA JAMOLTAN than by motor - driven vehicles,
ENIAM ROBRAH RAB
whose swift massage diminishos space and makes
aHT 70 301770
lingering or detailed observation.
One motor road, of any considerable length, nlone
enters into this mlan, 8 road surveyed during the past sum-
mer from the public highway to the summit of Cadillee Moun-
toin, the high point of the Park, the Island, and our oustern
coast. After long study and many trials a route has been
secured, between four and Rivo viles in length, that has no
equal in the eastern states for besuty and breadth of out-
look, for variety and interest of view; it also has a grade
not exceeding six nor cont at maximum, an ossy grade for
motorists, and wide, safe curves.
This road, when built, will be a unique feature in our
eastern states. There will be nothing like it in the country
to the eastward of the Rockies, and it alone, as a landecape
feature, will drew motorists from far and near. Beyond this
single road, it is planned not to invode the natural beauty
of the marklands or their value as wild life sanctuary, but
to secure, as opportunity may some, striking points of interost
unon the mainland as outliers of the Park - such as the Schoodic
Mountains, Bluehill, treets on the shore of inland lakes within
easy motoring distance from Bar Harbor that afford good fishing
3.
ROISETTI 3HT 70
JANOITAN
ROBRAH RAS
and good bathing, or geological fenture of exceptional
70 301770
interest, such as the great snake-like esker that winds
for miles over the level plains between Bangor and Cherry-
field; and to utilize the Federal or state aid motor roads
leading to them as excursions for the motorist visitor to
the Park.
In addition to these, for more distant excursion,
Lafayette National Park has what is unique to it in the
whole Park ays tem, unlimited opportunity for excursion by
water through island-sheltered water-ways to yet other points
of interest and beauty.
Reserved in broad sections for foot trails, bridle
maths, and driving roads the National Park lands unon the
Island become at once of wide extent, fitted to occury the
visitor with objects of fresh interest for days or weeks
together, while ways of such a character will not detract
from, but in the end - taken back by nature - will add to
the interest and charm as well AS the accessibility of the
landscape they exhibit.
These lands, as they are divided by motor-highways
through the mountain passes of the Island chain, fall nat-
urally into separate groups. The central of these groups,
ROIA3TNI 3HT 70 THEMTRA930
4.
XRA9 JANOITAN
JANOITAN
ROBRAH RAB
and the broadest, containing the great variety of landscane
EAT 70 301770
feature, is that lying between the deep DESS to the westward
called the Notch, where the old road runs from Somesville to
Northeast and Seal Herbors, and the pass occuried by Bubble
Pond, and in sooking to give amphasis to the wild life sanc-
tuary aspect of the Park, an inspect that must steadily grow
in importance and interest as the years go by, it is planned
to distingish this section, containing Eagle Lake and Bubble
Pond, Jorden Pond, Aunty Betty's Pond and Unper Hedlock Pond;
containing Pemetic Mountain and the Carry pass, the Bubble
Mountains and Southwest pass, Sergent Mountain, Penciscoot
Mountain with its amphitheater. and Parkman Mountain with its
peaks and passes, together with the woodlands associated with
these, as the "Sanctuary", an area devoted to wild life, both
animal and plant, and destined to remain, according to inten-
tion, undisturbed forever by motor intrusion.
On either side of this area there are, to the eastward,
two mountain areas - road enclosed, according to fact or in-
tention; and to the westward the great natural feature of
Somes Sound finrd with its bordering mountains, and, separated
from this by the road to Southwest Harbor, an area containing
Beech Mountain and Beech Cliffs, the various peaks of Western
Mountain, Echo Lake and Long Pond - in their nicturesque south-
ern portion.
ROIRETUI 3HT 70
5.
>15819
JANOITAN
ach of these areas has it's own special character and
ENLAM ROBBAH SA8
EHT 70 301770
interest, but none other offers the important wild life on-
portunity this central one mossesses; in it, guarded by
rangers and undisturbed by motor travel, wild life in every
form appropriate to the region and desirable to retain should
quickly become Abundant and tame, a delight to the observer.
The inclusion of such an area, set aside and devoted to such
use, should add immensely to the interest takon in the Park,
to the pleasure it will give and the support it should re-
ceive, and to its adventional value and the effects of it,
whether in the life, plant or animal, it helps directly to
preserve, or in the inspiration that it gives toward the es-
tablishment of areas of similar intention elsewhere will be
immortant and far reaching.
The scheme outlined lacks possibility of complete ful-
filment at the present time, because lands that are essential
to it have yet not been secured, but it involves no lands
devoted now to other uses or that we may not hope to get. And
it marks out the courses the National Park Service in its
development of the Park would wish to follow.
[G.BDDrr]]
THE CLUB'S PERMANENT CAMPS
367
the appeal of the unspoiled little lake, there is a peculiar charm
to Ponkapoag, heightened greatly in that it can be reached
by auto, over a delightful route, in less than an hour from the
heart of the busy city. With these natural advantages, the
cleverness and ingenuity of members can be counted upon to
do much to add to the pleasure of visits. To spend a starlit
evening by a camp-fire at the edge of the pond, surrounded by
great stretches of woods, after a busy day in the city, is a real
refreshment of the body and spirit.
Perceval Sayward
ECHO LAKE CAMP
The beginning of the Echo Lake Camp dates from the regular
August Camp of 1922, which was made possible in this location
by the invitation and coöperation of Mr. George Dorr, the
Superintendent of the Lafayette National Park, and his assist-
R.G. Clough
ants, Mr. B. L. Hadley, Chief Ranger, and Mr. Henry Smith,
CAMPING AT PONKAPOAG
Ranger. (It was through their efforts that a rough road was
constructed into the camp, a site cleared to permit the erection
of tents, and a cabin built, which served first as a kitchen and
later as an office.)
The first year of the camp was a rough one. Tents were
erected wherever the topography of the cleared space permitted.
The so-called dining-tent served as a shelter from the sun and
as a plaything for the rain and wind. The usual excellent
spirit of the August Campers soon overcame physical discom-
forts, and they became enthusiastic over the features and
attractions peculiar to the Lafayette National Park. At the
end of the season this enthusiasm resulted in an almost unani-
mous feeling that this camp site should be retained as a per-
manent camp for the Club. After consultation with the Park
officials, who were most cordial in their invitation to continue,
the Excursion Committee appointed a subcommittee with
power to equip and continue the camp. In 1925 the control
et the camp passed from the Excursion Committee to the
Council, which recognized the permanent status of the camp
R.G. Clousi
PONKAPOAG CAMP
by the appointment of a managing committee, as in the case
of the older camps of the Club.
From this rough beginning in 1922 the camp has gradually
grown in comfort and in size. Chief among the improvements
which have increased the comfort of the camp are the following:
Applachia
V.
(6
(1924)
368
THE CLUB'S PERMANENT CAMPS
the large dining and recreation pavilion, glassed in on all sides,
with a large stone fireplace for chilly or damp nights; modern
sanitation, running hot and cold water, electric lights and power,
an ice-cold well in the center of the camp; large roomy tents
with board floors, iron beds with box mattresses; swimming
float, boats, canocs; telephone connections; auto road into
camp with adequate parking space; and increased and well-
organized kitchen facilities.
On Mt. Desert risc thirty named peaks, nine of which are
more than fifteen hundred feet high. All the thrills of mountain
climbing can be found here without the unduly prolonged
exertion found elsewhere. The one hundred miles of govern-
ment trails in the Lafayette National Park provide ample
short walks and long tramps. Experienced camp leaders plan
and direct daily excursions.
The camp is on the cast shore of Echo Lake. Directly
Parker B. Field
across the lake rises Beech Cliff, six hundred feet sheer. The
BAKER'S ISLAND
lake, two miles long and a half-mile wide, is beautifully located,
Dancing Rocks
with mountains on both sides, making it ideal for canocing and
boating. The water is clear and delightful for swimming
Fishing for the angler is near at hand.
About two miles away is Southwest Harbor, where the boat
lands the guest after an all-night sail from Boston. Here may
be found motor boats and sail boats at an average cost of
about fifty cents per half-day per person. Many hikes start
by using motor boats to the base of the mountain to be climbed.
Clambakes at Baker's Island have now become a camp institu-
tion. Moonlight sails and fishing parties can be easily organized
at short notice. Tennis and golf are available at the near-by
country club.
Thus this camp is unique in that it combines mountain,
lake, and scashore recreation. Nowhere in America can this
peculiar combination be found except at Mt. Desert Island.
While there are no set rules and regulations governing the
camp, the committee in charge has attempted to keep the activi-
ties well organized and planned. Each day a hike or sail is
Parker B. Field
planned for those who wish to participate under the leadership
ECHO LAKE
of the resident leaders. The social activities and evenings are
Camp on left Beech Cliff opposite
taken care of by guest committees, SO that monotony has never
become a camp problem. The camp is open four weeks in
August, the guests coming in two sections of sixty each, for
two weeks.
Z. Carleton Staples
THE HARPSWELL LABORATORY
WEIR MITCHELL STATION
BAR HARBOR, ME.
January 23, 1922.
Mr. A. H. Lynam;
Bar Harbor, Maine.
Dear Mr. Lynam:
I received your letter concerning our share of the
taxes and will issue a voucher to our treasurer, Dr. M. J. Greenman,
ordering them paid.
Before doing SO I would like to inform myself on several
points. Were these taxes levied by the assessors on the 14 1/2
acres we leased from the "wild Gardens" as a separate item?
ur
did they levy on the whole property including the land to the north
as well as the land to the south of the road and the "Wild Gardens"
then apportion this share to the 14 1/2 acres leased to the Harps- -
well Laboratory?
Also was the Laboratory building included in the property
taxed? I ask this because the selectmen promised not to tax our
individual property and I wanted to be sure that their office force
had not forgotten this fact.
I am happy to report that Mr. Henry Eno has completely
recovered from his very serious illness (pneumonia) from which he
nearly died.
I am busy collecting money for our Harpswell Laboratory
operations next summer and already have enough on hand or pledged
to enable us to conduct the work. Much interest is also being shown
by the scientists of the country and 1 expect that our facilities
will be taxed to their utmost by students and research workers.
2.
During February I shall be working in the large new aquarum
and laboratory at Miami, Florida and expect to get many pointers
there as to new we may develop at Bar Harbor.
With kind regard to Mr. Dorr and to your brother, I am,
Yours sincerely,
Ulin Dahlgrom
Pg of 8
Somerset CITI,
Boston.
aprist go 1222
Wear Mr Lynam,
Than a letter from
Prof Wallgow in Whiel he
speak of Coming denn to Ran
a few days' Stay, about
the 12th or 13n april - and
then
yu
I hall
probably Mm on from here 8
2
Somerset CITIL,
Boston.
Washing for a few days.
before I return; to I hall not
fu him you aill and I
unit to La hode
in answers any questions, hit
regard to the Wild Gaiden
of acadia, its make up
membership or the quister
3
Somerset CITI,
Boston.
of th of the Jakes
Cover land, ilchife with Megan
to the last the laud Wa.
acquired Vaide
Subscription fra defause
permanent falfilment the
With is he
sponsible and that this for
manent
4
Somerset Citib,
Boston.
buneship of the had he the
interest of that memoral was
Understand as a Guaranta gr
it fulfillant perfected further, he
raising the fund -
and theat
and Mentually accepting
a Salisfactory arrangement was
amined at the the leave which
you Way they
gillin hannishid
while retain the necessary follow
Somerset Clitz,
5
Boston.
quaranteed impliedly
safe guard to the Subscribes
with upand to the Apden's
Than writte
or Wallgree you were alike altung On
deeds, drawn Missing limt see
felluce Of stafe-guardian here ab
his X her daughter memoral
intention, of Communicating it
his falls and Dr Make to
usiful to the Laboratory- I
6
Somerset CITIL,
Boston.
have
a not Faires the question of
as yet
Ownershif or leave was Vit
with u best not to do to, one
way the alter, lu talking
with him till Thall have
talked it our Maybell again
hill the pee
manent Memorial further
must
safe - guarded arrangement
made
Somerset Clitt,
7
Boston.
thing, bring th the from
always, how or late, he any lady
you may back
but ON allien relative to
Whe Labora
/
that thin leading
purpose for as a enforcement the party i.e
A th biological N other Secualife
development through Cooperation
Somerset CIIII,
for
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with the National part Service
N th Government the in infectant
as beari On Prof
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REPRODUCED
AT NARA, THE NATIONAL ,CP/K679/ ARCHIVES CCF 1907-39 Acadin, Speck Reputs
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
May 12, 1922.
WASHINGTON
Dear LS. Dorr:
For your information we are inclosing a copy
of a letter dated May 4, 1922, signed by the Acting Secre-
tary, in regard to the preparation and submission of the
1922 annual report.
You will note that our report is
limited to 160 printed pages including the index but exclud-
ing any illustrations. In allocating pages, one page
is
allotted to your report. This means that your report will
be limited to 1,000 words printed in E-point solid type.
If tables are submitted for printing, you should allow for
a proportionate reduction in number of words of text.
In the preparation of your report you are par-
ticularly referred to Circular D, copy of which you should
have in your files. Special attention should be given to
paragraph 1 of this circular "Special requirements".
It
is very important that the instructions regarding size of
paper, spacing, etc., be followed, as those are based on
the rules of the Government Printing Office, and unless
followed will necessitate additional work in the Washington
Office to put the report in proper form for submission to
the printer.
The official park season for the purpose of
the annual report is from October 1 to September 30, and
travel statistics should be for this period. The figures
of tourist travel to the park should be omitted, suitable
blank spaces being loft in report for the insertion of these
which must be wired in at the close of the day September 30.
Tabulated statement should be placed immediately in the mail
in order that figures may be checked before sending to print-
er.
It is requested that your report for Lafayette
be submitted in duplicate to reach here not later than Sep-
tember 14.
You should also send a copy of your report
direct to Field Assistant Albright at Yellowstone Park, Wyoming.
This with the one copy that you will want to retain for your
files will make four copies to be prepared. You should also
include with your report suitable photographs for possible use
as illustrations.
air
ICED AT THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES
2.
With the necessity for radical reduction in the size
of our report and with the limited space allotted you, you
are placed on your mattle to submit a concise report which at
the same time will be of general interest.
Cordially yours,
(Sgd) ARNO B. CAMMERER
Acting Director.
Mr. George B. Dorr
Supt., Lafayette National Park
Bar Harbor, Maine
Inc. 2469
AND*EN
New York
May 26, 1922,
Dear Mr. Dorr:
Your letter is just received. I am sorry not to meet Mr.
Mather in New York today as I had hoped, and regret, too, that he
cannot go to Maine before the middle of June. Do you suppose
it would be possible to get Mr. Mather's consent to the construction
of the road along the west side of Jordan Pond, starting from my
present road just above the Jordan Pond Dam bridge, SO that work
might start on that road as soon as you get back to Maine and have
approved the final route which Mr. Simpson is now working on?
It seems to me that this is highly important and that because this
road is the connecting link between Seal and Bar Harbors for horses,
Mr. Mather might feel; justified in authorizing you to start work
on it even before he had visited the park. If this consent can
be wisely secured before you leave Washington, I should think an
important step of progress would have been made.
Again, if nothing can be done until Mr. Mather comes to
Maine, the road would not have been started until after the summer
people had begun to come, and work would be going on nearer this
end, where it would be more of a nuisance than had it progressed
a little further up the lake. A word on this subject at your
convenience will be appreciated.
jorie or
I note what you say about Representative Nelson, of Augusta,
and would be glad indeed to go about the roads with him should he
Actord
be. at Seal Harbor while I am there this summer.
What you say in the postscript of your letter about the
attitude of the Chinese towards beauty is quite true. Unlimited
time, leisure and a spirit of contemplation are essential to the
development of the highest art, are they not?
Please tell Mr. Mather how sorry I am not to have seen him
and that I am looking forward to seeing him at Seal Harbor, if
that should be possible.
Very truly,
Mr. George B. Dorr,
Cosmos Club,
John D. Professional
Washington, D.C.
New York
May 31, 1922.
Dear Mr. Dorr:
Your letter of may 29th is received. I am sorry that
Mr. Mather is not well and unable to make the trip to Seal Har-
bor, but glad that Mr. Cammerer can go. You are quite right
in thinking that it might create comment were I to be in Seal
Harbor when either of these gentlemen is there. While I have
not heard from Mr. Simpson, I assume that by the time you arrive
he will have completed his survey of the horse road along the
west side of Jordan Pond, past the boulder slide, and hope that
among the first things you do with Mr. Cammerer will be to go
over that piece of road with Mr. Simps on, and if the location
of the road meets with your approval, that Mr. Cammerer will be
willing to authorize you to proceed with the work on it, for, as
I have told you, Mr. Clement could start work on this road at
an early date.
I shall think of you and Mr. Cammerer as walking over
these routes together, and shall envy you the beauty and joy
of it all. I am sure much will be accomplished by this joint
visit.
Thank you for calling my attention to the article on
Early Chinese Ceramics. I have not seen it, and am glad to
know about it. I hope your cold is much better, and that a
return to the Maine air will put you in good shape again.
If Mr . Cammerer should be returning from Maine through
New York, I would be interested to have a little chat with
him, to gain his impressions of what he has seen in Maine, and
would be glad to meet his convenience as to the time and place
of an interview, if one should be possible for him. Will you
be good enough to give Mr. Cammerer this message, also my
kind regards?
Very sincerely,
John
Mr George B. Dorr,
Somerset Club,
42 Beacon Street,
Boston, Mass.
Acadia.
interstor C 1 Culture
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
GRAND
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
LAFAYETTE NATIONAL PARK
BAR HARBOR, MAINE
OFFICE OF THE SUPERINTENDENT
July 11, 1922.
Dear Mr. Cammerer:
I enclose the map you asked for showing the residence
at Northeast Harbor and the general residential layout.
I enclose
also what is called the Path Map for the eastern half of the Island.
This map, though it bears a recent imprint, as a fresh edition,
really goes back a good many years and is mainly valuable for the
mountain trails, but it shows the general situation and the mountainous
character of the tract very plainly. From it you will see that what
is known as Asticou Hill, a bold granite mass four hundred and fifty
odd feet in height and a continuation to the shore of the Sargent
Mountain mass, lies between Northeast Harbor and the Jordan Pond area
which includes Seal Harbor, Long Pond, and the Amohi theatre. President
Eliot, whose house is the oldest summer residence in the Northeast
Harbor district, lives where Asticou Hill, separating two areas, comes
down to meet the sea, his residence accordingly bordering on both.
The neighborhood area of the Northeast Harbor colony takes in Brown
Mountain (Norumbega Mountain), the only one which has not yet been
acquired for the Park, and the two Hadlock ponds, whence their water
supply is drawn.
am
The general residence at Northeast Harbor lies close along
the shore. I have only indicated the houses of a few of the summer
ARCHIVES
2.
residents who have taken in one way or another an active part in the
colony's affairs.
The principal hotels are marked: The Rockend House, the Clifton
House, and, at the head of the Harbor, Asticou Inn.
President Emeritus Eliot and Miss Mary Wheelwright of Boston, who
has been active in securing lands for the Park, have homes by the eastern
entrance to the Harbor. Mr. Seth Milliken of New York, who has been helpful
also, has a home by its western entrunce, and Mr. Gano Dunn, who is one of the
leaning electrical engineers of the country and a man of high scientific
prominence, ha: a home on its western shore. He has been, and is, of great
assistance to me.
Mr. Pepper has built a house on Schoolhouse Ledge. Mr. Lincoln
Cromwell, president of the Northcast Harbor V. I. A., whom you met in New
York, lives in a house on the Somes Sound shore which is, second to Dr.
Eliot's, the oldest summer residence in that section, built by his wife's
father.
On the eastern side of the Harbor live Professor Emeritus Francis
Peabody of Harvard, Dr. Richard Hart of Philadelphia, one of the leading sur-
geons of the country, and Mr. Carroll Tyson, an artist specially interested
in
birds and painting them. My friend. Dr. Drury, head of St. Paul's School,
a man of splendid public spirit, lives by Gilpatrick Cove, together with a
colony of old friends of mine - Henry Parkman and others.
NATIONAL ARCHIVES
3.
Senator Pepper's house on Schoolhouse Ledge is of recent building.
That of his friend Mr. Turner, present chairman of the Northeast Harbor
Path Committee who is taking charge for me, as are the other path committee
chairmen, of the Government trail repair lying in their section, is just
completing the house marked in his name to the north of it.
Mr. Pepper, whose season here, Mr. Cromwell tells me, has
never been a long one, spends a large part of it by preference in a camp
entirely away from this section of the Island, on Goose Marsh Point at
Pretty Marsh Harbor on the western shore, some dozen miles or more away
by road from Northeast Harbor.
Having no map of the whole Island to send, I enclose, to
show where Mr. Pepper's west shore camo is, one of the Geological Survey
Mt. Desert sheets, showing the western half. The Geological Survey, you
may recall, is bringing out a Lafayette National Park sheet which will take
in the whole Island, now shown by it upon three separate sheets. I left
with its editor, Mr. Wood, the text to be printed on the back of it
according to arrangement. I am anxious to get this map for use this season,
and Mr. Beaman, of the mapping department, said it would be put through
promotly once he got the text. I wrote Mr. Demaray some days since asking
him to find out where the delay lay and, if he could, to set things going - or
let me know concerning it. I have not yet heard from him and as it is
possible he may be away, won't you make inquiry?
Sincerely yours,
Mr. Arno B. Cammerer,
Group B.WH
Acting Director,
National Park Service,
Washington, D.C.
I
George B. Dorr NorthEast Harber Map 1922
UPPER
POND
Mapsion
charlton Yaruall
residence
J.a. Murray
Diston
Words Ean Harber
N.E. Harbor
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Length
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W.J Turney
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J. Tunis
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61> Rishard Hart
Crowwell
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Club
Gano Wann
Harber v.da R J.Purrencement
P.O.
0
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Pool
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Kathre
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®
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W. Elist x
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Reproduced at the National Archives
R679 UP S, Centra Sile 1907-39/Bon 4, File 121, of 1.
Bix
Citation:
Quarters
TUT
Conseplocated
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
in sepalate
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
file. Above and
1822
LAFAYETTE NATIONAL PARK
P9-2.
BAR HARBOR, MAINE
OFFICE OF THE SUPERINTENDENT
July 15, 1922.
Dear Mr. Cammerer:
I write in answer to your telegram of July
14, regarding lease for office quarters, carpenter shop and
garage for present fiscal year; and asking that I expedi te
request for approval of the same, giving full details. To
take them seriatim s
The Park office is situated on a plot of ground
cornering on two of the principal streets of Bar Harbor, Park
Road and Main Street. The length of the plot upon Park Road
is two hundred and six (206) feet. The length of it upon Main
Street is eighty-one (81) feet. The Park Road frontage faces
the principal park of the Town, the Bar Harbor Athletic Field,
from which shady foot-paths extend to the mountains of the National
Park, a mile and a half away.
The site the Park office is on was created for it,
the land being donated for the purpose to the Wild Gardens of
Acadia, a corporation formed for the purpose of cooperating with the
National Park Service in the development of, the Park.
when
The Park office was built upon this site by the
Wild Gardens of Acadia, and designed for its purpose. It was built
on the first establishment of the Park as National Monument, and has
1/5/2019
Xfinity Connect Percival Baxter and George Dorr Printout
charlie jacobi
1/5/2019 4:56 PM
Percival Baxter and George Dorr
To Howard Whitcomb
Ronald Epp Copy
Aaron Megquier
Hi Howard and Ron
I have documentation in Superintendent Dorr's monthly reports that Gov.
Percival Baxter helped open Lafayette NP on May 15, 1922, meeting at that time
(if not before) with George Dorr. They met again in July 1922 and had another
scheduled for the fall. This makes a lot of sense. It's hard to imagine they did
not meet.
Thought you would want to know!
Charlie
1927
Vis
Citiman
28
SEAL HARBOR
VILLAGE IMPROVEMENT SOCIETY
29
Committees of the four Village Improvement
Societies of Bar Harbor, Seal Harbor, North-
THE LAFAYETTE NATIONAL PARK
!
east and Southwest Harbor.
on Mount Desert Island, Me.
The motor road commenced in the fall of
includes 12,000 acres of mountains, woods and
1922 leading from Great Pond Hill, on the Bar
:
lakes
Harbor Road to Somesville, to the Jordan
Office, Corner Park Road and Main Street
Pond House is now completed and will be open
Bar Harbor, Maine
for use in early July. Work is proceeding on
the road leading from this to the summit of
Superintendent
George B. Dorr
Green or Cadillac Mountain and is open to the
Assistant Superintendent
A. H. Lynam
public as far as to a striking point of view over-
Chief Ranger
Benjamin L. Hadley
looking Bar Harbor and Frenchman's Bay.
Clerk
Carl G. Nowack
The lakes within and bordering the Park
Clerk Typist
Grace M. Oakes
have been extensively stocked with fish sup-
Publications: "Rules and Regulations," in-
plied by the State Fish and Game Commis-
cluding a brief history and description of the
sion, about 150,000 fry and 100,000 fingerling
Park, Free.
salmon and trout being planted annually.
Map of the United States Geological Survey
Deer have steadily increased in number
Lafayette National Park sheet with geological
in the Park, as have Ruffed Grouse and other
description compiled from the Shaler and other
birds, taking advantage of the sanctuary
accounts, 10 cents.
given them. The beavers presented to the
The Acadian Forest by George B. Dorr,
Park by the State Fish and Game Commission
25 cents.
in 1921 and 1922 have increased to an extent
where control measures have become necessary
The Park is interlaced with many miles of
to prevent their spread. There is now a well
wood and mountain trails. These are de-
established colony at New Mill Meadow on
veloped and maintained through the Path
Duck Brook, where a lake which is a feature in
1927
30
SEAL HARBOR
VILLAGE IMPROVEMENT SOCIETY
31
the landscape from the mountains has been
created by them, and another on the outlet from
:
Aunt Betty's Pond. These colonies form in-
BY-LAWS
teresting features of the Island's native and
original life. Those which have wandered
No. 1-NAME
Name.
1
elsewhere are being trapped by the park rangers
The Society shall be known as
by a method devised by the United States
the Seal Harbor Village Improve-
Biological Survey which does not injure them
ment Society.
and are being shipped away to points where
No. 2-BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Number of
beaver are desired.
members.
The Board of Directors shall
Additional publications of interest:
consist of not less than ten nor
Trail map of the Eastern Part of Mt. Desert
more than twenty members, all of
Island.
whom shall be elected at the
Monograph of the Geology of Mt. Desert,
annual meeting of the members of
illustrated: F. Bascomb.
the Society by ballot or other
History of Mt. Desert: by Dr. George Street.
method provided by vote of the
The Flora of Mt. Desert: by Edward Rand.
members of the Society, and shall
hold office until their successors
are elected. In addition to the
elected directors, the President,
the Vice-Presidents, the Secretary,
the Treasurer and the members of
the Board of Selectmen of the
Town of Mount Desert shall be
ex-officio members of the Board of
Directors.
6/12/2015
- (1536x2048)
The Eyrie
Seal Harbor, Maine
July 14th, 1922
Dear Mr Lynam:
I am greatly distressed to know of the condition of your
eyes, of which you have advised me in your letter of July 12th, but
reassured by the fact that the Doctor seems to feel confidence that
with the treatment which he has prescribed this difficulty can be
stopped, and the further fact that he does not think it necessary
for you to do any different than you have heretofore.
I much hope that your eyes will yield to the treatment
prescribed and that you will soon note improvement in them.
Thank you for writing me.
Very sincerely,
Johna Rockyulag
Mr A H Lynam,
Bar Harbor, Maine.
https://web.mail.comcast.net/service/home/~/?auth=co&loc=en_US&id=297920&part=2
Pg. I of IR
Amo Blammerer to S Mather
REPORT OF INSPECTION TRIP
To Lafavette National Park, Maine
[ Circa 6/10/1922
Memorandum for Director Mather:
You and I left Washington on the Federal Express at
7:30 o'clock on the evening of June I, 1922, arriving in Boston the morn-
ing of the 2d. We left Boston on the evening of the 2d, arriving in
Ellsworth, Maine, at 6:40 the next morning, motoring from there to Bar
Hargor. where we were put up by Superintendent Dorr at his home. Mr.
Dorr had met us in Boston and accompanied us to the Park.
Saturday, the 3d, was rainy, with low-hanging fog
clouds obscuring all except the immediate distance. With Supt. Dorr and
his assistant, Mr. Lynam, I made an automobile circuit of the eastern
section of the Island and walked over a path of new construction along the
eastern side of Jordan Pond. It was impossible even to see the further
shore of the pond on account of the fog, which, however, enabled me to
give more attention that day to the path construction and the beauty of the
natural ground covering.
The next two days were bright and sunny, and you and I
were ocoupied from morning until evening following woodland trails and
climbing the mountains. On the 4th we aironited the Amphitheatre head to
Jordan Mountain, passing Sargent Mountain Pond upon the way. The next
day we climbed Champlain Mountain by the Precipice Path, descending by
the Bee Hive to Sand Beach, where we bathed and lunched. We then motored
2.
over to Beech Cliff.
You had to leave on the evening of the 5th, I remained, to con-
time my inspection and to make preparation of this report, until the
evening of June 8th. when I left for Boston on the 9 o'clock ferry.
purpose
The special purpose of my inspection was to study the road and
trail system laid before us in Washington recently by Supt. Dorr on a
tentative project-map which he had prepared and which was the result of
strategic
long study on his part directed to securing a Dasis ecommication system
for the Park.
This accorded happily with out recent instructions to the
superintendents to prepare maps, estimates, and other data covering road
projects to be submitted to Congress as the basis for a general road program
Supt. Derr has been studying for years the needs of the Park in
regard to roads and paths, to link it with the residential sections of the
Island and to afford interesting-ways of travel through it, his study in-
cluding also that of means to efficient fire control and game protection.
Supt. Dorr's original plan, tentatively laid out, is attached hereto as
Exhibit A. It shows two systems of ways, one of which, marked in red
on the attached blue print, is planned for motor you's the other, shown
in yellow, for a system of road-trails for use on foot or by horse, motors
being excluded from them.
Before referring to Exhibit B, which shows conclusions arrived
at in conference between you, Supto Derr and myself, I want briefly to
register certain impressions that the Park and Island have made on me.
3.
I had not been in Lafayette Park before and was surprised at
the large scale of the Island. From the point where one enters it from
the mainland, by the bridge at the Narrows, to Seal Harbor, is sixteen
miles by read, while from the her.a of Sames Sound to Schooner Head is
nineteen miles. This constitutes only the eastern half of the Island, whole
is more compact and less extended than the western half and is the section
that you and 1 covered in such portion as we had opportunity. This
extent of the Island is increased further and emphasized by the bold,
abrupt charaster of the mountain masses, while the wonderful views of the
ocean, dotted here and there with islands, give a sense of vestness that
eliminates all feeling of narrowness or restriction. One may. indeed,
regard the broad expanse of water, islanded and stretching away into the
horizon, as an extension of the Park, available for recreational uses.
It would be difficult to say which of the remarkable opper-
tunities the Park offers for enjoyment and redreation are the more attractive
woodland walks and rides, walks along the well-planed, well-kept trails that
lead over the mountains and up the precipitous cliffs, affording a constant
succession of grand and beautiful views, or motor trips, or beating and
sailing, or bathing. To the lover of nature the appeal of the woods is
irresistible. Along the trails on every side objects of fresh interest in
plant and animal life are donstantly arising. the lakes are filled with fish
and the ocean is limitless in its offering for deep-sea fishing. No
visitor coming to spend one or two days would be content wi th that short
space of time but will wish to remain and extend it. This will not be
a park for "trippers" but a place for visitors spending not less than a
he
week or two.
It is to be borne in mind that the great mass of visitors to
a national park do not desire wilking trips over rugged territory or
strenuous climbs: for such, youth and activity, the habit and the love of
exercise, are necessary. For too older, the less strong and active, or less
atremously inclined, who are the vast majority, means must be provided making
reasonably accessible the features of special interest and beauty in the Park.
Were these, in such a system as Supt. Dorr has now planned, to be added to
the Park's already extensive foot-trail system, I venture to predict that
Lafayette National Park will become the most popular place of resort for
lovers of nature and landscape to the eastward of the Great Lakes and
Pass
Mississippi.
speak
Before proceeding to a discussion of the road projects I wish to
state that the trail work carried on from early times and recently with
fresh energy since the Park's creation has resulted in something very fine.
There are over two hundred miles of well-kept trails, carefully marked se
that a boy venturing forth for the first into the Park area would have
no trouble to find his way. Locations have been carefully chosen for the
trails to bring out the greatest scenic value in the areas traversed, and
exquisite taste is apparent alike in the selection of routes and the care
of waysides.
The original plan for motor roads and trail roads tentatively
suggested by Supt. Dorr is shown, as stated, by Exhibit A. We next come to
Exhibit B, which is a revision of Exhibit A with elimination,which you
considered advisable, of certain extensions or duplications of the road
5.
trails.
This map shows one main, park line for motor travel from the
town road now ending blindly near the Jordan Pond House to the Bar Harbor-
Somesville road, with a road to the summit of Cadillac Mountain springing
from it opposite Eagle Lake. Road trails available for foot, horse-back,
or horse-drawn vehicle, but closed to motors and constituting a separate
park system enclose in two great, connected loops the enobscot-Sargent
Mountain mass and that of Penetic Mountain, The Triad and The Bubbles,
passing four lakes - Eagle Lake, Jordan Pond, Hadlock Pond, and Bubble Pond -
upon its course. Northward it is linked with road-trails of similar
character already constructed in the Paradise Hill and Witch Hole Pond
section above the Bluffs on Frenchman's Bay.
These road-trails have been
planned along easy grades, affording, when constructed, to the splendidly
wooded slopes of half a dozen mountains absolutely necessary lanes for fire
and game protection.
I think it impressed you as it did me, and as was emphasi sed
by Supt. Dorr, that these sections of the Park covered not only by yellow
lines showing road trails, but by the red lines showing motor roads, are
practically inacessible except under the most stremous exertions for such
protection work or for enjoyment. I personally traversed the thickly
forested western slope of Pemetic Mountain with great difficulty, and from
the fire protection standpoint, roads of such a character, properly located,
are an absolute necessity. The great value of a road for fire protection
was divious in the Beech Hill section of the Park, where an old, rough
road served not only as a patrol lane for a forest fire that burned over
Beech Mountain two years ago, creating a scar hundreds of acres in extent
6.
that will be many years in healing, but acted also as a barrier to that
fire when it reached the road; on one side we now see the native tree
growth and plant life in all its freshness, while on the other side the
charred trunks of trees covering hundreds of acres were in horrible
can trast.
In order to ascertain to what extent the roads would be
visible from the mountain tops when built special attention was paid to the
proposed locations of those along Pemotic and Jordan Mountains. On
Tuesday I sircled Jordan Pond, partly by the new survey and partly -
where such existed - by foot trails, and then followed the motor road
survey through the woods along the western'slope of Pemetic Mountain from
the foot of Jordan Pond to the northern and of Bubble Pond, a distance of
about three miles. Surveyer signson, who made the survey, and Mr.
Lynan accompanied Supt. Dorr and mo. The read is excellently located
throughout with a maximum five per cent grade. With the exception of one
or two places where it will cross rock slides It cannot be seen from either
above or below: and along these rock-slide sections boulders and other
weathered rocks which are abundant along the route can be se arranged that
the road will scarcely appear, at all, in evidence.
The reads, with the exception of a small section of the
system flanking Bubble Pond which will run close before shore of the Pend,
are surveyed at elevations sufficiently high to be out of sight from the
trails and planned to bring aut to the atmost beautiful reflection and light
effects of the lower-lying ponds, as they are termed Locally but which are
true lakes. Not until these roads have been built, affording the general
7.
public such a view as this of these exquisite, clear, and beautifully shaped
bodies of water will it get a true appreciation of their great charm and
beauty. % am confident that the future will see a demand rather for the on
ting of vistos at well-chosen places to open the views to visitors than for
vegetation to hide the road construction. I personally verified this in
following the survey of the proposed motor road running along the west
flank of Pometic Mountain, and also the section of the road trail system
on the west cide of Jordan Pand. Neither you nor X had time to follow the
route of the proposed motor road to the top 0f:0a:111as Mountain, or to
alimb that mountain, but anyone who has climbed any one of the major
mountain masses will come to the sure conviction that a road for moterists
should lead to the top of at least one of the mountains no that those who
cannot climb may get opportunity to receive the inspiration and feel the
exaltation of spirit that come with an hour spent on the breese-swept
hillsswith their superb views over sea and island, losing themselves in
far distance. If one good motor road to the ton of Cadillac Mountain is
not provided in this plan, it will inevitably come through popular
insistence in the future. In fact, every one of the reads now shown on
Exhibit B, in my opinion, is essential and should be safely established
on this basic plan. In my opinion a road up Gadillac Mountain will not
be equalled anywhere in the United States for its combination of mountain
massing, valleys, inland lakes, and ocean and should be given when built
a distinctive name that will identify it as a national scenic road and give
it individuality throughout the world, even as the Corniche and other old-world
drives are world famous.
8.
Exhibit B has been prepared as the result of an hour's
conference between Mr. Dorr, you and myself, shortly before your leaving.
Comparison with Exhibit A shows what road details have been eliminated.
The map as now altered shows a simple commicating and feeder system
laid out so as to serve the most important administrative requirements
of fire fighting and game protection patrols while at the same time
affording views of the best scenic exhibits of the Park without invading
other and extensive sections which can be reserved to the walker.
I am returning from this inspection trip with a true realisation
of the wonderful work Supt. Dorr has done and I am confident I can speak for
GBD
you similarly in putting this on official record. No one can appreciate,
until he has been on the ground and viewed the immense tracts oz valuable
lands turned over to the Government through his efforts, and the detailed
construction work already done, what a stupendous undertaking it has been.
This achievement is quite without parallel elsewhere. In his splendid ao-
complishment, Supt. Dorr has been ably supported by many other public
spirited men in the free and generous donation of lands and money; and
in fact, as soon as the read projects shown on Exhibit B are approved,
donations of large SUMB not from one but a number of interested and
public spirited individuals will be available, not only to build the motor
road from the Bar Harbor -Somesville road to the Jordan Pond road but for
the acquisition of thousands of acres of land, not yet in the Park, but
so strategically located as to be absolutely essential for the complete
9.
rounding out of the Park and its enjoyment by the people. In reviewing
these achievements the conclusion is inevitable that no one else than Supt.
Dorr could have accomplished what has been done and is being done and will
be done, and that he has established for all time in the creation of Lafayette
National Park, as it eventually (ill leave his hands, a splendid example for
the American people of what a public spirited man, supported by a group of
public spirited citizens, inspired by his initiative and ideals, can do to
reserve for all time a great scenic area for the health, recreation and pleasure
of the American people. He has done this modestly and inconspicuously, with
whole-hearted endeavor toward one end.
In conclusion, I feel that no element entering into a thoughtful
consideration of these road projects seems to have been overlooked. The
plan shown in Exhibit B, in my opinion, shows the reasonable solution of
handling the practical problems of traffic control and distribution of visitors,
coupled with fire and game protection, and is imperative to meet the inflowing
hosts of visitors the coming years will bring. The Park is one
that
must
be
enjoyed at leisure. It is small in comparison with our other major parks,
but it is rich in its offerings. Eventually licensed operators will have to
be installed to furnish saddle horse and light buggy service at reasonable
prices.
Itherefore recommend that the plan receive your approval as basic
for a motor road and road-trail communication system for Lafayette National
Park.
10.
It mast be emphasized for our records that this report must
be kept confidential as far as the general public is concerned. Should it
become public in an way land values might rise to such figures that the
proposed donations will not be sufficient to wover the amount needed for
adquisition and the opportunity be lost.
Therefore should discussion of
individual projects or development work arise it should be carried on
generally and without reference to this map or this report.
I may add that the demand for a development such as
Supt. Dorr proposes appears to be strong in the State, not only in the
immediate region of the park, but throughout the whole extensive resort
section of Maine which has come to regard the park as an impor tant asset.
[Arno B.Cammerer
page 11.
EXTRACT from
Mr. Cammerer's Inspection Report 1922
I therefore recommend that the plan receive your approval
as basic for a motor road and road-trail communication system for
Lafayette National Park.
It must be emphasized for our records that this report
must be kept confidential as far as the general public is con-
cerned.
Should it become public in any way land values might
rise to such figures that the proposed donations will not be
sufficient to cover the amount needed for acquisition and the
opportunity be lost. Therefore should discussion of individual
projects or development work arise it should be carried on
generally and without reference to this map or this report.
I may add that the demand for a development such
as Superintendent Dorr proposes appears to be strong in the State,
not only in the immediate region of the Park, but throughout the
whole extensive resort section of Maine which has come to regard the
Park as an important asset.
To Stephen T.
ather
Director National Park Service
page 12
EXTRACT FROM
MR. CAMERER'S INSPECTION REPORT 1922.
In conclusion, I feel that no element entering into
a thoughtful consideration of these road projects
seems to have been overlooked. The plan shown in
Exhibit B, in my opinion, shows the reasonable
solution of handling the practical problems of
traffic control and distribution of vivitors,
coupled with fire and game protection, and is im-
perative to meet the inflowing hosts of visitors
the coming years will bring. The Park is one that
must be enjoyed at leisure. It is small in compari-
son with our other major parks, but it is rich in
its offerings. Eventually licensed operators will
have to be installed to furnish saddle horses and
light buzzy service at reasonable prices.
I therefore recommend that the plan receive your
approval as basic for a motor road and road-trail
CO unication system for Lafayette National Park.
It must be emphasized for our records that this
report must be kept confidential as far as the
general public is concerned. Should it become
public in any way land values might rise to such
figures that the proposed donations will not be
sufficient to cover the amount needed for acquisi-
tions and the opportunity be lost. Therefore should
discussion of individual projects or development
work arise it should be carried on gen rally and with-
out reference to this map or this report.
I may add that the demand for a development such as
Superintendent Dorr proposes appears to be strong in
the State, not only in the immediate region of the
Park but throughout the whole extensive resort section
of Maine which has come to regard the Park as an
important asset.
ADDRESS ONLY
THE DIRECTOR. NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
WASHINGTON D. C.
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
WASHINGTON
July 26, 1922.
Dear Mr. Dorr:
Referring to your letters of June 14th and 16th
on the tentative Lafayette Park road and road-trail plan, which
I personally inspected on the ground early in June (the Director
himself for a few days accompanying you and me on our inspection),
I have just concluded a thorough review of the project with First
Assistant Secretary Finney of the Department in whose particular
bailiwick the national parks fall, covering thoroughly the scope
of my report to the Director of June 10th and also other points
of possible importance in connection with the development of the
project, and we have both approved it as per Exhibit B attached.
This Exhibit is an exact copy of the similar Exhibit B in this
office having Secretary Finney's and my signature.
We are convinced that the project is well thought
out, and will enable the enjoyment of the wonderful natural
beauties within the Lafayette Park by all visitors without
marring the beauties of the landscape in any way, or intruding
upon areas that should be preserved for quietude and repose;
in fact, special attention has been given that areas such as
the amphitheater section, Sargent Mountain Pond, and numerous
other beautiful valleys and secluded spots be kept away from
too close proximityto these roads and trails. The road
to
the top of Cadillac Mountain is important, though it is equally
important in my opinion that no road go to the top of any other
mountain in the Park.
The plan is approved, and whenever you have sufficient
donations to go ahead with the work you may do so, bearing in
mind to keep the roads and road-trails as inconspicuous as
possible.
I should mention for your information that we
have had cordial letters from Senators Hale and Fernald and
Congressman Nelson, assuring their great interest in this
project, and giving their unqualified endorsement to it.
Cordially yours,
Mr. George B. Dorr,
Supt., Lafayette National Park,
Acting Director.
Bar Harbor, Maine.
Inc. 1107.
[A.B.Caminerer]
il. of Minnesota.
Thomas 5. Roberts
HERBERT W. GLEASON
Natural History Corres pondence
ILLUSTRATED LECTURES ON TRAVEL AND NATURE-STUDY
Scenic Alaska
The Old Spanish Missions of California
Mt. Monadnock
Luther Burbank and His Magic Gardens
Our National Parks
Volcanic Peaks of the Pacific Coast
The Maine Woods
Alpine Flowers. of the Rocky Mountains
Our Romantic Southwest . Yosemite Valley and the Big Trees
Lafayette National Park
Wild Flowers, East and West
Grand Canyon of the Colorado - The Yellowstone Wonderland
Island Gardens of Mt. Desert - Mushrooms and Other Fungi
The Wonderland of Southern Utah - Over the John Muir Trail
Afield with Henry David Thoreau
The Spell of the Desert
Ancient Cliff Dwellings of the Far West - The Canadian Alps
Gardens and Deserts of Southern California
Bird Life
1259 COMMONWEALTH AVENUE, BOSTON 34. MASSACHUSETTS
April 18, 1924.
My dear Dr. Roberts:
Here is another story which I had in the Boston Trans-
script this week. The pictures are punk (there were a number of others
which got crowded out, perhaps just as well), but you may be interested
in the story. By the way, if you should want any of these gull photos
for your educational work, or any lantern slides of the same, I think I
can secure them for you at nominal cost. The negatives are in my control,
but I took them for Mr. Geo. B. Dorr, superintendent of the Lafayette
National Park, and he is glad to have them used for educational purposes.
We have spent the past two summers at Bar Harbor, - rather a
1922-24
mild substitute for our trips into the Far West but we have greatly en-
joyed them, and plan to go there again this summer It is
a
combination
of business and pleasure for me (exclusively pleasure for Mrs. G.) which
is very agreeable. My work during the summer is chiefly notographic,
with occasional lectures, and with a motor-boat and automobile at my dispos-
al, the time goes pleasantly. You ought to visit Mt. Desert. I am sending
you copy of a pamphlet recently issued at Washington which will tell you
more about it. The half-tones in this are very good, as I think you will
observe.
By the way, can you tell me where I can get a good "blind"
for bird work? I remember Mr. Figgins used to make a good contrivance, but
I think he has discontinued the business.
Tell me about yourself and what you are doing. I would like
immensely to spend next month in Minnesota among the birds, but that is
hardly fessible this year.
Sincerely yours,
Histori H. Eleason
Dr. Thos. S. Roberts,
Minneapolis, Minn.
8/2/2018
AMC's 100-Plus Years in Acadia National Park - Appalachian Mountain Club
Appalachian Mountain Club
S
MOUNTAIN
August Camp
Lafayette National Park
Echo Lake
Mount Desert, Maine
July 29- August 12
1922
2.
On July 8, 1916, President Woodrow Wilson dedicated 5,000 acres on Maine's Mount Desert
Island as Sieur de Monts National Monument. The National Park Service (NPS) was founded later
that summer and, in 1919, Sieur de Monts was redesignated and renamed Lafayette National
Park. Doesn't sound familiar? A decade passed before it gained its current name: Acadia National
Park.
AMC's presence on Mount Desert Island dates back even further, to 19th-century trips to Beech
Mountain. Then, in 1922, AMC hosted its annual August Camp on Mount Desert Island. For $58,
members could enjoy two weeks along the shores of Echo Lake. Horace Van Everen, the club's
recording secretary, noted in the January 1923 edition of AMC's Bulletin that park officials-
including the "father of Acadia," George B. Dorr-requested that AMC host a camp at Echo Lake
every year. According to Van Everen, the idea garnered the "liveliest interest and attention."
AMC members made subsequent excursions to the temporary camp in the summers of 1923 and
1924. In 1926, AMC signed a 10-year lease with Wild Gardens of Acadia, a group of financial
supporters, under the stipulation that the "the Club shall exercise supervision and control of the
property, using every care to guard against fire, shall protect wildlife." The lease formally
established Echo Lake as an AMC camp.
In 1934, Dorr, the superintendent of the park, sold the 13-acre Echo Lake parcel to AMC for $1,
with the conditions that the camp would remain dedicated to recreation and that AMC would
seek NPS's approval of any changes.
As the popularity of Echo Lake Camp grew, AMC added modern amenities such as hot and cold
running water, electricity, boats, and swimming floats. Even so, the camp retains much of its rustic
charm today, with campers still spending a week or more living in canvas tents.
LEARN MORE
See vintage shots of other national parks. Learn more about centennial events at Acadia.
Find events to celebrate Acadia's 100th, for which AMC is proud to be an Acadia
Centennial Partner.
Acadia National Park, August Camp, Camps, Conservation, Critical Treasure, Echo Lake Camp,
Maine, Maine Chapter, AMC Outdoors, Flashback, From the Magazine, July/August 2016
https://www.outdoors.org/articles/amc-outdoors/amcs-100-plus-years-in-acadia-national-part
3/7
8/9/22 B.H.Times,
ANI
VOLUME VIII
$2.00 A YEAR
BAR HAR
WAS A BIG DAY AT
OVER 100 ENTERED
EAST MILLINOCKE
APPALACHIAN CAMP
FOR TENNIS WEEK
HERE THIS W
Rain Delays the Opening
Maine's Fastest Team to r
Flag Raising Feature At
Local Diamond Friday
Echo Lake Wednesday
Matches of Competitions
and Saturday
Bar Harbor plays East Mill
100 GUESTS PRESENT
WILL PLAY THURSDAY
here Friday and Saturday of thi
East Millinocket has, unquest
In Spite of Unfavorable Weather
the fastest team in Maine this yr
Luncheon, Speeches by Distinguished
First of Week Interest Keen in
attendance at the week end gar
Visitors and Other Events
Maritime Championships
in all probability be the largest
on Program
season thus far. Bar Harbor/
14-inning game to this team a
On account of the heavy rains early
Millinocket last week by a score of
With
more than one hundred guests
in the week the opening matches in Bar
and the visitors come here with a
present
the Appalachian Club camp
Harbor's first tennis week were post-
some respect for the Bar Harbor
at Echo Lake presented a lively appear-
poned until Thursday. When the en-
On the name day. following 1
ance on Wednesday of last week when
tries closed Saturday noon there were
Inning game, the Bar Harbor team
Judge John A. Peters and the members
more than 100 players entered, many of
to Millinocket, distance/ 10
of his house party were the guests of
them being entered in three events.
and defeated the fast Millinocket
honor at a luncheon given by the Club
While the delay on account of bad weath-
by a score of 8 to 1.
and the Park.
er is to be regretted, it is not expected
The local team lost to the Prov
The festivities began with the arrival
that it will interfere greatly with the
Independents here Saturday by a
and reception of guests. Many drove
success of the tournament.
of 8 to 6
down into the woods road the con-
The pitching dall of he Bas I
struction of which in a few weeks by
GIRLS' FRIENDLY SOCIETY
Nine has been strengthened by "
Lafayette National Park workmen has
ENTERTAINS OLD TOWN GIRLS
dition of Bernard Mr arthy.
been the occasion of many favorable
the first string Goorgetown pitche
remarks. Outside in the main road,
Summer activities of the Girls Friendly
the past action Md arthy
has
lines of cars were parked, and there
Society have included many interesting
with the fant teams In
were many guests from the various
events. On Saturday the Society en-
York state and should prove of
towns, the boards of selectmen from
tertained the Girls Friendly of Old
real ameilance to the Har Harbor
Mt. Desert, Southwest and Bar Harbor
Town when 18 girls /guents, coming
The fans who saw
being invited and well represented.
by automobile and accompanied by
against the Island Falls team fix
The sounding of the bugle and then
several officials. They were entertained
were apparently much pleased will
the notes of the Star Spangled Panner,
at supper by Mrs. R. Higgins. Mrs.
show that he made when the 11
with Supt. George B. Dorr of Lafayette
John Conners, Mrs. R 11. Moon, Mrs
team was defealed by a acute of a
National Park pulling the flag slowly
William Burton, Mrs Alonzo Parker,
up the new liberty pole while all stood
Mrs. Vasconie Higgins, Mrs. Harry
at attention in salute and as the flag
Gordon, Mrs. Charlety Hass, Mrs. F H
MISS HENNETT AND MII MAN
huttered from maschead, giving the
Sherman, Mrs. John alkenstrom, Mrs
0.11 CONO
oath of 'allegiance, was an inspiring
W. E. Patterson M A
picture.
operated by looking after the drivers
George Harris the well known
With the sounding of the dinner call
who brought the party. On Saturday
and Miss Edith Hennett.
the guests, men in one line and women
evening at the I uring Hall of St Saviours
the first the Building of
in the other, prepared for the march
the guests were entertained at a dance
Saturda
M.
11
to the refreshment tent where Chef
with about 100 present. Moore or
has
friends
in
11as
Hastin
Bellamy of the Camp Force assisted
chestra played
his
brings
the
Fits
by B. L. Hadley, Chief Ranger and
Following corporate Communion on
finely
hale
by Miss Crosby and Miss Oakes of the
Sunday morning at :30 breakfast was
his
Fark service looked after the general
served in the arish Hall with 11 guests
ability
10 to
serving. The manner in which the
present. The hables were attracti
but she is a and
bringing together of the two lines as-
with bouquets of sweet (x as and gladion
of
Information and
sembled the partners for dinner was
Mrs. Alonzo usker, Mrs. Irving litence
must artistice
a social element which went far toward
Mrs. B. E. Think After breakfast the
is an unue
dispensing with all formality. The
party motored to Sieur de Monta Spring.
ly fine
lipenial as his plas
menu was a delicious one and well
visiting also the Kennedy Gardens. and
proved
served. Fish with cream sauce, clam
driving along the ocean drive, returning
The
chowder and coffee, the two latter
for the 10:45 service Miss Alder 511.
items prepared by Henry Bragdon of
tertained 11 members at the Y. W. A
inder
Willia
Bar Harbor as only he can do it, vege-
at dinner and a motor trip was enjoyed
Green
Midk
table salad, ice cream, cake, doughnuts
in the Itemoon to various politia of
The
Nails
their
Hundreds
Name
and coffee made up a delicious lunch.
interest
Mr. Maria
At the close of the luncheon hour,
Another interesting feature of the
Au
se
is
guere
the guests assembled on the shore of
summer was the piente to Sleur de Monta
the
the lake, while President William F.
Spring enjoyed by the candidates on
11
out
des ktako 11e flows hat
Rogers, of the Appalachian Club, be-
July 21st.
that
cal
plus
Le le
gan the speaking program, introducing
Miss
Judge Peters. Judge Peters, associated
One the pleasantest gatherings was
1
Automic
Keynaldo Hahn
so closely in the minds of all with the
that at Kump Killbare at Eagle Lake
1
l'eche
Meynaldo 11a
creation of Lafayette National Park
Tuesday afternoon when suitie 40 meth
Pain
Maynahdo Has
told of the first liberty pole at Machias.
bers the Appalacitian lub Camp
are
Turn Delease
In part Mr. Peters said:
members at Echo Lake having liked
We
"I was asked to welcome you to
liange Harris
this luncheon as guests. On reflection
over Dry Mountain ended their day at
I find it is entirely improper. It is your
the camp. Ranger John Rich of Lafay
Park-not mine, nor Mr. Dorr's, but
ette National Park who ONIO the camp
was a most hospitable heat Chief
yours. I helped what I could in the
Ranger Hadley, assisted by Misso
passage of legislation which made it
SUBSCRIBE FOR THE TIMES
Crysby and Oaken of the office staff
possible for this Park to become yours.
served tea and a substantial
It is yours. The deeds are duly re-
corded in your name. You have a right
panying mehu. A photograph of the
to be on your own land. I think it
group was taken by Herbert H Gleason
proper, however, for me to mention
and is social hour spent about the amp,
that we cannot all of us, one hundred
which ended in the club's giving vote
SAVINGS DEPARTMENT
of thanks in cheering for Supt Doss
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 3)
who was direcent
It has been stated that
EDWARD B.
MEARS
if the railway employees
A. S. RODICK
would
in
THE
BAR
HARBOR
FLAG RAISING AT THE
SHEILA BAIN YOUNG
THE BAR HARBOR TIMES
APPALACHIAN CAMP
VIOLINE OF PROMIS
Newspaper
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1)
Miss Sheila Bain, whose vioth mude
Wednesdays at Bar Harber, Maine, by SHERMAN PUBLISHING CO., Inc.
millions of people, operate here without
has recently attracted attention,
SERMAN, Pres.
SESSMAN,
Tréss.
SHIMMAN, Vice-Pree.
rules and regulations. Congress passes
is a pupil of Victor Kundo the
certain legislation which places the
supervision of Leopold Auer, and
BION F. SHERMAN
EDITOR AND MANAGER
management with the great Interior
protege of Josel Homanh
Office Times Building
Telephone 709
P. O. Box 564
Department, which in turn delegates
In a 27. 1922. from
AL
that management to be a bureau called
Description Price $2.00 a Year In Advance
Advertising Rates Furnished OR Application
Mr. Hofmann be gubtes Prol. Aper
the National Park Service.
follows: 'She04 (very gifted in-
latered as second dam matter July 10. 1914, at the postoffice at Bar Harbor, Maine under
Mr. Mather", continued Mr. Peters,
deed and has a very fine tone produce
Act of March & 1879
the able head of that Bureau, the
tion; in two years or less she safely
Im
National Park Service, and our own
and successfully appear the concert
prince of altruists, Mr. Dorr, has local
stage." Miss Bain is now tittle lover
he Bar Harbor Village Improvement Association has for many
charge. They have a policy which
1
fourteen and has given her services
Im
$ been working for a more attractive Bar Harbor. Our Village
think is wonderfully well adapted to
to many charities in Northeast and
every situation-that this shall be
Bar Harbors. She gives recital in
in was made possible by the A. and its upkeep has been in
great Democratic Park, for the use of
Northeast Harbor at the Neighborhood
Spc
ands of the association for many years. The care of the Shore
all people who love nature and appre-
House on Tuesday, evening, Aug. 22.
ciate such opportunities as this. And
Im
the Village Cemetery, the building and maintenance of numer-
what could be finer than to have this
KAMP KOHUT BOYS
parks, mountain and other trails, the improvement of a section
Club, the very foundation of which
AT EAGLE LAKE
lies in that close touch with nature?
Tw
and there; all have come under the work that the V. I. A. has
I am very regretful that the Club comes
A party of six from the boys' camp,
for the resort.
but once to a place.'
Kamp Kohut, at Oxford arrived Thurs-
Mo
Just here was a ripple of dissention
day night to spend a few days in Lafay-
e direct results obtained by the V. I. A. are in themselves im- and the club members informally as-
ette National Park. They went intrme-
sured the speaker that they would
diately to Eagle Lake where they spent
W
nt, but perhaps no more so than the indirect results in building
certainly make a return trip to the
the night, and are to remain during
er a period of years a common pride in the appearance of the
Park.
their stay. The Darty was accom-
Plai
Mr. Peters then went on to speak 0
e
and its surroundings. The great majority of Bar Harbor's
panied by the campmaster, Charles
the liberty pole and its flag and gave
Lillis. After leaving Bar Harbor
round and summer residents take real pride in seeing to it that
a little history of the first liberty pole
they are to go to Rockland to spend
Spo
erected in this section, that at Machias
ild beauty of the Island is not-marred and that from time to
a few days camping in that vicinity.
back in the days of the Revolution
This is one of first parties of this
he natural beauties of the country are made even more enjoy-
and of its defense from 2 British ship.
sort that has availed itself of the privi-
Slip
In speaking of his guests, Judge
y the addition of a new feature of beauty or of convenience.
leges and fine camping grounds in the
Peters said it was a pleasure to bring
park. In the party were Newton Rice
Wh
have been years when the has done more work than in
to Ellsworth and to Mount Desert
of New York, Morris Ullman of New
Island the members of his party and
and some administrations have naturally been more active
Haven, Donald Adleberg of Codar-
Silk
he would ask them to speak to those
hurst, L. I., Daniel Sherby, Robert
ore efficient than others, but taken over a period of some thirty
present.
Baum, and Louis Hoffenmaier of Wash-
He spoke of the Hon. Wilfred W.
it would be difficult to over-estimate the value of the direct
ington.
Silk
Lufkin, Collector of the Port of Boston
direct work of this Association.
and introduced him, remarking that
SECURE GUARANTORS FOR
he had come on his private yacht,
Wo
t has been said of the Bar Harbor I. A. might with equal
CHAUTAUQUA NEXT YEAR
the revenue cutter Ossippee. In the
e said of the similar associations in the other resorts of the
midst of laughing applause Mr. Lufkin
The guarantors for the 1928 Chau-
Sum
spoke briefly expressing his pleasure
At about this season each year these societies come to the
tauqua J. H. Butterfield, Mrs.
at being present. Mr. Lufkin in re-
Morris Lymburner, Mrs. In L. Canning.
Fox
of the Island, both resident and non-resident, asking for con-
plying to Judge Peters' laughing accu-
Rev. W. H. Patterson. Mrs. Myra D.
sation that he was no mountain climber
financial support. The TIMES believes that this work is
Joyce, Mr. H. F. Carter Mrs. Ardello
said he wanted to go on probation as
Hadley, Mrs. Effle Road, Mine Geral.
of support from each one of us, in such measure as we feel
a possible member of the club.
dine Butterfield, R. 1. White, E. J.
can afford to contribute. It is essential that these societies,
In like mannier the Judge introduced,
M. 1. Hodgkins, Mrs. F. G.
with many a quaint and witty quip
Small, Bertha Poletson, Dorother Stan-
heir work through generally efficient committees, have ade-
of kindly humor, the Hon. Jacolr John
loy, John 1. Thompson, Rav. Dayton
150
MA
nds with which to carry on.
Rogers, the Hon. Allan T. Treadway.
E. McCMain, Mary Hope Dow Mm.
Massachusetts congressmen. Both were
T. A. McIntire, Eugene H. Higging.
tant as is the financial support, there is another kind of
greeted with applause. Judge Peters
Allen Mitchell, Arthur C. Gray, Amon
then introduced Gen. John H. Sher-
Salisbury, H. Bloomfield, Min C. B.
that is just as truly needed, the kind of support that makes
burne of Boston, the only volunteer
Spend B. L. Hadley, Mrs. Irving
of the V. I. A. less difficult and consequently less expensive.
officer to be made A Brigadier General
Front. S. D. Hecht Co., Albion
in the Great War. Gen. Sherburne
Sherman.
reference to a more general interest in the appearance of
rose, in response to Judge Poters an
ge on the part of all who spend all or part of the season here.
nouncement of a 'real general' expressed
Gossard
his pleasure and thanks to those who
the disposal of waste paper and other rubbish on the part
at the office as well as at the camp in
applauded him but did not make a
for every
the Club's behalf, the work of H. M.
Il contribute greatly toward a more attractive town. The
speech.
Smith of the ranger force and others.
oicnic grounds along the Ocean Drive, at The Ovens, at the
Miss Jennie Doe of New Hampshire
At the close of the exercises, the in
Branalerce
a
member of the State Legislature of
formal Kreeting of various members
All the latest
onds and lakes are for the enjoyment of all who may come
her home state made a brief but telling
of the club, of the town officials from
rest and recreation. A few picnic parties the members of
little speech, saying that New Hamp-
Bar Harbor and Mt. Denert, took up
savdo
shire with her own scenic beauties was
an hour or more. President Rogers of
glect to burn or take away their own rubbish soon have in
far from Jealous of Maine and her beau-
the Club was cheered as he left the
Prices $3.25
vay marred the great natural beauties that attracted them
tiful first eastern Park. Fred Tucker,
campgrounds in early afternoon on
No extra
a former president of the Club spoke
his way to Boston on business The
t and the next comers are greeted by clutter and rubbish
briefly as did Gardiner Jones, one of
Congressional party received their share
VIOL B.
ything but attractive. It really seems more than careless-
the Club's oldest members, having
of applause and three cheers echoed
joined in 1876.
as Supt. Dorr of the Park left the camp.
selfish, that some persons apparently have SO little con-
Graduate
Manager Staples of the Camp then
The day was a success from every
for others. A little more thought of the next comers
asked various of those who had been
point of view. Guests present who
IH Collage Street
connected with the event to speak.
were noted were Philip Livingston of
enjoyment/ be much worth while. What has been
S. H. Mayo of Southwest Harbor IN
New York; Miss Clio Chilcott, Lalay-
nic grounds might be said of the Shore Path, the Green and
sponded to the tribute of cheers and
ette National Park lecturer of New
applause paid to him and the people
York, Miss Blackwell head of the
y other points of interest on the Island. Some of us might
of Southwest Harbor generally for their
department of French of Washington
eat expense give a little more attention to the appearance
kindness to the club. Benjamin 1..
Irvoix High school. New York; Mrs.
Hadley chief ranger responded in
Robert Lincoln O'Brien and son Lin.
E.F.
a
properties, and thus add to the attractiveness of the resort.
brief but graceful characteristic and
coln, wife of the editor of the Boston
knows the history of the Village Improvement Association
kindly little speech in which he depre
Herald: Mr. and Mrs. 8. P. Davis of
CARPE
cated thanks saying that he had en-
Hartford, Conn.
of the others over Mt. Desert Island, must appreciate that
joyed the cooperation with the club
A feature of the afternoon was the
Furniture Made
done and are doing a splendid work. They can and will
that it was pleasure and not duty
taking of photographs in which many
better work, if they are given both the financial and moral
Mr. Staples made an appreciative
besides those present for the purpose
Furnleure and
speech of appreciation of the Park in
participated. The Park camera oper-
and
:he community, in greater measure than is the case at present
general, from Supt, Dorr down to the
ated by Herbert W. Gleason the well
office force, mentioned the work done
known lecturer and photographer and
Shop. West St.
assisted by Ernest Gustafsom and Wil.
lim B. Campbell of the Park service
Yache and n.
played an Important part.
GBD
"prince of altruists"
PAR AUCTION
BAR HARBOR TIMES, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23,
1922
ST GIVEN
ing yearly as the fame of it as a vacation
CURTIS
SATURDAY
AT FINE CONCERT
E.H.PEOPLE HEAR
ground grew. Summer life then was
WINNER
vastly different then from what itis now.
The visitors found shelter and board
ecital Program at
OF NATIONAL PARKS
with the island natives, going into their
H. P. Curtis was the wi
ts Delights Audience.
homes, living as they lived, and making
stroke competition in the
friends of them. Their diversion and
series at the Kebo Valley
pleasure was found in climbing the moun-
ing a card with a gross of 8
the young Cuban who
Mrs. Huntington Williams Hostess
tains, sailing in the harbor, and pic-
of 65 with a handicap of
an enviable place for
To 200 Who Hear Interesting
nicing by the seashore or in thewoods.
Van Buren was runner u)
nals of American con-
Talks On Works of National Parks
Their needs were simple and their wants
gross of 107 and a 32 handi
beared in a remarkable
few. Their recreation was gained largely
a net of 75.
ding of Arts on Satur-
in the opportunity offered for life in the
The scores:
d was received with
More than 150 were present at the
open. It was from the record of this
udience which seemed
home of Mrs. Huntington Williams in
early summer life that the idea arose
it preasure in his work.
Northeast Harbor on Friday afternoon
of preserving the natural beauty and
Total
th finish which gives
when, with President Charles W. Eliot
offering it to the public in the same way
H.P. Curtis
xqusite@perfection and
presiding an interesting though informal
in which it appealed to those early
Martin Van Buren
ks such players. He
program of speaking upon National
visitors.
Dr. J. A. Furley
interpretation which
Park work was carried out. The speak-
have said that summer life in the
Dr. Robert Fowler
t with an individuality
ers were A. E. Demaray of Washington,
early days was different from that of
Edward Robbins
he composer's thought
editor of the National Park Service,
the present time. The change came
James Robbins
a something of under-
who is the guest here, unofficially of
about gradually, the easy, carefree ways
E. Lee Jones
88 has the personality
Supt. George B. Dorr Chief Ranger
first giving place to a more ordered
H.D. Burnham
the feeling of the
Benjamin L. Hadley and Frederick V.
hotel life, with its customary social
C.S. Van Renssalaer
ch something of his
Coville of Washington, the eminent
events, and from the hotel life, grew
George A. Robbins
is work.
(ch)
botanist.
what is now the leading summer visitor
Lawrence Morris
In opening the meeting President
life of the Island, the cottage colony.
M. P. Collins
gram was not a long
Eliot in his simple and kindly way which
ven numbers six were
With each change, the other changes
sets a speaker at ease and makes him
Other players in Saturds
lays Chopin with that
have necessarily taken place. The so-
tition included M. L. Fear
welcome first introduced Arthur E.
cial activities have taken on a more
h can bring delight
Demaray, editor of the National Park
Ryle, W. H. Conroy, Earl
er of the great classics
formal aspect, making such demands
Service at Washington.
L. Livingston, J. M. Harts
those to whom music
upon the time of our visitors that less
F. L. V. Hoppin, A. S. Wr
through melody and
Mr. Demaray is an able speaker, frank
time than formerly is found in which
Mears, G. G. McMurtry,
Perhaps no selection
simple, straightforward and he struck a
to enjoy the woodlands, the seashore
Kuser, Dr. J. F. Mitchell, M.
ld have been more
keynote when he those who
and the mountains. It is hoped that
The score on points of the
such a concert. For
saw one national park always wanted
with the establishment of the Park and
the closing number
to see another and all the others. He
its activities along varoius lines the
stands with James Robbins
or the Military Po-
said that in the five years he had ahd
summer residents will find renewed en-
Robbins in the lead with
brite. But he played
been connected with the Park service
joyment in the Island's natural charm.
each. H., D. Burnham, R
dances exquisitely
he had had wonderful opportunities
G. G. McMurtry, Dr. Rol
to visit the other parks and that he had
have two each, and S. M.
delightful numbers,
EMINENT BOTANIS IS
Rachmaninoff and
visited 12 out of the 19.
GUEST IN BAR HARBOR
S.P. Delaney, have one each
balance and variety
'I am very often asked," said Mr.
gram a perfect whole.
Demaray, "which I prefer or which
Frederick Vernon Coville, botanist,
I would recommend that prospective
MALVERN EMPLOYER
who 18 connected with the United States
visitors should see first. I am unable to
Department of Agriculture, is visiting
MOST SUCCESSF
answer those questions because each
Supt. George B. Dorr at his home on
UNDA KNOX.
park is 80 different from any other park.
Old Farm road. Mr. Coville 18 one of
The annual ball of the Ma
I myself have not yet been able to ac-
the most eminent men in his profession.
Employees, held at the (
. widow of the late
quire a preferance and no matter which
He is here for special research work
Thursday evening, was at
d away on Thursday
park one visits first the desire to visit
on the Island. Mr. Coville is a native of
the largest crowd of dancers a
Eden, Maine in the
the others is created. To me the most
New York but has been in Washington
the Casino this year. Alw
been hers for over
impressive feature of Lafayette National
for many years having been since 1893
the big Casino dances of the
was 83 years of age
Park is the matter of its creation. The
curator for the United States National
year's ball surpassed all for
th came as a great
other parks have all been created out
Herbarium and botanist for the United
ly it was not wholly
of lands already belonging to the Gov-
both in attendance and qua
States Department of Agriculture. His
tertainment. The introductio
was quite helpless
ernment. They have simply been set
writings on many botanical subjects
novel features in decoration
She was most ten-
aside by acts of Congress and dedicated
are considered high authority and he
tainment added much to t
her youngest daughter
to the recreational uses of the people.
has held many important chairs and
of all who attended. The
y with whom she has
The lands of Lafayette National Park
served on many important committees
Miss Adele Olga made a bi
are given entirely by private owners to
years.
in connection with his work.
the nation. I wonder whether the value
all present.
been a most devoted
of such a gift is yet fully conceived of
her untiring efforts
Mr. Demaray continued to speak of
her father and mother
the great possession of the people which
years.
the parks constitute and of the reali-
always lived an ac-
zation that they are the people's own.
being a most devoted
He touched upon Lafayette National
and her cheery smile
Park and its relation to the Mount
issed by her family
Desert Island of the Park's great at-
he was the mother of
traction to people. He spoke of
the
ur of whom survive
problems brought up by this increase
es nine grandchildren
in-travel and of the necessity for meeting
and children and two
them and referred to the manner of
children.
handling the problem of motor camping
FRID
mildren are Mrs. John
by the other parks, of how tracts are
for, George of Somers-
set aside and of how these plans are
North East Harbor
daily working out satisfactorily.
Emery of Eden. The
Mr. Demaray then continued to speak
fand children and two
them and referred to the of
d children.
handling the problem of motor camping
children are Mrs. John
by the other parks, of how tracts are
bor, George of Somers-
set aside and of how these plans are
of North East. Harbor
daily working out satisfactorily.
Emery of Eden. The
Mr. Demaray then continued to speak
home at Eden on Sun-
of the dévelopment of the great depart-
erment at Mt. View
ment. the National Park Service and
n Hill. Many beauti-
of Stephen T. Mather, its head, who
ent by friends and
took up the work, for pure love of it,
ribute to the deceased.
seven years ago. He spoke of the re-
markable advancement which the or-
ganization had made since, of the in-
noma American Legion
creasing interest everywhere in the
esville for its annual
national parks and their administration.
ty will present typical
Particularly, Mr. Demaray touched
The citizens of Bartle-
upon the development of the parks
aged to decorate its
with regard to roads and of the effort is
DOLLAR
3 so that the former
being made for the parks to have roads
think themselves on
through them which shall be equally
d in the shops of the
as good as the highways which lead to
ven Bartlesville's river
them.
;he Seine.
In closing Mr. Demaray paid tribute
to those who, in this great work of the
$
$
$
$
$
preservation of these beautiful areas
for the people of the land, are erecting
lasting monuments which shall be for
all time inspiration to others.
At the close of Mr. Demaray's address,
Just received specially for
President Eliot said: "I would like to
bear testimony to the description of
Mr. Mather and his most remarkable
selection of merchand
work."
President Eliot then introduced Fred-
erick V. Coville, the eminent botanist.
Mr. Coville in beginning said that
he went to Washington more than 30
years ago and that since that time he
had spent most of his life in the south.
"Some years ago," said Mr. Coville,
there drifted into my office a man named
Dorr. He said he had come to talk
with me about a project he was inter-
ested in, namely: a national monument
on Mount Desert Island. He told me
Friday at
of the steps that needed to be taken to
put the project through and asked my
advice, I did not have much advice
to offer. Mr. Dorr then alluded to the
fact that Mr. Gifford Pinchot was his
Listed below are a
few
friend. At the first opportunity I asked
Mr. Pinchot if Mr. Dorr had great
persistence, for the project he had out-
lined to me was one, I thought, which
cluded in this
called for great persistence. Mr. Pin-
chot assured me that Mr. Dorr was a
persistent man. I gave the project
such small and slight assistance as I
could. About five years ago Mr. Dorr
Waists
Silk
Hose
invited me to visit the monument.
When I came to this Island found
the plants of my boyhood days in New
Dresses 2 Sport Hose
York, the bunchberry, the spruce and
many another which we did not know in
Washington," said Mr. Coville, continu-
Sweaters
W
IS in
ing.
President Eliot then introduced Chief
Ranger Benjamin L. Hadley saying
that Mr. Hadley was a man well ac-
quainted with the uses made of the
m
national parks and well qualified to
describe them.
Mr. Hadley in opening his address
said he had long been a lover of the out.
919
of-doors and that three years ago, it
had been his great good fortune to be-
Specially Priced'f
come connected with Supt. Dorr and
the work. Mr. Dorr is doing in Lafayette
National Park. Mr. Hadley expressed
in simple words his love for Mount
Desert Island, his native place, and of
Only at $
his interest in the Park and its work.
In part, continuing, he said:
wonder how many really know the
idea which prompted certain men here
present to undertake and successfully
Coats
Gingham Dr
carry out the formation of the first na-
tional prak east of the Rocky Mountains.
the
Dotted Swies Dressos
President Eliot then introduced Fred-
erick V. Coville, the eminent botanist.
Mr. Coville in beginning said that
he went to Washington more than 30
years ago and that since that time he
had spent, most of his life in the south.
"Some years ago," said Mr. Coville,
"there drifted into my office a man named
Dorr. He said he had come to talk
with me about a project he was inter-
ested in, namely: a national monument
on Mount Desert Island. He told me
Friday at
of the steps that needed to be taken to
put the project through and asked my
advice. I did not have much advice
to offer. Mr. Dorr then alluded to the
fact that Mr. Gifford Pinchot was his
Listed below are a few
friend. At the first opportunity I asked
Mr. Pinchot if Mr. Dorr had great
persistence, for the project he had out-
cluded in this
lined to me was one, I thought, which
called for great persistence. Mr. Pin-
chot assured me that Mr. Dorr was a
persistent man. I gaye the project
such small and slight assistance as I
Waists
Silk Hose
could. About five years ago Mr. Dorr
invited me to visit the monument.
"When I came to this Island I found
the plants of my boyhood days in New
Dresses of Sport Hose
(
York, the bunchberry, the spruce and
many another which we did not know in
Washington," said/Mr. Coville, continu-
Sweaters
W
S in
ing.
President Eliot then introduced Chief
Ranger Benjamin L. Hadley saying
that Mr. Hadley was a man well ac-
quainted with the uses made of the
m
national parks and well qualified to
describe them
Mr. Hadley in opening his address
said he had long been a lover of the out.
of-doors and that three years ago, it
had been his great good fortune to be-
Specially Priced 1
come connected with Supt. Dorr and
the work Mr. Dorr is doing in Lafayette
National Park. Mr. Hadley expressed
'in simple words his love for Mount
Only at $
Desert/Island, his native place, and of
his interest in the Park and its work.
In part, continuing, he said:
"I wonder how many really know the
Hadley
idea which prompted certain men here
Coats
present to undertake and successfully
Gingham Dr
carry out the formation of the first na-
tional prak east of the Rocky Mountains.
Dotted Swiss Dresses
One of the current ideas 18 that the
mountainous lands of the island, being
unfit for cottage sites, economic or com-
mercial development, would make, under
Capes
Dresses
proper supervision, an excellent area
for nature and out-door lovers to en-
Silk Sweate
joy themselves; that is, looking toward
the future, such a state of things might
come to pass.But as a matter of fact,
the idea arose from conditions as they
existed years ago, to be exact, at the
period beginning shortly after the close
of the Civil War and continuing until
the close of the summer hotel-life days
just prior to the beginning of the twenti-
eth century.
To explain this statement so that it
may be clearly understood, I must go
E.
LAURI
back to the year 1855. when we find
recorded for the first time summer visi-
for life on Mt Desert Island. From
150 MAIN STREET
or
then on, until the close of the Civil War,
Op
the Island was visited by a few each
PHONE 596
year, who found great enjoyment in
the physical charm and beauty of it.
With the close of the War, summer
life here took on added activity, the
number of visitors to the Island incresa-
BAR HARBOR, MAINE, WEDNESDAY
AUGUST
30
1922
FIVE CENTS A COPY
FEATURES AT
Dr. Eliot on History
"TANGLED HEA
WATER SPORTS
of Mt. Desert Island
BHT
E
8-30-1922,
TO CROWDED
Features Enjoyed
Dr. Charles W. Ellot presided at the
Large Gallery
recent meeting at the Northeast Harbor
home of Mrs. Huntington Williams at
PAGE /
Society Photo-drama fr
WIMMING CLUB
which time the establishment of Lafayette
National Park and other matters per-
Event of Season.
taining to the development of
Mt.
COL 4
Desert Island were discussed.
So Great That
Harbor Team Wins Relay
The
Life Saving Race and
TIMES was unable to get the complete
r Unusual Events on
text of Dr. Eliot's address for last week's
formances
Card
issue, in which a general account o
the
Given
meeting was published. A copy
has
ugust Water Sports at the
since been made available and the ad-
Club last Wednesday there
dress is of such unusual interest that
1A1
All llar
y large attendance The
it is printed in full.
Hearts
the
lar
5 fair, and the pool, with
drama in 11ar
ml
ractions at its best, thronged
month by of the
Mrs. Williams, ladies and gentlemen:
HOT
bevy of those who came to
under 11102 of Mr. IN
heir various individuals and
The object which Mrs. Williams had
all
Milean, dreat how the
tory in the many interesting
in mind when she invited us to her house
and
for bour and for then fire
contested events. There
today cannot be completely fulfilled
ronde enthusiasts in general and will
for the lemons IN the 11er
11
lition to the usual races for
because Mr. Dorr declines the part
be featured by the presence of the
1al Friday evening that it has
which was originally assigned to him;
dic., who are to the given n special
asses, many novel features,
cidex to 1 wi additional
but I am clear in my own mind us to
vitation to nttend
lition to the cupe offered for
also at the
the objects for which this opportunity
The details of the program have not
rds by the club there were
and evening popular pri
for the younger contestants.
should be utilized. It seems to me that
been completed. The annual Inner,
feature or the Saturday
we summer residents, old and new,
however, will Ix held at M., ml the
Derby gave a handsome
formance will In the
winner of the beginner's
need to be informed about the changes
Newport House, which in to by: the board
Davin
()
to those 14 years of age and
in this beautiful Island which the CA-
quarters for the Association at Har Har
will play not only lin the
Joseph Blake offered a
tablishment of the Lafayette National
bor. Governor Percival P. Baster has
chandler alior the show
Park may be expected to produce, and
been invited to be n speaker, and it in
for the winner of a special
The with of lllmink
to restate our own plans and hopes in
believed he will accept. There will
yards for those under nine
wan completed have were
regard- to conserving, preserving, and
also be H national speaker President
part of the film has
developing the beauties of this unique
Hiram W. Ricker will premide. and will
tt was chairman of the com-
New York Thom
be club in charge of sports.
Island.
deliver his annual address.
vileged (1) more Harts
I first saw this Island in 1866 when
The Bar Harbor Board of Trade in
? were Dr. James Mitchell,
are monts enthinian
and John S. Rogers. Col.
on a short voyage with three younger
arranging a fine program of entertain-
for the production
The
Harvard men from Swampscott, Mass.,
ment for the members of the arrorin-
nton Falls was referee and
turn has not yet
to Bar Harbor and back in a small schoon-
tion and their friends, one of the features
t and Sidney D. Ripley were
trial runt have
er that we had hired from a Swampscott
of which will be a 40-mile automobile
Warwick Scott acted as
have Here them the
that
Edgar Scott as announcer.
fisherman, who went as skipper and pilot
trip to the points of Interest on Mt.
merit in medician
the
although he knew nothing about the
Desert Island and to Lafayette National
race was that for beginners
always IN
Maine coast beyond Rockland. Then
Park. There will also/ be a fine musical
years of age, swimming a
of amateurs of PT
program in connection with the annual
15 yards and this was won
I saw the extraordinary combination
Among the last
Katherine Blake with Miss
which the hills, partly wooded and
dinner. During the day there will be
one of that thrillers of the
second and Miss Gertrude
partly bare, the deep-cut valleys with
special events, as it As planned to make
on the Ortan last
ird. The time was 20 sec-
their ponds, the outlying islands, and
the occasion more of a field day than a
ink. In this
Mine
he race, with the small ladies
the bays and sounds and the broad ocean
strictly business session.
Blaine
and
Mr
had produced. Five years later I be-
The complete program will be announc-
Scott. the
the
will
prettiest was a big feature
gan to spend six or eight weeks of the
ed as soon as completed, which will
The cup given by Mrs.
in is hair-raiming
summer in tents on Calf Island in French-
probably be in about two weeks.
to little Miss Blake.
Jumping the you on above
the same type with the age
man's Bay with my two little boys and
urr
toward
the family of one of my married sisters.
SANFORD TO PLAY
finally
in
choil
frants
ars was won by Jane Ayre
e Livingston second and
I kept in the excellent harbor of Calf
HERE LABOR DAY
the
resha
with
the
heavy
tzer third and was also a
Island a good-sized sloop yacht, which
11
my
wis
1
enabled us to sail out the bay and the
Double Header Band 11 Game,
of Min
and
Mr
rest holding the closest at-
he audience. The time was
neighboring waters in all weathers, and
Other Holiday Attractions In
this
in
marter seconds and the other
so to become familiar with the endless
Bar Harbor.
must
have
taken
small
beauties of the Island as seen from the
courage
10
into
the
were Billy McFadden, Miss
rs and Morter Fearey
water. It was only. in October 1880
The bigxiti baseball attraction of
Mothed
in
that Mrs. Eliot and I paid H visit to the
the season IN scheduled for Labot Day.
11H
wan
This
inners diving brought out
ble divers among the young-
south side of the Island bent on finding
next Monday Sanford is coming here
of the thrilling
the age limit of 15. Each
a place to build a house where we could
for a dunble-header, the KAMEN 1st 2.00
of
have fine views both seaward and land-
and 4:00 in the afternoon. The Bur
Kraphs
was required to make two
R. Ayre took first honors
ward, and secure the boating facilities
Harbor Band will be at Athletic Field
the
living off a tie, Miss Betty
which we desired. After a careful
and the largest crowd of the suison in
iven second place and Miss
survey of that portion of the coast which
expected to and them games,
The
third. Others entered were
lay between the present Northeast
The Sterlings of Concort, champions
has
A. B. Strange, R. Wing and
Harbor Golf Links and Seal Harbor,
of New Hampshire, play here tomorrow
vle
we bought the 100-acre Lingham lot
The Easterns are here Friday and Satur-
holiday
Bar
Thom
claus with an age limit of
which stretched from the top of the hill
day. The from will get plenty of gind
do
not
next event and three dives
now called Asticou to the shore, where
baseball for the closing week of the summer
Amoe Eno was awarded
we have since lived with great content,
Desert
and E. C. Williams, second,
and on which a considerable number
oberts, third. Other divers
of Hopkinson-Eliot children and grand-
children have grown up with strong
Why to
yre, Miss Anna Pettingill,
Espy, Miss Susie Scott and
attachment to the Island and its various
delights.
Harmon Piano Co.
The lot we bought from Judge Emery
of Mar Merber
NTINUED ON PAGE 4)
of Ellsworth, the agent of the Bingham
doing the plano bediness of Fastern
heirs, had been burnt over about thirty
cars before by a fire which had destroyed
"There's a Reason"
GS DEPARTMENT
(Continued on Page } of Supplement)
Honest Planoe. Treatment.
Good
as been stated that
employees
of
its
Become
be
devoted
limited
provision
be
>made
for
those
only
the
Park
Today something
about
the
sketched
beg to thank our Hostess for giving
accordingly
much
you and something about the consers
vation and development of the beauties
the pleasure of meetingr
pressed from the beginning of our 00-
cupation with the immitinent to
of this Island, and about the of
the Island fire. As talked with
reconciling freedom of access by the
Rev. Mr. and "Mrs. John Leutz of
uxiliary
and
our neighbora and friends, both perma-
multitude with the precious sense of
Milton, Pa. Mr: Edwin Paul,
yes
and
nent residents and summer residents, we
isolation and withdrawnness which
8
Milton, Pa., Miss Jennie Davis, New
learned that there was another great
wilderness can give.
York: Mr. and M# H. W. Loud, Skow-
danger to which the beauties of the Island
I shall ask to speak first to you a
hegan, Maine Mr. and Mrs. P. L.
hion meeting win be held this
were exposed, namely, the bad use of
gentleman whose chief function is that
Courant, Fairfield, Maine; Mr. and Mrs.
the Baptist church oh. Sunday
the woods by their owners as sources of
of publicity agent for the National Park
Chas. Brown, New York; Mr. and Mrs.
when
$subject
wilk
be
The
lumber and firewood. When these pri-
Service He has other cares and duties
H. G. Weltman and sons, Wm. and
Bible.
vate owners cut the woods they owned,
in connection with the Park Service,
George of New York: Mr. and Mrs.
they made a clean sweep, hauled off
but in this Capacity of publicity agent
Geo. Gascoigue, New York; Miss Amelia
the logs, and left their tops and the
he has visited during the last two or
Burnham, Dorchester, Mass.; Miss
brush wherever the trees had fallen,
three years all the National Parks of
Lilly Bates, Dorchester, Mass.; were
thus creating large ugly in the
the country especially the largest Parks
guests at the Miller Cottage last week
See
woods and increasing the danger from
like the Yellowstone, the Grand Canon,
They were all delighted with the beau-
fire. Against these two dangers to
and those in the Rockies and the Set
ties and hospitality of Bar Harbor and
the Island, the earlier summer residents
kirks and near the Pacific Coast. I be-
undoubtedly will return another season.
who settled here in thei60s and 70s soon
lieve he is now visiting for the first time
began to struggle. With help from
the only National Park on the eastern
Mrs. Amelia Edwards and Mrs. A.
leading permanent residents they es-
coast of the United States-Mr. Demar-
McKenzie, mother and sister of Mr.
tablished the Hancock County Trustees
Wm. Edwards of the Miller Cottage ar-
ay.
rived on the Boston boat for the balance
of Public Reservations, a corporation
of the season.
which could hold securely large areas
At the close of Mr. Demaray's address
of land on the Island which they bought
President Eliot said:
The Brewer Store wishes to announce
from the existing private owners. These
"All of us who have known about
for the benefit of contestants in the July
Trustees made no attempt to acquire
the admirable work of the National
Simplex Electric Iron Contest that Miss
land on the shores, but gradually suc-
Park Service during the past eight or
Marie Richards of Bar Harbor
was
ceeded in obtaining considerable areas
nine years are much obliged to Mr.
awarded tenth prize. This was a choice
of land on the hills and in the valleys
Demaray for what he said about Mr.
between an electric toaster and an electric
between the hills, away from possible
Mather, the Director of that Service.
Traveler's Iron.
or probable residential quarters and un-
We have regreted very much that Mr.
The friends of Mr. Edward B. Mears
suited to any agricultural use.
Mather's health has been 80 much im-
are happy to learn that he is improving
The Trustees raised money to buy
paired that he has been obliged to with+
rapidly after surgical treatment at the
land in all sorts of ways, by concerts
draw-temporarily we hope-from his
Bar Harbor Hospital.
lectures, public subscriptions, solicita-
ardous duties. We who love this Island,
tion of residents at their own houses
however, have lately experienced a great
/
H. Warden and Mrs.
and solicitation from persons who came
pleasure in the recent visit that the Act-
John W. Garrett left Bar Harbor, Mon-
to the hotels for short visits. In these
ing Director, Mr. Cammerer, has just
day for Baltimore.
various ways the Trustees got money
paid to the Lafayette National Park.
Desmond Fitzgerald of Boston the
enough to buy nearly five thousand acres
Under his direction Mr. Mather's good
well known consulting engineer, was here
of land which had previously been in
work, following the good work done by
last week, returning from Isle au Haut,
shire
private ownership; but there they stop-
Secretary Lane, for this Island will be
on his way to Northeast Harbor to join
ped. They could not raise money enough
carried forward with wisdom and die-
his daughter, who will return with him
to buy the remaining areas which ob-
cretion.
to spend some days in Bar Harbor.
viously ought to be preserved for future
The next friend who is going to ad-
generations.
dress you is a botanist by profession
Dr. and Mrs. Herant Baron Mat-
Not only were the Trustees unable to
and the devotion of his life, and a bot-
teossian of Philadelphia are at the Lyman
anist well acquainted with the flora
House.
buy further areas, but they had no
money to spend on the improvement
not only of our country at large, but
of the forests they owned. From the
with the local flora of this coast of Maine
Village Improvement Societies in the
and particularly with that of the Island
Remarkable Bronzes on
three largest villages the Trustees got
of Mount Desert Mr. Coville is in-
Exhibit at Library.
some help in making and keeping up
terested in the improvement of the flora
At the Print Room of the Jesup Mem-
trails; but in general the Trustees were
of this Island, not only in its preserva-
orial Library there have just been put
obliged to be content with merely hold-
tion. He is interested in the restora-
on view two bronzes by Clyde de Vernet
ing lands without any effort to save the
tion of the losses the flora of the Island,
Hunt. These bronzes were exhibited
existing stand of forest from fire or to
has suffered, and in the bringing hither
last year at the Paris Salon, and a copy
improve the wild flora and fauna.
of the Acadian species which will thrive
of one of them is in the permanent col-
Under these circumstances, the idea
here. I learn with pleasure that he is
lection of the Metropolitan Museum
was suggested to the Trustees of Public
well acquainted with the work already
of Art in New York. They are at-
Reservations that they give their lands,
done for the flora of Mount Desert by
tracting much attention, not only from
or most of their lands, to the Govern-
my friend and pupil at Harvard, Ed-
those for whom they are made a delight
ment of the United States to constitute
ward L. Rand Mr. Rand was asked
by the study of art or sculpture, but
what is called in the Legislation of the
by Mr. Dorr, wHen Mr. Dorr was first
from those who see in them all the mar-
United States a Monument. The Pre-
made Curator of the Park here, to under-
vel and beauty of this beautiful ex-
sident of the United States by his own
take a well-planned restoration of botan-
pression of such art, so great that it
act can accept a Monument, without
ical species to the Island, like the sub.
speaks to those unversed as we.l as to
asking any appropriation from Congress
Arctic species which had been lost or
critics.
either for the purchase of land or for
much reduced in number of represen-
the care of the land thus acquired. The
tatives; and Mr. Rand was also asked
TRACY REUNION
Trustees gave nearly all the areas they
to make plans for the introduction into
the Island of the other botanical species
The 27th Annual Reunion of the Tracy
had acquired on the Island of Mount
Desert to establish here a National
which really belong to this region. Un-
family will be held at Gouldsboro point
Monument in the technical sense. But
fortunately Mr. Rand suffered an at-
on September 2nd, 1922. on the Jono-
tack of apoplexy about eight months
than Tracy homestead. All connected
still, as no appropriations are made by
ago; but I am happy to say that he is
with the family are invited to come. A
Congress to a Monument, there were no
slowly recovering, and that no one will
picnic dinner will be served in the pavil-
means of improving the reservation as
scenery or of protecting and increasing
be more delighted than he to have the
lion, with hot tea, coffee and clam chow-
the wild life, vegetable and animal,
work which he undertook at Mr. Dorr's
der.
which it contained.
suggestion taken up by Mr. Coville
ORD
Some of the Trustees under the lead
and made perfect. I present to you
MAINE CENTRAL RAILROAD
of Mr. George B. Dorr conceived the
Mr. Coville.
Eastern Standard Time
idea of converting the Monument into
STEAMERS LEAVE BAR HARBOR FOR
a National Park; and Mr. Dorr invited
After Mr. Coville had finished, Presi-
Augusta, 10.15 a.m., $3.35 p.m., *9.00
the then Secretary of the Interior, Mr.
dent Eliot said:
Bangor, 110.15 a.m., $2.15 m. $3.35
Franklin K. Lane, to visit the Monument
I take this opportunity of mentioning
9.00 p. in.
and make himself familiar with its ex-
that Dr. Ulric Dahlgren, the Director of
Bath, 10.15 a. m. $3.35 p. m., *9.00 MO.
traordinary beauties. At that time no
the Laboratory at Salisbury Cove, for-
Boston, 110.15 m., $3.35 m., 0.00 p. in.
Brunswick, 110 15 a.m., $3.35 p.m., *9.00
National Park existed in the eastern
merly at Harpswell, is going to give a
Ellsworth, 110.15 1.2.15 p.m., 18.35 p.m.
lecture a week from tomorrow night at
m.
part of the United States. Great Na-
tional Parks and National Forests had
the Neighborhood House in Northeast
Lewiston, 110.15 $2.15 13.35 m.)
m.
the
Sallarke
Harbor which I am sure everybody here
MI Desert Ferry. $840a m., 110
what is called in the Legislation of the
by Mr. Dorr, wayn
United States a Monument. The Pre-
made Curator of the Park here, to under-
vel and beauty of this beautiful ex
sident of the United States by his own
take a well-planned restoration of botan-
act can accept a Monument, without
ical species to the Island, like the sub.
pression of such art, so great that it
speaks to those unversed as we.l as to
asking any appropriation from Congress
Arctic species which had been lost or
critics.
either for the purchase of land or for
much reduced in number of represen-
the care of the land thus acquired. The
tatives; \and Mr. Rand was also asked
Trustees gave nearly all the areas they
to make Nans for the introduction into
TRACY REUNION
had acquired on the Island of Mount
the Island the other botanical species
The 27th Annual Reunion of the Tracy
Desert to establish here a National
which really belong to this region. Un-
family will be held at Gouldsboro point
Monument in the technical sense. But
fortunately M Rand suffered an at-
on September 2nd, 1922. on the Jono-
still, as no appropriations are made by
tack of apoplex about eight months
than Tracy homestead. All connected
Congress to a Monument, there were no
ago; but I am happy to say that he is
with the family are invited to come. A
means of improving the reservation as
slowly recovering, and that no one will
picnic dinner will be served in the pavil-
scenery or of protecting and increasing
be more delighted than he to have the
lign, with hot tea, coffee and clam chow-
the wild life, vegetable and animal,
work which he undertook at Mr. Dorr's
der.
which it contained.
suggestion taken up by Mr. Coville
Some of the Trustees under the lead
and made perfect. I present to you
of Mr. George B. Dorr conceived the
Mr. Coville.
MAINE CENTRAL RAILROAD
Kastern Standard Time
idea of converting the Monument into
After Mr. Coville had finished Presi-
STEAMERS LEAVE BAR HARBOR FOR
a National Park; and Mr. Dorr invited
the then Secretary of the Interior, Mr.
dent Eliot said:
Augusta, 110.15 $3.36 *9.00
Franklin K. Lane, to visit the Monument
I take this opportunity of mentioning
Bangor, 110.15 a.m., $*2.15 13.36
.00 p. in.
and make himself familiar with its ex-
that Dr. Ulric Dahlgren, the Director of
Bath, 110.15 m $3.35 p. m. *9.00 p MO.
traordinary beauties. At that time no
the Laboratory at Salisbury Cove, for-
Boston, 110.15 $3.35 in.
merly at Harpswell, is going to give a
Brunswick 110. a.m. $3.35 0.00
National Park existed in the eastern
Ellsworth 110.15 $*2.15 p.m. 18.35 p.m.
part of the United States. Great Na-
lecture a week from tomorrow night at
.00 m.
tional Parks and National Forests had
the Neighborhood House in Northeast
Lewiston, 110.15 1+2.15 p. 13.35 p. m.)
been created in the Rockies, the Selkirks,
Harbor which I am sure everybody here
m.
Mt. Desert Ferry. 18.4 m., 110. a. IN
and their foothills, and the Government
will be interested to listen to, for his
$3.35 p. m., 15.30 p. m. *9.00 p. m.
had taken intelligent charge of many
subject is a very fascinating one, the
New York, m. 1+2.15 m.
luminous marine animals. I have been
Philadelphia, c2.15
of these invaluable public areas; but
Portland, 110.15 a.m., $2.18 p.m. $3.35 m.)
near the Atlantic shores of the conti-
telling some of the permanent residents
*9.00 p. m.
nent nothing had been done by the
of Northesat Harbor about this lecture
Washington, c2.15 p. m
Government. Secretary Lane encour-
and find many of them have the greatest
Waterville, 110.15a.ru (*2.15 $3.36 p.m.
.00 m.
aged the Trustees of Public Reservations
interest in it. You know that all men
t Daily, except Sundays
Sundays only.
to believe that Congress under his lead
who go down to the sea in ships are
c Tuesday Thursday and Sunday
Will
run
would accept the Monument as a Na-
actively interested in that luminousness
Monday Sept. instead of Sept. 3.
tional Park, and he thought it probable
which we call phosphorescence. The
. Pullman passengers only
1 Daily, except Saturday
that
Congress would appropriate as
spirit in which that research Laboratory
D. C. DOUGLASS, M. L. HARRIS,
much as $60,000, a year to the main-
at Salisbury Cove is maintained is the
6-26-22 & Gen'1Mgr. Gen'l Passenger Agt.
tenance and improvement of this the
finest possible, and I hope you will all
only National Park in the eastern part
go to hear Dr. Dahlgren, its Director.
of the country. He was never able to
To whom do we owe the coming of that
procure an appropriation of that size,
Laboratory from East Harpswell to
but Congress did eatablish the Lafayette
Salisbury Cove? To Mr. Dorr. He
EASTERN
ONLY
National Park, and made an appropri-
hopes to make it contributory to the
ation of $20,000, in the first instance.
progress and growth of that Corpora+
This first appropriation was subsequently
tion with the romantic name of 'The
STEAMSHIP LINES, Inc.
5
raised to $25,000. By these steps the
wild gardens of Acadia," which he in-
lovers of this Island, whether summer
vented.
BAR HARBOR LINE
residents or permanent residents, have
(Standard Time)
arrived not only at the conservation of
President Eliot then said:
LEAVE Rockland daily at 5 a. m. for
JRE
the beauties of this unique Island, but
"Our next speaker is a young man well
North Haven, Stonington, South-
also have provided the means of adding
acquainted with the uses made of the
west Harbor, Northeast Harbor, Seal
to their attractiveness and charm for
great National Parks in the West and
Harbor, due Bar Harbor 11 a m.
coming generations.
on the Pacific Coest which have been
RETURN:-Leave Bar Harbor daily
In the meantime, the original summer
successfully opened in wise ways as
at 1 p. m. for Rockland and way
residents in the Town of Mount Desert
resorts for a multitudinous public. He is
landings.
Y MARRIED
which covers the central strip of the
well qualified to describe these uses to
BLUEHILL)
Island from Otter Creek to Prettymarsh
us. I present to you Mr. Hadley.
(Standard Time/)
and High Head, had united with a large
LEAVE Rockland daily at 5 a. m. for
HINKS SHE
majority of the permanent residents
At the close of Mr. Hadley's address
Dark Harbor, Eggemoggin, South
in the Town in an effort to keep auto-
President Eliot said:
Brooksville, Sargentville Deer Isle,
mobiles out of that Town. The Town
This statement by Mr. Hadley is
Brooklin, South Bluehill, due Blue-
voted. by a very large inajority against
certainly encouraging in regard to the
hill 11.45 a. m.
the admission of automobiles; but at
sensible use of the Island for public
RETURN:-Leave Bluehill daily at
the next session of the Maine Legislature
enjoyment. But perhaps we ought not
12.30 p. m. for Rockland and way
small minority of the permanent resi-
to part without listening to some of the
landings.
dents in the Town caused to be intro-
apprehensions which the old summer
CONNECTION is made at Rockland
duced into the Legislature a Bill com-
residents on this Island and. their chil-
with steamers from and to Boston.
dren and grandchildren feel lest the en-
AT BOSTON connection is made via
life time of bitter
pelling the Town to admit automobiles,
went from Cambridge to the hearing
joyments which they have had here
the Metropolitan Line express freight
hem.
at Augusta to protest against that Bill
should hereafter be lost. I know that
and passenger steamers for New
and was permitted to state the case of
my grandchildren are eager to have the
York and points South and West.
the Town against it; but I did not enjoy
old summer life on the Island perpetuated
the argument of the counsel for the
unchanged for successive generations;
MAINE STEAMSHIP LINE
will have a bet'ter
Bill at that hearing. His argument
and some. of both the older and the
Portland-New York Freight Service
problem
consisted chiefly in reading to the Com-
younger generations feel that it will
mittee extracts from a description of the
be impossible greatly to increase the
Local freight service between Port-
beauties of Mount Desert which I had
resort of all sorts of people to the Island
land and New York has been resumed
written a few years before: and the coun-
without diminishing or destroying one
from Custom House Wharf, Portland.
sel finally appealed to the Committee
of the greatest sources of enjoyment
Upon completion of the new state pier
conditions as they
in words something like this:-"You
that those of us who came here forty
at Portland now under construction,
hear what the natural beauties of the
years ago have experienced. Much of
direct freight service to and from in-
Island of Mount Desert are, how worthy
our enjoyment on the Island and of
terior points and New York will be
thiry are of love and admiration, how
the enjoyment of our children and grand-
resumed.
ther are to be studied by all the
children has been due to what may
A. M. Herrick, Agt. F. L. Roberts, Agt.
people of Maine Will you not agree
fairly be called its wildness. We and
Bluehill, Me.
Bar Harbor, Me.
that all the Maine people who want to
they have been able to walk the forest
drive on to the Island of Mount Desert
trails or climb the rocky alopes without
their automobiles shall be permitted
coming upon any signs of civilization;
to do so? This argument prevailed
so' to speak, or of the artificial life in
with the Committee and the Legislature;
the cities and towns of our winter resi-
For Trip or Season's Hire
from that time we have defiged
denses, Is ful going to be possible to
contemplate an increasing resort to
keep some of that sense of wildness and,
1919 PACKARD TWIN-SIX
Island of Mount Desert in automo
isolation for the solitary walker or the
TOWN LAUNDELET
biles the people not of Maine alone
groups of young walkers up Sargent of
Rot many other States. We are all
Pemetic or Green if roads are to be
This car has always been a private
four hopes and fears
built on the sides of those hills? I have
ear, is in perfect condition every way, is
Island, and take it for granted
personally witnessed these pleasures
one of latest models, is equipped with
Bark
to
be
below my own.
Westinghouse Air Springs. One couldn't
that
is now delighting
find ED more comfortable car.
and
waters.
How
who
that must lose? That de-
Call C.G THOMPSON
is
the
prespect
I think upon the wisdom) the
but
have
we
not
all/the
careful consideration with which the
Phone 750
that
this
auto,
Island is opened to the new rush of visi
Stand, opposite Village Green
and
other
tors: Having a kni acquaintance
to
come
the
men
have
most
to
do
WILL SELL THIS CAR
with
DEPARTMENT OF
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
ACADIA NATIONAL PARK
BAR HARBOR, MAINE
OFFICE OF THE SUPERINTENDENT
September 12, 1922.
Dear Mr. Rockefeller:
Our work together for Lafayette National Park
has reached a point where we can look both back and
forward. Plans I have been working over for a year
n
for its development have been approved by the Govern-
ment, and thanks to your generous cooperation I can
for the first time look forward to a consolidated
party
park area and to constructive work that should
transform the Park in respect to its possibilities
of use and enjoyment by the people.
It is a distinct stage reached in the Park's
history, that of its passage from the period of
commencement and the overcoming of initial diffi-
culties to one of attainment, and I write this
letter to mark it and in recognition of that
cooperation from you which has made it possible.
Looking back upon the past, the work you have
done constructively within the Park under the
authority given through me by Secretary Lane when
he was here in 1917 is of the highest order in its
2
thoroughness, its forward vision, and its attention
9/12/22
to the details that make or mar the beauty of a
road or landscape. I have done work enough myself
of a similar character, and made failures and mis-
takes enough in doing it, to understand the prob-
lems you have had to solve and appreciate the
success with which you have met and overcome them.
Being, as superintendent, responsible to the Govern-
ment and the people as the means through which that
work proceeded, so far as it lay within the Govern-
ment bounds, I have followed it naturally with close
attention and great interest, and have found it ad-
Dorl
mirable. What it has accomplished also, grown then
working
JDR
to greater beauty through the mellowing of time and
would
the rich mantle of vegetation which time will throw
about it.
The same problems on a greater scale face us now
in the work that lies before us. I shall welcome from
you suggestion or criticism on the work I take charge
of personally and I shall feel safe in the work you
similarly undertake under the new authority for con-
struction given me this summer that it will be done
from the highest standpoint and with due regard to
nature.
gi
With respect to the care and annual repair of
9/13/12
the roads you have built and are building and to
forestry, to planting, to grading or other work upon
the lands that border these, it is of the greatest
assistance to me that you do this work which the
funds I receive from Congress are too limited as
yet to enable me efficiently to carry out myself,
and I especially ask that you will continue it
and that you will look upon this letter as a re-
quest to do so, if you will; and as formal author-
ity also for so doing -- authority delegated to
you by me as springing from my own authority as
superintendent. I greatly value, in this and in
all other ways, the assistance you are giving me
in this creative period of the Park's existence
and in every way I can I desire to make the giving
of it satisfactory and pleasant to you.
Sincerely yours,
GEORGE B. DORR,
Superintendent.
VACA, ep, 2671, CCF 190739. Acadia
EP
6
1922
30 Pinckney Street,
Boston, 14, Mass.
September 14,1922.
Mr. Arno .Cammerer,
Acting Director,
National Park Service,
Washington,
D.C.
Dear Mr.Cammerer:
What is there new to say about Lafayette National
Park? Anything?
sent
Dr. Smith, of the Geological Survey has just me a copy of the
map brought out this summer with the suggestion that it might be
of public interest. It wuld have been of greater public interest,
and might have been useful as a peg on which to suspend a park story,
if I could have had it earlier. The summer is now practically done.
Perhaps if there was something new to say about the park and its
development we might be able to tell a little story and bring in
the map and its excellent geological story.
In some ways the map is a disappointment to me. It does not show
the boundaries of the entire park--at least not as I understand them.
Such information as I have been able to secure on that score is very
vague, Mr. Dorr seemingly being desirous of keeping mum for some good
reason of his own. Then too the map shows no foot-paths. They are
there on the ground, or were several years ago, long before the park was
thought of, when I last tramped over those hills. There must be more
now.
There is a feeling in some quarters I find that this park is more
or less a riding ground for Bar Harbor and other summer residents,
but not much of a place for mere vacationists. I thought that per-
haps the four weeks camp of the Appalachian Club there this summer
might help to allay that notion, but no, someone has called my atten-
tion to the fact that they were not in the park, and were kept as far
removed from the so-called high-brow residential section of the is-
land as possible. If the map is right they were not in the park, yet
I understand that they were in it nevertheless. Then too it is pointed
out that the park authorities and the Bar Harbor town officers are
spending money on bridle paths, a type of path for which trampers care
but little, and nothing on footpaths.
If these notions are groundless perhaps something should be said
to correct this point of view. Possibly it will be as well to let the
subjedt alone until another spring comes around. That of course would
be a more appropriate season.
I hope that Mr. Mather has returned or is soon to do so and that he
feeling thoroughly himself.
with
Sincerely yours,
M Chambaram
Seal Harbor, Maine
September 18th, 1922.
Dear Mr. Dorr:-
Your letter of September 12th, spealing so Appreciatively
of the work which it has been my pleasure to do in the interest of
the Jafayette National Park, has been received.
I am most grateful for your kindly words and thank you for
writing as you have.
The possibilities of the Park seem to me SO
unusual and its beauties SO extraorMinary that I am glad to see it
made increasingly accessible to those who enjoy nature.
I note what you say with r eference to the upkeep of
roads already built and under construction in the Park, and forestry,
planting, grading, etc. in connection therewith, and your authorize.-
tion to me to do work along any such lines on your behalf as I my
feel disposed to do.
while I would not of course wish to commit myself in
the matter, I shall be glad for the present at least to act upon your
authority.
I cannot close this letter without expressing my high
appreciation of the unselfish, untiring end devoted service which you
have rendered in bringing the Park into being and are continuing to
render in its upbuilding and development. It has given me very
genuine satisfaction and pleasure to cooperate with you from time to
time in your spleniil work as opportunity hous offered.
Wishing you the fullest measure of success in the con-
summation of your plans, I am
Mr. George D. Dorr
John Rockificing
Very singerely,
Bir Marcor, Reine
Page I of 2
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
WASHINGTON
September 27, 1922.
Dear Mr. Chamberlains
Your very interesting letter of September 14 has remained be-
fore me until I could find time to write to you at some length about
Lafayette Park. The new Geological Survey map of the park was gotten
out pretty late in the season and was rushed through to meet the evi-
dent demand for a good topographic map from park visitors. Only a
limited edition was printed and it is hoped that before next summer
a second and more complete edition can be published. The boundaries
of the park as shown include only the area of the former Sieur de
Nonta National Momment and later lands donated to the park are not
shown. Mrs Dorr has had a big problem on his hands to get the deeds
to the later d onsted lands in such shape that they can be accepted by
the Government. Not only have the titles had to be searched out but
individual surveys of the land have had to be made. It is hoped the
great bulk of the donated land Canada be formally accepted and added to
the park before long. Unofficially there are now between 11,000 and
12,000 aares in the park area and on the inclosed map I have had the
your areas roughly outlined in green. The Appalachism Club camp was
located at the upper and of Beho Lake on parts lands not yet femally
accepted, and I suppose that is the reason the impression that they
were not in the park game about. The mm does not show any of the
footpaths and trails which, of course, are still on the ground. the
Survey is adverse to putting on its maps features which its surveyors
do not mark. The may needs a lot of revision to show new features,
and it is hoped - can get the Survey to send a man up there sountine
in the near future to make the necessary corrections and additions.
The venture of the Appalachian Glub this summir me highly and
cesaful, in fact, the Club is talking of making - at
feature of its animal program. The members transpeal all
both east and most of Jomes Sound and all were
park. As a matter of fast they probably brought our the vedation pos-
sibilities of the park as they had never been
out
I think
their
Line
will
grow
rapidly.
ABD,13C
PSH
Copy to Superintendient Dorr.
2.
looking forward to having a number more such camps next year, possibly
several Boy seout Gdmpa.
As you know, we have been struggling along for a number of years
now with appropriations hardly sufficient to isey up our maintenance and
protection work. Except for a few individual projects for new read con-
struction we have had no funds for development work. In the meantime
the good roads movement has progressed with rapid atrides under Federal
aid. Since 1916 $540,000,000 have been appropriated by the Government
for Federal aid in road construction. In addition to this the Forest
Service in the same period has had a little over $50,000,000 for road
construction in the national forests. All this has resulted in vast im-
provement of the reads leading up to the parks, and when motorists using
the good roads arrive in the parks they are thoroughly disappointed on
account of the poor condition of the park reads. Secretary Fall has just
forwarded to the Bureau of the Budget with our estimate for the next fis-
cal year a road budget for the improvement of the present roads and the con-
struction of new roads in the national parks, contemplating an expenditure
of $7,296,000 to be divided into three animal appropriations. What the
fate of this road budget will be in the hands of the Bureau of the Budget
and later in the Appropriation Committees of Gongress it is difficult to
foretell. The need of road development in the national parks is becauing
nit $
more and more evident each year, and we feel the time has now arrived when
every effort must be made to accure adequate funds to place the park roads
on a per with roads reaching. Only one item for Lafayette Park has
been included in this budget and that is for a road reaching the stands
of Cadillas Mountain which is the highest point - the Afliantia Seaponst.
This road ense built will note Infoyatte Park the measa for every estern
motorist;for there will be notother road which combines the beautifies of mount
tain with the vast expanse of the sea. One Immixed thousand dollars has
been included for the construction of this read. The approximate location
of it is also indicated on the map.
I - going to ask Mr. Dorr to look you up the next time be is is
Beston and talk with you about some of the Infayette Park problems.
Cordially yours,
F. CAMMERER
Arno B. Commerce
Acting Birector.
Mr. Allen Chamberlain,
30 Pincknay Street,
Beston, 14, MASSACHUSETTS.
Inclosure 1543.
NEHGR - The New England Historical and Genealogical Register 1847-1994 - New England
H
Page
2
of
3
1923]
Proceedings of the N. E. Hist. Gen. Society
77
Brother Henry Sampson oweth me £26. Witnesses: Richard Eburne, vicar,
and others. Proved 14 June 1627. (P. C. C., Skinner, 63.) [This abstract
has been adapted from the abstract of the will of Katherine Sampson pub-
lished in REGISTER, vol. 40, p. 303, and reprinted in Waters's "Genealogical
Gleanings in England," vol. 1, p. 176.]
[The rest of the Haskett material, with pedigree, will be published in the
REGISTER of April 1923. - EDITOR.]
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NEW ENGLAND HISTORIC
GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY
By HENNY EDWARDS SOOTT, A.B., Recording Secretary
Boston, Massachusetts, 4 October 1922. A stated meeting of the Society was
held in Wilder Hall, 9 Ashburton Place, at 2.30 P.M., President Chase presiding.
The minutes of the May meeting were read and approved, and the reports of
the Corresponding Secretary, Librarian, Historian, and Council were accepted,
the Council reporting that since the May meeting members of the Society had
been elected as follows:
Honorary Member
John Venn, Se.D., F.R.S., F.S.A., of Cambridge, England
Life Member
Eliza Taft Newton of Holyoke, Mass.
Resident Members
George Bucknam Dorr of Bar Harbor, Me.
Mrs. A. Roberson of Binghamton, N. Y.
Mrs. Stella E. J. Mills of Willimantic, Conn.
Mrs. C. K. Baker of Auburn, R. I.
Harry W. Glossbrenner of Indianapolis, Ind.
Mrs. W. H. May of Pittsfield, Mass.
Walter M. Tuller of Wypantskill, N. Y.
Mrs. Emilie Maris Cole of Duluth, Minn.
Jessica J. Haskell of Hallowell, Me.
Jessie E. Blackstone of Anaconda, Mont.
Mrs. Le Roy B. Cox of Chicago, III.
Elizabeth Crawford of Kittanning, Pa.
Mrs. A. C. Rippier of Brooklyn, N. Y.
Claud F. Lester of Philippi, W. Va.
Mrs. E. B. Thomas of Pasadena, Calif.
Mrs. William H. Hoffman of Barrington, R. I.
Mrs. John F. Storm of Union, S.C.
Percival Jones of Boston, Mass.
Mrs. Mark C. Price of Greensboro, N.C.
Louise Tanner Reeve of Buxton, N. Dak.
Mrs. J. H. Cutter of North Litchfield, N. Y.
Mrs. F. R. Heustis of Hyde Park, Mass.
Mrs. Clarence R. Sloan of Marietta, Ohio
Allan Hiram Whitman of Malden, Mass.
Elizabeth F. Gordon of Bridgewater, Mass.
Perry Oliver Holden of Ashland, Mass.
Mrs. T. L. Smith of Concord, Mass.
Mrs. Grayee E. Eldred of Cody, Wyo.
Arthur Crew Inman of Boston, Mass.
Nathan E. Truman of Bainbridge, N. Y.
Back to Last Master Search Results page
Back to Search Results page
http://www.newenglandancestors.org/research/database/register/default.asp?vol=77&pg=77&page...3/14/2005
10/11/1922
THE BAR HARBOR TIMES
An Independent Weekly Newspaper
Published Wednesdays at Bar Harbor, Maine, by SHERMAN PUBLISHING CO., Inc.
W. H. SHERMAN, Pres.
F. E. SHERMAN, Treas.
A. F. SHERMAN, Vice-Pres.
ALBION F. SHERMAN
EDITOR AND MANAGER
Office Times Building
Telephone 709
P. O. Box 564
Subscription Price $2.00 Year in Advance
Advertising Rates Furnished on Application
Entered as second-class matter July 10. 1914, at the postoffice at Bar Harbor, Maine under
the Act of March 8, 1879
The announcement that construction has been started on the road
Sia
to the summit of Champlain (Green) Mountain is the most interesting
Cadillac
and the most important news that the TIMES has published in a long
time. A motor road to the top of this mountain has been the dream
of Bar Harbor people since the passing of the old carriage road.
While most of us have been merely dreaming, a few men, under the
constructive leadership of Mr. George B. Dorr have been working
for the road with the result that actual construction has begün. The
beginning of this road is a most important step in the development of
Lafayette National Park and with it the growth and development of
the Mt. Desert Island Resorts. In the early days of Bar Harbor and
of the Green Mountain Railway, the trip to the highest point on the
Atlantic Coast was the preeminent feature of a visit to Mt. Desert.
When the new road makes this trip again an easy one for all who may
come here it will again become the outstanding feature, for there is
nothing like it to be had in America.
Such outstanding achievements as this bring to the general public
a realization of the importance of Lafayette National Park and some-
thing approaching an adequate appreciation of the work of Mr. George
B. Dorr and his associates. A few men, who, from the nature of their
work have been privileged to see the plans for future roads through
the park and to have a general knowledge of future plans for the park-
greater than that of the general public, have an enthusiasm for the
work that knows no bounds. Likewise their appreciation of Mr.
Dorr and his work is boundless. The development of Lafayette Nat-
ional Park since its foundation has been great, but this development
is comparatively small in contrast with the plans for the future.
The people of Mt. Desert Island should do everything possible to
assist in this development.
MAINE, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1922
FIVE CENTS A COPY
NUMBER 432
BEGIN CONSTRUCTION OF AUTOMOBILE ROAD
Eiroc11
TO TOP OF CHAMPLAIN MOUNTAIN
Lafayette National Park Project Approved by Government-
Work
on
Magnif-
icent Mountain Road Begun by Superintendent George B. Dorr
Walters G. Hill of Bar Harbor is Engineer
Construction has been started by the Government on a motor road
tive purposes. It forms excellent road
The summit of the spur, slightly
to the summit of Cadillac Mountain in Lafayette National Park, the
material, being mingled clay and gravel
above the road that circles it, commands
highest point upon our Atlantic coast with a magnificent sea view.
not packed so hard as to be difficult of
a wonderful view, beautiful and
The construction now contemplated will cover over 4,000 feet in length,
handling.
scarcely less broad, except upon the sea-
The places where retaining walls are
ward side, as is obtained from the n oui-
bringing the road to an elevation of 519 feet above sea level. Funds
required are four, where the curves are
tain summit.
for the construction of the remainder of the road, approximately four
sharpest, and rock of excellent character
A spring of pure water, also, and ex-
miles in length, have been asked for by the Secretary of the Interior
for building \permanent and solid walls
cellent opportunities for water storage,
in his estimates for the fiscal year of 1924 submitted to the Bureau
without cement lies. close at hand, while
and shady foot-trails lead to this Joint
of the Budget, the construction to be completed in three years.
as much material in general will need to
from either side.
The road as planned by the Secretary of the Interior and the Nat-
be removed as will be required for con-
At the mountain summit one comes
struction, building and excavation closly
out-facing the road on its last turn-on a
ional Park Service calls for the best and most permanent construction
balancing.
vast sweep of ocean to the far horizon
and for a road of easy ascending grade and liberal width. No such
A superb point is reached where, nearly
fifty miles away. It is an extraordinary
road as this from the scenic point of view exists in Eastern North
two-thirds the height of the mountain,
view; there is no other like it on our
America, and great credit should be given to Secretary Albert B. Fall,
a bold spür stands out from the mountain
Atlantic coast, and few in the world
of the Interior, and to the Director of the National Park Service for
ridge-with which its summit is level-upon
accessible by road. The whole road, as
its western side, overhanging Eagle Lake.
planned, from start to finish, is singularly
this project.
This spur the road circles in order to gain
beautiful and impressive, a true park road
The road takes its rise from the summit of Great Pond Hill in the
grade and not exceed the maximum
and it will make a unique addition to our
vicinity of Bar Harbor and the views from it are superb from its com-
established, but it affords a view that in
national park system.
mencement.
Sincerely yours,
itself would make such circling desirable,
Superintendent Dorr commenced survey for this mountain road a
George B. Dorr
were it not necessary.
Superintendent.
year ago last August, the work being done under his direction. by
Mr. Walters G. Hill of Bar Harbor, engineer. On June 27th of the
present year, the completed survey was submitted to the Director
of the National Park Service at Washington, accompanied by the
following letter:
The Director National Park Service
alternately eastward over Frenchman's
Department of the Interior
Bay to distant mountains and the Bay
Washington, D. C.
of Fundy, and westward over lakes
and fiord and mingled sea and islands to
Sir:
the Camden Hills.
I have the honor to present the pre-
liminary survey for a motor road to the
The road has been engineered with
summit of Cadillac Mountain, the sum-
strict regard to safety, the curves being
ample: in the only three instances where
Walters G. Hill of Bar Harbor is Er
Construction has been started by the Government on a motor road
tive purposes. It forms excell
to the summit of Cadillac Mountain in Lafayette National Park, the
material, being mingled clay a
highest point upon our Atlantic coast with a magnificent sea view.
not packed so hard as to be d
The construction now contemplated will cover over 4,000 feet in length,
handling.
bringing the road to an elevation of 519 feet above sea level. Funds
The places where retaining
for the construction of the remainder of the road, approximately four
required are four, where the c
sharpest, and rock of excellent
miles in length, have been asked for by the Secretary of the Interior
for building permanent and S
in his estimates for the fiscal year of 1924 submitted to the Bureau
without cement lies. close at h
of the Budget, the construction to be completed in three years.
as much material in general wil
The road as planned by the Secretary of the Interior and the Nat-
be removed as will be required
struction, building and excavat
ional Park Service calls for the best and most permanent construction
balancing.
and for a road of easy ascending grade and liberal width. No such
A superb point is reached who
road as this from the scenic point of view exists in Eastern North
two-thirds the height of the r.
America, and great credit should be given to Secretary Albert B. Fall,
a bold spür stands out from the
of the Interior, and to the Director of the National Park Service for
ridge-with which its summit is 1
this project.
its western side, overhanging E:
This spur the road circles in ord
The road takes its rise from the summit of Great Pond Hill in the
grade and not exceed the
vicinity of Bar Harbor and the views from it are superb from its com-
established, but it affords a vie
mencement.
itself would make such circling
Superintendent Dorr commenced survey for this mountain road a
were it not necessary.
year ago last August, the, work being done under his direction. by
Mr. Walters G. Hill of Bar Harbor, engineer. On June 27th of the
present year, the completed survey was submitted to the Director
of the National Park Service at Washington, accompanied by the
following letter:
The Director National Park Service
alternately eastward over Frenchman's
Department of the Interior
Bay to distant mountains and the Bay
Washington, D. C.
of Fundy, and westward over lakes
and fiord and mingled sea and islands to
Sir:
the Camden Hills.
I have the honor to present the pre-
liminary survey for a motor road to the
The road has been engineered with
summit of Cadillac Mountain, the sum-
strict regard to safety, the curves being
mit of the Mount Desert mountain range
ample; in the only three instances where
and highest point on our Atlantic sea-
close curves are required a radius of
board. The road shown, three and
fifty feet is employed. Construction has
ninetyeight one hundredths (3.98)
been figured for an eighteen-foot travel-
miles in length, is the result of a study
led way, with three-foot shoulder.
on my part lasting over years and of
The plan calls for an earth and rock fill,
a thorough engineering survey, entered
such as the mountain itself will yeild,
upon last August under my direction
and for a gravel surface similar to that
by a capable and efficient civil engineer
on the neighboring town roads, without
who had had previous experience under
macadam or other bound surface. This
a State Commission and independently
seems all that is required with a grade
in Canada and as superintendent of
far less than is met with constantly on
constructive work, Mr. Walters G.Hill.
the regional roads and with the water
The established maxium grade for
taken care of by an ample ditch upon
the road is six per cent, the average grade
the upper side, and frequent culverts.
is four and forty one hundredths per
The rock is granite, deeply trenched
cent. The route taken has been as
by glacial erosion and split by frost.
carefully studied from the landscape
Its seamage is such that it can be split
point of view as from that of good
by explosives at relatively small cost
engineering, being so led over the ridge
for amount moved, while it splits nat-
by which it mounts as to give views
urally into excellent shape for construc-
October 14, 1922.
Dear Mr. Rockefeller:
I commenced work on the motor road at once upon
receipt of your telegram and had a crew at work upon
it Monday morning. I now have two crews on it, in
different sections -- picked men under competent
foremen -- and two stout horse-teams. My plan is
to work all the men I can to advantage while the
weather and all conditions remain favorable as now,
and to get the utmost I can accomplished before
winter sets in to hinder.
I want to have this portion of the new road
completed in time for use when people return next
season. The view is beautiful at the point it
reaches, suggesting the beauty that the whole
will have, and everyone will be interested in it.
I have arranged to have Mr. Clarence E. Dow,
manager of the Mount Desert Nurseries, whom I can
thoroughly rely upon, act as my representative in
charge of the work. He is intelligent and trust-
worthy, has had various and wide experience in
constructive work and in the handling of men, and under-
stands my point of view. He will give such time to it
personally as the work requires and will call in Mr.
Brewer for consultation as he and I may need in res-
pect to rock-blasting and other matters in which he
had had exceptionally wide experience.
Mr. A. H. Lynam will act, as heretofore, as
treasurer as funds are forwarded and will keep full
statements of account to forward or show you as you
may desire, making payments upon my approval.
The men, as is customary here upon such work,
are paid weekly, and it is necessary also to have
funds at hand for the discharge of men if found
unfit, or for other sudden or immediate needs.
After consultation with Mr. Lynam, I would
suggest that the sum of ten thousand dollars be
forwarded to him as treasurer for the present
season's work. He will receipt for it to you
and be at all times responsible to you for any
unexpended balance, keeping as I have said full
record of what is spent. I shall spare no pains
myself to see that all is expended with the utmost
economy of means to end.
[G.B.Dor]]
6/19/2015
National Park Service Conferences
D. Dispersal
The NPS Historic Photograph Collection contains several photos of the various conferences,
including panoramas of participants.
E. Folder List
Series I - Biennial Superintendents , Conferences
Box 1 - Conferences, 1911-1925
Proceedings - First National Park Conference, Yellowstone, September 11-12, 1911
Proceedings - Second National Park Conference, Yosemite, October 14-16, 1912
Proceedings - Third National Park Conference, Berkeley, California, March 11-13, 1915
Program - Fourth National Park Conference, Washington, D. C., January 2-6, 1917
Proceedings - National Park Conference, Washington, D. C., January 2-6, 1917
Summary Notes - Fifth National Park Conference, Denver, November 18, 1919
Program - Sixth National Park Conference, Yosemite, November 12-13, 1922
Minutes - Seventh National Park Conference, Yellowstone, October 22-28, 1923
Minutes - Eighth National Park Conference, Mesa Verde, October 1-5, 1925
Correspondence - Jesse Nusbaum, Superintendents' Conference, 1928-1942
Box 2 - Conferences, 1926-1939
Program - Ninth National Park Conference, Washington, D. C., November 15-20, 1926
Minutes - Ninth National Park Conference, Washington, D. C., November 15-20, 1926
Program - National Park Conference, San Francisco, California, February 15-21, 1928
Program - Superintendents' Conference, Yellowstone, September 17-24, 1929
Proceedings - First Park Naturalists' Conference, Berkeley, California, November 11-30,
1929
Extracts for Conclusions of Park Superintendents' Conference, Washington, D.C.,
November 17-December 15, 1932
Program Dinner for 1934 Conference
Program - National Park Conference, Washington, D. C., January 23-24, 1936
Extracts from Recommendation of National Park Superintendents' Conference, January 2,
1936
http://www.nps.gov/hfc/services/library/conf.cfm
2/18
0
BERT M. FERNALD, ME., CHAIRMAN.
FRANCIS E. WARREN, WYO.
JAMES A. REED. MO.
JOSEPH 8. FRELINGHUYSEN. N.J.
HENRY F. ASHURST. ARIZ.
c.c.
JOSEPH 1. FRANCE, MD.
CHARLES A. CULBERSON, TEX.
IRVINE L. LENROOT, WIS.
PARK TRAMMELL, FLA.
RY W. KEYES. N.H.
CLAUDE A. SWANSON. VA.
United States Senate
.IAM B. MO KINLEY, ILL.
HARRELD. OKLA.
NATIUMAL FARK SERVICE
OLIVE BOYNTON, CLERK.
COMMITTEE ON
Brices V Hill
PUBLIC BUILDINGS AND GROUNDS.
3
DEC 9
1922
OFFICE OF THE DIRECTOR
December 8, 1922
Stephen T. Mather, Director,
National Park Service,
Department of the Interior,
Washington, D. C.
My dear Sir:
Will you kindly advise me if you
have a caretaker at Lafayette Park, the
amount of his salary, if his appointment
is for life, and any other information you
may have on the care of the Park.
Thanking you,
Yours very truly,
U. S. S.
lmb
1.
#
United States Senate
M
DEPARTMENT OFTHEINTERIOR
PUBLIC BUILDINGS AND GROUNDS.
DEC
it
1922
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
OFFICE OF THE DIRECTOR
WASHINGTON
December 1922.
December 8. 19:2
Dear Mr. Fornald,
cephen T. Mather, Director,
National Park w your letter of December 8,
Depay advise when Dational Park is administered
Wash direction and expervision of a Superintendent,
the Superintenteat of lafayette material Park is
dec. B. Dorn, wheee salary is 41,000 a year.
My
are appointed by the Secretary of the
Interier," these positions are excepted from examination
under Civil Service rated.se me it you
have a caretak safayette Question was created by Act of
Congress February 25, 1919, the land having been donated to
amouthe Unitedstrates MN Debt still associates. It is
largely through Mr. Derr's efforte that Infayette Park
is has trusties of the park
Mr. Dorr was Custodian of the Sieur do Ments National
may Members the care of the Park.
Thanking you,
Cordially yours,
Yours very truly,
ALL
(Sgd) ARNOR CAMMERER
Director.
Sen. Dert Permaid,
United States Senate.
U. S. S.
BRU
A6M
lmb
Acadia History
1922
SCHOODIC'S JOHN GODFREY MOORE
Allan Smallidge
ad John Godfrey Moore not died pre-
mon schools, and spent one year at nearby
the deal. Moore was subsequently elected to
H
maturely at age fifty-one, the wildly
Cherryfield Academy. When he was 18, he
the Western Union board of directors.
beautiful Schoodic Point might be a
went to New York and entered into employ-
After living some years abroad, Moore
very different place today. As it happened, after
ment as a clerk in the lumber dealership of
returned to New York as the head of the bro-
Moore's death his heirs began spending their
Thomas Mahew and Wilson Godfrey, his
kerage firm Moore and Schley, also acquiring
time away from their summer places in Winter
uncle. At age 21, Moore started his own lum-
large interests in Chase Manhattan Bank and
Harbor and it was not until 1922, some twen-
ber business and prospered almost immedi-
several railroads. After the panic of 1893, he
ty years after his death, that George Dorr was
ately. In company with a partner named John
invested $25,000 of his own money in a case
able to make arrangements to acquire
Evans, he executed several important con-
to defeat a new federal income tax law. The
Schoodic for the park. By then Moore's some-
tracts with the War Department, including
Supreme Court ruled in his favor and the
what younger second wife, Louise, had remar-
piers and breakwaters at Buffalo, New York,
law was defeated, at least for the time being.
ried and Moore's daughters were living in
and Cleveland, Ohio, as well as dredging
All during his career, he maintained his
England, one married to Viscount Lee and the
projects along the Delaware River.
interest in and loyalty to the rural section of
other, a spinster, living near her sister. The
In 1880, he and Evans went into the fast-
Maine from which he sprang. He became
contact between Dorr and Louise Leeds was
developing telegraph business, founding
involved in the plan to develop Grindstone
a casual one, made while both were having
the Mutual Union Telegraph Company and
Neck in Winter Harbor and built himself one
supper at the Jordan Pond House, but the
constructing lines to rival Western Union.
of the largest cottages there, which he called
result was that Dorr was able to set the wheels
Their intentions were to lease their lines to
"Far From the Wolf." He purchased hundreds
in motion for the eventual land acquisition.
businesses by day and to newspapers by
of acres of forest and islands in the vicinity,
At the time of his death, however, Moore
night. Before all their plans could be real-
including Schoodic Point. He built Schoodic
had vastly different plans for Schoodic Point.
ized Evans died and Moore, as the new pres-
Drive, the first carriage road on the point,
John Godfrey Moore came from modest
ident, led the company into one of the biggest
which wound from his newly-built bridge at
beginnings. He was born in Steuben, Maine,
competitive wars in the history of telegraphy.
Frazer Creek, along the bold, rocky shores to
the son of Captain Henry D. and Maria
The outcome was that Western Union was
the salt ponds and Devil's Anvil. His road also
(Godfrey) Moore. The young Moore took
forced to lease Mutual Union lines. Moore
climbed to the summit of Schoodic Head, a
whatever schooling he had at the local com-
and his associates realized vast profits from
favorite spot, reputedly, because from there
Picnic party on Schoodic Head, July 1923.
Summer 2005
Friends of Acadia Journal
he could see all the way to his native Steuben
placed a bronze tablet in his memory at the
ALLAN SMALLIDGE is a native of Winter
and beyond. He had plans to build a grand
overlook on Big Moose Island. Also in his
Harbor and a graduate of the University of
hotel at the summit, and supposedly
honor, in 1937 the name of the road which
Maine. After a career teaching high school
had ideas for the further development of
runs from the village south to the bridge at
English both in Maine and in Massachusetts
the rest of Schoodic. He died, however, before
Frazer's Creek was officially, albeit belatedly,
public schools, he returned to Winter Harbor
these plans could be brought to fruition.
changed by the people of Winter Harbor from
to serve as Town Manager for fourteen years,
Apparently his heirs were not as enamored
Schoodic Street to the Moore Road.
until retiring in 1998.
of the area as he was, although his daughter
Faith did maintain a summer home on
Grindstone for several years afterward.
FORESIGHT E GENEROSITY
The day after Moore's death, an article
appeared in the Bar Harbor Record quoting
a previous interview with him concerning his
acquisition of Schoodic Point and the islands
and of the pleasure he realized from building
the first substantial road on the point. He stat-
ed that he had acquired the land because of
its beauty, noting that there was nothing he
admired more than a mountain, "especially
when an ocean goes with it." Also, he
explained, he had enjoyed the experience of
Yankee trading with the previous land own-
ers, and he thought that it would be a good
investment considering what was being
developed in Bar Harbor at the time. The
road, he said, was built for his own pleasure
and convenience, but also as an object lesson
in economy for the local authorities. He felt
that they could repeat his successes in the
public roads all over the area. Moore said,
"[The road] is nine miles long and I enjoyed
every foot of it It did me and my family
as much good as a trip to Europe and didn't
cost any more. Besides, it gave employment
Schoodic Point
to a large number of people who need the
ESTATE PLANNING
money." While it may have seemed arrogant
of him to assume that he could teach the
Preserving and protecting those things that we all hold dear - our quality of
locals how to build roads, any hard feelings
life, a distinctive heritage, and the integrity of Mount Desert Island's
the statement may have provoked was prob-
natural wonders - is a wise investment. You can help protect Acadia forever.
ably defused with his sincere efforts to cre-
It's simple. Add only one of the following sentences to your will, or a codicil:
ate jobs and to aid the local economy.
After Moore died on June 27, 1899, con-
1. I hereby give
% of my residuary estate to Friends of
current services were held in New York City
Acadia, Inc., a Maine charitable corporation, P.O. Box 45,
and at St. Christopher's-by-the-Sea in Winter
Bar Harbor, Maine 04609, for its charitable purposes.
Harbor. Bedford Tracy, a young Winter Harbor
attorney who was a local associate of Moore's,
2. I hereby bequeath $
to Friends of Acadia, Inc.,
elaborately eulogized him at the Grindstone
a Maine charitable corporation, P.O. Box 45, Bar Harbor, Maine
service and concluded with the words, "The
04609, for its charitable purposes.
fragrance of his acts of kindness perfumes
his sepulcher, and he must live on, embalmed
3. I hereby devise the following property to Friends of Acadia, Inc.,
by our love and garlanded with our affec-
a Maine charitable corporation, P.O. Box 45, Bar Harbor, Maine
tion. The cold marble bears in mockery many
04609, for its charitable purposes: [legal description of property].
a name forgotten but for the letters chiseled
on its icy slab. It cannot be so with the name
of John G. Moore, which is chiseled on the
For more information, contact Lisa Horsch at 1-800-625-0321,
tablets of too many hearts to need the aid of
email her at lisahorsch@friendsofacadia.org or visit our
marble or bronze to perpetuate it."
website at www.friendsofacadia.org
Nevertheless, Acadia National Park has
Friends of Acadia Journal
Summer 2005
7
page I of 2
TIMELINES
JANUARY 1929
POSTAGE
Scenes of
LAFAYETTE
NATIONAL
PARK,
ONE
CENT
WITHOUT
and several thousand acres on and around
Maine's Schoodic Peninsula, just across the
DESERT
ISLAND
MT.
MAINE
bay from Mount Desert Island.
BAR
HARBOR
Fast-forward to 1922 when Moore's
since-remarried widow went out to dinner
Somes
at MDI's genteel Jordan Pond House. Six years
prior, the feds had designated the surrounding
hills as Sieur de Monts National Monument,
which in 1919 became Lafayette National
Park - named for George Washington's
French military sidekick and commemo-
rating American solidarity with France at
the end of World War I. Into the Jordan Pond
House walked park superintendent George
Dorr, largely responsible for acquiring and
convincing others to donate the lands that
constitute the park. Moore's widow asked Dorr
whether his trustees association might accept
her late husband's Schoodic holdings as a
Lafayette
donation - it'd just be a matter of convincing
her stepdaughters, Ruth and Faith.
The Moore heiresses were then living
large in England. Just after her father died,
Ruth had married a British military officer
National Park
and diplomat, Lieutenant Colonel Arthur Lee,
and moved across the pond with him and her
sister. Lee leveraged his wife's inheritance to
quit soldiering and launch a political career,
and Ruth and Faith pooled their funds to buy
Becomes Acadia
an Elizabethan manor called Chequers, which
the Lees later donated for use as the prime
minister's summer home (it's still the British
equivalent of Camp David). After the war,
Arthur Lee had received a peerage, and by the
HOW A PAIR OF HEIRESSES WHO (ALLEGEDLY) SCORNED THE FRENCH
time Dorr was petitioning her in 1923, Ruth
INADVERTENTLY CREATED OUR MOST RECOGNIZED FRANCO BRAND.
had become the Viscountess Lee of Fareham.
BY BRIAN KEVIN Downeast Editor of chief.
Of course, if there's one thing wanna-be
British aristocrats don't like, it's the French.
mong the gaggles of Gilded Age robber barons
Or maybe the sisters liked the French just fine
who preferred their pleasure domes with a
and it was the Viscount Lee who bore a grudge
A
view of Maine's Frenchman Bay, John Godfrey
against his homeland's fairly recent allies.
Moore was the rarest sort - a genuine local
Whatever the reason, the story goes that the
boy. Born in Steuben in 1847, the son of a ship
daughters couldn't truck with a moniker
captain, Godfrey left Maine for New York City as
honoring the French, and they stipulated that
a teenager. He started in lumber, then pivoted to
Lafayette National Park be renamed before
the telegraph biz, rapidly scaling a startup and
they would donate their Schoodic estate.
selling it to Western Union. In 1885, flush with buyout cash, he took
"Who knows what kind of prejudices
the time-honored route of affluent young men who aspire to be more
they had?" asks Allen Workman, who, in
affluent and went into finance.
his book Schoodic Point: History on the Edge of
Moore's investment firm moved money around for various WASPy
Acadia National Park, is one of many to relay
tycoons - Morgans, Rockefellers, Whitneys - and he spent the next
the anecdote. "I can hypothesize that Lee was
decade-and-a-half doing wealthy financier things: suing the federal
just such a proud descendant of the British
government to avoid paying taxes, narrowly dodging indictment
Empire - you know, those French, they
in a corruption scandal, building a huge, turreted vacation palace
hadn't run the war right and SO on."
outside his hometown. When he died of a heart attack at 52, he
So why did the Anglophile donors sign
left behind a wife, two grown daughters from a previous marriage,
off on "Acadia," a name that France had
44 downeast.com
Jan. 2020
Page 2 of2
bestowed on its Atlantic settlements in
the New World? Historians aren't sure.
Dorr's biographer, Ronald Epp, says he
knows of no source material explicitly
mentioning the sisters' antipathy for the
French. Dorr writes of their "objection
to the name of Lafayette," but he doesn't
elaborate. The explanation, Epp says,
has simply "appeared anecdotally over
the decades." Dorr, he points out, was an
admirer of French history and culture,
and it's fair to assume such a request
would have left him conflicted.
But the park's founder had also been
fond of the name "Acadia" for decades,
and he may have sensed opportunity.
Dorr was gifted when it came to parsing
ideas and schmoozing wealthy donors.
THE PARK'S FOUNDER HAD
BEEN FOND OF THE NAME
"ACADIA" FOR DECADES.
"He could probably convince anyone
that, for the general public, the word
'Acadia' is a toned-down expression
of any associations that they bring
to 'Lafayette'," Epp says. In their
writings on the park, both Dorr and
National Park Service director Stephen
Mather played down the Frenchiness
of "Acadia," emphasizing instead its
likely derivation from cadie, from the
same Mi'kmaq root as quoddy (as in
"Passamaquoddy"), meaning "place."
However he won them over, Dorr
obtained his limey patrons' blessing
for "Acadia," and when Congress
authorized the park to add new lands
in January 1929, it conferred the new
name. "Little did the Moore daughters
know," Workman says, "it would end
up on hundreds of businesses all across
Hancock County" - an area with only a
faint link to the French-derived culture of
northern Maine and Canada now univer-
sally recognized as "Acadian." That's what
Lafayette would have called l'ironie.
Timelines is a special monthly
history column celebrating Maine's
2020 bicentennial. Brian Kevin is
Down East's editor in chief.
January 2020 45
amusi.g and
ups. 13.
lates with perfect pitch
al agony of the die-hard
absurdity and genuine
His taste for hyperbole
ANTIQUES
us humor, however,
usingly tiresome as the
Wendy Moonan
ses, and because some
otes are decidedly dubi-
hor, who is in his 50's,
Rockefeller's
he received, as a boy,
froman old-timer who
ne rn down tickets
("), reader begins to
Legacy
how many of his stories
Of Roads
re, "True Believers" is
bitrary in what it leaves
John D. Rockefeller Jr. (1874-
it leaves out. Given the
1960), son of the founder of Standard
is book, why does Mr.
Oil, is remembered for his philan-
ine his stories about the
thropy: $537 million in gifts to educa-
I Cubs and their long-
tional, cultural, medical and other
S to brief asides? Why
charitable projects. In New York
er on so repetitiously
alone he founded Rockefeller Univer-
S and Notre Dame? (Is
sity, built Riverside Church, be-
e could title one chapter
queathed the site for the United Na-
See Green"?) Why so
tions headquarters and donated the
whining about stupid
Cloisters and Fort Tryon Park.
little about greedy own-
What is less known was his passion
National Park Service
stical players?
for road building, which began 90
A stone carriage bridge over Duck Brook in Acadia National Park on Mount Desert Island in Maine.
Mr. Queenan fails with
years ago.
tes to hit the ball out of
Between 1913 and 1940 he designed
ugh he does manage to
57 miles of carriage roads on Mount
easily accommodate a carriage,"
pecting their third child, they visited
donate their land for a park in 1908.
tertaining ground-rule
Desert Island in Maine. They were
Ms. Roberts wrote.
Mount Desert. Nelson was born
In 1914 they approached Rockefeller
carved through spruce and hemlock-
The Rockefellers loved coaching.
there. It was a happy time. Two
Eliot took the perfect tack. "I sun
covered mountains, around glacier-
After the senior Rockefeller moved
years later, at the age of 36, he de-
posed that you appreciate the fact
formed lakes, across streams and
the family to New York, he went car-
cided to devote his life to philanthro-
that well-built roads are the most du
over chasms. All were designed to of-
riage-driving through Central Park.
py. "He realized that he had no de-
rable works of man," he wrote.
fer splendid views of mountains,
His son also became an expert in
sire to pursue his father's business
"They outlast all other structures
lakes and the Atlantic. He also built
driving carriages, a great skill.
interests or to make more money,
and monuments." It worked. Rocke-
17 granite and cobblestone bridges,
In 1893 John D. Rockefeller Jr.
Ms. Roberts wrote. He purchased a
feller began to transfer his land to
marvels of engineering.
went to Brown University; an ob-
huge Tudor-style house in Seal Har-
the park, ultimately contributing a
ues
Eventually he donated 51 miles of
servant Baptist, he said he consid-
bor on Mount Desert.
third of its acreage.
road and 11,000 acres to Acadia Na-
ered the Yale crowd "too fast." He
Mount Desert had long been a ha-
In 1960 he died, and the National
tional Park. (All of Acadia's 41,645
graduated Phi Beta Kappa and re-
ven for painters like Thomas Cole
Park Service took over the responsi-
Flea Markets-Shows
9004
acres were privately donated.) The
turned to Manhattan to work in his
and Frederic Edwin Church; scien-
bility for the carriage roads. But the
park now attracts four million visi-
father's offices. "He held major re-
tists, botanists, clergy and academ-
agency did not have enough man-
CAPE MAY, N.J.
tors a year, many of whom use its
sponsibilities for which he had virtu-
ics, including Charles W. Eliot, presi-
power to maintain them properly. By
ANTIQUES SHOW
gravel roads for carriage rides, hik-
ally no preparation and no guid-
dent emeritus of Harvard Universi-
1986, when Ed Winterberg, a Ken-
AUGUST9 & 10
75 Antiques Dealers at Historic Cold Spring
ing, mountain biking, cross-country
ance," Ms. Roberts reported.
ty; and nature lovers called "rusti-
tucky lawyer, approached the Park
Village. Furniture, Textiles, Linens, Silver,
skiing and snowshoeing
In 1901 he married Abby Aldrich,
cators." By the 1880's Bar Harbor
Service about obtaining a franchise
Primitives Books.
tibles
more
Sat
Sun
adm
$7
Few people had thought about
the daughter of a senator from
had become a summer social capital.
On
to offer carriage rides, he recalled,
includes
00f GS Pkwy
those roads until Ann Rockefeller
Rhode Island. He took her on coach-
John D. Rockefeller Jr. loved the
"The roads were so overgrown they
w.stellashows.com
Roberts, Nelson Rockefeller's
ing trips to Mohonk Mountain House
island and bought more and more
looked like a Christmas tree farm.'
ART MEXICAN CONTEMPORARY
daughter, researched them for her
in upstate New York and to the
property. "He had deep personal
Mr. Winterberg met David and
Excel prices. Aug 14-18 at midtown East
master's degree in landscape archi-
Homestead in Hot Springs, Va.
feelings for the earth and its beauty,
Peggy Rockefeller. "They took my
hotel
www
Info: Guillermo Solorzano
tecture at the University of Virginia.
'For him, carriage driving was
his conviction that the Divine Pres-
measure," he said. "I suggested we
cell:
Contact at anopcoo.com
'No one in any of the publications I
more of a sporting exercise than a
ence is revealed in nature, and his
redefine the carriage roads as a cul-
saw even considered that grandfa-
social one," the landscape architect
belief that nature plays an important
tural zone, so the park would see
ther might have actually laid out the
William D. Rieley wrote in a 1989 pa-
role," Ms. Roberts writes.
their many uses. The service was
roads himself," she wrote in "Mr.
per for the National Park Service,
He hiked through his forests to
afraid horses were elite."
Rockefeller's Roads: The Untold
'Historic Resource Study for the
plan his roads. He hired engineers to
Mr. Winterberg won his conces-
Story of Acadia's Carriage Roads
Carriage Road System, Acadia Na-
do the bridges and a work crew of 60
sion and started giving rides in car-
and Their Creator' (Down East
tional Park, Mount Desert Island."
to cut 16-foot-wide roads. The men
riages pulled by giant Percherons
Books, 1990). realized grandfather
He may also have needed to get
had to quarry the granite by hand,
and Belgian draft horses. "I drove
was intimately involved with every
away. Beginning in 1900 his father
lay down road foundations with split
Olympia Snow, Sen. George Mitchell
DIT
stage of the work, from the concept
became the target of ferocious at-
granite slabs and smaller rocks, add
and the under secretary of the interi-
the most minute details of execu-
tacks for his monopolistic business
clay and gravel to the surface, build
or to show them the terrible state of
tion.
practices. Ida Tarbell wrote a muck-
retaining walls, dig drainage ditches
the roads," he said. Senator Mitchell
Rockefeller learned road building
raking book, "The History of the
and install culverts. The protective
proposed a financing mechanism
from his father. In 1873 John D.
Standard Oil Company," and the
stones perched along the edges are
every dollar the government spent to
Rockefeller Sr. bought land outside
press attacks turned vicious. In
still known familiarly as "Rockefel-
fix the roads would have to be
m/nytstore
his native Cleveland to build a sum-
1904 Junior had a nervous break-
ler's teeth."
matched by a private endowment,
mer house. He carved out roads, in-
down and took his wife and baby
Acadia National Park was not his
The Friends of Acadia raised $4
stalled stone bridges and landscaped
daughter to the South of France for
idea. George B. Dorr, a Boston aris-
million, and in 1991 Congress started
w Hork Times
700 acres. His son was intrigued.
six months," Mr. Rieley wrote. Even
tocrat and charismatic naturalist
appropriating funds to match that
.com
'Grandfather learned how to lay out
after they returned, he did not work
who summered on Mount Desert,
amount. Today the vintage carriage
a road according to the contours of
for months.
and Eliot, the Harvard president, be-
roads are again pristine, shared by
the land and lay a grade that could
In 1908, when he and Abby were ex-
gan persuading summer people to
bikers, hikers and horse carriages.
NYT
8/8/03
B32
1922-
COMPLIANCE DOCUMENTATION
FOR THE
HISTORIC MOTOR ROADS
ACADIA NATIONAL PARK
in
FEDERAL HIGHWAYS PROJECT #PRA-ACAD-4A10
du
ke
?
a
il
si-
the
Prepared by
By
H. Eliot Foulds, Landscape Architect
rk
se
d,
ley
1.
Edited by
ly
Lauren G. Meier, Historical Landscape Architect
we
cul-
Olmsted Center for Landscape Preservation
Cultural Landscape Program
S
North Atlantic Region
National Park Service
September, 1993
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1921 - 1922