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

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Metadata
1931-32
1937
Part Transinest 1932
JD RFr. Loop loadPlan
4/2/08
-Completion of Cadilloc Mt.
Summit Road (see 1925 file)
Satterlee proposal to Create
albright visit toANP(6/13) c
ocean Adntuary for name
JORFr. Cadellae Mt.Rd/
univers birds on ANP perimatee.
bener central
Charles E.Peterson visit and
-Jr stouch c shingles(9/24)
report m atterbury's designs.
-Mr.yillrs R. meet c E BD
Callellon Summit recom. albright
at Horxans House (9/24)
letter prouses P. (10/27)
also Jrs. property aeq.
Lynam uttents Jr. ri Trustee
Communication letter to allright
offer of lands to govt ex clusive
(8/9) Nermeredy Asot.Pir
Lynam as successort GBD.-
to (8/27)
better known part admin.
- Master List of Jr. gifts to U.S.
the CBD
response to Jr. in
Dorr's role in securing lands pear
-Camerer (8/10) letter ne gateHaise
- Lynam to Jr. (9/28) re HCTPR
gent readors, Dorri memory
contractor. Albright visit in Spring
effort to write summary npt. of
- Afterbury from (5/27) le
last 30 years.
gatehouses as a"hit to be
donated to NPS.
Lynam letter to Jr. (9/28) u HCTPR
and the Eliats./history of org.
-Jr. to Commerce (9/25) ie
Jr. to Hale me HCTPR membership
Mr/Mrs JDR7 meet c Dorr at
Humans House. Also radio
Jr. to Atterbury re Petarson's Report
renoonl obstacles.
on Trip to ANP (11/9)
-VIAVIS fath work Summary (17731)
BHTimes 11/25 anticle n Gate Lodges.
- Cadilloe Sunnet Rd Opening(7/24)
JDR Jr. to B 7assand (10/27) re plantings.
- JORJr. to Littler's sale of land (1/4)
-Name change far Mountains-
for staff reordures
propare of US geof alwe Board
Con.c w.k rearchearse Nuseen
-Olmsted - letter(1/25) letter to twitter re
(6/20)
TAX property and fittle's suggestia of field
-Jr. to Ly ram re WGA and
Shirt group in ANP separate from Don't adm.
getting GBD to ext (11/7)
-Jr. to Lynam (10/27) re his refusal t
-Jr to Mayarrod (9/21) on
upact Susarde mosts pumphouse! roof
llay's letter of appreciation to Jr.
owned b Jr. & leased to NPS.
ad CBO
- altrught to Jr. (10/28) on Peterson's
- Jr.to See Wilbur (6/29)re visit to ANP.
Credits CBD.
enthusian for ANP + its landcaping
-Into Llax Farrand (9/21) onllax's letter
challenges, and with C GBD.
and Jrs View of us Dorr
-C Peterson to
re gatehouse / Lodge additistrative
-Jeeg Navy adamsaddum (7/14)
ad style for ANP ie Alterbury model.
1
Asst see Dixon's speech (1/20
for Cadillae it- Road ceremony
for Gullar it Road apaning
A93
1932
- old or New ltt Names (1/9/31)
-NYT article m Cadillacellt Rd. (7/24)
W.K.K. Morehead (11/10) re publication $
Dedication of Cadillae it Road
-
for Messum.
-Park concessions (1/31/46)
(BHT 7/13 plans.
- Mt. naming (1/2) =
more dedication of Cadilla Summert
- Gate Haves freet (11/14/68)
Road (BHT. 7/20): lans.
- Cammera teo to Bond (1/28)ria map name
-Rainge dedocation (BHT. 7/27) of
changes
Cadillac let. Road
-Seey Wilbur visits ANP, first visit
-Bumpus + Little to Packard
Since 1902 (BHT 6/29/32)
Stayed at obstarm.
(1/5) on MDIBL, Dorritation
- Yord letter to Bryant (6/24) on elucatra in up.
+ JAX.
Annual pt
- -Bonepos -Pachard course
- HCTPR History from Deasy to C.W.Eliot, 2nd;
Don Station (1/9)
also Dunhamis revision on drift.
-HeTPR Minutes (6/22) conveying to
US gout all HeTPR lands. Empt
- 3 letter from GED(ids) to Wm. Santelle
-GBD gets greenlate Hatchery trentered to
Dept. of Inferior
- BBD to Lynam (19/22) Siewrda Monts Spiny
Hnee roof needs us shingling Fr. owns
building Park has is funds to repoir even
if NPS showed anthouyi.
PATHMAKERS
CULTURAL LANDSCAPE REPORT
FOR THE HISTORIC HIKING TRAIL SYSTEM
OF MOUNT DESERT ISLAND
Acadia National Park, Maine
History, Existing Conditions, & Analysis
Prepared by
Margaret Coffin Brown
Olmsted Center for Landscape Preservation
Project Manager
Jim Vekasi, Acadia National Park
Contributors
Karen Anderson
Laura Hayes
Christine Arato
David Goodrich
Sarah Baldyga
Charlie Jacobi
Christian Barter
Keith Johnston
Don Beal
Lauren Meier
Brooke Childrey
J. Tracy Stakely
Peter Colman
Gary Stellpflug
Mark Davison
Stacie Van Wyk
Paul Weinbaum
Funding provided by
National Park Service Cultural Resources Preservation Program
National Park Service Fee Demonstration Program
Friends of Acadia
Olmsted Center for Landscape Preservation
National Park Service, Boston, Massachusetts, 2006
2006
PATHMAKERS
2
TABLE OF CONTENTS
LIST OF DRAWINGS
iii
LIST OF TABLES
iv
LIST OF FIGURES
iv
FOREWORD
ix
ACGNOWLEDGMENTS
xi
PRODUCTION
I
EARLY TRAILS
II
Carry Trails, Colonial Roads, and Paths, pre-1760s-1830s.
I2
Mountain Scrambles by Artists and Rusticators, 1830s-60s
20
Rocking, Walking Guides, and Hiking Clubs, 1860s-1890
26
CREATION OF AN ISLAND-WIDE TRAIL SYSTEM
41
Founding of Village Improvement Associations, 1890-1899
42
Land Protection and Path System Expansion, 1900-1916
58
Creation of a National Park, 1916-1932
98
MANAGEMENT OF A NATIONAL PARK TRAIL SYSTEM
121
The New Deal and Park Trails, 1933-42
122
Fire Obliteration, Mission 66, and Park Trails Program, 1943-2003
149
EXISTING CONDITIONS
173
ASALYSIS OF SIGNIFICANCE AND INTEGRITY
179
Statement of Significance
183
Anaivsis of Landscape Integrity
188
Evaluation of Landscape Characteristics and Features
191
FERENCES
201
Recommendations for Further Research
202
Bibilography
203
Agpendix A Terminology
208
Appendix B. Joseph Allen's Path Chronology for Seal Harbor, 1900-1930
215
Appendix C. Individual Trail Descriptions
216
Agpendix D. Trail Chronology
272
Appendix E. Path Maps
284
317
DRAWINGS
Study area for the Mount Desert Island historic hiking trail system, western part
IFC
Strawberry area for the Mount Desert Island historic hiking trail system, eastern part
IBC
Possible Native American carry trails that predate European settlement, pre-1762
13
Paths deriving from Mount Desert Island roads, 1762-1835
16
Popular walking paths on Mount Desert Island, 1836-66
24
5
Walking paths described in guidebooks, 1867-89
34
VIA/VIS path work, 1890-99
52
7a.
VIA/VIS path work, 1900-1916, western side of island
88
iii
PATHMAKERS
3.
7b. VIA/VIS path work, 1900-1916, eastern side of island
89
8a. VIA/VIS path work, 1917-32, western side of island
II2
8b. VIA/VIS path work, 1917-32, eastern side of island
113
9a. Civilian Conservation Corps and VIA path work, 1933-42, western side of island
144
9b. Civilian Conservation Corps and VIA path work, 1933-42, eastern side of island
145
IOa. Existing conditions, 2003, western side of island
168
rob. Existing conditions, 2003, eastern side of island
169
LIST OF TABLES
I.
Possible Native American carry trails that predate European settlement, pre-1760
14
2.
Paths deriving from Mount Desert Island roads of the 1700S
17
3.
Popular walking paths on Mount Desert Island, 1836-65
25
4.
Early travel guides for Mount Desert Island
26
5.
Walking paths described in guidebooks, 1867-88
35
6.
Individuals associated with Path Committees of Village Improvement Associations
43
7.
VIA/VIS path work, 1890-99
53
8.
VIA/VIS path work, 1900-1916
90
9.
VIA/VIS path work, 1917 32
II4
IO.
Civilian Conservation Corps and VIA path work, 1933-42
146
II.
Paths added or modified, 1957 2003
170
12.
Criteria for evaluation for the National Register of Historic Places
180
13.
Summary of landscape integrity for Acadia's historic hiking trails
190
14. Summary of evaluation of landscape characteristics
197
LIST OF FIGURES
CARRY TRAILS, COLONIAL ROADS AND PATHS, PRE-1760s-1830s
I.
Locator map
2
2.
Four historic path districts of the village improvement associations
5
3.
Tribal regions of the Penobscot and Passamaquoddy tribes, pre-1760s
12
4.
Tracing of 1808 plan, western half of Mount Desert Island, showing roads that are now trails
18
5.
Tracing of 1807 plan, eastern half of Mount Desert Island, showing place names and landowners
19
MOUNTAIN SCRAMBLES BY ARTISTS AND RUSTICATORS, 1830s-60s
6.
Lynam homestead near Schooner Head, circa 1870
20
7.
Sketch by Thomas Cole, Mount Desert looking south by east, 1844
21
8.
Sketch by Frederic Edwin Church of Schooner Head and Lynam Farm, 1850-51
22
ROCKING, WALKING GUIDES, AND HIKING CLUBS, 1860s-89
9.
Pen-and-ink sketch of "rocking" along the Mount Desert Island coast, 1873
27
IO. Green Mountain House, circa 1870
28
II.
Hikers on the summit of Flying Mountain, 1875
28
12.
Rustic bridge with roof along the Duck Brook Path, 1870S
29
13.
Rustic bridge, 1870S
29
14. Rustic gazebo and bench, 1870s
30
15. Shore Path in Bar Harbor, circa 1890
30
16. Map of eastern half of Mount Desert Island, 1874
3I
328
pages
iv
FILE NO. 2682-A
HALE AND DORR
ORIGINAL FILE COPY
R FILE
NOT TO LEAVE THE OFFICE
W, HALE
Mail Dick
Deck retainted
yought
like
January 2, 1931
To the Editor
Bar Harbor Times
Bar Harbor, Maine
Sir:
At the last annual meeting of the Hancock County Trustees
of Public Reservations I proposed that at the coming Annual
Meeting in 1931 we should vote upon the following motion:
"That this corporation declare itself to be
in favor of the use for the mountains and
natural objects of Mount Desert Island of the
well known names which have been used for the
past thirty-seven years in the admirable maps
of Messrs. Bates, Rand and Jacques and requests
its officers to use these names in all of its
affairs.
If
As the matter was only mentioned at the close of the
meeting it was put over by a vote for the informal polling
of the members of the corporation meanwhile.
That poll has been taken and the following are lists
of those in the corporation who are in favor of the old names
for the mountains and my motion and also of those who
prefer the new names and are against my motion in the
informal ballot:
FILE NO.
HALE AND DORR
ORIGINAL FILE COPY
NOT TO LEAVE THE OFFICE
To the Edi tor -2
January 2, 1931
Favoring the Old Names
Charles F.Paine
John A. Peters
E.B.Mears
Charles E.Sampson
William Lawrence
Stroud Rodick
Dave Hennen Morris
Wm. J. Schieffelin
John S. Melcher
Joseph P. Tunis
Arnold Wood
Robert B. Bowler
B.H. Young
Samuel S. Fels
Roscoe C.E.Brown
S. H. Milliken
Van Adams Brown
Carrie M. Robinson
W.W. Vaughn.
Arthur Train
J. Archibald Murray
E.S. Dana
Fred C. Lynam
James Murphy
Helen Sears Bradley
Samuel Henderson
Richard W.Hale
C.C. Little
Opposed to the Motion.
Wm. Draper Lewis
Lincoln Cromwell
L. B. Deasy
Wm. Otis Sawtelle
Samuel A. Eliot
Clarence Dow
F. J. Stinson
Charles W. Eliot
I suggest that you should do something with regard to
obtaining the general public opinion of both the year-round
residents and the summer people who have a stake in the
island.
Yours very truly,
Richard W.Hale.
Seal Harbor, Maine; January 2, 1931.
Dear Mr. Rockefeller:-
I have received your letter of December 30th in
reference to the proposed outlet for the Paradise Hill roads at Hull's
Cove. Although we had one line as shown on the tracing which I sent you
the decision oa to the whole outlet question was postponed - as it did
not seem likely at the time that this branch would be built in the neär
future and it was your thoug' t that the matter could be considered late
If we may disrecard the existing bridle path along the brook which the
line shown on the tracing was made to enter and follow for a large part
of the way - which is probably not used as much now as it was when we
made the first surveys - I think we could get. a more direct line to Ede
>treet as shown on the enclosed sketch. This line has not been surveyed
but I cruised the country over and thought it could be made with a 5 01
6% grade. The entrance on Eden Street would be at about the same point
as this shown for the Hull's Cove entrance of the possible extension of
the proposed. motor road. You will remember that the extension of the
proposed motor road to Hull's Cove was not decided upon and that it was
thought that possibly, it would be better to make a. turn around the top
of Corkscrew Hill to take in the good views and have only the one entra
on Eden Street near Duck Brook.
You did not have time last year to go over these Hull's Cove 11
go the study of the problems there have not been completed. For the
horse road outlet I am inclined to think the shorter and more direct 1
shown on the enclosed sketch though of somewhat steeper grade would be
preferred to the longer line through the valley, using the old bridle
Very truly yours
[Part Simpson
26 Broadway
New York
January 6, 1931
Dear Mr. Simpson:
Your letter of January 2nd, further with reference to an
outlet on Eden Street for the bridle path from Paradise Hill, is re-
ceived.
I think we should not do anything to prevent our making the
proposed motor road loop over the old Corkscrew Hill country come out
to the west on Eden Street as we talked. You remember we had it in
mind to get Mr. Morris to let us have a road on the east side of his
farm, thus getting an outlet for the proposed motor road instead
of coming down on the Corkscrew Hill road to Eden Street.
All of this I say because your recent proposal of a shorter
horse road outlet to Eden Street crosses the Corkscrew Hill Road and
might interfere with this motor road. Is it not possible to bring
this shorter outlet down the Corkscrew Hill Road after it strikes it
instead of crossing it as you indicate?
When weather conditions are so that you can go into the
matter, please go over the line of the proposed horse road outlet
to Tulls Cove as originally planned and shown on the tracing which you
sent me some weeks ago, with a view to seeing how much work would be
needed to make it a safe horse trail simply for saddle horses.
I
presume hardly more would be necessary than to cut the brush, put in
some drain pipes across the road and possibly fill some marshy places.
It may be that for simply a horse trail, this proposed route could be
made avai lable without much expense, and if so, the simplest thing
to do would be to put it in shape for use the coming summer and then
study the matter at our convenience.
Very truly,
Solin
Mr. Paul D. Simpson,
Seal Harbor, Maine.
JLA, RCI, B.73,F-12
26 Broadway
New York
January 9, 1931
Dear Dr. Little:
Mr. Olmsted has spoken to me of the desire of
the Labora tory to obtain a portion of a certain piece of
land which I own, across the highway from its main building,
to make possible the erection of several residences for
laboratory workers. When you have decided just how much
land you would like, I shall be glad to give the matter
consideration. Perhaps you will have sent me a little
drawing showing the frontage, depth and general outline
of the piece desired. At your convenience I shall be glad
to take the matter up with you.
Very sincerely,
John D
Dr. C. C. Little,
Jackson Laboratory,
Bar Harbor, Maine.
Seal Harbor, aine, January 19, 1931.
Dear "r. Rockefeller:-
I have been studying further the bridge site on
the Amphitchant.re road at the Little Harbor Brook crossing with a view
to make more certain the saving of the two large trees at the site -
a 20" herlook and a 20" pine. A # originally nlanned the bridge was to
have a roadway clearance of '16' - like the other bridges we have built
to date. with the 20' clearance between parapet walls which we are now
planning for the bridges I find that on the old location we might have
to lose the 20" pine below the bridge. I have accordingly made a revis
location RE shown on the enclosed plan - which 18 probably the best we
can do with the width of bridge considered. This location has the ad-
vantage of a longer radius curve but the disa vantages of crossing the
stream more obliquely and on a little steeper grade and of requiring
a longe span for the bridge. Of course it would be desirable to have
the small waterfall above the bridge in line with the axis of the arch
but with this crossing the construction would be rather difficult. Wit
a wide opening however, such 88 shown in green on the enclosed plan, a
fairly wide view could be had both ways along the stream from the east
ern side - where the trail should be located. As you remember , it is
now on top of the western bank. By building the arch on a skew the spa
could be somewhet reduced and the view uo the stream toward the water-
fall made a little more direct. In either case I think it would be wel
to hold the northeast corner of the arch at the point shown on the pla
in order to save the roots of the hemlock and to make room for the tra
If necessary to reduce the span it might be possible to arch over the
month the tree - but it would be better not to do this if it can be
avoided.
If we could sacrifice the 20" nine we could CTORA the stream
at approximately right angles and use a shorter apan for the bridge. A
there are few large trees at the site however it would be well to save
both henlock and pine if possible - even if we should have to reduce
the width of the bridge somewhat. These are questions which you will
discues with Mr. Stoughton. I furnished Mr. Stoughton a plan of this E
site on A slightly different location last fall - but I do not know
whether he has ever completed a design for the bridge or not. If so
he can probably keep the general lines of his design and adjust them
to this location.
Very truly yours,
[Paul Simpson]
Mr. John D. Rockefeller, Jr.,
26 Broadway,
New York, N. Y.
N.Y.TIMES 1/28/31.
J.D.ROCKEFELLER JR
DROPS PARK PROJECT
To End Controversy He With-
draws Offer to Build Roads
Near Bar Harbor.
COMMUNITY WAS DIVIDED
Summer Residents Opposed Mount
Desert Island Development as
Inviting Tourists.
Special to The New York Times.
BAR HARBOR, Me., Jan. 28.--
John D. Rockefeller Jr. has asked
the director of national parks to re-
lease him from an offer made last
June to construct in part more than
twenty miles of motor and horse
roads through lands in Acadia Na-
tional Park and through lands which
he personally owns. Mr. Rockefeller's
engineers estimated the cost of this
project in excess of $4,000,000.
The Rockefeller offer was accepted
by the government on Sept. 11, since
which time there has been oriticiam,
at times bitter, of the Rockefeller
program by Mr. Rockefeller's neigh-
bors in the fashionable Summer
colonies of Bar Harbor, Seal Harbor
and other resorts bordering upon the
national park.
Mr. Rockefeller and his represents-
tives remained silent in the face of
this adverse criticism until today,
when he replied to his critica and
stated his desire to withdraw from
the major portion of his construction
offer in a letter to the editor and
publisher of The Bar Harbor Times,
Planned by Engineers.
the newspaper that has in recent
weeks carried a series of open let-
There are two schools of thought
ters from prominent members of the
on the Island with regard to the
Mount Desert Island Summer colo-
Rocketeller development achemes,
nies in protest against his program.
which have been worked out with the
Mr. Rockefeller said in this letter:
"I have no desire to be put in
aid of prominent engineers and land-
scape architects.
the 'position of forcing upon even a
The great majority of the perma-
small minority of the people who
nent residents express a hearty ap-
frequent Mount Desert Island some-
proval of almost anything that is
thing that they do not want, nor do
proposed or done by Rockefeller.
I care to be the continuing cause
Opinion is divided among those who
of the regrettably bitter criticism and
spend but the Summer months here.
comment which have been expressed.
There is a group that believes that
not only in some of the letters pub-
in building so many motor and horse
lished but in other ways as well."
roads and lasking the scenic beauties
of this magnificent island 80 easily
Helped Conservation Work.
accessible Mr. Hockefeller is de-
The publication of the Rockefeller
stroying the very wildness that is the
letter today brings to a climax a divi-
Island's chief charm. On the other
sion of public opinion in Bar Harbor
hand, there is a group, quite as large
and quite as influential, that main-
and Its neighboring resorts that has
tains that in his purchase of these
in recent years been constantly grow-
lands, his careful forestry. his con-
ing in intensity and that at times
struction of well-planned roads and
would have reached the stages of bit-
other development work, he is giv-
ter controversy had not Mr. Rocke-
ing an inestimable service in pre-
feller and his associates maintained
serving these lands from the opera-
a constant policy of never publicly
tions of lumbarmen and their use in
replying to their critics.
other undesirable ways.
John D. Rockefeller Jr. built his
The severe criticism of the past
Summer home, The Eyrie, at Seal
few weeks has been brought on in
Harbor more than twenty years ago.
part by the refusal of Mrs. David
His Interest in the development of
B. Ogden of New York and Bar Har-
Acadia National Park and his gen-
bor to sell to Mr. Rockefeller a small
erous support of the conservation
tract of land at Otter Creek, over
work directed by George B. Dorr,
which the motor road had been sur-
superintendent and chief sponsor of
veyed, until she had assurance that
Acadis National Park, dates back to
a considerable majority of the rest-
his earliest residence here.
dents and Summer residents of the
He has provided vast sums of mon-
island wanted the road. Mrs. Ogden
ey for the purchase of lands for the
made her statement in an open letter
park and has built scores of miles of
to The Bar Harbor Times.
horse roads and one magnificent
scenic motor road on his own lands
and in the park lands. He has con-
today acres stantly national bordering owns added park upon thousands the of the lands until Han- of of
to his acreage he
several
the and
cock County Trustees of Public Res-
ervations. He has already expended
several millions of dollars in this de-
velopment work. and was apparently
only beginning his program when be
made his $4,000,000 offer to the gov-
ernment last June.
In a word, this scheme proposes a
Dr. Francis G. Peabody Discusses 2.
colossal undertaking, which, like the
magnificent road already built on the
The Rockefeller Road Question
Western slope of Green Mountain,
must intrude somewhat on the seclu-
sion of the hills, but which, like the
An Eminent American, who Has Been a Summer Resident of
mountain road, would open a practi-
Mount Desert Island for Sixty Years, Views the Present
cally unvisited area, and, as that road
Situation in the Light of the Experience of Years Here.
does, would safeguard many miles
from depredation.
The worst that can be said of this
Dr. Francis G. Peabody, the emi-
wishes to compare the security thus
great proposition is that it represents
nent theologian, author and former
obtained with the chances of other
one more step in what the economists
Dean of Harvard Divinity School,
ownership, let him first pause at the
call the cost of progress. To those
has been a summer resident of Mount
south end of Long Pond, by the beach
who have known the island in its
Desert Island for more than sixty
near Seal Harbor, and survey the ex-
primitive days, the golden age will
years, in more recent years making
tensive view northward, where lovely
always lie in those years of remoteness
his summer home at Northeast Har-
valleys and noble hills, unspoiled and
and solitude when one had to disem-
bor. The following expression of his
uninhabited, make so beautiful a
bark in Southwest Harbor and drive
views regarding Mr. Rockefeller's
picture. Then let him drive towards
through a wilderness to the primitive
road building offer was written under
Southwest Harbor, or along the west-
hamlet on Frenchman's Bay. After a
date of January 20, before the publi-
ern shore above Pretty Marsh Harbor,
while, as the Indians are reported to
cation of Mr. Rockefeller's letter in
and observe the hideous desolation
have said to Columbus, we were dis-
THE TIMES of Wednesday, January
wrought along the roads by commer-
covered; and the invasion of luxury
28, and before Dr. Peabody had any
cial lumbering.
and ostentation began. Presently the
knowledge of Mr. Rockefeller's de-
Concerning the greater part of the
telephone-threat appeared, and Bishop
sire to withdraw any part of his offer
proposed road, from the Ocean Drive
Doane protested that the setting up
of construction:
round Otter Cliffs and across Otter
of poles along our narrow lanes could
Cambridge, Massachusetts
Creek to the Hunter's Cove Beach,
be compared with nothing less than
January 20, 1931
there can be little debate. It would
the wrongs of Poland. Soon followed
Editor of the
bring within reach of visitation the
the audacious demand for automo+
Bar Harbor Times
boldest shores on the island, now seen
biles, and President Eliot went to
Dear Sir:
by a mere handful of adventurous
Augusta to protest that such locomo-
walkers, and would open a region of
tion on the island was neither practi-
Will you permit me to add one more
extraordinary picturesqueness. The
cable nor desired. Hard on the arrival
letter to the voluminous correspon-
protest most frequently offered con-
of these conveniences came the era of
dence which you have received con-
cerns the northern portion of the road,
luxurious living, with its clubs and
cerning the new Rockefeller Road?
and the apprehension that the heights
casinos and lawns, and with even the
There are probably few summer
and trails of Newport Mountain are
trails so smoothed down that a lady
visitors who can report, as I can, a
to be invaded. I must confess that, per-
may walk from Asticou to Jordan's
residence on the Island for sixty years,
haps because I am not informed about
Pond in kid slippers and high heels.
or who can claim a more thorough
details, it is not clear to me that this
All this degeneracy is the cost of pro-
acquaintance than I can with its be
huge section of the road from Green
gress, to which the old-timer must ad-
loved hills and bays. Indeed, my
Mountain to Otter Creek is essential
just himself if he is to live in a chang-
climbing days were before even trails
as an approach to the Ocean Drive.
ing world. Let him at least console
existed, and when the ascent of Sar-
This portion of the plan appears to
himself with the reflection that, by the
gent's Mountain was not an after-
involve a motor-road parallel with
establishment of the Acadia Park,
noon excursion but an athletic adven-
the county road for a considerable
and by the munificent generosity of
No one can care more for the
distance, and as the county road is
one neighbor, our hills and forests are
preservation of natural beauty on the
now widened and resurfaced, it would
made reasonably secure from devas-
and than I.
seem to provide for the present a suf-
tation, and that the rugged beauty of
We must approach the proposal of
ficient connection. On the other hand,
the Island may be made more acces-
Rockefeller by recognizing that
the impression that Newport Moun-
sible to all.
has the same intense interest in
tain is to be seriously invaded seems
Francis G. Peabody
feguarding the picturesqueness and
to be unjustified. For some miles the
arm of Mt. Desert. He has studied
western face of the mountain is so
whole subject with scrupulous
precipitous that no trail on that side
and has had the constant counsel
exists or is practicable. Further on,
of Mr. Olmsted, the leading land-
where the new road follows the old
scape architect in New England. As a
pass from Otter Creek to Schooner
result, Mr. Rockefeller has already
Head, there is certainly an invasion
become the chief benefactor of the
of a beautiful walk; but with this
Island, He has rescued great areas
exception the slopes of Newport are
rom the logger's axe and from squalid
unmolested, and the familiar trails on
attlements, and created what is in
its northern and eastern sides are not
ct a great reservation adjacent to
approached.
Acadia National Park. If one
(Continued on page 3)
ent of that locality
gram.
to make its natural
ing Mr. Rockefeller's Road Pro-
le to the greatest
gram. Several Guests Heard
seems to me to be
at Tuesday Meeting
portance.
Sauletz
hat Mr. Rockefeller's
Great Majority Favor Construction
2.
A large and enthusiastic gathering
ch a system of roads
of the business men of the town met
the natural beauties
The publication of Mr. Rockefeller's letter in THE TIMES of
at the Mary Jane Cafe Tuesday noon
it would on the other
last Wednesday has brought forth a tremendous expression of
for the regular weekly meeting of the
lories of nature more
public sentiment in favor of the continuation of the Acadia
Luncheon Club of the Bar Harbor
e reach of our citizens
Board of Trade. Guests of the Club
National Park road building program in which Mr. Rockefeller
rs."
were Colonel Pat Griffin, former De-
has taken such a keen personal interest and which he has sup-
partment Commander of the Ameri-
I Comments
ported SO generously. The reaction to Mr. Rockefeller's expressed
can Legion, Oliver Hall, editor of the
desire to withdraw his 1930 construction offer is to give voice to
Bangor Daily Commercial, Wilfred
ewspapers of New
zed up the situation,
a locally unanimous expression of approval of his projects for
Hennessy, secretary of the Bangor
Chamber of Commerce, and George B.
importance of the
the development of the park.
Dorr, superintendent of Acadia Na-
prosperity of the
This newspaper has consistently expressed the belief that an
tional Park.
Nation. THE TIMES
overwhelming majority of the island's permanent residents
At the meeting, Prin. Rawson an-
where in its columns
favored the construction program and is not at all surprised at
nounced that there will be a county
Bangor, Portland and
which unanimously
the expressions of opinion heard on every hand today. THE
ty basket ball tournament at the
nuation of the road
TIMES has as consistently held that a considerable majority of
Casino February 23, in which the high
schools of the county will compete
n instituted by Mr.
the island's summer residents approved of the continuation of
ny years ago. This
for county honors.
the Rockefeller program and will be much surprised if this does
iment is but another
The matter of a Washington's
not prove to be the case.
le interest shown in
Birthday celebration for the town was
dd, and the consensus
It is perhaps but natural that those who approve of any
left in the hands of the directors of the
ed in each editorial is
worth while policy or project shall remain silent even in the face
Board of Trade.
good for the majority
of adverse criticism of that policy or project on the part of an
Oliver Hall, editor of the Bangor
inuation of the road
active minority and not give expression to their own opinions
Commercial, spoke in a humorous
n as outlined.
vein, saying that as Sec. Hennessy
until there is apparent danger of the cause being lost. THE
was coming to deliver the main speech
to THE TIMES
TIMES has from the very beginning of the development of what is
at the luncheon, he felt as though
e of the controversy
now Acadia National Park, consistently and whole-heartedly
he were playing Boswell to Hennessy's
gly large number of
supported the conservation and development work that has been
Johnson. Commenting on the situa-
ave been received at
carried on under the leadership of Mr. George B. Dorr and Mr.
tion in regard to the proposed
e during the last few
Rockefeller roads, and speaking from
John D. Rockefeller, Jr. It offers no apology for as consistently
imer and permanent
forty years intimate knowledge of
endorsing the proposed
maintaining the right to criticize on the part of those residents and
Mt. Desert Island affairs, Mr. Hall
ular, and approving
summer residents of Mount Desert Island who agree neither with
said he felt confident that the road
ive road building pro-
these distinguished gentlemen nor with us.
would be built when Mr. Rockefeller
servation plan in its
There is neither time nor space today for the publication of
was convinced that the majority of
rous letters laud Mr.
the residents favored the road.
more than a mere fraction of the letters that we have received
r and Mr. John D.
Secretary Hennessy spoke of the
rescuing the domain
urging Mr. Rockefeller to go on with his road building program.
cordial relations which have existed
the lumbermen, and
We have chosen to print today a telegram from Mr. Dave
between Bangor and Bar Harbor for
vast estate available
Hennen Morris to Mr. George B. Dorr, in which this leader in
many years, and commented on the
everal of the adherents
the life of the Bar Harbor summer colony and good friend of
advertising efforts which are now
lan also point out that
bringing results. Mr. Hennessy stated
every movement for the good of the town and island gives his
not enough, but that
that he believed that Eastern Maine
be developed to the
excellent reasons for urging the continuation of the Acadia
should advertise the advantages of
ter public usefulness
National Park development program. The other communication
the section as a unit, and carry on a
that we have chosen to print is a letter to the editor of this
more extensive campaign. In discuss-
ing this matter of advertising, the
Club Unanimous
newspaper from one of Mount Desert Island's most distinguished
speaker said that Acadia National
and most beloved summer residents, Dr. Francis G. Peabody
r luncheon club meet-
Park was one of the outstanding at-
ay noon, fifty promi-
of Cambridge and Northeast Harbor.
tractions of Maine, and that he favor-
ten of the town unani-
Dr. Peabody has been a summer resident of the island for
ed playing it up more and more as a
a resolution endorsing
sixty years. He knows the island, loves and appreciates it as few
factor in drawing in more summer
t SO generously offered
trade.
men can or do. In his letter, written before the publication of the
eller, and included a
Archie L. Getchell presided over the
Rockefeller letter, he views present conditions and problems
lanks for the splendid
meeting. Other members of the execu-
nneeving and develop-
from the viewpoint of a residence of sixty summers. Read Dr.
tive committee having charge of the
lomain.
Peabody's letter not once, but several times. It is by far the
luncheons are Fred L. Carter, Harold
ing also, Oliver Hall,
finest and fairest thing that has been written in this or any other
F. Carter, and Tobias L. Roberts.
Bangor Daily Com-
newspaper on this subject. Dr. Peabody has said something that
ed the program plan-
has very much needed to be said and has said it in a way that
from an intimate
perhaps only he could have said it. Read it for what it can teach
and conditions extend-
us all, not only of the Rockefeller road matter, but of tolerance,
alf a century. Wilfred
cretary of the Bangor
of breadth of viewpoint, of fairness and of unselfishness in
ommerce also spoke,
thought and in deed.
enic and other advan-
road.
Mrs. John Markoe's Letter
enabled many to enjoy what few had
to us old residents, is fast becoming a
Mrs. C. A. Watts' Letter
seen before.-
strange land.
Mrs. John Markoe, who correctly
am glad that Mrs. Ogden in her
Yours truly,
Mrs. C. A. Watts, of Allston, Mass.,
describes herself as one of the oldest
admirable letter has given us the op-
Effie A. Anthony
writes to add her protest against the
members of the community, writes a
portunity to express our views.
new names of Mt. Desert Island
brief letter in which she expresses her
(Mrs. J. F. Anthony)
Having walked, ridden, driven and
mountains and states that Green
profound gratitude to Mr. Rockefeller
motored over the Island for fifty years
Mountain was known as such at least
for the Mountain Road and expresses
Mrs. Byron F. Horne's Letter
I know it well. I should deeply
forty-eight years ago.
her fervent hope that he build no
deplore the building of this proposed
more roads.
Mrs. Byron F. Horne, of Andover,
Mrs. Watts' letter follows:
road because I feel we wish to preserve
Mass., and Southwest Harbor, is a
Mrs. Markoe's letter follows:
all that is left of wild beauty in that
1359 Commonwealth Ave
native of Mt. Desert Island, who is
1630 Locust Street
section.
Allston, Mass.
heartily in favor of the restoration of
January 12, 1931
Philadelphia
Most sincerely yours,
the older names for mountains and
To the Editor
January 12, 1931
Mary Roberts Coles.
other natural objects here. Mrs. Horne
Bar Harbor Times,
Dear Mr. Sherman:
gives her reasons in the following
Bar Harbor, Maine
letter:
As Mrs. Ogden has asked us all for
Miss Mildred McCormick's Letter
Dear Sir:
242 Main Street
an expression of opinion, I feel obliged,
Andover, Mass.
"It may seem presuming in me to
as one of the oldest members. of the
Following is Miss Mildred McCor-
community, to give mine.
mick's letter in which she places her-
January 17, 1931
mark the inclosed ballot, also to send
this personal note, but my birthplace
I am profoundly grateful to Mr.
self on record as opposed to the con-
Mr. Albion Sherman
was Mt. Desert, as it was that of my
Rockfeller for the Mountain Road,
struction of the proposed new Acadia
Bar Harbor, Maine
father, mother, and two grandmothers,
which enables me to enjoy almost daily
National Park motor road:
Dear Sir:
and my last resting place will be in
the beauties of that unequaled drive,
1035 Park Avenue
I am pleased to see that some action
Mt. Height Cemetery, in South-
but I fervently hope that he will build
New York
is being taken to restore the original
west Harbor.
no more roads.
Dear Mr. Sherman:
Yours truly,
names of our hills and mountains. It is
Of course, we all know that the
Matilda Markoe
Please add my name to the list of
most embarrassing during my visits in
summer people have made certain
those who are against the building
summer to be approached by some
sections of the Island financially, and
Miss Mary Roberts Coles' Letter
of Mr. Rockefeller's new road.
guest asking the name of such and
socially, but why should they not be
willing to give the natives a break on
Miss Mary Roberts Coles of Phila-
Very truly yours,
such a mountain.
naming the dear old hills and vales of
delphia and Bar Harbor writes to
Mildred McCormick
My only answer is; I am sorry, I am
the island? I feel very strongly about
express her appreciation of Mr.
Jan. 18.
a native of Mt. Desert, I can not
Green Mountain being renamed 'Cadi-
Rockefeller's generosity in giving Mt.
answer your question.
lac; to me it savors too strongly of
Desert Island the road from Great
Mrs. J. Franklin Anthony's Letter
the automobile industry, and would
Pond Hill to Jordan Pond and at the
That mountain used to be Western
indeed be a misnomer to apply to the
same time to say that she would de-
Mrs. J. Franklin Anthony, in the
or Newport or which ever the case
Everlasting Hill of Mt. Desert.
plore the building of the proposed
following letter, briefly states her
may be.
The well-known name of Green
new motor road.
preference for the older names for Mt.
Miss Coles' letter follows:
Desert Island mountains and other
Since the government has taken
Mountain was familiar to me 48 years
2010 DeLancey Place,
natural objects:
these places for a National Park I am
ago, as Mr. Watts and I tramped to its
summit July 15, 1882. There we met
Philadelphia, Pa.
"Great Head"
a "stranger is a strange land." Give
three residents of Bar Harbor, who
January 5, 1931.
Bar Harbor, Maine
us our old names. Then we will all
said they knew the route through the
Dear Mr. Sherman:
January 12, 1931.
know what we are talking about. If
Gorge, but they proved false prophets,
I read with much interest the letters
Mr. Albion Sherman
these names are allowed to go on, soon
with the result that we spent several
Time Office
you publish in "The Times" about
we shall lose the name of Mt. Desert
anxious hours scaling boulders, sink-
the proposed road.
Bar Harbor, Me.
ing into moss covered holes and under-
Island.
Dear Mr. Sherman:
brush before we discovered the right
I thoroughly appreciate what Mr.
Youts in the interest of Mt. Desert
trail.
Rockefeller' has done in giving us one of
Naving lived here the greater part
Island.
of the most beautiful drives in the
of my life, I naturally love the old
Please pardon me for writing at this
Mae Driscollo Horne
world, which when completed will take
names for the mountains and for all
length, but I wish you to know that
(Mrs. B. F. Horne)
us to the summit of Green Mountain.
other places of natural beauty, and
the name of Green Mountain has
To the building of this road he has
scenery on our beautiful island, which
(Continued on page 3)
exceeded the thirty-seven years of the
ballot by eleven years.
Very respectfully,
26 Broadway
New York
January 31, 1931
Mr. Paul D. Simpson
Scal Harbor
Maine
Dear Mr. Simpson:
Your letter of January 19th regarding the two large trees
near the proposed amphitheater bridge is received, also the sketch.
I discussed this matter with Mr. Stoughton twice. I had forgotten
that we were building bridges wider than the original sixteen feet.
Mr. Stoughton justifies the increase in width because of the amount of
curvature on the bridge, which I think is 3. compelling and convincing
argument. If the bridge were straight, I should see no reason for
increasing its width beyond sixteen feet, which I understand is the
width of all the other bridges on this road. It is important to save
the trees if we can It is also important to so locate the bridge that
the waterfall will be pleasingly framed by it. The bridge should
also be wide enough for comfortable use. Just what compromise may
be necessary in order to give the fullest possible consideration to all
these points can be determined only on the ground.
It seems best to leave this matter until Mr. Stoughton is next
in Seal Harbor, which will be in early March. He will then study
the problem on the ground with you and make his recommendations to
E.
Since his detailed plans for the bridge as at present located
have already been completely drawn, not more than a week's time will
be lost, even if it is necessary to re-locate the bridge after his
visit.
Very truly,
John
JLA, R61, B73,f.12
OLMSTED BROTHERS
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTS
the
FREDERICK LAW OLMSTED
JAMES FREDERICK DAWSON
BROOKLINE+ MASSACHUSETTS
PERCIVAL CALLACHER
EDWARD CLARK WHITING
HENRY VINCENT HUBBARD
January 26, 1931.
Dr. Clarence Little,
Roscoe B. Jackson Memorial Laboratory,
Bar Harbor, Maine.
Dear Mr. Little:
The suggestion, in your letter of
January 23rd, of "squaring out" the northerly
corner of the area I suggested as available for
the Laboratory looks very reasonable on paper;
but I question whether it is desirable in fact.
The line I drew was intended to rep-
resent the base of the very steep hill-escarpment.
The line may be quite inaccurately sketched, but
I am almost certain that you will find it inex-
pedient to extend any building or roadway improve-
ments up on to that steep escarpment. I am sure
also that the land on the F. and S. H. Rodick par-
cel which is flat enough to be conveniently usable
for such purposes is very much wider in the region
opposite the entrance to the present Laboratory land
than it is at the boundary between the Rodick and
Conners parcels, and has in fact a curving boundary
of the general shape roughly indicated by my sketch.
What you suggest would merely include in the
Laboratory land an additional triangular piece of
steep hillside.
In general I have assumed that the
Laboratory would have no use for this steep hill
slope, but if it would be advantageous in any way
to include some of it I see no fundamental objection
to doing so.
As I wrote, in effect, to Mr. Rockefeller,
the most sensible procedure appears to be for you to
have Mr. Hill "brush out" some lines, (say 100 feet
apart), extending in from the Otter Creek Road as
far as the land is topographically at all suitable
Mr. Little
-2- 1/26/31.
for your purpose, and take some levels on these
lines; then have a preliminary plan prepared for
the ultimate maximum utilization of the land by
the Laboratory; and then draw a boundary that will
include the land you want to use, leaving the wooded
slope above for ultimate inclusion in and maintenance
by the Park.
By the way I broached to Albright in
Washington your suggestion about a small special group
to be assigned to field study and inspection of the
Acadia National Park, responsible directly to Washington
and wholly distinct from the executive force, which is
under the direction of the Superintendent. He thought
very well of it, and believed he would have Government
funds which could be used for that purpose.
Sarah sends you her best regards and hopes
to see you one of these days.
Sincerely yours,
Frederick Law Olustee
ARIZONA INN
TUCSON. ARIZONA
March 2nd, 1931.
Dear Mr. Simpson:-
Your letter of February 8th is received.
The suggested connection of the Paradise Hill horse
road at Eden Street, using some of the old lane seems admirable.
I shall want to go over these several routes with you when I
come to Maine in May.
In the meantime, when the snow goes
off, you will have gone over them all and cut them out so that
we can easily find them.
I am proposing to spend a few weeks here in Arizona
at the above address, and shall be in New York again in early
April.
Very truly,
John 2. Rocefelling
Mr. Paul D. Simpson
Seal Harbor, Maine
641
UNITED STATES GEOGRAPHIC BOARD
Adopted
Porcupines, The
Approved
March 4, 1931
Thing
named
}
group of four islands in French hman Bay,
Percuping Porcuption Porcupino
Me.. individually known as Long, Burnt Sheep and
Porcupine island between Jordan and Iron-
3nd Aton Key
Names
bound islands on the east, and Bar Island x and town of
Bar Harbor on the west. .
Porcupines The 1911-Sherman-Mt. Desert Island
1930-Letter-Supt.-Acadia N.P. , 2-14-31
Four islands always shown on map as Long
Porcupine Island, Burnt Porcupine Island,
Local usage
etc.
Recommendation of Executive Committee
Submitted by Supt.Acadia N.P.
Porcupines : The J.I.C
2-14-31
RAP B Sub JAPAN
Date
J. J. Cameron
This card prepared by
U. a GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE: 1929
Note : This memo was filed by Supt Don to insure
Pg. lof5
mation it contains
that the Board shall have available the infor
CHAINMAN
File
MAR C 1931
RECEIVED
For
Memorandum
On certain mountain names in the Mount Desert
Island chain established by decisions of the United States
Geographic Board at its meeting held October 2d, 1918,
end later:
Acedia, Bornard, Cadillic, Champlsin, Flying
Squadron, luguenot Need, Mansell, Norumbega, Parkman,
Penobscot, st. Sauveur.
These names belong to a range of granite hills
which traverses Mount Desert Island in a northeast-southwest
direction and was originally, geologically speaking, a solid
granite dike, uphonved, molton, into deep regional-rock
deposits which have since been completely eroded away to near
or below the present ocean level.
This dike, exposed and standing athwart the seaward
movement of successive ice-sheets, became deeply trenched
across, creating a series of isolated peaks divided by
transvorse gorges and deep, lake-filled valleys, or sea-
flooded at the Island's center to create the single glacial
fiord 02 our Atlantic const, Somes Sound.
-l-
It was these bold rock masses rising from the
sea that led Champlain, sailing in 3 ptember, 1004,
from the St. Croix colony on the Bay of Fundy, to name
the Island: 'Isle des Monts deserts.
1
No names were given to the individual pools
that compose the range by the early Fronch or laber English
settlers, for whom they had no interest except in range
as a beacon from the sea, or for the number to DE cut
along their bases.
Such names as the early voye ours and sottlers
gave sprang from their life along the shore. The harbors,
bays and waterways, the islands and the headlands they
named. The lakes, of whatever size, were known is ponds
and described by shape or size or geographical position;
or by the name of someone Living and lumbering clans their
shore. The mountains individually acquired names only
from the summer visitors after railroads and steembost
lines had brought the Island within reach, none roing
beyond living memory when the Government acquired possession.
-2-
Acadia National Park was first established as
the Sieur de Monts National Monument by presidential
proclamation. It was established largely upon historic
grounds, the interest of its region's early story, and
it was felt that the bold, outstanding heights of the
Island range, a famous landmark from the sea, should receive
names that would help recall that history to the visiting
public in the years to come.
This was urged by the Secretary of the Interior,
Franklin K. Lane, who prepared the proclamation signed
by President Wilson. It was urged by President Eliot
of Harvard, one of the earliest summer residents upon
Mount Desert Island and president of the Hancock County
Trustees of Public Reservations fro whom as holding agent
the United States received the gift. And it was in accord
with a suggestion made in the History of Mount Desert
compiled by the Rev. George E. Street, an early summer
visitor, and edited upon his death by Dr. Semuel A. Eliot, s on
of President Eliot, and familiar from boyhood with the Island,
its mountains and its people.
-3-
The United States Geographic Board, on the matter
being brought before it, asked for a report upon the names
in use with suggestion for others appropriate to the dignity
and historical purpose of the National Monument, which had
itself been named in the same intent for the founder of
Acadia, the Sieur de Monts, viceroy of Henry IV, to whom
the coming of Champlain and first recorded exploration of
the coast was due.
The report was rendered and remains on file. In it,
reasons were given for not wishing to perpetuate in the terri-
tory given to the nation the names it was desired to change.
Others, in replacement, were suggested and favorably acted
on. The gift of one of the beautiful mountains in the
chain, Acadia Mountain, fronting on Somes Sound, immediately
followed, conditioned on the name.
Others followed, giving entrance to Champlain Mountain,
St. Sauveur Mountain and the Jesuit Field, all linked with the
historic interest these names recalled.
To Cadillac Mountain summit the United States is now
building a wonderful road, the Cadillac Mountain road, whose
name will tell to every visiting motorist of the Island's
once
earliest owner and feudal lord, and its link with the great
city of Detroit he founded.
-4-
The Park itself, carrying out the thought, has been
renamed by recent Act of Congress: Acadia National Park,
while at the foot of Flying Squadron Mountain a now famous
spring has been developed, commemorating in its name the
Sieur de Monts and the founding of Acadia.
Alongside of this, on land given for the purpose and
conveyed recently in free gift to the Park, a museum of
enduring material and fire-proof has been built and liberally
endowed through the energy and interest of Dr. Robert Abbe
of New York, who has since died, for the housing and ex-
hibition of Indian relics of the stone age period found along
these shores, where there were many and old settlements at
the coming of the whi te man and numerous shell-heaps that remain.
The entire Island range is now included in the Park
as the plan intended, or is on its way to be so, and its
noble granite masses, clear-cut against the sky as they
front on that great ocean highway which brought the first
discoverers and colonists to the land, have become true
historic documents that will record forever to succeeding
generations the human background to the Park.
[G.B.DORR]
- 5-
Seal Harbor, Maine, Larch 13, 1931.
Dear ur. Rockefeller:-
You will remember that you had to defer the study
of the alternative location through the valley which I had staked out
for the outlet of the horse rond loop from the Eagle Lake bridge by Aunt
Betty's Pond and Gllmore leadow uoon the Jordan - Sargent Mountain road
near the triangle at the north end of Jordan Mountain, and that you
planned to study the question further on the ground during the visit
which you hoped to make in December.
As the crading is completed to the triangle at the foot of Gilmore
Meadow Mr. Falston plans to have the Par Harbor road crew work on the
section extending from the foot of Gilmore Meadow to this outlet during
the coming season. This section WAS cut out and cleared last yearsto the
point where the first outlet survey leaves the valley - a distance of abou
3400 feet from the end of the completed
triangle
at
the
foot
of Gilmore Meadow and ir. ralston has inquired about cutting out the
18 missing of the line so that the brush and stumps can be burnea
the spring 19 too far advanced. While it may not be necessary for Mr.
Ralston 71th a small force to do any construction work at this end during
the coming season - unless It is planned to start an acditional crew
here, which I assume is doubtful, I a.m. referring the matter to you, with
a plan showing the three outlets which we have considered 80 you can
study the question on paper if you wish. To refresh your memory - the
grade on the first outlet was between 5 and 6 per went - on the second
we had About 300 feet of 7 per cent and on the third about 1500 feet of
7 per cent. The relative lengths are shown by the plan.
I am sorry to trouble you with this during your stay in Arizona -
where I hone you are finding relaxation and rest. Probably there will
be ample time to consider it after your return to New York.
Yours very truly,
Mr. John D. lockefellor, Jr.,
Arizona Inn,
Tucson, Arixona.
ARIZONA INN
TUCSON, ARIZONA
March 21st, 1931.
Dear Mr. Simpson:- -
Your letter of March 13th is received.
As to the three routes proposed, it seems to me
that the choice would lie between either One or Three; Two
being the compromise that gives us the beauty of the valley
but takes us so far North and out of the way before connect-
ing with the Seal Harbor road.
I fear the grade of Three is prohibitive, 7% for
1500 feet is bad.
Have we any piece of horse road that is
comparable to that?
If so, where?
Comparable in steep-
ness of grade and in extent of grade? I much prefer Route
Three for its location, its beauty, its point of arrival and
its directness.
If we turn to Route One, it would be because it
is the shortest and the best grade, altho the most uninter-
esting.
Please write me at the above address about grades
at your early convenience.
Very truly.
John D. Rockyeller
Mr. Paul D. Simpson
Seal Harbor, Maine
Seal Harbor, Maine, March 27, *1931.
Dear Mr. Rockefeller:-
I have received your letter of March 21st
relative to the three routes under consideration for the outlet
of the road from Aunt Betty's Pond to the Jordan - Sargent Mountain
Road nexr the north end of Jordan Mountain.
With reference to route No.3 - the best example of a road
comparable in extent and steepness of grade that I can think of
at the moment is the road connecting the Jordan - Sargent Mountain
Road with the County road on Shady Hill at the west end of Little
Brown Mountain - which we have often referred to as"the work road".
This road is on a 7% grade, but is several hundred feet longer than
the piece of 7% road up the valley, which we are considering.
Considering the nature of the country here it does not seem
that this grade would be 80 very objectionable. Before reaching the
steep part however we have a thousand feet of a little more than
5% grade. Perhaps the greater beauty of this line might offset the
advantages of easier grade on the other.
Very truly yours,
Mr. John u. Rockefeller, Jr.,
[Paul Simpson]
Ari-ona Inn,
Tucson, Arizona.
641.5
See work card
UNITED STATES GEOGRAPHIC BOARD
Adopted
Bubble
name
APPROVED
pond, Hancock County, Maine, elevation
APR 1 1931
Thing
325 feet, about 1/4 mile southeast of
named
Eagle Lake, in Acadia N.P., near lat. 44° 2IV, long.
Names
68° 14'.
Authorities
Bubble Pond
1893-Rand
Mt. Desert Island
"
"
1896-Bar Harbor Village Impr. Assn.
19
"
it
1896-Bates, Rand, Jaques
11
It
1896-Mears
"
1911-Sherman
Turtle Lake
1881-Colby Atlas, Hancock Co.
Docal usage "
1884-Colby Atlas
John with n
18
"
189 -Eastern R. R.
11
11
1904-U.S.G.S. Bar Harbor Quad.
/
18
1926-Higgins
(Over)
Recommendation of Executive Committee
Submitted by Gea. B Dorr Supt for N.P.Serv.
Bubble
J.J.C.
B
SWB
Date
This card prepared by
9-2275
U. a. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE: 1929
See work card
641.5
UNITED STATES GEOGRAPHIC BOARD
Adopted
'Bald Porcupine
name
APPROVED
one of the Porcupine Islands in French-
near
APR 1 1931
Thing
named
man Bay, Hancock County, Me. lat. 44°
23' N., long. 68° 11' W.
Names
Authorities
Bald Porcupine
See authorities listed on Round Island,
decision Nov. 7, 1928.
(Not Round.)
Local usage
Bald Porcupine
Visit, Supt. Acadia N. P., 3-7-31
George B. Dorr, for N.P.Serv.
Recommendation of Executive Committee
Submitted by
Supt. Acadia N. P.
Bald Porcupine
J.J.C.
Date
swep
This card prepared by J. J. Cameron
9-2275
U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE: 1920
ARIZONA INN
TUCSON. ARIZONA
April 6th, 1931.
Dear Mr. Simpson:-
Your letter of March 22nd is received.
You say that the 7% grade of the outlet road from
Aunt Betty's Pond is about the same as the grade on the work
road entrance from the Brown Mountain Road to the Little
Brown Mountain road.
You say, however, that the former
1500 feet of 7% grade is preceded by about 1000 feet of 5%
grade. Going back to the Little Brown Mountain work road
is there not even a longer, steeper grade prior to the
1500 feet of 7%, as one comes from the stone bridge on the
bridle path near Hadlock Pond up to the work road? In other
words, starting from the stone bridge under the pine trees,
would there not be at least 1000 feet of 5% grade before one
reached the service road, which you say is about 1500 :
feet of 7% grade?
I think it would be difficult for me to
decide this question before coming to Seal Harbor. On the
other hand, I shall be glad at your early convenience to
have the further data asked for in this letter, for it will
help me in making the comparison.
Very truly,
John D.
Mr. Paul D. Simpson
Seal Harbor, Maine
address 26 (Groadway, n.y
Senl Harbor, Maine, April 13, 1931.
Dear Mr. Rockefeller:-
Referring to your letter of April 6th relative
to the outlet road from Aunt Betty's Pond - you are correct in your
recollection of the grades on the Hadlock Pond bridle path below its
junction with the work road leading to the road on Little Brown Mountain.
This art of the bridle path for about 1500 feet is on a grade of 5 and
5% So these two pieces of road offer & close parallel to the condition
that would be found on the outlet road referred to above.
As construction work will not reach the portion of the road
under consideration for A long time I think the decision can safely
be left until your next visit. Although the legal time for burning
brush nay then be over there will be no difficulty in getting permission
from the town to burn on rainy days.
Very truly yours,
[Paul Simpson]
Mr. John D. Rockfeller, Jr.
26 Broadway,
New York, N. Y.
Seal Harbor, Naine, May 5, 1931.
Dear Mr. Rockefeller:-
The plans for the Amphitheatre Road bridge on
Little Harbor Brook show the inside face of the 4 foot rib formed by
the ring stones of the arch as built on radial lines at the springing
line - making the face of the rib form a curved warped surface between
the springing line and the top of the arch. This makes the depth of the
panel formed by the barrel of the arch and the ring stone rib have a
variation in depth between the springing line and the top of the arch
of about 5" on the lower side of the arch and about 10" on the upper side
as shown by the plan. This was probably done to give the appearance of a
right arch as viewed from above and below. As the bridge will be seen
mostly at close range however I a.m wondering - since the inside faces
of the ring stones will show anyway - if it would not be better to make
the inside face of the rib parallal to the barrel or soffit of the arch.
This would simplify the building of the forms and construction generally
and would give a uniform depth of panel and do away with the crooked
appearance shown. The enclosed sketch showing a section of the arch shows
what I mean.
This is just a suggestion which you might discuss with ur. Stough
when you see him.
Very truly yours,
[Paul Simpson]
ur. John D. Rockefeller, Jr.,
26 Broadway,
New York, N. Y.
ROCKEFELLER JR. IN MAINE.
AVT
New York Times (1857-Current file); May 5, 1931; ProQuest Historical Newspapers The New York Times
pg.31
ROCKEFELLER JR. IN MAINE.
Bar Harbor Looks for Conference
on Highway Project.
SEAL HARBOR, Me., May 4 (AP).-
John D. Rockefeller Jr., whose offer
to construct a $4,000,000 highway
through Acadia National Park on
Mount Desert Island was withdrawn
because of the opposition of a group
of Summer residents, was here today
as the guest of Irwin Clement, the
Rockefeller Summer estate not yet
being open.
It was understood that Mr. Rocke-
feller would confer with various per-
sons regarding the proposed road.
After the offer was withdrawn a
committee of Bar Harbor citizens
visited Washington and urged Secre-
tary of Agriculture Hyde to prevail
upon Mr. Rockefeller to reconsider
the proposition, and the Legislature
passed a resolution calling for sim-
ilar action by Mr. Hyde.
No word concerning Mr. Rocke-
feller's decision has been made
public.
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner Further reproduction prohibited without permission
Explanatory note accompanying call for special meeting of the Hancock County
Trustees of Public Reservations to be held on
the
22nd day of
June
1931.
ARTICLE 1. The two lots which would be conveyed to Mr. Dorr if the exchange offered by him is favor-
ably acted on by the Trustees are narrow strips of land bordering Great Meadow Brook between its
crossing of the Ledgelawn Avenue Extension road and its outlet from the Meadow, and separated by one
of the playing courses of the second nine-hole golf links. These lots are remainder portions of an origin-
ally continuous strip deeded by Mr. Dorr to the Trustees before the establishment of the Golf Club's
second nine-hole course, with reference to a driving road and foot-path the plan for which was given up in
favor of the links. The intended development which led to the conveyance having been abandoned,
blocked by the links, this land has ceased to be potentially useful or appropriate to the Trustees' purposes.
The land offered by Mr. Dorr in exchange, fronting on Ledgelawn Avenue Extension road, extends
along the eastern side of the road between Cromwell Harbor Brook and Kebo Brook bridge-crossings and
forms a necessary link in the opportunity for a continuous foot-path connecting the Village at the Athletic
Field with the Great Meadow and Sieur de Monts Spring, together with the trails that start from them,
in accordance with the plans proposed by Mr. Charles Eliot in his study for the future development of
Mount Desert Island prepared for the Bar Harbor Village Improvement Association, and by Mr. Olm-
sted in his work for Mr. Rockefeller. It is in the interest of this development that this exchange is pro-
posed.
ARTICLE 2. At a meeting of the Reservations held August 20, 1929, it was voted to convey to the United
States all lands owned by the Corporation on Mount Desert Island except a strip of land one hundred
fifty feet wide bordering the lakes and their tributaries furnishing water to the various towns and except
also a lot containing approximately five acres on Barr Hill and a lot occupied by the Champlain Monu-
ment on the Cooksey Drive.
The reason for seeking a conveyance of this lake-shore property now is that portions of the system
of constructed roads extending around these lakes lie over this land. The Reservations have no funds to
maintain such portions and the Government, assuming the obligation now borne by the Trustees in con-
nection with the protection of the water supply, will be able to keep the roads in proper condition.
ARTICLE 3. The land referred to in this article was acquired after the vote had been passed authorizing
the conveyance to the Government of all but certain specified lots. It therefore becomes necessary to
obtain special authority from the Corporation to convey this lot.
yard 1931
LETTER FROM DR. ROBERT STERLING YARD TO DR. H. C. BRYANT
June 24, 1931.
"I have read with keenest interest your report to the Laura Spelman Rockefeller
Memorial on educational activities in National Parks. While it contains few details of
which I was unaware (having been secretary from the beginning of the National Park Educa-
tional Committee, of the National Parks Association, and of the Museums Association's
Outdoor Education Committee under both its titles) I find the achievement as a whole, as
here presented, little short of astonishing. So lusty a growth from so small a start
in so short a time is not only eloquent of the public need that inspired it, but highly
dramatic also, and I am keen for the popular rewriting which you promise as a public
document.
"But do not think of confining a statement so valuable to outdoor education and the
fame of the National Park Service merely to the Nature Guide System. The story of the
whole should be available in the public and university libraries of the country.
"The only criticism I have concerns the beginning of education in the National
Parks Service which preceded by several years the Nature Guide System. Of course that
was before your personal observation, but I can make the facts available and will be
very glad to do so. Here they are in, I think, sufficient detail.
"Unofficially, the use of the national parks by universities as class rooms began
many years ago. The University of California probably began it, but I havent the record.
In 1899, Doctor Rollin D. Salisbury began taking University of Chicago geological classes
into what afterward became Glacier National Park, Doctor Thomas C. Chamberlin and Doctor
J. Paul Goode following his example. Doctor William M. Davis took Harvard classes to
the Grand Canyon at an early date. Doctor Douglas W. Johnson took Columbia University
classes into several national parks. Doctor Frederick G. Pack took Utah State University
classes into Yellowstone and the Zion country long before our time. Doctor Ernest Lehnert
took University of Minnesota classes into Glacier for several consecutive years, and I
have less definite notes in my 1916 files about several other state universities including
Texas.
"Mr. Mather caught the educational idea, and definitely determined upon educational
development, as early as the summer of 1916; this was on his second 'Mather Mountain
Party" in the Sierra, of which I was a member. We developed it together during our
trail riding of many days. On our way back east we spent eight wonderful September days
in Glacier where we met Dr. Ernest Lehnerts who had just dismissed his University of
Minnesota geology class. During a stormy day in Lewis's hotel on Lake McDonald the three
of us talked over many ideas, some of which afterward were realized.
"We returned full of purpose, and sprung the educational idea officially at the
fourth National Park Conference which was held in the Smithsonian during the first days
of the following January, 1917. The second day of five was called Educational Day, and I
presided at both sessions. Dr. Lehnerts, Dr. Charles D. Walcott, Dr. William H. Holmes
and Dr. Arthur E. Bester, president of Chautauqua, were among eight or nine who spoke
on education, but no one advanced any defined program. Dr. Claxton, U. S. Commissioner
of Education, offered to cooperate with the National Park Service in securing 'educational
extension in the national parks', but his ideas were vague like those of all the rest of
us. At that meeting, by the way, I predicted the National Parks Association which actuall
appeared two and a half years later.
"No definite plans were made either at this meeting or in the months that followed,
though many were talked over. Mr. Mather assigned me to canvass opinion, but I found fe
who took the idea seriously. In May, 1917, the question came up of a title to give my
educational work more weight. I suggested (Educational Adviser to the National Park
Service', but some one, I think Mr. Albright, thought that 'Chief of the Educational
Division' would accord better with Interior Department usage. That was painted on my
door (room 4133) in which, for two years, I carried on a vigorous composite of park
publicity and educational promotion, writing, meantime, my 'Book of the National Parks'.
The latter was built on an educational frame work which some of us had worked out as
a basis for work in the Service.
"Educational promotion wasn't much of a success at first. No one in Washington
took any interest in it except Mr. Mather, spasmodically; Congressmen smiled over it;
and, with a very few exceptions the concessioners opposed it. Somebody politically
influential on the Pacific Coast slammed the whole idea of education in national parks
by letter to his Senator, who called up Secretary Lane about it, and Lane phoned down
to Mather that he'd better go slow on that unpopular kind of stuff. Thus the cause pass
under a heavy cloud just as things were beginning to look hopeful. But I still kept my
title, and hammered away as inconspicuously as possible.
"Meantime Dr. Charles D. Walcott and a few Smithsonians, together with Mr. Matthes,
Mr. Campbell, and others of the Geological Survey, had been getting enthusiastic over
our ideas, and we had a number of good friends in several universities. Discouraged
by Lane's opposition, Dr. Walcott suggested a study organization to determine what
should be done in the circumstances.
"On June 26, 1918, was organized, in the Smithsonian Institution, the National
Parks Educational Committee, consisting largely of university presidents and professors
as far west at Utah and California, together with representatives of leading conserva-
tion organizations including the Camp Fire Club, the Audubon Society and the Sierra
Club. The committee numbered, I think, about 72 members, nearly all much interested.
With Mr. Mather's permission and considerable interest, I ran this committee, as
secretary, from my desk in the Service. It was all to the ultimate good of this Service.
"With $84 collected as postage money, I conducted a lively correspondence, as a
result of which, on May 29, 1919, the educational committee merged into the National
Parks Association, creating it, and I resigned from government service to take charge.
"This brings us, you see, up to the point where you begin your Rockefeller report.
In fact, nature guide work in California had already come to our attention, and Enos
Mills had engaged in it in the Rockies. There was talk of applying it in the National
parks, but I think nothing was done till the California Fish and Game people (doesn't
that mean you?) took the initiative.
"I have written this at length to go into the Service files. From it, I hope
that you will find what you need for your popular account of educational beginnings
in national parks."
Sincerely yours,
/s/ Robert Sterling Yard.
2
UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
WASHINGTON
COPY
June 24, 1931.
Mr. George B. Dorr,
Supt., Acadia National Park,
Bar Harbor, Maine.
Dear Mr. Derri
We have been delaying answering your letter of June 11 to Director
Albright because we wanted to check up on the possibility of assigning
some of the Acadia Park work that you mention to the landscape staff,
We realize that matters are ready to be pushed at Acadia, but of course
these all have to be fitted in with our other landscape problems here
in the East. As it stands we have word from Mr. Peterson that he
is programming his work se as to spend from three to four weeks in
Acadia this summer during July and August, which of course is satis-
factory to the Service. Work cannot go ahead until it has had this
landscape supervision and planning and approval,
Incidentally, you are in error when you say that you have $10,000
available for trail work, since our records show only $5,000 for the
next year,
There is no doubt, in my opinion, that what we need most for Acadia
Park is a good topographic map as a basis for future planning, and I
hope this may eventuate during the coming year.
It is our plan while Mr. Peterson is in Acadia to have Assistant
Director Wirth, in Charge of Lands, spend some time in the park to study
the various questions falling within his bailiwick,
Sincerely yours,
Arno B. Cammerer
Acting Director.
CC Mr. Peterson.
acadia National Park
Thine
ARK
SERVICE
Monthly Report
RECEIVED
duly. 1931
AUG -8 1931
000 General
MAILS AND FILES
010
July saw a number of happenings outside the ordinary course
of events, all of which served to create additional interest and acti-
vity in the Park.
First on the list was the customary bi-anual Fourth of July
Celebration sponsored by the Bar Harbor Board of Trade. This event al-
waye draws a large number of visitors from outside, a majority of whom
take occasion to visit the Park. Among the events was an excellent civic
and military parade, including decorated cars and trucks. Conspicuous
among the trucks was one entered by the Park and decorated by the rangor
force. The decoration was intended to contrast a bit of green forest with
a burned area. Fire protection signs were displayed, the whole being
intended to teach a lesson in care with fire in the woods. From the can-
ment heard it would seen that the idea got across.
Next in order came the visit in the harbor for one day of the
famous old frigate Constitution. This event caused a lot of excitement
in the town, oven though it did not directly concern the Park. Ranger
Campbell secured several good photographs of the ship which will 60 into
the records and will, in years to come, be of great in crest, if not of
value.
On July 21 the first section of the Cadillac Mountain sumit
road was opened, the penolithic surface having been applied. This section
is 3500 feet in length and terminates in a broad turn from which an exten-
sive view of Frenchmans Bay, Islands and nearby mainland is obtained. Vis:
tors at once availed themselves of the opportunity offered to use this
piece of road, and expression of delight with the excellent surface and the
beautiful view were heard on every hand.
020
General eather Conditions:
Temperature
recipitation
loan maximum
77.3
Rainfall
3.95
Mean minimum
57.2
Mann
67.25
HERBERT L SATTERLEE
37 EAST 36TH STREET
NEW YORK
October 2nd, 1931
George B. Dorr, Esq.,
Bar Harbor,
Maine:
Dear Sieur des Monts:
I thank you for your letter of the 26th. Please
let me know whether you find the typewritten copy of Mr.
Charles Tracy's diary. If not, I will look up the original
in the Morgan Library,
There is a matter that I meant to speak to you about
Sacks
before I left Mt. Desert, and it is this: When we were in
San Francisco last summer we again went out to the Cliff House
to see the seals on the seal rocks. There is nothing that has
been a greater asset to San Francisco than those seals. People
go again and again to see them and visitors from the interior
go out there before they go anywhere else. Those seals have been
worth a great deal of money to the proprietors of the Cliff House.
2
Now that the Acadia National Park has so much water front,
I do not see why you do not get the seals back again on the rocks.
In the old days we used to see a great many of them. Now I believe
that the fishermen kill them.
Dair
Could you not get a bill through the Legislature and get
an order from the Secretary of the Interior making the water front
of a National Park, sanctuary for marine animals and birds. of
course, such a description would frankly include seals. There
would probably not be much objection to being in a position to
stop shooting shore birds. I suppose the fishermen would object
to giving the seals any refuge at all. As a matter of fact I do
not know of any fishing in Newport Cove or on the Frenchman's Bay
side of Great Head, or around Otter Cliffs, except the nets that
Richard Hale puts out sometimes. If there should ever be a tea
house or restaurant at Otter Cliffs or on the Homan property, the
seals on the rocks would attract a vast number of visitors. The
sale of fish for visitors to throw to the seals is really quite an
item.
If the fishermen could only realize it, there is more
money to be taken in by having seals for visitors to see than there
is to be saved by driving them away.
Perhaps you have thought of all this before and know the
George B. Dorr, Esq.
-2-
October 2nd, 1931
pros and cons of the situation. I will be very glad if
you will let me know what you think about it. I think
Richard Hale ought to also be consulted because he may
have very definite ideas on the subject and it is well
to know them before any time is spent on the matter.
With all good wishes, I remain,
Faithfully yours,
Filit Caustile
UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
ACADIA NATIONAL PARK
BAR HARBOR, MAINE
OFFICE OF THE SUPERINTENDENT
October 5, 1931.
Dear Mr. Sattelle:
Mr. Satterlee wrote me about the
Charles Tracy 1855 diary, telling me of your wish to have
a
CODY of it for your museum, The original was loaned
me by Mrs. Morgan and her sister Mrs Hoppin, who was
staying with her that fall at Schooner Head and told
of the diary's existence. I had a copy made as oppor-
tunity came. This was before the Park's establishment.
I have been meaning to have a fair copy made from the copy
taken then and could have one made at the same time for
you if you desire. I would like to look it over with you.
Where are you now?
Yours sincerely,
GBD-0
Mr. William Otis Sawtelle,
Islesford, Maine.
ANPA Sawtella Call. 349.F8
UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
ACADIA NATIONAL PARK
BAR HARBOR, MAINE
OFFICE OF THE SUPERINTENDENT
October 5, 1931.
Dear Mr. Sattelle:
Mr. Satterlee wrote me about the
Charles Tracy 1855 diary, telling me of your wish to have
a COPY of it for your museum, The original was loaned
me by Hrs. Morgan and her sister Mrs, Hoppin, who was
staying with her that fall at Schooner Head and told
of the diary's existence. I had a copy made as oppor-
tunity came. This was before the Park's establishment.
I have been meaning to have a fair COPY made from the copy
taken then and could have one made at the same time for
you if you desire. I could like to look it over with you.
Where are you now?
Yours sincerely,
CBD-0
Mr. William Otis Santelle,
Islesford, Maire.
ANPA Sautelle Call 849 f8
UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
ACADIA NATIONAL PARK
BAR HARBOR, MAINE
OFFICE OF THE SUPERINTENDENT
October 12, 1937.
Dear Dr. Sawielle:
Can't you run down to Bar Karbor
so e day soon and have a talk ith me about the
Tracy Journal and some other matters? There are
various batters I should 00 glad of a chance to
talk over with you.
Yours sincerely,
lr. Willim Otis Sentel e,
Bangor Chamber of Connerce,
Bangor, Maine.
GBD-0
2 of 3 extact
ANPA Sautclle Call. P49 +8
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
LAFAYETTE NATIONAL PARK
BAR HARBOR, MAINE
OFFICE OF THE SUPERINTENDENT
June 9, 1923.
Prof. William Otis Saytelle,
Eaverford, Pa.
Dear Professor Sawtslle:
Thank you warmly for your kind and interesting
enclosure, which I shall read with greatest interest. I
have long been planning to pay you a visit at Islesford
in the summer but have had no boat. . This year I have a
boat and hope to come.
with thanks again
Believe me
Yours sincerely,
Gemp B. Work
3 of 3 extant
The Midtown Book - The University Club
Page 1 of 3
The Midtown Book
THE UNIVERSITY CLUB
1 West 54th Street
(Northwest corner at Fifth Avenue)
Developer: The University Club
Architect: McKim, Mead & White
Erected: 1899
By Carter B. Horsley
While less spectacular than the six-year-older, white marble Metropolitan Club (see The
City Review article) six blocks farther north on the avenue, designed by Stanford White of
the same firm, on Fifth Avenue, this is the city's grandest clubhouse.
With its deep rustication, grand proportions and superb craftsmanship, it is the city's finest
Italian Renaissance palazzo-style structure [preferred by G.B.Dorr.]
http://www.thecityreview.com/univ.html
2/15/2008
Seal Harbor, Maine, October 26, 1931.
Dear Mr. Rockefeller:-
Our original plans for carrying both sewer and
water pipe lines by the Jordan Pond underpass are being followed. Thes
are the same plans which I went over with you before you returned to
New York. They provide for carrying the Bewer under the bridge and the
water main around the cast and of the bridge in an inverted siphon with
blow-out discharging into oatch basin of 12" drain under the bridge. In
this way the main will be accessible and the bridge will not be endange
ed in case of A break. 7e would have preferred to carry the main on the
bridge but on account of limited head room and consequent small crown
thickness of arch this was impossible. As the bridge takes up the full
width of the town road right of way it will be necessary to give the
water company an easement over the small piece of land east of the brid
over which the new line passes. It may also be necessary to give the
town 8. right of may for the Bewer over & short strip a few feet in
len-th if the plans for the relocation of the Jordan Pond road are
finally accepted - as I believe they already are.
The temporary pipe which it is necessary to use during the
excavation work for the underpass has been put in and the old pipe
which comes within the construction lines has been taken up. Some of th
excavation for the underpass has been done and drais installed and
about 500 feet of the new sewer has been completed.
The pipe line matters were taken up with Messrs. Dunham and
Jordan renre enting the Seal Harbor Water Company. As Mr. Thorpe,
Consulting Engineer for the Bar Harbor Water Company, happened to be
in Bar Harbor Mr. Dunham called him in consultation. We went over the
situation on the ground with him and he approved. our plans in full.
The question has come up as to how best to handle the work con-
nected with the water company's pipe line. It was my first thought that
it would be well to have the company do the work itself 80 that every-
thing would be done to its own satisfaction. I have just been talking
with Mr. Halston about this and he thinks it would perhaps be better
to have Mr. Jordan do the work and send him a bill which he can approve
and forward to you with the explanation that the work was necessary
in connection with the construction of the underpass.
I am enclosing a blueprint which shows the general lay-out
of the work which is Being done.
Very truly yours,
Mr. John D. Rockefeller, Jr.,
26 Broadway,
[Paul Simpson]
New York,
2.
The final conclusions to which we have come, therefore, and
on the basis of which I authorize you to go ahead with the bridges, are
as follows:
For the first bridge, being a diagonal one, a split lintel the
same width throughout its length; the width not to exceed 24" and to
be less if you feel that from a structural point of view that is safe
and wise. The lintel to rise on the side walls without brackets or
corbels. No boulders to be used in the wall, only split stones. The
lintel may be a stone split from some quarry, even if the color is not
exactly the same as the other stones.
Your estimate for this bridge was $2,585., which I hereby ap-
prove.
The second bridge, with the arch. Either you will build the
bridge as per Mr. Stoughton's original design, if the conditions which
it was designed to meet can be as well adopted as the new conditions on
which you have designed the new arch, or, if the more rounded arch which
Mr. Stoughton is designing, showing the improvements of your arch which
he and I both felt could be made, is satisfactory to you and from your
point of view preferable as to conditions to Mr. Stoughton's original
arch bridge, I am willing you should substitute his new arch for the
old.
Your estimate on your revision of Mr. Stoughton's old arch
is $1,703, which I approve and authorise, assuming that the revised
arch will not cost substantially more.
For his information and because it carries authorisations, I
am sending a copy of this letter to Mr. Ralston. A copy is also being
sent to Mr. Zach for his information. You need not await my return to
go ahead with these two bridges.
Very truly
Mr. Paul D. Simpson,
John
Seal Harbor, M ine.
334-G
DUNCAN CANDLER
ARCHITECT
126 EAST 27TH STREET
NEW YORK
October 29, 1931.
Paul D. Simpson Esq.
Seal Harbor, Maine.
Dear Mr. Simpson:
Just before Mrs. Rockefeller left Seal
Harbor in September, I asked Sam Candage to ask you to
make a contour plan of the knoll at the end of the alley
in the garden where a high stele is to be placed.
As I have not heard from you and as Mrs.
Rockefeller would like to have me do some work in con-
nection with the placing of this stele and platform for
same, will you kindly let me have at your earliest con-
venience contour of this site. Sam Candage can tell you
what I want. I need it large enough to include the pres-
ent steps to it and the spruce tree in front of it; a
width of about 201 on the axis of the alley and a depth
from the spruce tree to the North to include the drop
to the lower levels.
Very truly yours,
Duncan
Caydel
Page lof4.
copy for Judge Deasy
Phillips Academy
Andover, Massachusetts
10 November 1931
George B. Dorr, Esq.,
Acadia National Park
Bar Harbor, Maine.
My dear Mr. Dorr:
I have your letter and thank you. I am leaving for
Ohio, New York and Indiana, tomorrow and returning December 3.
I have asked our mutual friend, Mr. Endicott, for an interview
sometime between December 4 and 23, agreeable to his convenience.
Obviously, I wish to do the right thing in this matter.
I quite agree with you that we should hesitate be-
fore we enter into this arrangement unless we are assured that
there are sufficient funds available to produce a creditable
volume. We have at Andover published both Indian and archaeo-
logical books for many years. The Trustees appropriate the
entire expense and in the course of a few years these volumes
very nearly pay for cost of production. To oe exact, our first
three volumes are out of print and selling at a premium. The
next three covered three-fourths and two-thirds of the original
cost and we have several hundred copies left. The last two
volumes, due to the hard times, have sold as follows: Dr. Kid-
der's book, about $300; mine about $500.
The last book was more technical and "drier" than
will be my account of the Indians of Mount Desert. Moreover,
it is larger, being 224 pages. There folding maps which are
expensive. The cost (1200 copies) was $2300 - including pic-
tures.
It is difficult to exactly estimate the cost of a
work before the manuscript is prepared. Assuming the same size
- which is opoular - as my Arkansas volume and that the work
would be 130 pages, cloth bound, it is my opinion that a thous-
and copies would cost $1600. Our publisher here at Andover
does excellent work but he is rather expensive. Possibly the
volume could be produced in Bar Harbor, Bangor, or Portland
more cheaply. It is my candid opinion that if your fund allows
$500, and Peabody Museum of Salem, $500, that you would be
able
to raise, say $600 among the people of Bar Harbor. My Merri-
mack report, 79 pages, is not as well done as I would desire.
It was necessary for us to economize. I am sending you a copy
of it, also the Arkansas book. Twelve hundred copies of the
Merrimack cost $800 or something like 70 d each.
2
I enclose letter from the Andover Press, which
estimates the cost as 1300, without cuts. These un from
44 to $7 each. We should have all told about fifty illustra-
tions.
on the Merrimack report, the publisher knowing me
for many years, carried the account. He has received about
half the money. Our proposed ar Harbor publication is some-
what different in that - if I understood Mr. Endicott correct-
ly - the Peabody Museum of Salem would give $500, which with
your
money
leaves
but 00 secure. It seems to me you could
raise that amount next spring or early summer. You do not need
any money save for my expenses until the manuscript is ready
and in the hands of the printer. That might be the first of
next October - possibly September.
Concerning the outline sketch which you requested,
I would suggest this little work follow the late Francis Park-
man's method of treatment. Mr. Allen Forbes, State Street
Trust Company, 3oston, got out an excellent memoir of the
French occupation of northern New England, a year or two ago.
IIe handled the subject quite well. It would be my purpose to
insert something concerning the prehistoric occupation. By
the term, "Indians of the Mount Desert Region" I comprehend
both the historic and the prehistoric. I shall be very glad
to hand the manuscript - when the first draft is completed -
next summer to Judge Deasy and yourself. I believe both of
you might have some suggestions or criticisms to offer which
would be ;ladly received.
Yes, I heartily agree that there should be no inter-
1
ference
with your present series. Mr. Smith has done a good job.
I believe this covers your letter. If not, pray command me. I
Shall be glad to hear from you by the middle of December.
With best wishes,
Very sincerely yours,
Warren Kind Moorehead (signed).
copy for Judge Deasy
3
UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
ACADIA NATIONAL PARK
BAR HARBOR, MAINE
OFFICE OF THE SUPERINTENDENT
copy
November 16, 1931.
Dear Dr. Moorehead:
Though I know by your letter that
you must have left for Ohio I write against your re-
turn to acknowledge both your own letter and the mem-
oranda you enclosed to me from the Andover Press, con-
cerning the proposed Museum publication.
As you know, I am warmly interested in having
what you have proposed accomplished. Done under your
auspices it would make a valuable contribution to the
subject as well as an exceptionally interesting one for
us here. Printed attractively, with good illustration
not only of implements and other finds but of the region,
1
it certainly should make a book people will wish to own
and should command a fair price that ultimately might
bring back a substantial sum toward the cost of publica-
tion. And I do not think it would be desirable to print
it unless it can be printed in such form. To do this it
will be necessary to raise $750, or thereabout, in addi-
tion to what Judge Deasy says the Museum can safely under-
take to pay.
I understand you will confer with Mr. Endicott
on this, and leave it in your hands.
Yours sincerely,
GBD-0
(signed) George B. Dorr
Dr. Warren K. Moorehead,
Andover, Mass.
4
copy
Phillips Academy,
Andover, Massa chusetts,
December 14, 1931.
Honorable George B. Dorr,
Acadia National Park,
Bar Harbor, Maine.
My dear Mr. Dorr:
Mrs. Moorehead and mys If had a very pleasant
luncheon, Saturday, with Mr and Mrs. Endicott. He said that
you were coming down for the Christmas holidays and he would
have a long talk with you. He also agreed with me that we
might as well prepare the manuscript this summer since I
have that time free and shall probably (if possible) go
abroad a year from next spring. He further said that
he would write you.
I gathered from his conversation that he
understood that you could pay the expenses $732 or $750
(I have mislaid the carbon of my letter which gives the exact
amount) out of your funds and $500 toward the publication,
that the Peabody Museum, Salem, would give $500 and the
remaining $600 he would contribute. Of course, he will take
up this matter with you, but that was my understanding of the
conversation. Meantime, during this winter I will have the
references looked up in the Harvard Library, etc., and every-
thing compiled so that all this material can be brought by
me to Bar Harbor for the actual writing. I think it will cost
between $60 and $75 for a library clerk to work on it
I wish you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.
Very sincerely yours,
(signed) Warren King Moorehead
*which come out of the
$732 for my work.
26 Broadway
New York
December 23, 1931.
Dear Mr. Simpson:
Your letter of December 15th, showing two ways of bringing
the Stanley Brook motor road into the Jordan Pond highway at the Wild-
wood Farm road, is received. I feel with you that plan No. 1, which
encroaches a trifle on the northwest dorner of Mr. Dane's property,
is by far the better of the two. On the other hand, there is no pos-
sible prospect of our acquiring any portion of Mr. Dane's property,
unless ultimately by condemnation. That of course, should the Park
be the eventual owner of my adjacent property, would be entirely
possible and natural. It would be regrettable to have to adopt plan
No. 2 as a temporary measure, and then later change the whole layout
back to plan No. 1.
As I study plan No. 1 I note that the reason for cutting
a corner of the Dane property is simply to make room for a more natural
turn from the Wildwood Farm road to the Jordan Pond road going north.
It would appear to me to be possible to make this turn without diffi-
culty without going onto Mr. Dane's property. To turn around the angle
of his property would be hardly different from making any right angle
turn. If the turn is physically possible - and it certainly must be,
for the proposed road in plan No. 1 is 50 feet in width from the corner
of the angle across - why should we not adopt plan No. 1, realizing
that we may for a few years be obliged to make the turn around the
Dane's angular corner but also believing that ultimately the corner
can be cut off?
If you can corroborate my belief that the corner can be turned
safely without encroaching on Mr. Dane's property, even if the turn is
not a desirable one, I authorize the adoption of plan No. 1, which seems
to me in every respect pleasant, desirable and economical, in that it
uses most parts of the present reconstructed surface of the Jordan Pond
road?
Very truly,
Mr. Paul D. Simpson,
John 2 Cockifiller
Seal Harbor, Maine.
"Acadia"
pg. I of 4
Superintendent
IRA,DI. NPS.SMR. 1931-1932 Notes
Monthly Rpts.1928-1905
I
"Asida fin the situation created by ur Like filler
acqual to be role and from his offer to construction
centro needs in ANI no incided working it special
attach occurs day Form . 1931."
of anthonyed
" of Personal : 13 employees, 10 lond year Jan.
NR 2.31
0.1
52 Dorr research IN pank with Feb. 26 left for DC. to enter E Service.
All agencies intent in wood buildy in ANP are unity
deligery to induce 11. hockfold to recorder in action."
2
", growth to popular cabout in tava of the pack,
particular circury its status is a game sancture.
3.3' Regard dear closed seem retricture bill passed. But
fu 10 days they was hased and my staughtered.
Anoth hill to make MDI a for sometry did not pass.
Local oppositing tro strong.
4.51
2
Scheoder Suray completed.
New contruction/Infreed in Park Approached
Pennal 11 appt, 15 non-appt.
5.31
Arst. handreops Architact V. Roswell Ludgate can to pank
to asst. 10 hundry construction to landscope Mobile
assor. I rood writ. His visit "coust fulto the first
puritical contact this pah has had E the Landscope
Divisa of th NPS Willature to actual plan
In contraction.
Z of &
AR
31
Charles E Petenson Asst badsage Archite l in
2
Change of landscupe wich in combone Dates,
arrived for as months stay sinching road and
trail sitnet on 0 d that the pla
can be developed." Schoolic Penne la road
developer also uder recrew it C.MRP. work on
the latter greatly speaked up
R8.31
Peterson left fn Yorkbom HDQ Aug. 25
3
R. M. Holmes, Chuf Clush do the Worly to office of the NPS
t his brother & their wives arrived in AND ad
were Dorr's guests
Senata DI. Watsh of Massachusetts + funk got Dorr tour.
9.31
Seam Visitors: 162,238 us. 154, 734 last year
(Montana Rd. surfacy completed at trant allowed.
Dorr does not malu much to do @ this - odd ! $68K,
Conrad L.Wirth (NPS) visited 9/10 9/14.
Blister Pust Control Extensive Update
MR 10.31
Road capletin described "event of importance". Traffic
anson 1 Oct 11 (1st 800 cars web up,
Oct 18
900 " " "
Oct IT
100 " " " (fog,rain)
Oct 30th I it fatality of pack provide Employee. Ralph Giles, 22 yrs
laborer, fell itt lear of huck broke Li neck.
Trust import : Eargle both Carry Tail , W.side Jorda Pood.
U.S. factor for Daine Freduct 1200 initial I
3 of 4
....K. 12.31
Dorr gave ANP a ford truck to h converted into
& fini truch, a piec of equipment long needed.
SMR 1.32
Dorr left for WDC on ta 23rd ford had not yet returned.
Maps prepared showy Nord & haling Cadillacht. topo finseed.
SMR. 2.3L Durr remand really in WDC all mate wrhy m may the paid
"accessible to Noter visitors."
^
1932 Nash auto purchase for un of Dorr.
MR 3.32 Dorr continues has stay in WDC.
1932 New arrived in 3/24/32.
MR & 32 Dorr return fn WDC 4/24/01.
Hadley web to "Superintendent" Conference. at Hot spys"
Return to BH Va WDC + Great Smokies NP.
New tategory "Labor Situation." Candit in BH "are
the same as in other parts of the country
a
laye
nurhe of near unexployed and available.
SPP replate re survey design funds.
SMR 532
Much of Dorr's true take : visiting UPS officerti to see
Schoolic, Homon House, misellaen trails, etc. Incl.
Chaif Engineer Kittnedge, Asob. Chat Ladscop. Arch.
Charles E. Peterson, & Director Albright-(5119-23).
Ps 2
Director turned h tran to Carada = NPS work.
Developms of approaches to th Pak.
Fire started in Birch Harbor May 19 hurry to within
0.5 mi. of rach honds on Achoodic. Past too -
4 of
EAFH, VI , UPS, SMR 6.32
pa 3 Homans residence corpleted ready for furnishings.
Trant work to records rebblish to improve safety.
ps.
Capleted Cadella ut forgestation, Summit Rd.
raggratation, & confort station.
SMR
7.32 Asst. Sechety of th Interest Joseph M. Dixon arrived SEC. at to depid th lad Sumit
D62 Edward S. Zimmer, NPS hadsayn Div, arme 7/15 Rd.
(Path devel. on Cadellae)
for 5 IX week stay.
oliver G.
Asst Chief Teylor arrived for month stay
pg.5
The Educat mil a work of the particular tax duiet -'
is gay nicely... nature walks, coup fires, talks,ek
sme 8.32
Arice Director AmoB. Cammerer Stayed 3.days disalored Police
Arst Dir Dr. H.C. bryant- 10day visit family
Mr. A P. Miller, Sanitary Engencer, U.S.P.H. S.
Solar eclapse, 8/31. Rough 3,000 people assembled stop
Cadillae.
Dorr still net in field
11.2
Bryats installed in Homans House, the fast official
receparts for it. Boyal studen ANP
educational program.
Sand Beach party aua guded.? enlarged als
at Fornald Point.
Cadella 114. Party area
Ranger, Natural & Guide Services (Educ. Program
iMR 9.32
work cappleted
I
Pah hospital Y Taylor Zimmer 1 Peterson propers
continues.
Arst. Director Begant left pah 9/8.
932
Page 1 of2
FOR NEWS WANT ADS DIAL 6441
Mountain Road
New Scenic Highway
Proclaimed Maine's
Greatest Attraction
Motor Cars Now Climb 1,529 Feet Above Sea
Level in High Gear Over Engineering Mar-
vel-Construction Has Taken Six Years
And Cost Approximately $350,000.
Acclaimed by world-travelers as the
with Eagle Lake in the immediate
beauty spot of the Atlantic Coast,
foreground. It is a rough country
new vistas of rare and original beauty
which is spread under one's eyes,
have been opened to the public by the
typical Maine scenery at its best and
redent completion of the new Cadillac
made available for the free use of
Mountain Road, in Acadia National
the motoring public by the Federal
Park, Mount Desert Island. This
government.
magnificent motor highway, twenty-
BRIEF HISTORY
two feet wide, ascends to the summit
of Cadillac Mountain, 1,529 feet above
This wonderful scenic highway has
sea level, winding in graceful curves
come into being as a monument to
from which can be seen a magnificent
the foresight and hard work of one
panorama of mountain peaks unriv-
man,-George B. Dorr, superinten-
alled in scenic beauty, of the chang-
dent of Acadia National Park. For
ing ocean which is never twice the
years it has been his dream to see the
same in coloring, and of lake regions
wonders of his beloved island made
which have been compared for beau-
available for those whose stay is too
ty with those of the Old World.
short to encompass all of its wonders.
Easy grades, averaging five per cent
For that matter, any visit is only too
and never more than seven per cent,
brief, and to be fully appreciated the
highway must be traveled in all sorts
insure easy climbing of this peak by
of weather and at all seasons of the
motor, and a gradual descent on the
year. Not one pilgrimage will suf-
return trip.
-many must be taken before the
From the various vantage points
inspiring beauty of Acadia can be ab-
where the roadway has been widened
sorbed.
to permit parking, can be seen incom-
After much planning and the lay-
parable vistas of the rough, rugged
ing of much ground work. in 1922
Maine coast on one side, of beautiful
road plans for the Cadillac Mountain
lakes and ponds on another. and with
Road were approved in Washington.
a vast section of the mainland laid
This approval followed a visit to the
out under one's gaze, on a third.
Park by Stephen T. Mather, Director
Other roads may ascend higher peaks,
of the National Park Service, and the
other National parks may boast more
assistant director, Arno B. Cammerer.
square miles, but none can compare
It was not until three years later. in
with Acadia in its variety of scenic
1925, that funds for the construction
wonders.
of the first section of the road were
From its unofficial opening late last
provided, Congress appropriating $50,-
fall the Cadillac Mountain Road has
000 for the work.
Bangor Daily News. Jan.1, 1932
visitors in a single Sunday motoring,
AWESOME SPECTACLE
to the top, the highest point of land
In striking contrast with the Pa-
2
on the Atlantic Seaboard from the
cific beauty of a summer sunset is the
coast of Labrador to South America.
rapid approach of a summer tempest
More and more each year Mt. Deserv
or a winter hurricane when tumul-
and Acadia National Park has be-
tuous clouds pile up hurriedly and
come the playground of the Nation,
the wind has a vicious roar. To one
with unnumbered thousands coming
who witnesses the approach of such a
from far-flung corners of the globe to
storm it is a spectacle never to be
view the scenic wonders bestowed by
forgotten, and the rapid advance of
nature with such a lavish hand and
the storm clouds, tumbling and toss-
no greater incentive can be conceived
ing in the firece gusts of wind which
for a visit to Maine than this mag-
tear them apart inspires a feeling of
nificent $350,000 roadway which the
awe in the beholder,-and perchance
government made available for mo-
a feeling of the frailty and insignifi-
torists.
cance of mere man. In storm or sun-
shine this new roadway makes possi-
UNRIVALLED SÜNSETS
ble to everyone a conquest of the
For those who love the beauties of
highest peak on the Atlantic sea-
nature, the exotic, ever-changing pan-
board.
orama of a sunset seen from the
PANORAMA UNEQUALED
glacier-rounded top of Cadillac Moun-
tain is the thrill of a lifetime. There
In clear weather an unequaled
can be seen blended all of the colors
panorama unrolled before the motor-
of the rainbow. intensified and con-
ist of the pedestrian as he climbs this
densed into the very essence of beau-
latest and best addition to the scenic
tv undefiled. Far away can be seen
attractions of New England. Winding
Bluehill mountain, and Schoodic, on
around Cadillac for a distance of 3.7
the mainland with the grey ribbon of
(right) miles from the famous Eagle
the cement highway winding away
Lake road changing cistas of wooded
towards Ellsworth with Bar Harbor
mountains. forest-girt lakes. and
nestling almost at the foot of Cadil-
island-dotted ocean. Away to the
east can be seen Bar Harbor Ghoup
lac. Gradually the colors fade
Beretinine Island Round Island. and
solving
of smaller islets dotting nae
narrowing
Away to the SOULE 810 east
to the
be seen Cramber
Edismonth
Islands THE adidasous
mountain
and there white
Harbor
out the ewel
box South
identifiering blue o the
villages of the great resort section
on the horizon can
The entire breath takin
discanned the trailing smoke
beauty that denes description and
steamer. half-down In
be enjoyed best by awed silence
the Immediate foreground gleam
Away to the west can be discerned
the white salls or tachts
the other peaks of the island.
On Friday, May 15. 1925 a small
Brown Mountain, Dry Mountain and
crew of men under the direction of
the others, while at their feet can be
Walters G HIIL of Bar Harbor as
seen the silver sheen of the lakes, engineer in charge, started actual
OFFICIAL OPENING
construction of the first section of
the road which was net to be com-
OF THE MOUNTAIN
pleted until late in 1934 The origin
nal plan of having annua appropria
tions made by Congress to carry on
ROAD JULY 4,
1932
the work was carried out the last
Congress appropriating $80,000 to sur-
face the road from starting point
to the summit completion of
Plans for the official opening of the Cadillac Mountain
this extensive protect is almost en
Road are progressing rapidly under the charge of a special
tirely due to the unremitting energy
committee under the charge of Charles Shea, president of the
broad vision and entertslasm on the
Bar Harbor Chamber of Commerce, and the official date has
part of Supt. George
been set for July 4, 1932. According to the plans being made
it is hoped to have President Hoover, Hon. Ray Lyman Wilbur.
secretary of the interior, and other high government officials
present at the opening. The large committee having this
matter in charge has been working on the plans since late
last fall and hope to have the opening one of the most impor:
tant events to take place in the Park. It is hoped that Gov-
C
.0
P
Y
26 Broadway
New York
February 9, 1932
Private and Confidential
Dear Mr. Cammerer:
Your letter of February 4th regarding your talk with
Senator Hale and Congressman Nelson on the subject of the
Otter Creek Radio Station removal, is received with appre-
ciation. You are quite right in having told these gentle-
men that I would not be interested to consider any of the
compromise proposals which they presented. I appreciate
your having saved me a personal conference with them.
As to the removal of the redio station to a point
somewhat west of the old radio station at Seawall, the
piece of property I fear these gentlemen have in mind,
perhaps at Mr. Dorr's suggestion, is a very beautiful
point of land which I bought a year or two ago -- as
beautiful in its way as the Otter Cliff point although
not so high. When the removal of the present station to
that general location was mentioned to me before by either
Mr. Lynam or Mr. Dorr, the old radio station site was
specifically mentioned. While I am not at this time saying
Mr. Cammerer. Page 2.
that I might not consider making available this beautiful
point to the west to which I have just referred, the Otter
Creek Radio Station to be removed thereto, quite frankly
I would feel very reluctant to do so when a location at
Schoodic Point, already determined by the experts to be
as good or better than the Otter Creek location, is avail-
able, now belongs to the park and has all the necessary
qualifications, with the one exception of its being not
quite as near to centers of amusement as is desired.
These observations I make simply to keep you posted
on the general subject and to have you know that probably
the piece of land west of Seawell which these gentlemen
have their eye on is the beautiful point which I acquired
within the last year or two.
Very truly,
(Sgd) John D. Rockefeller, Jr.
Mr. A. B. Cammerer, Associate Director,
National Park Service,
Washington, D. C.
2/4/1932
Albert to Jr. re meeting in
Wholeygla D.C. betwee See. Wilbur,
Sen. Hale, Rep. nelson, + llr. Darr.
Subject: going ahead c road project
Without ay reference to the other chiffs
Radis State (hg-perry station or moving
it to agreemented).
Have
San late, appropriation Comm. disapproved
of fending reverseff Radistation
Worthwhile Places, Pp 116-18.
See also can. 10/28/32 (p. 129-30)
11/25/32
Garrison Hall
Boston 17, Mass., ,
March 9, 1932
George B. Dorr, Esq.,
Superintendent, Acadia National Park,
Bar Harbor, Maine.
Dear Mr. Dorr:
I am writing you to offer to the Hancock County Associates
for the Acadia National Park the property which Mrs Inman and
myself own on Seal Cove Pond. If you will r emember, Mrs Inman
discussed this with you one day last summer at Bar Harbor.
Our property consists of 150 acres, more or less. It extends
between Seal Cove Road, Western Mt., and Seal Cove Pond. It in-
cludes a brook, Oak Hill (2 200 ft. mountain), and a half mile of
narrow automobile road up the mountain.
The reason which leads us to wish to give the property to the
Hancock County Associates is one of taxes. The selectment of the
township have seen fit to double our taxes since we acquired the
land, simply, as they frankly stated, because they 'liked the view'
from Oak Hill.
We understand that the property can be turned over to the Han-
Cock County Associates with certain restrictions.
We wish to deed our Seal Cove Pond property, lying in the town-
ship of Tremont, to the Hancock County Associates, with the following
restrictions-
1. We wish to be able to have the use of the property during
the remainder of our lives.
2. As we have planted a hursery of trees, we wish to be able
at any time to remove any small trees from said Seal Cove Pond pro-
perty.
3. We wish to be allowed to erect any building, or buildings,
during our lifetimes, on the Seal Cove Pond property, and if we so
designate, to have a building, if it be made of stone, stand after
our demise.
4. In case the Hancock County Associates are, for any reason,
declared insolvent or out of function, we, Mrs. A. C. Inman and
myself, A. C. Inman, or either of us, are to receive back said pro-
perty, unless it be deeded to the Acadia National Park before, or
at the time.
5. Our Seal Cove property, if we leave a fund upon our death
sufficient to engage a forester, with his housing, supplies, and
tools, is to be used for a station to experiment with the growing
dead, those
of various evergreens suitable for the climate. No trees, save
injured, or grown too thick, are to be cut down, the determin-
ation of the age-span of various specimens of evergreens and conifers
being the chief purpose of the trust.
6. The property, after our death, is to be called 'Terror Mt',
its name now, or 'The Inman Pinetum'.
Very sincerely yours,
(Sgd.) Arthur Crew Inman
(Per E. I.)
ACI/MDH
national Park Service Sapit. Conference. Apl3-8-19
at
[1933]
Hot Lyring hats Park - Arkances.
8
Front Row Lef 8 8 Right
of
Supt Smith
Petrified Forest hall Kion - Arizana.
Supt. Soliucky
Gater Lake latt Park
- (' regard.
Supt Tombinson
nt. dainier hattPark
- Wash
Supt. Thompson
Yosemite natt Park
- Calif.
asst. Wir.
3
Washington Office
The Hon. Louis Gampton Former Congressman
-
Director Horace Malbright
Washington office
jmy
judge
mehicle
Yellowstone leath. Park
- Wgo.
Sant
Support
Boles
Pridney
Cavere
- - (Tiez new mexico
a r.
Collins
Hot- spring Park
- un.
WO 2
Senton
Washington D.C
Supt
Tom alien
Hot Springs Park
- Rile
ant L.A. Peterson
Colonial hate luon
la.
Dr. Wixon
Supt Branch
Platthall
Wild Life furney
ekid
Calif
I
ast.C.E. O.g. Taylor
Washington D.C
Supt Patraw
zion n.p. : Supt. Tillotson
grand Camyon 1
1
Chief A. Torn Vint
San Francisco
:
Sii,
Eakin
great Smoking /
00,
fill Scoyen
glacier N.P.
:
Supt Collins
Lassen N.P.
F.S.P. Coffman San Francisco
E. Kittridge Sm Francisco.
I
Supt White
Sequoia N.P.
S.L.
Rabinson Cal and N.I
:
miller
P.H.S
Sing Hough
gWBPNM
: ant Seyst Ex and Yellonstone 1
of
ant Supt. Bottom
Hot Skyo Park
:
I'm Bilhirt Wash Siffic
Lapt. Toll
Yellowstone N.P. : Mr He. mon
P.H. 8.
a.c.R. Hadley
Acadia NP. : mr Blosson
Santa Fe. N.Mex.: C.R.
Wash. Office
mr. hussbarm
-
Hot Spe Par
mr. Chatelaine
Wash. office : Supt. Rogers
clocky not N.P.
Supt. Freeland
Wind lawp N.P. : Supt. Finan
neza Verde Pa
Supt. Leavest Howain N.P. :
Pg 10F2
UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
ANNUAL REPORTS OF FIELD DIVISIONS
OF THE
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
1932
OF
DEAR SECURITY SWITH THE N
D
ENGINEERING
LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE
FIELD BRANCH OF RESEARCH AND EDUCATION
FORESTRY
SANITATION
FISH CULTURE
WILD LIFE
to 1935
1810
Gatlinburg and Newfound Gap. The Chief Engineer and I reviewed
on a smaller scale was made of the entire area between the Gorge
portions of this work in April.
Road and the Schooner Head Road in the region of Bear Brook Valley
so that detailed studies of this important area can be made.
After the middle of July Mr. White was again assigned to
Location surveys, detailed plans, and grading construction was
duty in the Great Smoky Mountains National He first super-
done on three-quarters of a mile of the Bear Brook Valley Road
vised the construction of a fire tower, rangers' cabins, and
a
which forms the entrance to the public camp ground. Parking
telephone line for the fire lookout station on Barnetts Knob in
areas were constructed at Fernalds Point and along the Ocean
the Cherokee Indian Reservation. This work was carried on in co-
Drive near the Sand Beach.
operation with the Indian Reservation. Since that time Mr. White
has, been engaged in locating trails and commencing construction
Wakefield
on a $20,000 trail-building program in the mountain country that
until now has been difficult of access.
During the year considerable mapping has been done at
Washington's Birthplace National Monument by Mr. Lassiter and Mr.
Shenandoah
White. A map of the entire monument area is well along in its
preparation on a scale of 100 feet to 1 inch. Larger scale maps
In connection with the Shenandoah National Park project, I
were made of special areas where intensive development work is
made preliminary field studies and prepared estimates for 1934.
planned. Under Mr. White's supervision the following work was
The first year's developments will follow the lines laid down in
completed last fall: Two parking areas, about two miles of new
these estimates.
road construction, three-quarters of a mile of paths, one-half
mile of rail fencing and considerable road and trailside plant-
Hot Springs
ing.
During a brief visit to Hot Springs National Park at the
During the spring and summer of 1932 Mr. Lassiter had charge
time of the park superintendents' conference, I gained a general
of a rather large construction program at Wakefield. It included
idea of the problems of this park. No particular work has been
two new residences, two garages, one public comfort station, a
done there by the Engineering Division, but a study for the re-
new footbridge 400 feet long across an inlet of Pope's Creek
alignment of park roads is contemplated in the near future.
where piling was required, one mile of road surveys and con-
struction for roads to the recreation area and to the new
Acadia
residential area, sewage disposal plants, sewer lines and water
systems for the recreation area and the residential area, a small
Early in May, Chief Engineer Kittredge and I made a brief
amount of trail construction, and a complete water system for new
study of the engineering problems at Acadia National Park. Later
planting at the mansion area. The latter is independent of the
in the season I spent two months there studying development
domestic supply which is unsatisfactory for watering delicate
problems and carrying on certain engineering work.
plants. As the year closes contracts have been made and con-
struction started on a utility building and a comfort station for
Considerable mapping wqs done in order to facilitate stud-
the picnic area. General supervision has been given by the
ies. A large scale map was made of the Bar Harbor public camp
Assistant Chief Engineer, who has also assisted the superinten-
ground, and studies made for its improvement. A similar map was
dent in the purchase of fire equipment.
made of a proposed public camp ground on Echo Lake. Maps were
made of the Lake Wood Road and a parking place near the lake.
After the Yorktown Sesquicentennial Celebration in October,
This road was improved and the parking place constructed. A map
1931, I made a report of the National Park Service participation
20
21
MOUNT DESERT ISLAND HIGHWAY READY FOR SUMMER MOTORISTS
By ALFRED ELDEN.
New York Times 1857-Current file); May 22, 1932; ProQuest Historical Newspapers The New York Times
pg. XX5
MOUNT DESERT ISLAND HIGHWAY
READY FOR SUMMER MOTORISTS
By ALFRED ELDEN.
Not until three years later. however,
PORTLAND. Me.
were funds provided for constructing
1925
M
OTORISTS who tour next Sum-
the first section. Congress then ap-
mer over the Atlantic Highway
propriating $50,000. Subsequent ap-
into Eastern Maine and Canada
propriations brought the total outlay
will have two interesting side trips
practically to $350,000.
available.
A remarkable example of engineer-
The Cadillac Mountain Road, in
ing skill, the Cadillac Mountain
Acadia National Park, Mount Desert
Road is bound to take its place as
Island, completed last Fall, is now
one of the great scenic highways of
open for traffic. This scenic high-
the world. Three and seven-tenths
way has come into being as a
miles long, 22 feet wide, it winds its
monument to the foresight and hard
way in graceful curves to the sum-
work of one man-George B. Dorr,
mit of the mountain, 1,529 feet above
superintendent of this only national
sea level. The average grade is 5
park in the East. For years it was
per cent and never more than 7-an
his dream; once begun, his unremit-
easy automobile ascent and a pleas-
ting energy insured its completion.
ant descent.
Government officials approved the
A View of the Sea.
road plans in 1922, following a visit
to Acadia by Stephen T. Mather, di-
At many points of vantage the
rector of the National Park Service.
roadway has been widened to permit
temporary parking for the enjoyment
of the incomparable marine vista.
The broad plateau on Cadillac's peak
is the highest land on the Atlantic
Seaboard from the coast of Labrador
to South America.
The exotic, ever changing panorama
of a sunset from Cadillac's heights
brings a rare thrill. In the vista of
forest-bordered lakes and ponds.
mountains, broad bays and the sil-
very-surfaced Atlantic, dotted with
myriads of big and little islands, are
blended all the colors of the rainbow.
As the shadows deepen the yellow
eyes of the lighthouse towers begin
winking their warnings.
At the foot of the mountain glow
the lights from Bar Harbor, Seal
Harbor, Northeast Harbor, Southwest
Harbor, and to the north-Ellsworth.
Here is a scenic jaunt which brings
to the motorist a comprehensive
view of Acadia National Park, hith-
erto impossible. Surrounded by the
sea, this paradise has for its nucleus
and central feature the famous moun-
tains which prompted Champlain.
their discoverer in 1604, to give the
island its name, "Isle des Monts
Deserts."
At Eastport, Me., adventure awaits
the motorist who seeks novelty. There
next Summer for the first time he
may drive his car on to a picturesque,
eight-car scow ferry, where a power-
ful motor craft lashed alongside will
convey him one mile across Passama-
quoddy Bay to the southerly end of
Deer Island, N. B. This is a beauti-
ful spot, the largest of the West
Isles archipelago.
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
IN 1932 THE HOME GEOGRAPHIC MONTHLY (v. 2, # 1) PUB LISHED AN
ARTICLE BY GEORGE B. DORR TITLED "ACADIA, THE SEACOAST PARK.
PP.
43.48
This publication was established by Home Geographic Society of Worcester, Mass., an
"educational institution" founded by a host of academics affiliated with Harvard,
Columbia, and Clark University among others. Fairfield Osborne., President of the
American Museum of Natural History, was an incorporator as well.
Its purpose was "to create and promote interest in geography among achildren; to
promote friendly and sympathetic relations among the children of the world; to assemble
and distribute geographic materials, slides, films, specimens, etc...."
"
This article is not written strictly for a juvenile audience and the publication "is SO rich in
interesting information and educational value that everyone, child or adult, fiinds it
readable and engrossing."
Model? National Geographic Magazine
.
Source: Frances LaCourse. Aunt of Ardra Tarbell, NPS park office employee of Mr.
Dorr. May 2006
doence IM. acting Cr.
The National lark Service
may 23, 1932
Horace u.albught
Copy from 6 B Dorr's O Hform guest book May 23, 1932.
6/13/32
Albregot to Jr. re allrights
to ANP, one of the ml interesty
Lags of y national pack career."
Refer to "this Exquistel beautiful park,"
ad impactors of Cadellan Itt, Road
- Beaver removal
Worthwabile Places, Pp. 125-126.
Ed. J.W. Ernst. The Bronx: Fordham U.P., 1991.
Page 1 of2
PHILLIPS ACADEMY
ANDOVER, MASSACHUSETTS
20 June 1932
DEPARTMENT OF AMERICAN ARCHAEOLOGY
WARREN K.MOOREHEAD, DIRECTOR
Mr. George B. Dorr,
Acadia "ational Park,
Bar Harbor, Maine.
My dear Mr. Dorr:
I have your letter and quite agree with the position which you
have taken. Please do me the favor to give Judge Deasy this letter
my
I have communicated with the Peabody Was error Salem and they have
agreed to give me for this important research a modest appropriation already
voted. In addition, my own Department places at your disposal $200. These
two funds provide me with sufficient to pay my room and board this summer
in Bar Harbor and some secretarial work. Both Judge Deasy and yourself will
understand that I have no claim upon you or your organization, and that
the modest expense connected with preparation of this important manuscript
has been vouchsafed by others.
Mrs. Moorehead and myself will come to the Belmont Hotel, Bar
Harbor, the evening of the 25th or 26th. I bring with me quite a library.
After due reflection I have decided not to abandon my work for
the following reasons:
Since the expense money has been provided and does not, as
stated, involve you either in the matter of cost or of publication, the
task should be completed. Already one of my secretaries, Miss Show, has
spent five or six weeks in copying various documents, extracts, reading
and in libraries. Phillips Academy gladly paid for most of this. Mrs.
Jump, my perianent secretary, has devoted nearly half of her time since
the 1st of pril in the Massachusetts Historical Society, Widener Library
and Boston Public Library. She has copied some 200 pages of important data,
done research, etc., which our Academy has assumed. For my own part I have
devoted many hours to reading Jesuit Relations, Winsor, Colonial documents,
etc., etc. All of this material is before me. To set it aside for two or
three years would mean the loss of the work already done. Moreover, next
summer is to be spent elsewhere, and the following year Mrs. moorehead and
myself will take our year's leave of absence and probably go abroad. There-
fore, I can visualize no gain either to history and science, or to me
personally, by abandoning the undertaking. Obviously, so long as it
does not cost my good friends at Bar Harbor anything, I can't see any
objection on your part.
2,
There is one rather embarrassing factor which I shall state
frankly and ask both Judge Deasy and yourself concerning. We have
announced to our friends that we are coming to Bar Harbor, have made
all plans, etc. Therefore I shall come as would any visiting historian or
scientists, and the fact that you can not through your funds support the
undertaking - which is right and proper - should be suppressed! In other
words, my good friend, just help me out to that extent. The public need
not know that the money for completion of my task is provided elsewhere.
Finally, the main thing is to do the job! I have put my hand to
the plow and I don't like to turn back, or to leave a furrow half plowed.
I
shall be glad to see both Judge Deasy and yourself, shall make
no reference to the financial arrangement, shall be glad to inspect the
splendid shell heap work and help in any possible way. I think this is
far better than abandoning the entire project. Moreover, I have nothing
else to do this summer.
Sincerely yours,
wancering moorlood
Later:
I have just returned from Salem where I held an interview with Professor
Jenkins, familiar with New England history and science. Mr. Endicott is
Vice President of the Peabody Museum of which Professor Jenkins is Director.
I'ne entire matter was laid before Jenkins, in whose judgment I have great
confidence. He said, "By all means, Moorehead, complete your task. The date
of publication is immaterial. There will be no difficulty, when times are
better, to secure a publisher."
I have written my friend, Mr. Endicott, that I have no desire to em-
barrass him in any way, that we have arranged for expense of manuscript COM-
pletion.
When I see Judge Deasy and yourself we can have a conversation. Jenkins
points out further that the preparation will be "all to the good" and can
not interfere with your regular plans in any way, since
are not to provide me any funds
you
progrés
leaps and bounds and
ngor,
the Harbor Post along with many
Loyal
other Eastern Maine Posts will fight
Edge,
hard to bring about the election of a
ince,
local man for the highest American
Dr.
Legion office in the State.
:laire
Since he announced himself as a
'ield,
candidate for the post of Command-
com-
er last week, Mr. Cleaves has received
and.
much encouragement from various sec-
ring
tions of the State. Several ex-Com-
the
manders have written him wishing
BURLEIGH MARTIN
RALPH O. BREWSTER
GEORGE
him luck and prominent Legionnaires
Guy
from near and far have -pledged him
Republican Candidate
Republican Candidate
Republica
ers,
their support.
for GOVERNOR
for CONGRESS
for STAT
arty
Upon arrival in Houlton today the
day
Bar Harbor contingent marched
ater
through the streets of the up-State
nost
city bearing a "Vote for Cleaves"
WILBUR ARRIVING
GUIDE SERVICE
WANT $1
ele-
hanner and led by the Drum and
ome
Bugle Corps. Various other represen-
yor
tatives of Maine posts fell in line as
ias-
the procession stopped at the hotel.
AT PARK TO-DAY OFFERED AT PARK
A
hey
Houlton is to give the Legionnaires
a real reception. Many interesting
pic-
events have been planned including
Secretary of Interior and Mrs.
Arthur Stupka to Have Charge of
Clark Coal Co
the
night horseracing, athletic events and
Wilbur to Inspect Park as
This Work- Plans Interesting
Ass'n. $200
I
the
a carnival. The town is gayly deco-
Guests of Supt. Dorr
Program of Activity
R:
an,
rateds in flags and bunting and pre-
35
sents a holiday aspect. The Conven-
Hon. Ray Lynam Wilbur, Secretary
This summer, for the first time in
The Bar Harb
tion will wind up the last of the week.
of the Interior, arrives in Bar Harbor
its history, Acadia National Park
is launching a ca
he
Wednesday night or Thursday morn-
A great deal of effort was made by
willinfter nature guide services to all
sum of $1,000
ing and will inspect Acadia National
visitors who are interested. As in all
fuel fund for ne
any
members of the Bar Harbor Post to
Park. The visit of President Hoovers'
ing
other National Parks where it has
next winter. T
assure a large and enthusiastic repres-
the
cabinet member is in line with the
entation. Local folks are looking for-
become an established project, this
Clark Coal Compa
of
hopes and plans of early spring this
ward to the result of the annual elec-
government service is free to the
ing voted to give
esi-
year when Director Horace M. Al
tion and hope to see Mr. Cleaves come
pub le. Arthur Stupka, of Columbus,
tion $200 provide
bright, of the Park Service, was in the
Ohio, who last year served as ranger-
tion will raise $80
home with the honor of having been
Park
elected Commander, a post which he
naturalist at Yosemite National Park,
Dr. Wilbur came to Hanover,
Nature Guide wo
of
really deserves.
California, and who has been nature
the
N. II., Monday to be given an honor-
couscilor at private camps for boys in
Daily nature W
ith
There are 300,000 adults in New
ary degree and with Mrs. Wilbur he is
the state of Maine during the two
caravan trip, a
York who can neither read nor write.
(Continued on page 8)
previous summeis, will inaugurate
(Continue
Now the
a amous
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Delivery of new gas supply is
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VICTOR N. CUSHMAN
$129
by the largest company of its
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Come in or 'phone
tion of this brand new,
conveniences and Pyrofax econ-
and Room 501, Transportation Bldg.
spinner-dryer washer
omies demand the serious at-
Bar Harbor
Washington, D.C.
tubful demp-dry while
ingl Here Indeed is a
With about 65 or 10 votes still out
For Sheriff
The time of the funeral will be an-
Brewster had 2042, Stetson 1547,
Snow 484 and Blanchard, 486. It was
In one of the closest and most in-
nounced.
Pg.1of2
DO
ES
all Stetson and Brewster. The latter's
tensely interesting contests ever staged
plurality was about 500.
politically in Hancock County the late
TORREY RETURNS
Prop
Bar Harbor gave Brewster real
Ward Wescott triumphed over Harold
FROM CONVENTION
support with 383 votes to 276 for
Hodgkins for Sheriff by 29 votes
Stetson. In Mt. Desert he won by 217
without Long Island in. This town's
(Continued from page 1)
E
to 187. Blanchard had 44 in Bar Har-
vote will be small, probably 10 or 12
California on the right and Pennsyi-
bor while Snow had but 19. Brewster
and will not change the outcome if
vania and Massachusetts just beyond.
ran very strong on Cranberry Island
Hodgkins gets every vote.
Returning home, Mr. Torrey was at
with 72 votes against 12 for Stetson.
As the returns came in the lead see-
York Beach, the guest of Hon. Joseph
Deer Isle was with Stetson. In Frank-
sawed back and forth and the out-
Simpson, and reached Bar Harbor on
(in they ran close with Brewster/lead-
come was not definitely decided until
Monday, after a five days trip, filled,
ing 94 to 86. Southwest Harbor
Tuesday noon. With a scant margin
he says, with a renewed sense through-
favored Brewster 77 to 70. Snow ran
of 21 votes with about five towns to
out of the magnitude of such an Amer-
second to Brewster in Stonington.
hear from Wescott led late Monday
E
ican gathering and with an inspira-
Snow also carried Swan's Island.
night. Mariaville, Otis and Amherst
tion, he adds, which was a possession
Stetson failed to poll a vote there.
favored the Sheriff and gave him the
he would wish to share with every-
E
Blanchard carried Winter/Harbor with
victory despite a 62 to 12 vote for
one.
64 to 16 for Stetson and/11 for Snow.
Hodgkins in Trenton.
Brewster only had 9. Ellsworth fa-
Bar Harbor, Mt. Desert and/South-
WILBUR ARRIVING
vored Stetson by a narrow margin of
west Harbor gave Hodgkins a wonder-
AT PARK TODAY
282 to 278. Brewster ran two to one
ful vote. In Bar Harbor he led 610 to
in Bluehill. Snow ran second in
134 and in Mt. Desert 521 to 107.
(Continued from page 1)
Penobscot while Brewster had a big
Southwest Harbor was Hodgkins
lead in Lamoine. Snow led in Verona
76 to 58. He beat Norwood in the
motoring through to Bar Harbor.
latter's home town of Tremont, 51 to
This is the third time that a Secre-
and Stetson in Bucksport.
40. Wescott also at Norwood in
tary of the Interior has visited the
State/Senator
Tremont.
Park It was the late Hon. Franklin
George Harmon and Carroll Blais-
Wescott ran very strong in Ells
K. Lane who was Secretary when
dell carried the Senatorial vote with
worth polling 478 votes to 239
Supt. George B. Dorr founded the
Frederic Blodgett running close and
Hodgkins' support there was consid
Park and it was Hon. Hubert Work,
Homer Dunbar a poor last. Harmon
ered remarkable as Wescott has made
who was Secretary in 1924, when the
led the list with about 25 votes over
Director of the Service, then the late
T
his home in Ellsworth for many years
Blaisdell. The total with a few small
In the eastern half of the county
Stephen T. Mather, came down bring-
towns out were Harmon 2227, Blais-
Hodgkins had a lead of 1707 to 990
ing the Secretary with him for an offi-
dell 2206, Blodgett, 1567 and Dun-
but the western half, Wescott's
cial visit in connection with road
bar 962.
stamping ground carried him through.
work.
Harmon got a big lead in Bar Har
Bucksport gave him 276 to 77 and
Dr. Wilbur is making a visit which
bor, Southwest Harbor, Elisworth and
Bluehill 199 to 33. Castine was 51 to
is not entirely official and he and Mrs.
Mt. Desert. Blaisdell did best in Bar
12 for Wescott and Orland 133 to 39.
Wilbur will be guests, as was Director
Harbor, Mt. Desert, Bucksport, Blue-
Lamoine went for Hodgkins by 77 to
Albright. of Supa George B. Dorr at
hill and Franklin. Blodgett carried
61. Mariaville went 9 to 8 for Hodg
his home. Oldfarm.
Bucksport by a wide margin of 288 to
72 for Harmon and 78 for Blaisdell.
kins and Sedgwick 53 to 31. Fred
Gerry was nominated on the Demo-
GUIDE SERVICE
Dunbar ran second there. It was
cratic ticket being written in by sev-
OFFERED AT PARK
Blaisdell and Harmon in practically
eral voters. It is understood that
S
every town. In the eastern half of the
county Harmon had 1621 votes to
through this procedure the becomes a
(Continued from page
candidate f the Fall election.
438 for Blaisdell. Blaisdell and Har-
nature-study day, a nature trail, and
Brann and Utterback were the vic
mon will be opposed by Ralph Bucks-
occasional evening campfire programs
tors in the Democratic voting with
minster and Chandler Noyes, unop-
are being planned as part of the
Thurson and Stevens seconds. Brann
posed Democrat candidates.
nature-gui work. Exhibits of plant-
carried practically every town. Utter-
groups as well as of other natural his-
County Commissioner
back won out 3 to 1. No tabulation
tory objects are being considered.
Sim H, Mayo by virtue of big votes
was made of the Democratic vote as
Mimeographed programs will be avail-
in Mt. Desert and Southwest Harbor
the number was small and there were
able at the Acadia National Park
beat Mark Morrison of Bar Harbor for
no county candidates." However, the
office as well as at various ranger
County Commissioner. The final vote
Democratic vote was an enthusiastic
stations ben the work gets under
with few small towns missing showed
one and showed that this party will
way Suggestions as to what may be
2841 for Mayo and 1908 for Morrison.
be fighting to the finish when the final
included in the list of activities will be
This was a close and interesting con-
count comes in the fall. In Bar Har-
appreciated by the ranger naturalist.
test all
bor Brann received 118 votes to 16
The nature column, appearing for
Mr. Me
was accorded splendid
for Richardson his nearest rival
the first time in this issue of THE
apport
Harbor polling 610
Utterback had 103 to 28 for Gallagher
TIMES, will deal with some phase of
to 120 for Mayo. In Mt. Desert
who placed second. In Elleworth
the natural history of Acadia National
Southwest Harbor Mayo pulled
Brann and Utterback led. Fortyethree Park and will appear regularly
down He polled 410 to 181
Democratic votes were cast fs Mt.
the
summer.
in the formet and 185 to
Desert.
ranger acturalist will be glad
gave
Mayo
In the Fall election the line up
schedule special nature walks for
be:
Martin against Brann for Govern
Interveted groups: He should be nd.
Cranberry
Isle
or
Brewster against Utterback for
the Park Office
Pagelof7
Y JUNE 29, 1932
FIVE CENTS A COPY
NUMBER
SHOWS
DOG SHOW IS ON
WILBUR VISITS
KIRK POST
WIL
TART JULY 6TH
SAT., JULY 23
NATIONAL PARK
HONOR CLEA
and Southall to Run Week-
Kemp to be Superintendent-
Secretary of Interior Predicts
Public Reception at Legion
Wrestling --High Class
Judges Chosen Many Tro-
Great Future for Acadia Pro-
quarters for New Comman
Talent Coming
phy Cups Offered
ject
Friday
d wrestlers will groan and twist
The date of the dog show to be
A great future for the Acadia Na-
The Bar Harbor boys broug
other's anatomy weekly at
held in Bar Harbor was announced
tional Park project is predicted by Ray
bacon back from the Houlton CA
wood Stadium this season un-
last week as Friday, July 22. This
Lyman Wilbur, Secretary of the In-
tion and will celebrate with bl
direction of Harold Harris of
was an error. The dog show will be
terior, who left with Mrs. Wilbur,
lic reception at the George
arbor and George Southall of
held on Saturday, July 23, the same
Saturday morning after a two day in-
Kirk Post Headquarters of the
igton, D. C. Messrs. Harris and
day as the formal opening of the
spection visit with Superintendent
can Legion, Friday evening. 1
11 have taken over the stadium
Cadillac Mountain Summit road.
George B. Dorr. In an interview with
put across their candidate. F. Y
summer and plan to hold shows
Officers of the Mt. Desert Kennel
THE TIMES, Secretary Wilbur ex-
Cleaves, as Department Comn
/ednesday evening. The first
club are receiving much encourage-
pressed pleasure at the lay-out of
for Maine and presented a bug
f matches will take place next
ment in making plans for the show.
Acadia and was surprised to find so
drum corp that won the second
day, July 6th, and a real high
Thomas E. L. Kemp of Bridgewater,
much natural beauty and the unusual
prize, they want to share their
rd is being arranged.
Mass., has been engaged as secretary
combination of trees, sea and mount-
ies with the general public whi
promoters were in Boston Tues-
and superintendent of the show and
ains.
operated with them in making
aking arrangements for per-
the following well-known judges will
The Department of Interior is
good showing at the Convention
and secured some real talent.
officiate:
anxious to work out an inter-park
The party will be in the form
lan to have such well known
Mr. Frank T. Eskrigge has been a
highway connecting Acadia with the
open house in bonor of Comm
(Continued on page 2)
licensed judge of the American Ken-
great National parks of the East in
Cleaves. and a fine program has
nel club for more than twenty years.
cluding Shenandoah, Everglades in
arranged. At 7 o'clock a para
RAILROAD
He has judged all over the United
Florida, Mammoth Cave in Ken-
the prize winning bugle and
States and Canada and is recognized
tucky, Great Smoky Mountains and
corps will be held and all 02
as an authority on sporting dogs.
Mount Royal Island in Lake Superior,
men are requested to be in time
He is a breeder and exhibitor of
according to Secretary Wilbur. This
mediately after the parade
SCHEDULE OUT
cocker spaniels.
highway he believes would promote
congregate at the Headquarts
Mrs. T. E. L. Kemp has bred and
tourist traffic to the chain of parks
honor Mr. Cleaves Refreshmen
exhibited many breeds of dogs. At
and would bring the Eastern beauty
be served and the Lagionnaire
the present time she owns and exhibits
into prominence that would rival
it expressly understood that the
rbor and Ellsworth Service
some of the finest St. Bernards in
that of the Rosemite and Yellow
al public is condially invited
ted by Change to Sum-
America. She has been a licensed
stone and others in the West.
Commande
mer Service
judge of the American Kennel club
The gradual completion of improved
Houlton by
for over twenty years and is licensed
highways is bringing the plans of the
is
remarkable
due
changes are announced in the
to judge more breeds of dogs than
Department to a reality. In the future
there
170
passenger schedule released
any other woman in America.
as soon as the road building program
ed by the
Maine Central Railroad. Bar
Mr. Wilmont R. Evans has been a
is
more advanced a special National
tion
of
the
and Eastern Maine are affect-
breeder and exhibitor of terriers for a
Park highway will be laid out over
of
the
local
e changes which are effective
great many years and is considered
special routes and tourists can take in
From
as follows:
one of the best terrier judges in Ameri-
the scenic wonders of the East over
the
ca.
this one route. The plans are now be
predomman!
forth-Bar Harbor Service
Mrs. John B. Hadaway has for many
ing discussed and drawn up in the
, Coach Service is maintained
years been a breeder and exhibitor of
Department of Interior offices.
Ellsworth and Bar Harbor,
toy dogs. She has owned and judged
'It is my second visit here
ng to and from all trains.
some of the finest Champion Pekin-
Secretary Wilbur, though my
ave Ellsworth, Monday and
ese in America and is considered one
Acadia, for I was on M:
at 7.15, Wednesday, Thurs
of America's most famous toy judges.
Island the first time 30
iday and Saturday at 7.35
Mr. C. N. Grey was for many years
am greatly impressed by the
unday at 7.10 a. m., Monday
secretary of the Boston Terrier club
spirit of the community and there
and Saturday at 4.15 p. m.,
of America and is a prominent exhibi-
be a great future for this project
day, Thursday and Friday at
tor of Boston terriers, and has a li-
Continuing he spoke of the
m. In the reverse direction
cense to judge all breeds of dogs and
combination which Acade offers
ave Bar Harbor, Maine Cen-
has probably judged at more shows
the comination of trees, mountaids
Continued on page 6)
(Contin ued on page 2)
(Continued page
Now the Famous
S FORMULA
ABC Spinner at
ANOW AVID
IS ANNOUNCED
hington page 20F2
that an Eastern Maine and Bar Har-
tion of "Tonight or Never"
bot man has held this post. Mr.
(Continued from page 1)
Dancing Partners"
h
Cleaves had fine support from all of
Sets will be designed by Rot
the Legionnaires and received many
T. Gay, Jonesboro, Grades 6 and 7;
Redington Sharpe, who has come
ork
congratulatory messages and letters.
Mrs.
O.
Y. Thompson, Bar Harbor,
from the Pasadena Theatre in C
Mr. Cleaves was regarded as the
Grade 8.
fornia. Mr. Sharpe, has spent
most logical candidate due to his fine
Heald School
past five years study mg the thea
record in Legion and Civic work.
Miss Clara E. West, Bar Harbor,
here and abroad. Miss Grace Ripl
Telephone 580
Grade 1: Miss Katharine Shaw, Port-
a member of the faculty in the Rh
land, Grade 1; Miss Kathleen Kelley,
Island School of Design, is with
WILBUR VISITS
Dennysville, Grade 2; Miss Hazel
here this summer and has comp
NATIONAL PARK
Swan, Princeton, Grades 2 and 3;
charge of costumes.
(Continued from page 1)
Miss Elizabeth Chadbourne, Dorches-
g Company
ter, Mass., Kindergarten Supervisor;
DORR STATION
the sea which he described as being
Miss Vera G. Wright, Hyde Park,
OPENS SEASO
absolutely unique.
Mass., Kindergarten Assistant.
(Continued from page 1)
"I think that as time goes on," he
Miss Dorothy Bracy, Bar Harbor,
Embroideries
said, with 2 little more discreet
Hulls Cove Primary; Miss Dorothy
publicity the number of visitors here
ornithological problems; Miss H
Spurling, Cranberry Isle, Hulls Cove
Smith, Howard University, Mamm
rniture
is going to greatly increase. The auto
Grammar: Mrs. Pearl Salisbury,
mobile roads are improving and we
ian genetics; Miss Caroline Siler
Bar Harbor, Forest Street; Mrs.
anxious to work out an inter-park
Howard University, Mammalian g
Telephone 332
Myra A. Moon, Hancock, West Eden
etics.
highway. Starting here we can go
Grammar; Mrs. Bertha A. Higgins,
NE
through to the other great parks of
Dining Hall Staff
Hulls Cove, West Eden Primary;
the East. The Eastern parks have H
Mrs. Helen W. Liscomb, Salisbury
Mr. B. F. Gallagher, Philadelp
great variety of scenic wonders to
Pa., Chef; Mrs. Mattie L. Canda
Cove, Emery: Miss Marjorie, Wor-
offer and with a definite system map-
cester, Bar Harbor, Central; Miss
Bar Harbor, Acting Cook; Mr. R.
ped out should measure up to the
Thelma Hanson, Bar Harbor, Salis-
Little, Dedham, Mass., Assistant.
EBBA N. KIRK
Western system which we hear so
bury Cove; Miss Mary Aliberti,
Courses
much about.
Trenton (Ellsworth R. F. D. No. 1),
In addition to the research activ
Secretary and Mrs. Wilbur were
Jordah River; Miss Marion Allen,
of its resident investigators, the D
favored with two days of perfect
Fox
South Paris, Bayside, and Mrs. Ethel-
Station will offer systematic and
weather here and made H thorough
yn J. Remick, Trenton, Narrows.
fied instruction to summer and perri
tour of the Park property and Schood
nent residents of Mount Desert. Th
ic Island. They stayed at Supt. Dorr's
e Hair
HANCOCK
COUNTY
courses will cover such aspects
estate, Oldfarm, arriving and leaving
LEAGUE FORMED
biology and nature study as the ider
by motor.
Secretary and Mrs. Wilbur were de-
(Continued from pgae 1)
fication of plants, (plant taxonom
BAR HARBOR
lighted especially by the handsome
insects (entomology), birds (ornit}
Norman-French structures, nearing
at Ellsworth as part of the holiday
ogy), and both fresh water and mar
completion, the gate houses being
celebration. The games will start at.
animals (zoology); and, additiona
built by Mr. Rockefeller, and with
6 o'clock with the exception of the
the relation of organisms to their
the beautiful driving roads Mr.
holiday when there will be a game
vironment (ecology). These cour
Rockefeller has constructed.
at 2 and another at 4 o'clock.
are so organized that they are flexi
1st
From the mountain summit, where
The schedule:
and can be adapted readily to fit
Secretary Wilbur and Supt. Dorr
particular interests of a given grou
July
joined Chief Ranger B. L. Hadley
Instruction is given as non-technical
-Northeast Harbor at Bar Harbor
ir Harbor
and saw the new structures and where
as possible, especially so to childr
1 -Ellsworth at Southwest Harbor
the Secretary spent more than a few
It is emphasized that no particu
rt Operators.
4
-Bar Harbor VS. Ellsworth
moments in enjoyment of the superb
degree of previous training in biolo
4-Northeast Harbor vs. Southwest
view, the party went over the Cadillac
is required; about half of the regist
(Double header to be played at Ells.)
mountain road from Eagle Lake to
tion last year was in children's grou
8-Southwest Harbor at Ellsworth
Jordan Pond, the gift of Mr. Rocke-
(8-14 years). No "grades" no
Waving
8-Northeast Harbor at Bar Harbor.
feller to the Park.
quirements about the amount
11-Northeast Harbor at Ellsworth
inger Waving
Secretary and Mrs. Wilbur and
collecting and an informality of pre
11-Southwest Harbor at Bar Harbor
Supt. Dorr continued their inspection
entation are special features of the
ing
15--Ellsworth at Southwest Harbor
by going to Somesville where they
courses.
15-Bar Harbor at Northeast Har-
larcel Waving
were met by Chief Mechanic Ralph
The aims of the Dorr Stati
bor
C. Douglas, in the Párk boat, and
throughout may be summarized
ing
18-Bar Harbor at Ellsworth
were taken over to Pryor's Island
follows:
18-Northeast Harbor at Southwest
Facials, Etc.
with its beautiful cabin home, a gift
1.
To develop the scientific attitud
Harbor
to the Park some years ago. Secre-
2.
22- - Ellsworth at Northeast Harbor.
To foster a capacity for origin
tary Wilbur there expressed his agree-
and individual work.
22-Bar Harbor at Southwest Harbor
anent Waving
ment with the opinion of Director Al-
3.
To lay a foundation for possib
25-Northeast Harbor at Bar Harbor
bright that Pryor's Island would be
tion or Dis-
29-Ellsworth at Bar Harbor
future work in biology.
a wonderful place in which to spend
29-Southwest Harbor at Northeast
This season the Dorr Station is u
ive Scalp.
much time, to study or to write.
Harbor
der the resident directorship of D
R. L. Taylor, Assistant Professor
August
Earl Preparations
Thor Electric
Ironer
Biology in the College of William an
1-Northeast Harbor at Ellsworth
rie Earl Facials
Mary, who was in charge of the in
d French Perfumes
Roll 48 in. long--Cost $215.00
1-Bar Harbor at Southwest Harbor
structing staff last year. Previous t
-Ellsworth at Bar Harbor
sh.
IS required; about nair O! one registra-
DORR STATION
tion last year was in children's groups
(8-14 years). No "grades", no re-
quirements about the amount of
collecting and an informality of pres-
OPENS SEASON
entation are special features of these
courses.
6/29/32
The aims of the Dorr Station
throughout may be summarized as
Biological Laboratory Has In-
follows:
creased Number of Students
1. To develop the scientific attitude.
and Investigators
2. To foster a capacity for original
and individual work.
On June 26, the Dorr Station of the
3. To lay a foundation for possible
Mount Desert Island Biologica Lab-
future work in biology.
oratory reopened for the seaso:
1932 under the direction of Dr. I: L
This season the Dorr Station is un-
Taylor with an increase over last
der the resident directorship of Dr.
year in the number of resident
R. L. Taylor, Assistant Professor of
dents and investigators. The
Biology in the College of William and
will be open and meals will be
Mary, who was in charge of the in-
for ten weeks, or up to and including
structing staff last year. Previous t
September 3, 1932. A list of those
the season of 1931, Dr. Taylor spent
who are present at this time is its fol-
sixteen consecutive months on Mt.
lows:
Desert and is well acquainted with the
island as a site for fruitful studies in
Teaching and Research Staff
field biology or nature study.
Dr. R. L. Tayler, Ass't. Professor ei
As the result of the experience of
Biology, College of William and Mary:
last season, it is planned to provide
Mr. W. R. Spofford, Graduate School
prepared check-lists of the plants,
of Biology, Yale University; Mr.
birds and other animals most likely to
A. M. Green, Massachusetts State
be encountered; to furnish regulation
College.
collecting equipment at cost; and to
Investigators and Problems
replace the "per-hour" basis of last
Dr. H. B. Andervont, U. S. Public
year with a simpler and still more in-
Health Service, Induced immunity to
expensive "lump-sum" arrangement.
transplanted cancer; Dr. T. H.
Individual instruction can be furnish-
Werner, Harvard University, A prob-
ed at higher than the group rate.
lem in physiological chemistry under
It may be added that it is possible to
the direction of Dr. L. C. Strong;
offer these courses at a very low rate
Prof. Andrew Lester, H. C. Frick
because of the generosity of the
Training School for Teachers, Pitts-
donors of the laboratory's endowment.
burg, Pa., Problems in field natural
All tuition fees are applied to the
history; Mrs. Andrew Lester, Prob-
work of the laboratory.
lems in field natural history; Mr. S. G.
The courses begin on Tuesday, July
Warner, Harvard Univeristy, The
5 and will continue for eight weeks, or
uterus in relation to cancer; Dr. J. F.
until August 17. Each group will meet
Mueller, New York State College of
either once or twice per week. Each
Forestry, Syracuse University; fresh
session will last about two hours,
water invertebrate zoology: ecology,
which will be spent either indoors or
parasitology; Dr. A. E. Brower,
out-of-doors, or both, depending upon
Maine Forest Service (cooperation
the weather and upon the subject.
with the Dorr Station); Mr. A. M.
Anemone Cave, Otter Cliffs, the
Gillespie, Maine Forest Service (co-
Bowl, and Salisbury Cove, as well as
operating with the Dorr Station):
other interesting localities will be
Mr. A. M. Rich, College of William
visited by these class members who so
and Mary, Algae of Mount Desert;
desire. The Dorr Station is located on
Mr. John Riesman, Harvard Universi-
the grounds of the Jackson Memorial
Laboratory.
2
ty, Mammalian genetics; Mr. K. W.
Percival, University of Maine, Mam-
For further information or for regis-
malian genetics; Mr. B. W. McPhet-
tration, call Dr. R. L. Taylor, or Miss
ers, Bar Harbor, Bird banding and
Mary E. Russeil at the Jackson
ornithological problems; Miss Helen
Memorial Laboratory, Telephone Bar
Harbor 470.
Smith, Howard University, Mammal-
ian genetics; Miss Caroline Silence, (Special to The Bangor Daily News)
Howard University, Mammalian gen-
CALAIS, July 25-Neil Johnson of
etics.
New York, formerly of Robbinston,
Dining Hall Staff
who was held after the accident in
Mr. B. F. Gallagher, Philadelphia
which his car struck and killed Sam
Smith of Eastport near Frost's Corner
Pa., Chef; Mrs. Mattie L. Candage,
on Route 1, was later released by the
Bar Harbor, Acting Cock; Mr. R. A.
authorities when the hearing revealed
Little, Dedham, Mass., Assistant.
that the accident was unavoidable.
Johnson as he approached two
Courses
cars dimmed his lights, but the glare
In addition to the research activity
from the lights of the second cal
of its resident investigators, the Dorr
blinded him, so that he did not sec
Smith. who was walking in the road-
Station will offer systematic and uni-
way. The accident occurred Friday
fied instruction to summer and perma-
night and was investigated by Office:
nent residents of Mount Desert. These Billings.
courses will cover such aspects of
WASHINGTON EDUCATOR
biology and nature study as the identi-
HERE FOR CONFERENCE
fication of plants, (plant taxonomy),
ans 31-1-3922
Dr. H.O Bryant, assistant director
insects (entomology), birds (arnithol-
of the National Park Service, in
ogy), and both fresh water and marine
charge of the Service's educational
animals (zoolegy): and, additionally,
work, and Mrs. Bryant and four child-
the relation of organisms to their en-
ren are at the Homars House, Acadia
vironment (ecology). These courses
National Park Field Headquarters.
are SO organized that they are flexible
Dr. Bryant is here specially for con-
and can be adapted readily to fit the
ference with Supt. George B. Dorr and
particular interests of a given group.
Ranger Naturalist Arthur Stupka,
Instruction is given as non-technically
whose work in the Park this first sea-
as possible. especially so to children.
son is already well known. Dr. Bryant
It is emphasized that no particular
OF
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
WASPINGION
July 6, 1952,
1doale
for
Jun
PERSONAL AND CONFIDENTIAL
Mr. John D. Rocksfeller, Jr.
Broadway
City.
Dear Mr. Rockefeller:
I have just finished reading your several letters of June 29, one of
them addressed to the Secretary of the Interior but to be held for delivery
until further authorization from you, covering your possible donation during
the next twelve months of 2,168.68 acres of land for the Acadia National Park.
The point you make with respect to the occasional use of horse roads by
non and nernlex-
MOTOR
cars,
gene
ing. As you point out, the pressure that the superintendent is under OC-
casionally to show distinguished visitors over these roads by motor at times
has been practically impossible to overcome. Just the other day Superinten-
dent Dorr took the Secretary of the Interior and Mrs. Wilbur by motor over
some of these roads. Nevertheless such pressure can be resisted if that
is to be the decision and all such partiesThereafter can be taken over
the roads in horse-drawn vehicles.
The public situation, however, can be controlled by regulation. The
warmed and patrols not to use the roads
under penalty of law and regulation, and can
the roads contrary to those warnings. The real trouble would occur where
the superintendent would occasi onally suspend the regulations in favor of
occasional distinguished guests.
The only alternate which occurs to us would be for you to handle this
detail by restrictions in the deed of transfer to the effect that no use
of the horse roads by motors within the area involved in the deed, except
for repair or construction purposes, fire fighting purposes, accident, or
prior consent of the donor, shell be made or permitted by the United
States,
in
a
period
writing by the grantor or his heirs. Even under this procedure regulations
would have to be adopted to support and enforce these conditions in the deed.
NARA, R679CCF, Acadia Meschild
Page 20F2
1052 e' yeas'
SERVICE
for
DEBVBIWENT OE THE
Such intendent manner of transferring this particular acreage would place our super-
on notice to keep trespassers off, and himself too to honor the
restrictions of the deed. Such a grant would also assure those who have
fought ful your road projects for a number of years that your ideals for
Teast park carriage drives on these horse roads, would be carried out for rest. at
sion them to stop their opposition. The fact too that the area under discus-
twenty five years. I think this might be helpful in influencing
time strategically controls horse road access to park lands for the first
instead of over lands you privately own would appear to make this a
the Infractions of the restriction would then also be under your control with
logical time and place to have such a provision written into the deed.
otherwise. right to enforce the restriction at your discretion by injunction or
important and of possible appeal to you. For repair purposes it will
I have underlined above a number of exceptions to me
doubtless be necessary occasionally to run light trucks or other cars
over the road as you have in the past. In extreme emergencies caused
by not fire, or, say, accidents caused by runaway horses, we doubtless would
want to deny motor access to the location. Furthermore, should it
happen the that, despite our vigilance, an occasional motor would get past
stood warning signs or patrolling rangers, we should like to have it under-
violation of the restriction. In other words, I think it would be in
and agreed that the arrest of the offender would not operate as a
line with your wishes and plane not to object when, despite rules and
regulations and every other effort put forth by us, occasionally some-
body would by chance get on to these roads.
I submit the above for your consideration.
The question still remains to be solved as to the most effective
and satisfactory manner to patrol the roads, since motors and motorcycles
are to be barred.
you should see advantage in that.
August, and would then be available to discuss this you TY
I am planning to be in Acadda Park for two or three days in early
Sincerely yours,
(Sgd) ARNO B. CAMMEREE
Acting Director.
CC Director Albright
ACADIA NATIONAL PARK
MAINE
MONTHLY REPORT
FILES
JULY, 1932.
000 General
The old order changeth! No longer is Acadia an isolated number of
the national park system, having no contact with it except by corres-
pondence, or by an occasional visit from officials from Washington and
the field services. Acadia has established direct contact by the pres-
ence in the park of Engineer Taylor and Landscape Architect Zimmer, both
of whom are here for six weeks and who are engaged on engineering and
landscape work in connection with development plans. It is good that
such contact has been established. Much should come of it.
In another way the park has taken its place in the sun. A ranger-
naturalist has begun active work in the educational field and his pro-
gram has attracted mich attention and a lot of favorable contment on it
has been heard. The first Acadia Nature Notes, issued in July, proved
a big hit.
The outstanding event of the month should have been the dedication
of the Cadillac Mountain Summit Road. A committee from the Bar Harbor
Chamber of Commerce worked hard on it and planned well, but the weather
nearly wrecked the works. Where thousands should have been in attend-
ance, only a few hundred turned out to brave the fog and rain. Never-
theless, the dedication was accomplished, but without the colorful throng
which would have made the occasion a memorable one. The exercises, after
the symbolic cutting by Superintendent Dorr of 8. satin ribbon stretched
across the road at the mountain summit, were held at the Malvern Hotel in
Bar Harbor, instead of on the mountain, as planned.
The official party comprised:
[G.B.DorR]
Charles Francis Adams, Secretary of the Navy
Joseph M. Dixon, Assistant Secretary of the Interior
Frederick Hale, U. S. Senator from Maine
Wallace White,
"
11
"
John E. Nelson, Congressman - 3d District of Maine
William Tudor Gardiner, Governor of Maine
John G. Winant, Governor of New Hampshire
Norman Case, Governor of Rhode Island
Halph 0. Brewster, Ex-Governor of Maine
C. C. Stetson, Chairman, Maine Development Commission
George B. Dorr, Superintendent, Acedia National Park
John D. Rockefeller, 3d
Charles W. Shea, Chairman, General Committee 3. H. C. of C.
and about four hundred specially invited guests.
-1-
Page,10f2
Stephen Tyng
Mather
Memorial
Plaque
Identification:
7/4/1932
Preferred Structure Name:
Stephen Tyng Mather Memorial Plaque
Structure Number:
MON27
Other Structure Name(s)
Other Structure Name(s):
1.
Mather Plaque
Park:
Acadia National Park
Historic District
Historic District:
No records.
Structure State:
Maine
Structure County:
Hancock
Region:
Northeast
Cluster:
New England
Administrative Unit:
Acadia National Park
LCS ID:
041156
Historical Significance:
National Register Status:
Ineligible - Managed as Resource
National Register Date:
10/31/2007
National Historic Landmark?:
No
Significance Level:
Not Significant
Tyng was indirectly associated w/ cultural history of Acadia NP; plaques
association w/ a listed NR resource not established & lacks individual
Short Significance Description:
significance. It will be managed as a cultural resource with concurrence by ME
SHPO on 10/31/2007.
Bronze plaque at the Cadillac Summit Loop Trail (#33), at the trailhead and
near the parking lot of Cadillac Mountain, commemorates Stephen T. Mather.
Plaque is described and illustrated on pages 260 and 265, Acadia Trails
Pg. 2of2
Treatment Plan, Cultural Landscape Report for the Historic Hiking Trail
System of Acadia National Park.
This bronze memorial plaque recognizes Stephen Tyng Mather and was
installed on July 4, , 1932. Mather was an influential, wealthy Chicago
Long Significance Description:
businessman and outdoorsman. Interior Secretary Franklin Lane invited
Mather in 1914 to better manage the parks. With the assistance of another
University of California (Berkely) graduate, Horace M. Albright, the two led a
vigorous public relations lobying campaign that resulted in Congress
supporting legislation to create the National Park Service. The intended result
was the signing of a bill by President Woodrow Wilson on 08/25/1916 that
established the National Park Service. Mather thus became the first Director of
the National Park Service, and a similar plaque was installed in all 27 national
parks and 33 national monuments up to that time.
Construction Period:
Construction Period:
Historic
Physical Begin Begin Year End End Year
Designer
Event
Year
CE/BCE
Year
CE/BCE
Designer Occupation
Chronology:
1.
Built
1932
CE
Baker,
Sculptor
Bryant
Function and Use:
Primary Historic Function:
Monument (Marker, Plaque)
Primary Current Use:
Monument (Marker, Plaque)
Structure Contains Museum
No
Collections?:
Other Function(s) or Use(s) Historic or Current
Other Functions or Uses:
No records.
Physical Description:
Structure Type:
Outdoor Sculpture
Structural Component(s) Material(s)
Material(s):
1.
Substructure
Granite
2.
Superstructure
Bronze
Cast bronze plaque 34"w X 28 3/4"h w/ bas-relief portrait; attached to vertical
Short Physical Description:
face of granite bedrock, just below the summit of Cadillac Mountain, at the
Cadillac Summit Loop Trail (#33), at the trailhead near the parking lot.
Text says:
"Stephen Tyng Mather July 4, 1867--Jan. 22, 1930 He laid the foundation of
the
ULY 13. 1932
FIVE CENTS A COPY
CHORAL
SOCIETY
FIREWORKS AND BONFIRE
Repeal
ratic
WILL BE ACTIVE
TO CLOSE DEDICATION
returned
tending
To
Hold Programs at Building
mittee of
of rts-Dates to be Announc-
Display on Cadillac Summit as Day Ends
for Na-
ed Later
--Secretary Adams and Admiral Pratt
in New
contin-
The Bar Harbor Choral Society,
----Program Announced.
the 18th
which charmed a large audience in a
who is a
concert of fine choral music given at
The glorious spectacle of a bonfire
It is expected that the mountain
ommittee
the Building of Arts late last season,
1600 feet in the air and fireworks
top win be crowded with thousands of
idacy of
will again be heard this summer, both
shooting into space from the summit
persons as the voices of the speakers
emocratic
at the Casino and in the Building of
of Cadiliac Mountain will be witnessed
colorfully tell of the occasion and its
Arts.
by the thousands who will participate
inception.
TIMES,
Mr Maurice C. Rumsey, conductor
in the dedication of the Mountain
Execu-
To Superintendent George B. Dorr
of the society, who delights in spend-
Road on July 23. When night comes,
unization
of the Acadia National Park, who has
ing his vacation months in carrying
after Charles Francis Adams, Secre-
gret that
done SO much to bring the project
on the work which he founded here so
tary of the Navy; Admiral William B.
oosevelt,
into reality will go the honor of offici-
many years ago, has already inaugur-
Pratt, Chief of Naval Operations;
for the
ally opening the road. Before the offi-
ated this season's rehearsals, and an-
Joseph Dixon, Assistant Secretary of
cial party goes to the summit Superin-
)
nounces some beautiful and signifi-
the Interior; Governor William Tudor
tendent Dorr will cut a ribbon stret-
cant music for the performances.
Gardiner and others have completed
ched across the road as it leaves the
the official exercises on the mountain
G CAR
(Continued on page 2)
Rockefeller road and points skyward.
top, one of the most vivid displays ever
seen in Maine will be touched off.
After the exercises a luncheon will
Desert
GARDEN CLUB TO
be held at the Malvern with a tea at
Badly
Persons many miles. away will
the Kimball House at Northeast Har-
watch the flames of the bonfire shoot
bor from 4 to 6. A dinner and dance
into the air and then will see the fire-
will be held at the Bar Harbor club
Harbor
HOLD BIG SHOW
works that will resemble a meteor
in the evening.
p and R
shower of some astronomer's night-
ning as
mare. The committee in charge of the
It is expected that three destroyers
t at the
dedication program announced today
will be in the harbor for the week-end.
A taxi
Annual Exhibit at Building
of
that the day would be closed with the
The committee headed by Charles
I driven
Arts on Thursday, July 28-
fire and fireworks.
Shea is doing everything possible to
when it
Many Entries
It has been officially learned that
make the dedication an outstanding
walking
Secretary Adams will be the principal
affair and is receiving the support
She was
The Garden club of Mt. Desert will
speaker and that Admiral Pratt will
and encouragement of the businessmen
mediate
hold its annual flower show on Thurs-
also speak. At first it was feared that
and townfolks
at the
day, July 28th, from 3-8 o'clock, day-
it would be impossible to arrange for
Secretary Adams and Admiral
is bad-
light saving time at the Building of
a cabinet member to be present but
Pratt are expécted to arrive early
ition is
Arts, Bar Harbor. Admission will be
the Secretary has changed his pro-
Saturday by motor. It is possible that
forseen
small.
gram SO that he may take part in the
they may spend Friday night at
Entries in various classes are not
exercises.
Admiral Pratt's summer home in Bel-
ate that
restricted to club members. Any
The official program as now ar
fast. Governor Gardiner has invited
dge was
amateur gardener desiring to submit
ranged will have the day's activities
the five New England Governors to
struck
material for the show may obtain an
start at 12 o'clock, daylight saving
be his guests at the Blaine Mansion
il state-
application blank from the chairma n.
time. A speaker's stand will be erected
Friday night and motor here with
ication
Mrs. James D. Heard. Professional
on the mountain top and the Rt. Rev.
him Saturday morning.
known
gardeners are invited to exhibit,
William T. Manning, Bishop of New
an una-
phlox, aconite, delphi,nium and lilies.
York, will give prayer. He will be
Although flags will fly on the 23d.
d to be.
The flower arrangements are di-
followed by the other speakers.
A
the committee has advised against
xi Ser-
band will be present to add color to
and hopes to discourage decerating
belong
vided into the following classes.
the occasion. In honor of Champlain
by outside interests. It is believed im
anyone
Flower Arrangements
the explorer of Mount Desert, French
practical for the business houses to
olved in
All entries in these classes must be
national airs will be played as well as
profusely decorate with banners and
the fact
bunting for the day.
(Continued on page 2)
our own.
SEE
THE
NEW
HE
BAR
$2.00 A YEAR
THE BAR HARBOR TIMES, WEDNESDA
HOUSANDS WILL WITNESS CADILL
BIG STEP
MOST GLORIOUS OF ALL
RK DEVELOPMENT
ied Of For Many Years
construction Started
iment Project
he
stressed, would do much towards de
veloping the only National Park in the
Northeastern part of the country It
he
was a fundamentn) towards 11.
future development of Acudia
The first nection of the road was
he
surveyed in 1925 un the florts of
the
go
boosters began to best frunt
The
work WHN under the direction of
Waltern G. Hill, National Park Service
engineer and required remarkable skill
in
and 11 lot of difficult engineering In
cidentaliy Mr. Hill in a rative
Maine and WHN greatly interested in
the project from n patriotic standpoint
as well HM commercial.
Construction started after the ur
vey and before 1929, 6,000 lineal feel
of the highway had been graded This
Id
section brought cars to 11 reasonable
of
altitude and offered many scenic
View of Bar Harbor and Frenchmans Bay taken from a typical S
as
(Continued on page 1)
Summit Road. It would be difficult to estimate the number of p
panorama of islands, the sea and the sky. Saturday.
DAY PROGRAM
t Casino.
I guests assemble at Malvern
V
I.A. MEETING
MISSION'S ANNUAL CHORAL SO
ves for summit to arrive by
cut ribbon as party enters
HELD THURSDAY MEETING JULY 27 IN TWO CO
nit starts with band and the
asy will preside.
ern for official party.
Representative Group Hears Com-
Kenarden Lodge WIII Be Opened
Director Rumsey An
etic Field.
mittee Reports and Discusses
For Session
orful and Attractive
ty at Kimball House.
Season's Activities
for Future 1
e at Bar Harbor Club for
Kunarden Lodge closed for the last
The Bar Harbor Villa Improve-
ason continues its gracious tradi-
Musical gaiety and a
t display from summit with
ment Association held it first meet-
tion. Through the kind invitation of
be lacking hore this sea.
it display in harbor.
ing of the season at the M. C. A.
Mrs. John Dorrance the annual meet-
to plans of the Bar I
AVING TIME:
building on Thursday morning. The
ing of the Maine Sea Coast Mission
Society. Two concerts H
(Continued on page 4)
(Continued on page 4)
(Continued on p
JULY
FIVE CENTS A COPY
NUMBER 942
MOUNTA ROAD DEDICATION
ARRANGEMENTS COMPLETE
PANORAMAS
FOR A BIG CELEBRATION
Weather Only Thing In Doubt As Village
Prepares For Eventful Day --- Special
Traffic Rules Announced
Bar Harbor will play host to
Admiral and Mrs. Pratt will arrive
thousands of visitors and entertain
Friday evening and Saturday morning
them well Saturday in an effort to
the hilis of Mt. Decert will greet the
make the dedication of the Cadillac
Secretary of the Navy, Charles Francis
Mountain Summit Road one of the
Adam:, Governor William Tudor
biggest events in the history of this
Gardiner, Assistant Secretary of the
section of the State. The stage is set
Interior Joseph Dixon, Senator Fred-
and the curtain ready to risc. All
crick Hale, Congressman John Nelson,
details for handling traffic end taking
Governor Norman S. Case of Rhode
care of official and non-official guests
Island, Governor Stanley C. Wilson
have been outlined. The program is
of Vermont and Governor John C.
arranged. Special rule3 and regula-
Winant of New Hampshire.
tions for the day have been made.
Precording nd following there
The Weather Man alone now holds
official guests will be hundred of
the magic wand that brings success or
cars from every section of New Enz-
failure.
land with folk3 who will witness the
Thursday morning the new Coast
exercises. The dedication has had na-
Guard cutter "Cayuga" will steam in-
tionwide publicity and it is expected
to port to be followed before Friday
that the week-end population of Bar
noon by three Navy destroyers, the
Harbor will be much greater than
pical section of the Cadillac Mountain
Goof, Tillman and Bainbridge in
usual. The committee has not ven-
r of persons who will gaze upon this
command of Captain R. A. White.
(Continued on page 4)
EDSEL FORD TO PRESENT PRIZE
SOCIETY
HOTEL MAN HAS
Edsel Ford, son of the famous motor magnate who is
at his Seal Harbor summer home, will personally pre-
sent a $50 prize to the winner of one of the classes at
the Dog Show to be held at the Casino, Saturday from
CONCERTS RARE COLLECTION
10 o'clock in the morning until 10 o'clock in the even-
ing. Mr. Ford has assured the committee that he
would be on hand as the prizes are announced to make
his award.
nsey Announces Col-
Mr. Severance, Newport Manager
It is expected that over 200 highbred dogs will be on
Attractive Programs
Owns Library of Cook Books as
display at the Show from many sections of the coun-
uture Dates
Unique Hobby
try and in some instances from foreign countries. The
committee has been working hard to make this first
ty and activity will not
List Mrs. Elizaboth Raffold, famous
official show a big success.
the season, according
English culinary artist of the 18th
The show will be 2 part of the official Dedication
10 Hair Hurbor Choral
century as one of the World's busiest
Day program and the visiting notables will attend.
concerts are to be givan,
women. Those who have many differ-
lued on page 6)
(Continued on page 6)
benent
to
the
community
urge
a
greater
and
more
hand work from the vacation schools
widespread interest in the activities of the V. I. A. to the end
thousand
on display. The things that the child-
that all Bar Harbor may benefit by intelligent discussion and
that wh
ren do always carry their appeal and
constructive action on matters of community interest.
dreaded
the workmanship and artistry of those
account
who make "Maine So Coast Mission
populati
MUCH PRELIMINARY WORK
PLANS ALL SET FOR DEDI-
Rugs" is appreciated wherever they
NECESSARY BEFORE ROAD
are known. The meeting lasts but one
Myth
CATION PROGRAM HUGE
snakes a
BECAME REALITY
CROWD EXPECTED
hour. Its setting by the ocean is
of wide
beautiful. The service for which it
these ar
(Continued from page 1)
(Continued from page 1)
stands has an appeal than which there
panoramas, but the bald top of
is none more worthy. The attend-
they per
tured to estimate the number of visi-
surdity.
Cadillac off in the distance was in-
tors who will be in town for the day.
anco should be the largest in the his-
question
triguing to those who love nature
The program will start Friday
tory of the Society.
acquaint
and wanted to go the limit in their
evening when a dance will be held st
At eight p. m., there will be a
creature
inspection of the Park.
the Casino for the men from the visit-
demonstration of the work of the
The
In 1929 the National Park Service
ing ships. Music will be furnished by
Mission at the Congregational church
farmers
requested the Bureau of Public
Holt's Melody Boys and the Com-
to which all interested are invited.
in the a
Roads to lay out the highway to the
mittce has requested as many ladies
Among those expected to be present
of their
mountain top. This work was done
as possible to attend to provide danc-
as directors and sponsors are the fol-
its past
by the J. P. McCabe Company of
ing partners for the visitors.
lowing: Rev. Henry Van Dyke, D.D.,
of time,
Boston, under contract.
Saturday's program will commence
Honorary President; Rev. Warren J.
the milk
The construction work was difficu.t
with the opening of the Dog Show at
Moulton, D.D., president of Bangor
over bee
and required a maximum of engineer-
the Casino at 10 o'clock at which over
Theological Seminary: Mrs. John
servor.
ing skill. Some of the work was car-
200 canines from every section of the
Markoe of Philadelphia, Rev Wm.
any riqu
ried on in the winter months and this
country will be on display. Edsel
Adams Brown, D.D., of Union Theo-
"milk"
brought additional hardships. The
Ford will make 11 personal presentation
legical Seminary: Mrs. Frank B.
a tables
sturdy engineers kept on the job
of his $50 prize to a winner of one of
Rowell of New York, Col., Wm. Jay
come ne
however and blasted their way
the classes.
Schieffelin of New York, Miss Myrtice
milk. T
through great barriers of stone,
At 11 o'clock the official party will
D. Cheney, Chairman National Phil-
snakes-
around jagged cliffs onward to the
assemble at the Malvern to be escerted
anthorpy Sigma Kappa Sorority;
their fav
summit. Nothing stood in their way
to the summit by Stato and National
Mrs. Lea McI. Luquer, New York:
There
to reach the 1500 foot top of Cadillac
Park police. As the party enters
Miss Harriet V. C. Ogden, New York;
take the
with a small degree of grade on the
the Summit Road. Superintendent
and Mr. Edward K. Dunham, Jr., of
mouths :
road. In some instances many hun-
George B. Dorr of the Park will
New York.
has beer
dreds of feet of highway were built
cut a ribbon that serves as a silken
For 11 number of years the Congre-
snake de
across difficult places to eliminate a
barrier across the highway and will
gational church of Bar Harbor and in
striking.
high hili or rise. A minimum number
officially open the road. To Superin
more recent times others of the church-
the ir you
of men were injured in the construc-
tendent Dorr the honor is given ns he
03 in town have given over their
one rattl
tion work.
is considered one of the chief workers
vicos the last Wednesday of July to
skins, an
The road cost $350,000 and is con-
for the realization of the project.
the Maine Sea Coast Mission. The
twice a
sidered one of America's finest scenic
When the party arrives on the sum-
staff of that society who remain over
cannot b
drives. It leaves the Rockefeller
mit, the Bar Harbor Band will greet
from the annual meetin are a group
of its rat
road which crosses the flank of Cadil-
them with an inspiring air. The musi-
of talented prople from whom m. y be
To pull t
lac, just above Echo Lake.
cians will start playing at 11.30 and
expected not only inspiration but orig-
does not
It was constructed by the Federal
will play at intervals throughout the
inal entertainment.
time; ne
Bureau of Public Roads, under the
program.
This year as usual-Wednesday
old. Sna
direction of Leo Grossman, Civil
The official party will sit on a spe-
evening, July 27, at 8 o'clock daylight
down bef
Engineer and except for a stretch of
cially built platform and ex-Justice
time-three will be a demonstration
of the my
400 feet climbs continuously, The
B. Deasy will preside. The Right
worthy of their reputation. What will
understoo
grade at a maximum is seven percent
Reverend William T. Manning, Bishop
happen has not been disclosed by the
and the average grade is five percent.
of New York will offer prayer to be
superintendent, Rev. Orville J. Gup-
V.
I.
A.
Ninety percent is rock elevation and
followed by Senator Hale as the first
till. He assures us that the talent
one of the cuts is through a hundred
speaker. Congressman Nelson, Gov.
represented by his staff never was
(C
yards of slid ledge. The road is 22
Gardiner, Gov. Wilson, Gov. Winant,
finer.
feet wide and of bituminous macadam.
Gov. Case, Secretary Adams,
As-
One year, tableaux and a pageant
president
The surface is very hard and durable
sistant Secretary Dixon, will
then
of performance created an occasion
Blair, ope
and is designed to withstand the
speak in the order named with
Mr.
that is still remembered. Last year a
remarks i
severest tests.
Dixon giving the principal address.
motion picture of the Sunbeam in ac-
bers to ca
Saturday afternoon the highway
The visiting Governors will offer
tion realistically presented the work
former ye
will officially become a part of the
greetings from their respective States.
of the Mission.
The se
National Park and the dreams of
Taps will be sounded at the close of
read the
those who have done so much to see
the program in respect to the memory
Pond untir after four o'clock, d. 8. t.
which was
the development of Mt. Desert will
of the late Dr. Charles Eliot who was
No cars can turn on the summit
tember, 19
come true. Thus at sunrise or sunset,
one of the founders of the Park.
road except at the round turn at the
Richard
by sunlight and moonlight motorists
The official party will have lunch
top.
treasurer,
may witness the ever changing panor-
at the Malvern 2 o'clock and will
The exercises on the summit start
the associ
rama from the skies.
be escorted to places of interest on
at noon and no cars will be allowed to
quite satis
From the summit, the variety of
Mt. Desert in the afternoon, attend-
enter the road until 1.45 p. m.
Mr. Rov
views are unequalled in many in-
ing the Dog Show, a ball game and
Traffic must be kept moving, unob-
tion of Ha
stances. The ocean, lakes, distant
having tea at the Kimball House at
structed.
The speed limit will be
of the Path
peaks, islands, towns and streams are
Northeast Harbor at 4.30. At 4
maximum 30 miles an hour and mini-
will not be
off in the distance to be seen.
o'clock a ball game between Ells-
mum 25 miles per hour.
mer on acc
may witness
at the Malvern at o'clock and will
at noon and no cars will be allowed to
rama from the skies.
be excorted to praces of interone on
enter the road until 1.45 1. m.
Mr
From the summit the variety
Mt Desert n the afternoon, attend
Traffic must be kept moving. unob.
tion of
views are unequalled in many in
ink the Dog Show. H ball game and
structed. The speed limit will be
of the
stances. The ocean. lakes. distant
having tea at the Kimball House at
maximum 30 miles an hour and mini-
will
peaks, islands, towns and streams are
Northeast Harber at 4.30
At
1
mum 25 miles per hour.
mer on
off in the distance to be seen
wiclock a ball xame etween Ells
No cars will be left on the summit
worth and Bar Harbor will be herd 41
resigna
Perhaps the most effective picture
or summit road during the exercises.
regret:
can be obtained at sunrise As Old
the Athletic Field.
Drivers must take their families or
Sol peeks his head over the eastern
180'clock in the evening a dinner
meeting
horizon, staging a beautiful show of and dance will be held at the Bar
parties to the top and return to the
Associa
various parking places in town. Spe-
which
many colors, one watches the ur Harbor club for the official party and
cial buses will transport the drivere
several
rounding country awaken from its their guests.
free of charge to the Summit for the
At
slumbers.
The day will close with one of the
exercises for those who have tickets
Benjan
The lonely twinkle of Mt. Desert
finest spectacles of all. From the
which will be presented each driver.
on the
Rock lighthouse fades away. Slim
summit of Cadillar, 1600 feet in the
Each car will be numbered and af-
tee sin
streamers of smoke arise from the
air a flaming Flag of France in
the exercises parties must be ready
continu
chimney tops below."
fluttering tri-color will sparkle in the
to take their car as the loud speaker
this sea
And off on the northern horizon the
darkness at 9 o'clock. This will be in
announces that their number is com-
meetin;
peak of Old Squaw rising over the
honor of the French discoverers of
ing up the Mountain road. The drivers
on the
Moosehead Highlands appears while a
Mt. Desert and will be followed by a
will leave directly after the exetcises
work d
little to the right, rising between two
grand display of rockets shooting out
in the buses to get their cars in the
with in
hills and usually wreathed with
over the crags and cliffs of the barren
clouds one recognizes the hulking
inking places.
The
mountain top into space. The ships in
outline of Maine's longliest and finest
the harbor will present a searchlight
Evening Rules
port fr
written
peak, rocky Mt. Katahdin.
display as the ir part in the magnificent
This order is by Benjamin L. Had-
the exe
show. No cars will be allowed on the
ley, Chief Ranger:
during
MR. QUIMBY ATTENDS
mountain during the display and chief
In order that there may be no
structiv
CONVENTION IN WEST
ranger Hadley suggests that the ideal
danger of accident either to persons
along
place to see the fireworks will be from
or automobiles, the Cadillac Moun-
William Quimby, one of the town's
the town or in the harbor.
tain Summit Road will be closed at
loading business men, is on his way to
The visiting Governors will spend
8 p. m., daylight saving time, Satur-
Los Angeles, California, where next
the night with Governor Gardiner at
day, July 23, and will remain closed
To
week he will attend the great Masonic
Augusta and will motor here Satur-
during the program of fireworks.
Yuratn
drilled
gathering, the convention of the Su-
day morning. While here Secretary
After the program the road will again
turned
preme Councilo the Shrine of North
Adams will be the guest of Poter
be opened to motor traffic. Any auto-
Insert
America. Mr. Quimby represents
Augustus Jay at the Broakwater on
mobiles on the summit road at eight
Anah Temple of Bangor, to which
the Shore Path and Admiral and Mrs.
o'clock must leave the mountain.
Mr.
Masons of this district belong, as a
Pratt and aide will be guests of Mr.
The fireworks display will be seen
has beer
delegate. He is one of the outstanding
and Mrs. Murshall Langhorne at
more effectively from the vinage of
and that
Masons of the section and has long
Saltair. Mr. Dixon will be enter-
Bar Harbor, or from the waters of the
of the
been one of the most interested and
tained by Superintendent George
harbor. The dispay win be put on in
twenty
active members of the order, in its
B: Dorr.
confunction with a searchright display
Harbor
various bodies, here. Mr. Quimby is
from the nvvl veseela anchored in
to preser
Past Master of Bar Harbor Lodge,
Special traffic regulations will be
Frenchman's Bay. Points of vantage
tion" ca
all members of which have
effective on the Mountain Road Satur-
in Bar Harbor from which the
fire-
One
expressed their satisfaction in having
day.
works can be seen are: Cromwell Har
not cha
him delogate to the great convention
No cars will be anowed on the
bor Road, at the Building of Arts;
always a
the west.
Summit Road until 10 clock, a. m.
Harden Farm Road near Red Rock
however
No care can park on the Summit
Spring: the Athletic Field; Ledge
more get
THE
Road or along the Mountain Road
lawn
Avenue
Extension
near
the
that
bec
from Eage Lake Road to
Golf
Linica
1932
MT. DESERT HIGHWAY OPENED TO TRAFFIC
New York Times (1857-Current file); Jul 24, 1932; ProQuest Historical Newspapers The New York Times (1851 - 2003)
pg. 15
MT. DESERT HIGHWAY
tional Park was severed at noon to-
Florida were Secretary Adams, Jo-
Cadillac by his government in Que-
day, officially opening the road to
seph M. Dixon, Assistant Secretary
bec exactly 244 years ago.
OPENED TO TRAFFIC
travel.
of the Interior; Senator Frederick
"We come today," he said, "to
dedicate what-many of us regard:as
The dedication ceremonies were
Hale, Representative John E. Nelson,
one of the finest. scenic highways to
held at the summit of Mount Desert,
former Chief Justice L. B. Deasey of
be found in our nation."
Road 1,525 Feet Above Sea Level
where the vast panorama of ocean,
Maine, Governor Wilson of Vermont,
Far below in Frenchman's Bay, at
the foot of the mountain, three de-
forest, mountain and lake which the
Governor Case of Rhode Island and
Leads to Panorama of Ocean,
stroyers rode at anchor durinng the
highway opens to motorists may be
Admiral William B. Pratt.
ceremonies. They were the Bain-
Forest and Lakes.
viewed on every side.
Governor Winant of New Hamp-
bridge, Tillman and Goff. Tonight
George B. Dorr, superintendent of
shire expected to attend but was pre-
they will fire a salute opening a fire-
works display commemorating the
the park, cut the ribbon. Bishop
vented by illness.
French discoverers of Mount Desert
BAR HARBOR, Me., July 23 (AP).-
William T. Manning of New York
Governor Gardiner of Maine spoke
Island. ,
While a distinguished group of men
City pronounced the invocation.
briefly, recalling that the deed to
The 22-foot road is 3.86 miles long,
prominent in public life looked on, a
hard surfaced, and was constructed
Among those assembled for the cere-
Mount Desert Island, on which the
at a cost of $350,000. Its peak is
silken ribbon across the new Cadillac
mony on the highest peak on the At-
park is located, was conveyed to the
1,525 feet above sea level. Nine years
Mountain Highway in Acadia Na-
lantic coast between Labrador and
French nobleman Antoine de la Moth
were required for its completion.
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
MAINE
I
HWAYS
Vol. I
Augusta, Maine, August 1932
No. 5
FEATURES
In This Issue
Page
Cover: ACADIA NATIONAL PARK-Photo by Bradley
PARTICIPATING IN DEDICATION
6
EDITORIAL
7
CADILLAC MOUNTAIN ROAD OFFERS TOP o' THE WORLD
VIEW-By Grace M. Oakes
8
ACADIA-A BOYHOOD DREAM COME TRUE-By B.
Morton Havey
11
ROAD BUILDING PROGRESS ILLUSTRATED IN NEW
SCENIC HIGHWAY-By Wm. A. Grover
12
THE HIGHWAY PROGRAM-By Lucius D. Barrows
13
AN ALLAGASH ADVENTURE-By Frederick Robie
14
BRIDGE DEPARTMENT-By Max L. Wilder
15
YOUR UNCLE SAM HELPS-By R. M. Page
16
MONTHLY TOURS OF THE STATE-By Vico C. Isola
17
GOOD HIGHWAYS SAFELY BUILT-By Walter J. Bren-
nan
19
ODD SHOTS-By Hildreth G. Hawes
21
CLIPPINGS
23
HIGHWAY CONSTRUCTION BULLETIN
28
RECENT LETTINGS
28
CARLTON BRIDGE SHOWS TRAFFIC INCREASE
33
BRIDGE CONSTRUCTION BULLETIN
33
PERSONNEL ACADIA NATIONAL PARK
34
Maine Highways is published each month under direction of the Maine State Highway Commission, State House,
Augusta, Maine. Permission is granted to reprint any matter contained herein, if properly credited. Advertising
rates furnished on request. Submitted material must be accompanied by adequate postage to insure return
and
all
communications should be addressed to the Editor. This magazine is sent gratis to a limited list. Subscription
rates, one dollar per annum; single copies, ten cents. Members of Maine State Highway Commission: Frank A.
Peabody, Edward E. Farnsworth, Willis E. Swift.
B. MORTON HAVEY, Editor.
Source : Haire Highways V. 1,#5 (August, 1932).
2.
Participating In Dedication Exercises, Cadillac
Mountain Road
JOSEPH M. DIXON
CHARLES FRANCIS ADAMS
ADMIRAL WILLIAM V. PRATT
First Assistant Secretary of the
Secretary of the Nary
Chief of Naval Operations
Interior
Department of Navy
WALLACE H. WHITE. JR.
FREDERICK HALE
United States Senator
United States Senator
NORMAN S. CASE
JUDGE LUERE B. DEASY
JOHN C. WINANT
Governor of Rhode Island
Master of Ceremonies
Governor of New Hampshire
Pg. of 3
au Celegram
The Weather
Fair Today and Monday;
Northwest Winds
Portland Sunday Telegro
Herald
7/24/32
DAY JULY 24, 1932
Issued by Portland Maine Publishing
SEVEN CENTS
Company
Opening
Notables Of State And
Nation Attend Opening Of
Cadillac Mountain Road
Maine To Receive
Dixon, Adams, Gardiner, Hale
$1,067,079 From
Join In Tribute To Superin-
U.S. On Road Aid
tendent Of Acadia Park
Highway Commission Will
Put Loan Into More
Of Four Year Work
OUTDOOR PROGRAM CURTAILED
Maine will be entitled to $1,067,079
BECAUSE OF TORRENTIAL RAIN
from the Federal Government for
highway construction under the $120.-
086,000 special fund provided in the
relief bill signed recently by President
Walter Damrosch Leads Cheering As Silver
Hoqver, according to an Associated
Press despatch from Washington,
Band Is Severed; John D. Rockefeller,
Saturday night.
This allotment will be made use of
Jr., Ill, Represented By Son
immediately for completion of Maine's
four year building program and for
special road projects already planned
Special Despatch to The Sunday Telexram
by the State Highway Commission
Bar Harbor, (July 23-Here on the loftiest headland of the
This Information was given the Tele-
entire Atlantic coast, commanding & view in any direction
gram by col. Edward E. Farnsworth
unsurpassed beauty and magnificence, and overlooking a regio
of South Portland, member of the
commission.
rich in historical lore, distinguished representatives of State an
To Be Used Within Year
Nation assembled today to participate in a simple ceremony d
Col Farnsworth said the commis-
great significance not only to the present generation of Ameri
that Especial
caps, but those to follow.
With the severing of a narrow silver- band by Superintez
Centinent on Page 2A; 2nd Column
dent George B. Dorr of Acadia National Park, the wonderful
Find Philadelphia
new highway to the summit of Cadillac Mountain constructed
the at a cost, of $350.000 and opening
Staff Photographer
up & new vista to the pleasure seeking public was formally
Navy
Charles
Woman Slain In
opened, and fitting recognition of this event was voiced by sex
eral of the noted men who came here to "witness its
Arcadia
Speakers Lead
Summer Home
Those who apone paid splendid
Threat To
Minneapolis Man
tributes to the part which Mr. Dorr
and his associates have played in the
consummation of this plan evolvad
in Day Concert
Announces August
several years ago, and Joseph M.
Signs Of Struggle Found
Dixon, assistant secretary of the In-
terior, who delivered the principal
By Husband But
dress of the day. suggested that
ets Dr. Chapman-
Transatlantic Hop
time should be lost in erecting
Weapon Missing
bronce plaque setting forth the gond
work done by Mr. Dorr
)f Maine Take
Other speakers, Charles Francis
Goesan City: TWT July 23. (AP)
Balchen To Pilot. Plane
Adams, Secretary of the Navy; Gov.
With her throat blanned from ear to
William Tudor Gardiner, Clov. NSH
sar and her head nearly severed, the
With 20 Passengers And
man 8. Case of Rhode Island; United
States Senator Frederick Hale and
body of Mrs. Catherine Reynolds, 35,
es Hoover Directs
Crew Of Six
Representative John E. Nelson, also
of Philadelphia, was found today in
lauded Mr. Dorr.
urvey Of Question
a bungalow at Strathmere by her hits-
Unfortunately tiot all of the exer-
band, Robert C. Reynolds, and his
Minneapolis, July 23.-(AP)-Plans
cises could be carried out in the open.
Of Five Day Week
brother.
for a mid-August transatiantic flight
oving to a torrential downpour of
Furniture in the bungalow was up-
from Minneapolis via Montreal,
rain and the dense fog which hung
set and the front room where the
Greenland and Iceland, to Bergen,
over the mountain, but the ribhon
ructs Departments Of Labor
body lay was spattered with blood.
Norway, were announced tonight by
was cut in the presence of a gather.
indicating police said, there had been
L. B. Clark, Minneapolis business man.
ing of about 1,000, including many.
nd Commerce To Study
terrific struggle. In a preliminary
who said Bernt Balchen has been
newspapermen, photographers and
Possibilities Of, Plan
search of the structure and its imme-
engaged as chief pilot.
diate vicinity, investigators could find
Twenty passengers, R crew
of
Continued on Page 2A: 1st Column
six,
no trace of & knife or other capon.
in addition to mall, supplies and first
sshipgion. July 23.-(AP-Presi-
Reynolds and his brother went
Rug Shop
Senter, Randall Dep'ts
Owen, Moore's Great Basement
7/24/1932
Lof 3,
ULEQ rigures Attend rind r-huladelphia
ladillac Road Opening
Woman Murdered
Companed From Page One
Continued Front Page One
ation-sipture operators, and then
the week-and. The bungalow. amail
he enough week to the Hotel Maivers
structure, was completed .for the
there the addresses were delivered-in
blast
month.
1
x ballroom through the courtest of
found the place looked and
haries A. Wesper the proprietor.
strolled beach you two hours,
Standing j MD. Defr
expecting to Zua Reynolds there.
se band marking the format deflice
Pailing to Bodies thin they returned
on of the highway chief
and broke-in the hons
unger.
Reynolds left his from at the
array, forming
bungalow
and
ran
to
of
a
re Council:
neighbor to
Bergeant
the United States
within
of
police,
who
cretary Adams,
took
charge
investigation,
-hn Rockefeller, sidest
questioned
neighbors
as
to
Rocketetist Jr. who built the road
Mrs.
the
foot
is
the
from
One
seen
uch
the
to
yesterday
camit.
appeared
Later
in
father.
who
her
Miss
Jen-
Led
by
waiger
Damroch
world-
into
in
Phila-
and
a
delipida;
had
gone
Harbor.
ago to
red
the
cerentony
simmer usé.
2d
Rev.
William
her par-
of New York. The
ents
and
younger
Harbor Band played selection
then Justice Leure in. Dessy of
to go there in August
Barbor enhounced that, owing to
starts, the rest of the program
# be given in the hotel.
Maine To Get Over
the official party were ST offi-
from four warships sent here for
Million From U.S.
occasion, Secretary Adams and
side. Capt. Harold R. Stark, As-
Continued From Page One
ant Secretary Dixon Admiral WH-
3 Veszie Pratt and Mrs. Pratt Ad-
Federal aid money must be used on
at Pratt's side -Commander
projects to be completed by next July
W. A. Campbell, Governor Gardi-
and Mrs. Gardiner. Gov. John G.
1 and according to special require
ant of New Hampshire Governor
ments as to hours of labor and wage
of Rhade Island and Mrs. Case,
scales fixed by the Federal Govern-
stor Hale Senator Wallace H
ment. The money may be used/ by
lite and Mrs. White, Represents
Nelson and Mrs. Nalson, Ex-Gov-
states to match other Federal aid
. Heigh a Brewster of Deater
money but in Maine's case,
Col.
Mrs. Brewster, Representative
Parasworth said, all regular Federal
aid F. Snow of Bangor and Mrs.
aid funds have been matched/t this
Mr. and Mrs. Blaine a. Viles,
and Mrs. William Viles of
year and the special fund probably
Superintendent Dorr, Bishop
will be used as a direct loan.
ning and Mrs. Manning. Louis 1
Under original plans Maine's four
m of Lawision, John a. Ulter-
of Bangor, Mr. and Mrs. Loren
year highway program will not be
Jimball Miss Margaret Kim-
completed until next yyar. However,
Mr. and Mrs. George L Stebbins
the Highway Department already is
Relation: for Mr.
reteiler, and Mrs. Raiston Chain-
slightly ahead of its schedule and the
a Joy and Mr. and Mrs. Robert
special Federal funds now promised
svere Heal Harbor and New
will enable It to expedite that program
shop Benjamin Brewster of the
atili more this year Such projects as
Jopal Diocene of Maine, who is
have been surveyed already or can
ex-end guest at Northeast Har-
be surveyed and bullt before next
was also present
sistant
Secretary
Dixon,
in
his
July will be built, Col. Parnsworth
- at the hotel brought great-
said. and other projects not included
from President Hoover, who
in the four year program also will be
ratulated the people of Maine
done by the did of the new fund.
costplation of the highway
sater spoke briefly,
The special Federal fund must be
the part which he and Judge
repaid by the states over a period of
then a member of the National
five years beginning in 1938. Repay-
had in handling of the
nient way be made by the deduction
Mouthing is the establishment of
Park, where the new
of one-fifth br the- amount alloped
located and Governer
each state in regular Federal aid
Rhoden Island brought the
funds for each of the five years after
of
dr state
Nelson said: "We
1938. Maine last year obtained special
and from the Federal Government and
here today & wonderful highway
the federal government to
is to repay that amount in live year-
by deductions from its regular Federal
available to all men the match-
f beginning next year.
beauty of this spot. We stand
to tall of early vockigers,
'ancient settlements and the long
and of th east, supreme in
struggle between the French and Ent-
ape Interest
lish for the possession of North
measurably old. this mountain
America. Here the old Acadian for-
ich we stand is in Itself- won-
est, made famous by: Longfellow is
geologic exhibit. Heal the con-
preserved in all its digital bility
first emairaed from the pre-
and diversity.
is sea. Here these mountains
"It is an appropriate destiny that
7 old burst up in molten tury
this spot, of supreme scenic, scien-
a the earth's eattlest crust.
title and historic interest should be
IS cape and sculptured these
preserved unimpaired. uncommercial
which ones looked out across
bed and unscarred for future gen-
allays to the distant age
orations.
of sa age old commis travall
"It seems filling to me." said Gov-
earth's agony. out of the flood
ernor Gardiner, "that this rugged
. from and the fire, this Island
beauty spot of nature, located in
to a beauty and
land rich in historic traditions, com-
manding a sweep of sky, sea and for
there takkown and in
est. of -landscape and shore, unsur
to all the world.
pleased should be the scene of such
i
officests appts: has a fas-
work
Lands Superintedent
"And while many hands and minds
have
holned
3of3
Prominent At Cadillac Road Opening
Governor William Tudor Gardiner and Secretary of the Navy Charles
Upper, left to right, Walter Damrosch of New York, Mrs. Damrosch,
By Staff Photographer
Francis Adams. Lower, Superintendent George B. Dorr of Arcadia National
Park cutting the ribbon for the opening of the road. John D. Rockefeller,
Portland Sunday I
3rd, is standing with Mr. Dorr.
July 24. 193.
Charles Francis Adams, Secretary of the Navy.
Remarks reported in Bar Harbor Times, 7/27/1932
Cadillac Summit Road dedication ceremony.
"Few more brilliant speakers than Secretary Adams ever held an audience in
closest attention; and kit was ringing applause which broke the instant's silence of
tribute when his voice had ceased Secretary Adams' first words were tribute to
Supt. Dorr, his friend, referring to a day 15 years gone by [c. 1917?] when he had
stood with him on Schooner Head and was fascinated by Mr. Dorr's great dreams,
which have now come true...." "
MT. DESERT HIGHWAY OPENED TO TRAFFIC
New York Times (1857-Current file); Jul 24, 1932; ProQuest Historical Newspapers The New York Times
pg. 15
MT. DESERT HIGHWAY
tional Park was severed at noon to-
Florida were Secretary Adams, Jo-
Cadillac by his government in Que-
day, officially opening the road to
seph M. Dixon, Assistant Secretary
bec exactly 244 years ago.
OPENED TO TRAFFIC
"We come today." he said, "to
travel.
of the Interior; Senator Frederick
dedicate what-many of us regard as
The dedication ceremonies were
Hale, Representative John E. Nelson,
one of the finest. scenic highways to
held at the summit of Mount Desert,
former Chief Justice L. B. Deasey of
be found in our nation."
Road 1,525 Feet Above Sea Level
where the vast panorama of ocean,
Maine, Governor Wilson of Vermont,
Far below in Frenchman's Bay, at
the foot of the mountain, three de-
forest, mountain and lake which the
Governor Case of Rhode Island and
Leads to Panorama of Ocean,
stroyers rode at anchor durinng the
highway opens to motorists may be
Admiral William B. Pratt.
ceremonies. They were the Bain-
Forest and Lakes.
viewed on every side.
Governor Winant of New Hamp-
bridge, Tillman and Goff. Tonight
George B. Dorr, superintendent of
shire expected to attend but was pre-
they will fire a salute opening a fire-
works display commemorating the
the park, cut the ribbon. Bishop
vented by illness.
French discoverers of Mount Desert
BAR HARBOR. Me., July 23 (/P).
William T. Manning of New York
Governor Gardiner of Maine spoke
Island.
While a distinguished group of men
City pronounced the invocation.
briefly, recalling that the deed to
The 22-foot road is 3.86 miles long,
hard surfaced, and was constructed
prominent in public life looked on, a
Among those assembled for the cere-
Mount Desert Island, on which the
at a cost of $350,000. Its peak is
silken ribbon across the new Cadillac
mony on the highest peak on the At-
park is located, was conveyed to the
1,525 feet'above sea level. Nine years
Mountain Highway in Acadia Na- lantic coast between Labrador and French nobleman Antoine de la Moth were required for its completion.
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
7/27/1982
roye
1017
CENTS
A
COPY
ON TO
FIREWORKS FRIDAY
OLD CADILLAC STORE
The Committee has announce
ISTRUCTED
ed that the display of fireworks
from the summit of Cadillac
AS ROAD IS DEDICATI
Mountain scheduled for last
Saturday evening as a part of
aucus Chooses 17
the dedication program and
Supt. Dorr Cuts Ribbon to Officially Open
County Conven-
postponed on account of rain,
Instructions to
will be held Friday night at 9
SummitHighway---Speeches of Many
Hodgkins
o'clock. The spectacular show
1600 feet in the air will be
Notables Heard at The Malvern
M. Conners, chair-
touched off to serve as the
ublican Town Com-
town's welcome to the British
Cadillac Mount: in Summit Road,
8.
tional Park, extend my cordial greet-
at a Republican
ships Dragon and Danxe which
great scenic highway to the highest
ings to all present and my congratu-
he Municipal Court
will arrive on that date for the
Point of the Atlantic coast, in Acadia
lations to the people of Maine upon
y evening. There
Tennis Week festivities.
National Park, was dedicated Satur-
the completion of this road."
ixty members of the
No cars will be allowed on the
day; and even the fog and rain which
mountain during the program.
Leaves Under Cloudy Skies
10 elected seventeen
descended upon the Island at the
County convention
The display will be the same us
hour of the exercises failed to dampen
Undaunted by lowering clouds the
rrow and instructed
planned for Saturday.
the enthusiasm of the large group
official party lined up at the Malvern
to vote for Harold
which, gathered for the occasion.
Hotel and motored directly to the
Harbor for the nom-
This "group included the official
summit, where hundreds of people as-
fl. so long as Mr.
sembled for the program.
be a candidate for
RELIEF
BALL
IS
party and many of America's dis-
tinguished citizens.
The Official Party
ation.
President Hoover sent a message by
whether or not in-
Acting Secretary of the Interior,
The official party, other than the
NEXT TUESDAY
37 naval officers were: Hon. Charles
should be sent to
Joseph M. Dixon and the President
was represented by Hon. Charles
Francis Adams, Secretary of the
d on page 7)
Francis Adams, Secretary of the
Navy, his aide, Capt. Harold R.
Navy, whose brilliant address was the
Stark; Hon. Josepb M. Dixon, Acting
COMPETE
Members of Bar Harbor Relief
feature of the occasion, Admiral
Secretary of the Interior: Admiral
William V. Pratt, Mrs. Pratt. side.
Association Working for Social
William V. Pratt, U. S. N., was an-
Lieutenant Commander C. W. A.
and Financial Success of
other notable guest.
NO SHOW
The President's message follows:
Campbell; Hon. William Tudor Gar-
Annual Event
diner, Governor of Maine: Mrs.
"I will be obliged if you will upon
Gardiner; Hon. Norman S. Case.
The annual concert and ball of the
this occasion, the dedication of the
Governor. of Rhode Island; Mrs.
Exhibition
Bar Harbor Relief Association will be
Cadillac Summit Road in Acadia Na-
Case, Hon. Frederick Hale, United
--Many
held at Dreamwood next Tuesday
States Senator from Maine: U. S.
warded
evening, August 2. The artists to be
J. L. KETTERLINUS
Senator Wallece H. White: Mrs
DIED FRIDAY
White, Hot. John E. Nelson. repre-
featured on the entertainment pro-
sentative from the Third Maine I'm
ed being so close to
gram are Edward MacHugh, re-
Was For Many Years Leader in
trict; Mrs. Nelson, Hon Halph (1)
of these wonderful
nowned Scottish radio-baritone and
Summer Life of Bar Harbor
Brewster, ex-Goverror of Maine
1.
Helen C. Place, well known Scottish
Republican candidate, representative
y classes and prizes
Mr. J. Louis Ketterlinus died at his
ributed at the close
dramatic soprano.
to Congress: Mrs. Brewster, Congress
home in St. Augustine, Florida, on
man and Mrs. Donald F Sn of
day evening. John
Members of the Bar Harbor Relief
Friday morning at the age of 80.
Bangor; Hon. and Mrs. Blaine S
arbor received the
Association are working hard to
The death of Mr. Ketterlinus marks
Vites, Miss Viles, Mrs. William Viles
his dogs and was
make the 1932 ball as successful as
the passing of one of Ba: Harbor's
Mrs. Johnston, Supt. George R 14057
offered to the win-
have been its predecessors durirg the
oldest and most prominent summer
of Acadia National Park; Mr 11 R.
ophies. Edsel Ford
past sixteen years. During these
residents. Mr. Ketterlinus had made
Thomas, Mr. and Mrs. John D
to be on hand to
sixteen years, the Relief Association
his summer home in Bar Harbor for
Rockefeller, Jr., Miss Harris, Kt
his prize was un-
has earned and disbursed more than
thirty-five years. He built Bide-a-
Rev. William T. Manning Hishop of
$27,000 for relief work in Bar Harbor.
While, his summer home on the
New York, Mrs. Manning tion John
the various classes
The Association has one hundred and
Shore Path in 1893. Mrs. Ketter-
A. Peters, Judge of the Federal 14
thirty members who pay $5.00 each
linus died here in August, 1930.
triet Court. Mrs leters Judge
19, Judge, Frank T.
per year, and all expenses for the ball
Mr. Ketterlirus was a rative
Richard S. Shaley of the I S Court
5 lbs. dog food by
are paid from this fund, and every
Philadelphia and was long prominent
.:-Winner, A. O.
dollar donated from the sale of tickets
in the business and social life of the
of Claims, Hon. La'urs Brann, Item
1 on page 8)
goes to the relief fund.
(Continued on page 8)
(Continued on part S)
Pq. 20f4
2
RAIN FORCES
NOTABLES GATHER FOR
the ribbon parted. Cadiliac Mountain
They Son Jocus Christ, Who livethy
DEDICATION PROGRAM
Road was formally opened
and migneth with Thee and the Hoty
Hon. Luere B. Deasy
Ghost, God forever and over. Ameni"
H:
(Continued from page 1)
tice of the Supreme Judicial Count of
Movie and still cumeres clicked.
col
cratic candidite for Governor, Hon.
Maine, Master of cotemotti intro-
The bard wert on playing n.rd the
John T. Utterback, Bangor; Mr. rrd
duced Rt. Rev. William T. Marring
exerciser would have in another mo-
My3. Loren Kimball, St Mrs Loren
Bishop of New York, who had come
mert been well under way. But the
Kimball, Sr., Miss Mirgaret Kim-
from his summer home in & mesville,
main descerded st this point and
to
ball, Mr. and Mrs. George> L. Seeb-
and Bishop Manning gave the iavo-
Judge Deary announced edjourn-
firs
3, chair-
birs, S. F. Ralaton, Luperintender.u
cation C9 follows:
ment to the Malvern Hotel. There,
Se
wn Com-
for John D. Rockefe.ler, Jr., Mrs
"O God Our Frither, Whose glory
with but a moment's notice Ches-
of
rpublican
Ralsten, Chauncey D. Joy, Mr. and
is declared to us in the heavens and ir
ter A. Wescott hest throw his beau-
tio
al Court
Mrs. Robert DeRevere of Seal Hi.r
the earth, and Whose footpaths am in
tiful hotel open to the rain-suaked
do
There
bor and New York.
the great waters; we thank Thee for
hundreds who hed been gethered or
ree
ors of the
Rair had begun and fog hed long
the benefits which the opening of this
the mountain top for the exercises of
COT
eventeen
since obscured 'the magnificer.t scenic
highway will bring to many, for the
the day.
do
invention
panorama when the silken barrier AIS
vision of those who planned this un-
At the Malvern the program went
instructed
cut. The Bar Harbor Band under the
dertaking. and for the skill and labour
on as without interruption. Governor
he
Harold
direction of Frederick Wescott had
which have brought 11 in completion
Gardiner, introduced by Judge Deery
St
the nom-
played some spirited marches.
May those who press over this
who WRS at his best in hishappy man.
tio
as Mr.
R
The strains of the National Emblem
road see with new clearnets the wonder
ner of presenting the speakers, re-
idate for
Co
march died away. Supt. George B.
of Thy hardlwork and feel the ner.r.
crived & cordial welcome of applause
for
Dorr stepped forward to the road's
ness of Thy Presence. Open
but he spoke only 11 low words. His
I not in-
barrier, a length of broad white rilk
eyes in see the beauty that in in the
prepared address, however, will be
R
sent to
ribbon. Someone hunded him n pair
world, and to use our opportunities
found in another column
of
of brand new; gleaming seisure
as we should. Ard grant that in this
Hon. Joseph M. Dixon, first resist.
M
Walter Damrosch, the celebrated
time of difficultyour people may turn
ant secretary to Dr. Ray Lyman
ETE
conductor led the cheering. Beside
to Thee and mry learn clresh th
Wilbur, Secretary of the Interior,
M
Supt. Dorr WCS John D. Rockefeller,
our life corriss no: in the tburderce
and acting sectetary in his absomer,
mi
A
3d, representing his father, who was
of the things that we posses but ir
WHY the next speaker He spoke nt
Di
HOW
ill. There was : sripping sound crd
follo the Truth reverled to us in
lengthupon the Park Service, general.
WE
ly, the western parks, etc., grd in
bl
closing paid there should be 2 plaque
The annual conc.
of
HENRI de PARIS
erected for Mr. Dorr during his life
to
tion
Bar Harbor Relief Associa
time Mr. Dixon's address in ar
held at Dreamwood next
other column.
y
CO
RT
ST.
evening, August 2. The artists to
Hair Stylist
BAR HARBOR, ME.
'President Harding," said Judge
07
Deasy, "swid he liked to go to his
featured on the entertainment pro-
be
to give you a satisfactory lasting
own home town to be called Warren
close to
gram are Edward MacHugh, re-
ap
Was Formanent wave.
and our United States Senator says he
vonderful
CO
nowned Scottish radio-baritone and
Summer
likes to be called 'Fred' and I intro-
Helen C. Place, well known Scottish
"achineless
duce Senator Fred Hale."
nd prizes
Se
dramatic soprano.
Mr. J. Louis Ketterlin
Senator Hale spoke briefly but
the close
UIGNOLE
en
gracefully and appropriately, 28 LI
g. John
home in St. Augustine,
rin
Members of the Bar Harbor Relief
Friday morning at the age of Bar Harbor
ways. He paid tribute to Sund Dorr
lived the
st
Association are working hard to
The death of Mr. Ketterlinus n.rks
and congratulated the people of
and was
make the 1932 ball as successful as
the win-
the passing of one of Ba: Harbor's
Mrs. Jo.
D
sel Ford
have been its predecessors durirg the
oldest and most prominent summer
of Acadia
of
hand to
past sixteen years. During these
residents. Mr. Ketterlinus had made
Thomas, Mr. and Mrs John D
sixteen years, the Relief Association
his summer home in Bar Harbor for
was un-
Rockefeller, Jr., Miss Harros Kt
has earned and disbursed more than
thirty-five years. He built Bide-a-
Rev. William T. Manning Hishop of
$27,000 for relief work in Bar Harbor.
While, his summer home on the
S classes
New York, Mrs. Manning tion John
The Association has one hundred and
Shore Path in 1893. Mrs. Ketter
A. Peters, Judge of the Federal the
thirty members who pay $5.00 each
linus died here in August, 1930.
Frank T.
per year and all expenses for the ball
triet Court. Mrs leters Judge
Mr. Ketterlirus was a native of
food by
are paid from this fund, and every
Philadelphia and was long prominent
Richard S. Shaley of the I S Court
fe
A. O.
dollar donated from the sale of tickets
in the business and social life of tha
of Claims, Hon. Lauus Brann, Dean.
h.
goes to the relief fund.
(Continued on page 8)
(Continued pas S)
Col.
49.3014
Who
livetby
Millie
upon
the
nation
seeboard
Park
employees
cooperated
in
ri
nd the Hoty
superb food.
Senator
rangement for traffic and
SPEAKERS:TELL OF
rer. Ameni"
Hile's address found in another
fire protection
The
Ber
Herbor
res clicked.
column
Chrpter America Red Cross had
LAUD EFFORTS OF
ing n.rd the
Judge Deasy then Introduced Con
fine tent up road, ready
another mo-
gressman John E. "Nelson of Maine
for any emergency. Members of
y But the
who paid tribute in his opening Words
George Edwin Kirk Post, 'American
Assistant Secretary Dixon said in
appreciation
point, and
to. the late Stephen T. Mother the
Legion, Harold R. Hodgkins com-
part:
zens.
d edjourn-
first diréctor of the National Park
manding were posted 41 zlong the
"When plans for the dedication of
It see
tel. There,
Service and who laid the foundations
road and made 2 fine appearance.
the Cadillac Mountain Road were first
rügged b
tice Ches-
of
it. He quoted from the inscrip-
Men of the Headqu rters Britery and
considered, it was my understanding
in a la
in his beau-
tion on a bronze plaque outside the
Combet Train, 152d Field Artillery,
that the Sécretary of the Interior
comm
rain-baked
dodr of Mr. Mather's old office which
Capt. E. V. Cleaves, helped in mary
would be present and take an active
forest
gethered or
reads,
in
part:
There
will
never
ways. Bar Harbor police under Chief
part in the ceremonies. Instead of
surp
exercises of
come an end to the good that he had
Abbott were in hand to aid.
that Dr. Wilbur made his visit to
a
V
done,"
Supt. Dorr had his whole Park
Acedia National Park more than a
m
oxtam went
Congressmen Nelson and that as
'family' he calls it, about him.
month ago. At the time, I was at a
Governor
he read thrt he thought thit what
At the other end of the broad silk rib.
loss to understand the procedure, but
Judge Dezyy
Stephen Mother had been to the Ne-
bon. the superirtendent cut. was his
now that I have made my first visit
happy man.
tional Pr.k Service so Gcorge/Buck
Chief Ranger. Berjamin L. Hadley, his
to the park to represent the Secretary
peakers, re-
nem Dorr is to Acadia National/Park
insignia of gold star and black stripes
on this oecasion, the matter is entire-
of applause,
Congressman Nelson's address will be
showing his 13 years in the service.
ly clear. Dr. Wilbur began to hear
found in another column.
words His
Assisting Chief Ranger Hadley were
so mueh about this park that he just
ver, will be
Governor Norman S. Case of
Ranger o. Y. Thompson, Chief Clerk
could not wait until July 23 to get
Rhode Island, bringing the greetings
Carl G: Noweck and Chief Mccheric
here and see it for himself. I and glad
of all the New England states, except
R C. Dougles.
he couldn't, because otherwise I
first paint-
Maine, spoke extemporaneously and
Ray Lyman
At the junction of the road was
might have missed an opportunity to
said that elthough Rhode Island had
he Interior,
Ranger W. B. Campbell, serior of the
visit one of the most beautiful places
not sufficient territory to be Park-
motorcycle men of the park, while
I have ever seen.
his abrance,
He spoke at
minded with great areas, as Secretary
Rangers Vernen A. McQuirn and
"I come from the State of Montans,
Dixon of Montana had sa'd of the
vice, general.
Louis R. Foxler, in charge of moter-
where Glacier National Park and part
western states, yet Rhode Island was
cycle patrol of the motor roads of the
of Yeilowstone are located. I have
etc., and in
blessed with ability to pay the biggest
Park, were about their usual duties
also visited many of the other great
be a plaque
of Federal taxes 2nd so assist the west
ring his life
Supt. Dorr made the mountain's
western parks 80 I have a good be
to be Park-minded.
ess in ar-
escent in the administr. car of the
for comparison, and I believe that you
He spoke with pride of the Atlantic
Park, driven by Ranger Dana H.
have here the most urique memb.
coast's greatest harbor, Rhode Island's
said Judge
Young. Miss Grace M. Orkes. his
the national park system that I have
own Narragansett Bay, and he won all
secretary and Miss Ardra E. Terbell,
seen. For one thing, it is the fir
to go to his
hearts by his manner of speaking, hip
junior clerk, were with him. Only
national park to have been establish
led Warren
appreciativeness, his enthuriasm, his
Ranger Charles Hazs, whose duties
cast of the Mississippi Rivor and
nator says he
cordial good will.
kept him at Sieur de Ments spring,
the only national park in the system
and I intro-
Few more brilliant speakers than
was absent
which is entirely the gift of privat
Secretary Adams ever held an audi
briefly, but
Representing the Federal Govern-
citizens to the people of the Nation
ende in closest attention: and it was
ment in the Park was Kirk K. Stirr-
Acadia National Park also has the
itely, 28 JI
ringing applause which broke the in-
Sund Dorr
son, of Boston, who is in charge here
unique distinction of being the
stant's silence of tribute which came
for the Government of pine blister
member of the system in the
people of
hen his voice had ceased. Judge
rust control.
States proper with an oct.in boundry
Deasy introduced him as a Secretary
Hon. Guy E. Torrey smilirgly
If the proposed Cup# Sable Everglade
of the Navy who knows the navy and
handed the sharp seissors to Supt.
region in Florida becomes it national
its needs, who steers a racing yacht
Derr. Assistant Supt. Lynam stand-
park, this exclusive dist
as well as he guides the destinies of a
ing near. Mr. Torrey was referred to
be taken away from Acadia but
great Governmental Department, and
as a member of the Park "family
ally it will make no differ.
who belongs to America's most dis-
like David O. Rodick and Serenus B
the two regions are so entirely diffe
tinguished family.
Rodick, who have beer much con
ent. Now here else on our
Secretary Adams' first words were
nected with Park work
the Atlantic Coast ill you find
tribute to Supt. Dorr. his friend. re
A distinguished guest always rat.
mountains rearing their heads
ferring to a day 15 years gone by when
ing membership in the Park "famil
directly out of the seit. The mag!
he had stood with him on Schooner
Ix" was near Mr. Derr at the barrier
cent occan lired which
Held and was fascinated by Mr
cutting Judge John A. Peters of
Mr
Dorr's great dreams, which have now
Ellsworth, who was representative
be found on any coastal boundary of
come true. Secretary Adams' address
from this district "at the time the
the United States outside of Alaska
When Secretary Wilbur returned
was
Dorr's great dreams, which have now
Ellsworth, who was representative
be found on any coastal boundary of
come true. Secretary Adams' address
the United States outside of Alaska.
Pg.
from this district "at the time the
is printed in full in another column.
When Secretary Wilbur returned
4 of 4
district at the time the Park was
Judge Deasy then asked for 2 mo-
founded and who, with Senator Hale,
to Washington after his visit to Acadia
ment of silence in tribute to the late
handled much of the work connected
he spoke enthusiastically of the popu-
Charles W. Eliot, president emeritús
with it at Washington.
larity which he believes this National
of Harvard. President Eliot cmae here
Last mention is not least mention
park will enjoy in the future, and the
as a summer resident shortly after the
end in this case two of the most im-
short time that I have been here con-
Civil War. He it was who organized
portent men on the mountain Satur-
vinces me that his prophecy was not
the Hancock County Trustees cf
day wer eLeo Grossmar, C.E., of
idle one. Until recently the people
Public Reservations, a corporation to
Malden. Mass. in charge for the
of the East wave not been national-
which then; as non, was given the
Federal Burezu of Public Roads of the
park conscious in the manner that We
tracts which went tc the formation of
Cadillac Mountain project and Wal-
in the West are. With the exception
the Park. President Eliot was
ters G. Hill, C.E., chief.engineer of the
of this park, there were none last of
through many years closely associated
National Park Service, who built the
the Mississippi River. But, in a very
with Supt. Dorr in this p. rt of the
first section.
quiet and gradual way, this situation
Hon Charles Francis Adams, Sec-
has changed almost entirely in the
Park work as with his assistant super-
last féw years; I might even say in
intendent, A. H. Lynam, Esq.
retary of the Navy, arrived in Bar
Social Affairs
Harbor Saturday and was the guest
the past two years, Back in 1925 or
at Breakwater, of Hon. ard Mrs.
thereabouts, when Congress had more
At the close of the exercises a buffet
Peter Augustus Jay of Washington.
time for such things, it authorized the
lunch was served to more than 200,
establishment of several national
Governor Case of Rhode Island Was
members cf the official party and in-
the guest of Governor and Mr
parks in the East with the idea of ex-
vited guests, including 37 officers from
Gardiner at the Blaine Mansion on
tending the Nation's great system of
the U. S. Destroyers Bainbridge,
National parks to include some of the
Friday night.
Tillman and Goff, lying in the harbor.
Judge Richard S. Whaley, of the
wonder areas of the East, and to bring
This affair was successful in every de-
Federal Court of Claims arrived with
the benefits of the system within
tail in the manner characteristic of
easier reach of a densely populated
Senator Frederick Hale.
the Malvern.
Congressman John E. Nelson and
section of the country.
At the Kimball House in the after-
Mrs. Nelson and their two daughters,
'Already the nucleous of the great
noon the official party was delight-
Eastern Park-to-Park Highway has
motored from Augusta, and went to
fully entertained at tea by Mrs.
Storm Beach cottage to greet Supt.
been officially designated and when it
L. E. Kimball, Sr., Mrs. Loren Kim-
Dorr and this guest, Acting Secretary
is finally worked out, Acadia National
ball and Miss Margaret Kimbin
Park will be one of the best loved
Dixon.
A dinner and dance at the Bar Har-
Admiral Pratt arrived Saturday
Parks on the route. When the people
bor club made a brilliant and appropri-
and was the guest of Mr. and Mrs.
of the densely populated eastern
ate close of the day's program.
Marshall Langhorne of Washington
section of this country become fully
Cooperation with Bar Harbor's
and Bar Harbor it their summer home
national-park conscious as WE now are
hard-working, able and notably sur-
in the West, people search of peace,
here.
cessful committee was complete. Not
Hon. and Mrs. Ralph O. Brewster
of tranquillity will come to Acadia
one det ail Wis missing for the brilliant
were among the guests here for the
National Park in great numbers
success of the occasion and only the
There is something about the sea that
day.
cooperation of the weather gods was
clears tired heads and unravels ex-
Among other well known men pres-
lacking.
ent were Clarence C. Stetson, Wingate
hausted nerves. The beauty that they
Supt. Dorr's entire Park family as-
Cram, Bangor, Hon. Byron Boyd,
drink in from the magnificent scentry
sisted him in responding to the efforts
Augusta, and Hon. J. Frederick
spread before them through the medi-
of the committee in charge which was
um of the Cadillac Mountain road will
Burns, county attorney of Arocstook,
made up as follows:
who was the guest of Mr. and Mrs.
bring visitors back year after year, and
Directors of the Bar Harbor Cham-
make Acadia National Purk on the
David o. Rodick.
ber of Commerce: George F. Berry,
coast of Maine famous the world
Among courtesies extended Supt
John B. Ells, Charles W. Shea, Har-
Dorr, with which he was much pleased
old F. Carter, Archie L. Getchell,
were the Lincoln lcars with drivers,
John H. Stalford, Clarence E Dow,
the use of them being given by the
Gov. Gardiner said:
Tobias L. Roberts, Guy E. Torrey.
Morang-Robinson Co.'s Bar Harbor
Selectmen of Bar Harbor: Alvah
'Two centuries and forty-four
branch.
Abbott. Jilien Emery, Everett W.
years ago today July 23 1665
Johnson, Donald W. MacLeod, Eu-
deed was recorded at Quahael
MT. DESERT RED CROSS
gene H. Page.
that province, the seat then of the
MEETING IS FRIDAY
1.
F. L. Brewer, Gilbert H. Montague,
French Government in America,
Seal Harbor L. B., Deasy, John D.
granted Antcine della Moth Cadillac.
The twelfth annual meeting of the
Rockefeller, Jr., Seal Harbor George
a gentleman of noble family in France,
Mt. Desert Chapter of the American
B.
Dorr, William Endicott, George
the Island of Mt. Descri
Red Cross will be held at the Neigh-
W. Pepper, Northeast Harbor, H. L.
"History has passed: time has
borhood House at Northeast Harbor
Graham Lincoln Cromwell, North-
wrought its works; man has achieved,
on Friday evening, July 29th, at
east Harbor, H. M. Hodgkins, Vance
and with startling diamissal of this
C. MoCormick, Northeast Harbor, A.
8.80 p. in: The speaker will be Mr.
vast space of years, we come today
Eliot Wadsworth, member of the Cen-
Atwater Kent Seth EXLibby D.
this July 23d of 1938-00 dedicate
tral Committee of the American Red
Phillips, Southwest Harbor, A. H.
what many of us regard as one of the
Lynam, W. J. Miller, Southwest
Cross. Reports of the nurse and of
finest sornic highways to be found in
Harbor, George G. McMurtry, W. H.
local committees covering the work of
our Nation. We are honored upon
Thurston, Tremont, C. C. Morrison,
the Chapter during the past year will
this occasion with the previous of
Donald Snow, Bangor, William Mc-
presented, and directors and officers
noted assembly of representative N
for the coming year will be chosen.
Nair. Clarence C. Stetson, Dave H.
our Federal Government: with Chlor
individual
in
n'
REPRODUCED AT THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES
NARA CP, 2679 CCF, Acadia. Mebc. Rpts.
5
ADDRESS ONLY
the Commerce
THE DIRECTOR, NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
WASHINGTON D. C.
UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
WASHINGTON
August 9, 1932.
Personal and Confidential Memorandum for Director Albright:
A matter that I consider important is that should it occur that Mr.
Dorr, Superintendent of Acadia National Park, relinquish that position
by death, or otherwise, to have Mr. Albert H. Lynam, now Assistant Super-
intendent, appointed as superintendent, if for a period no longer than
six months. He is one of Mr. Rockefeller's close confidants, and a man
who has a better knowledge of the park's administration requirements than
Mr. Dorr, or anyone else up there.
There are a lot of matters in Acadia National Park that under ordinary
circumstances would need immediate correction, but which it is not prac-
ticable, or perhaps possible, to correct at this time. Accounts, however,
are in far better shape than they ever have been. I think we need have
no fear that r. Dorr will get into trouble going counter to accounting
practice, because of the fact that Mr. Lynam is in control of the accounts
and Mr.
Nowak is fully conversant with them.
It is possible, of course, that Mr. Dorr will far outlive Mr. Lynam,
since the latter has angina pectoris, but I felt this memorandum should
be made to bring this suggestion to your attention.
are
A. commerce
Acting Director.
Keven
M
MED
See sew draft
Draft
My dear Mr. Secretary:
If it is your judgment that the property colored green on
the enclosed pencil drawing, being 2,168.68 acres, would be a desir-
able addition to Acadia National Park, it would be my pleasure to
deed the same to the United States Government at my convenience during
the next twelve months.
This property is generally speaking bounded on the east
by Acadia National Park (colored red), on the west by the Brown Moun-
tain Road, which is one of the Island's highways, and at two points
on the north by the Eagle Lake Road, another highway. The property
affords the only access from the west to park horse roads. At its
southeast corner, where the horse road enters from the highway, I have
erected and am prepared to turn over as a part of this gift a lodge
house with its garage, also a gate, all for the purpose of affording
control of the entrance to the Park.
As you will recall, all of the horse roads in Acadia National
Park, built with the Government's sanction and wholly at my expense,
have been offered and accepted with the understanding that they are
#for horses, horse-drawn vehicles and pedestrians only, but not for
motor-propelled vehicles". If my offer of this land is accepted, I
feel it should be with the understanding clearly set forth in the
deed that (for a period of twenty-five years from the date of the gift
the horse roads on this land, as well as those in Acadia/Park to which
they give access, will be open only for the use of horses, horse drawn
vehicles and pedestrians and not for motor traffic except with my consent
(or that of by heirs or assigns given on the recommendation and at the
request of the National Park Service. X While it would be ary hope that
these roads would continue for the long future to justify themselves
as horse roads only, I should not be willing, nor would it be in the
public interest were it possible, to seek to impose my views in this
matter for all time. Acceptance of this gift would also carry with
it the right on my part to complete such roads on the property involved
as have already been approved by the Department and are well along.
Very truly,
[JDR].]
The Honorable Ray Lyman Wilbur
Secretary of the Interied
Washington, D. C.
1/12/2016
XFINITY Connect
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+ Font Size -
Jacobson Plaque
From : Ronald Epp
Tue, Jan 12, 2016 11:41 AM
Subject : Jacobson Plaque
To : Rebecca Cole-Will
Cc : Marie Yarborough
Bcc : Maureen Fournier
Dear Becky,
Not to belabor the point, I found a signed letter from GBD in the HCTPR archives
that may relate to the location of the proposed Jacobson plaque. It is dated 8.14.1932
and may be in your archive as well though it was sent to Richard W. Hale, Esq. who
had asked about placing HCTPR & Black House placards within the park.
"I am laying down a principle in regard to the mountain top [Cadillac] that no
notices or placards, no monuments, plaques or memorials shall be placed there
out-of-doors whether on the summit or along the roadside leading to it to
distract people's attention from the one purpose of the road: To exhibit the landscape.
The whole mountain I feel, now opened by the road, should remain as wild as the
foot-paths have left it heretofor with the single exception of what good administration
makes necessary in the way of ranger shelter and a few simply designed rock tables
on the summit, indicating what one is looking at as he turns toward the different
points of the compass."
A concluding paragraph spells out additional concerns which might have been foremost
in his mind since the July 4, 1932 installation of the Mather Memorial had just taken place.
Yet local park policies might now deviate from this norm.
Let me know if you want a copy sent.
Ronald
Ronald H. Epp, Ph.D.
532 Sassafras Dr.
Lebanon, PA 17042
717-272-0801
eppster2@comcast.net
https://web.mail.comcast.net/zimbra/h/printmessage?id=346983&tz=America/New_York&xim
1/1
2
261293
UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
ACADIA NATIONAL PARK
BAR HARBOR, MAINE
OFFICE OF THE SUPERINTENDENT
Amoust 16, 1932.
Dear Richard:
I will take care of your three placards about
the Black House, placing one in the Par office. onein the
pump-house at Sieur de Mento Spring, and the third in our ran-
per station on top of the mountain. I have spoken to Mr. Hed-
ley about it and he will attend to it.
this brings up a point which I went to bring before you
while
it is in my mind. I am laying down a principle in re-
card to the mountain to- that no notices or placeros, no monu-
ments, plaques or memorials shall be placed there out-of-doors
whether or the summit or along the rondside leaRing to it to
distract peo leis attention fro the one purpose of the road:
To exhibit the landscane.>
The whole mounta's I feel, now opened by the road, should
remain 9.3 wild as the foot-paths have left it heretofore with
the single exception of what good cdminlstration maices necessary
for the way of ranger shelter and a fow simply designed rock
tables on the summit, indicating what one is looking at as he
turns toward the dies erent points of the compass.
Some low building where bea may be served or simple meals
be had and visitors if they wish may rest will be needed but
my plan is that any such development shall be kept wholly to
the west of the little ravine that runs across the mountain
top, north and south, dividing it into two portions of which
the western one, slightly lower but with 3. superb sunset view,
is wholly unused in our present layout. This can have its
own semarate entrance and parking ground and not be visible
either on the sky-line from below or conspicuous from the road.
Have the placards left at the Park office.
with regards,
Yours sincerely,
GBD-0
Richard 1. Hele, Esq.,
Box 638
Bar Harbor, Maine.
COPY
August 16, 1932.
My dear Mr. Secretary:
If it is your judgment that the property colored green
on the enclosed pencil drawing, being 2, 168.68 acres, would
be a desirable addition to Acadia National Park, it would be
my pleasure to deed the same to the United States at my con-
venience during the next twelve months.
This property is generally speaking bounded on the
east by Acadia National Park (colored red), on the west by
the Brown Mountain Road, which is one of the Island's highways,
and at two points on the north by the Eagle Lake Road, a nother
highway. The property affords the only access from the west
to park horse roads. At its southwest corner, where the
horse road enters from the highway, I have erected and am pre-
pared to turn over as a part of this gift a lodge house with
its garage, also a gate, all for the purpose of affording con-
trol of the entrance to the Park.
As you will recall, all of the horse roads in Acadia
National Park, built with the Government's sanction and wholly
at my expense, have been offered and accepted with the under-
standing that they are "for horses, horse-drawn vehicles and
pedestrians only, but not for motor-propelled vehicles". If
my offer of this land is accepted, I feel it should be with
the understanding clearly set forth in the deed that for a
period of at least twenty five years from the date of the gift
the horse roads now on this land or which may hereafter be
built thereon will be open only for the use of horses, horse-
drawn vehicles and medestrians and not for motor traffic,
excent with my consent or that of my heirs and assigns given
on the recommendation and at the request of the National Park
Service, and except also when necessary for general road
and roadside maintenance, repair and construction purposes,
fire fighting and in case of accident. While it would
be
my home that these roads would continue for the long future to
justify themselves as horse roads only, I would not be willing
nor would it be in the public interest were it possible, to
seek to impose my views in this matter for all time. Acceptance
of this gift would also carry with it the right on my part to
complete such roads on the property incolved as have already
been approved by the Department and are well along, as well
as the right to clear and make available for horse use any
abandoned horse roads thereon.
Very truly,
Honorable Ray Lyman Wilbur, J.D.R.JR.
Secretary of the Interior,
Washington, D.C.
The Eyrie
Seal Harbor, Maine
August 28g 1933.
Dear Mr. Lynam:
Your letter of August 5th with its enclosure
I am sending you herewith together with a draft of a proposed
letter from me to Secretary Ickes. This I shall be glad to
discuss with you when we meet within the next few days.
I shall also be interested to know if the Eno
property purchase has been closed. If not, I am wondering
whether on the basis of the correspondence which you dug up
and the practical contract delivered to the park under which
Mr. Eno bought the property, Arthur Train could not be again
approached in the matter and be influenced as an executor to
take some decided position. This we can also discuss.
You have already received Mr. Potter Palmer's reply
to
Mr. Cammerer. Of course there is the power of condemnation
in the background; one hates, however, to use it. I am wondering
whether the next step might not be to get someone to write a letter
to the Bar Harbor Times to the general effect that recalling the
opposition t. the new motor road, which largely centered on the
crossing of the mountains by the Beehive, the writer has wondered
why the route might not be changed to go around the north end of
the mountain, which seems to offer no engineering difficulties
but rather to be an infinitely more natural and desirable route
from every point of view and not nearly so defacing to the country
through which it would go, and in addition avoiding the much used
path area in the vicinity of the Beehive. If this suggestion
could be thrown into the arena now while the summer people are here,
might not those who are opposed to the Beehive crossing see in it
an opportunity to get the road changed and they themselves become
proponents of the new route? Please think this over and we will
speak of it together.
Very sincerely,
John's
Mr. A. H. Lynam,
Hull's Cove, Maine.
enc
FILE NO.
2
HALE AND DORR
ORIGINAL FILE COPY
NOT TO LEAVE THE OFFICE
August 30, 1933
Seremus 3. Rodick, Esq.,
Bar Harbor,
Mai no.
Dear Mr. Rodrick:
will you Kindly supply me with some information, or
get it from the Secretary of the Hancock County Trustees for
me?
Mr. Samuel d. Eliott said at the last meeting that the
younger generation of visitors to the Island used new names for the
mountains.
You have recently elected in the Hancock County Trustees,
I am quite sure, the only ones who could be described as the
younger generation. May I have a list of them at your reasonably
early convenience?
Yours very truly,
Rieland wither
Richard V. Hale.
M.K.7.
8-20-73
2682-A
FILE NO.
$
HALE AND DORR
File
ORIGINAL FILE COPY
NOT TO LEAVE THE OFFICE
HomeolicT
September 5, 1933
Edward K. Dunham, Jr.: Esq.,
Seal Harbor,
Maine.
My dear Mr. Dunham:
At the last meeting of the Hancock County Trustees
a question was raised as to the names for the mountains that
are in actual use. Can you tell me, on the enclosed postcard,
what you call the mountain that has a road up it? I should be
grateful.
Yours sincerely,
Richard T. Hale, Jr.
1/5/15
National Park Service
U.S. Department of the Interior
Finding Aid
Arthur Stupka Maine Papers, 1932-1961
CATALOG No. ACAD 58815
ACADIA NATIONAL PARK
BAR HARBOR, MAINE
NORTIEAST
MUSEUM
SERVICES
CENTER
Administrative History
Narrative:
Arthur Stupka (1906?-1999) received bachelor's and master's degrees in zoology from Ohio
State University and attended the Yosemite Field School. He was the first Ranger-Naturalist at
Acadia National Park where he began in the summer of 1932 as the first NPS naturalist at an
eastern park. Stupka continued to work at Acadia until 1935 when he became the first naturalist
at Great Smoky Mountains National Park (GRSM) where he continued to work until his
retirement in 1964. While at GRSM he served as a naturalist and a biologist. After his
retirement he continued to work at GRSM as a volunteer.
1
Although the majority of his NPS career was at GRSM, Stupka's interest in the flora and fauna
of Maine did not end when he left Acadia; he continued to receive the Maine Audubon Society's
"Bulletin" and other publications about flora and fauna in Maine. This collection is due to
Stupka's continued interest in Acadia.
The Maine Audubon Society stopped printing its "Bulletin" in 1956 and began printing the
"Maine Field Naturalist" in conjuction with the Portland Society of Natural History. At the same
time the Portland Society of Natural History, in collaboration with the Maine Audubon Society,
began printing the "Maine Field Observer". The final issue of the "Maine Field Observer" was
November 1961. 2
1
Ellison, George. Mountain passages: natural and cultural history of western North Carolina. The History Press,
2005, 41.Lewis, Ralph H. Museum Curatorship in the National Park Service 1904-1982, 1993, 259. Ohio
Historical Society online:
p://web2.ohiohistory.org/ipac20/ipac.jsp?session=T2X9739550K45.2094&profile=allsoc&uri=link=3100009~!32
1590~!3100001~!3100002&aspect=basic_search&menu=search&ri=1&source=~!horizon&term=Stupka%2C+Arth
ur+--+Slide+collections.&index=#focus accessed 05/07/2010
2
Maine Field Observer, Jan 1956, vol 1, no 1, p 1; Maine Field Observer, Nov 1961, vol 6, no 11, 125.
Arthur Stupka Maine Research Collection - 5
23
noer
UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
art
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
THE REMOVAL 03 THE PRESENT
all
OTTER CLIFFS RADIO SMATION
HANCOCK COUNTY
MATNE
G
October 1932
0
Getter
to
Surve
future Dept
Thing ton
agondo
The Removal of the Present Otter Cliffs Radio Station
This report is made for the purpose of showing that the
present Otter Cliffs Radio Station or any station located on
the present Radio Station Reservation is objectionable to the
establishment of the scenic motor road which has been proposed
following near the shore line around Otter Point, thence cross-
ing Otter Creek Cove and continuing near the shore below the
Black Woods as shown by the map on the following page. A site
on Little Cranberry Island is proposed as a location to which
this station can be moved and pertinent information is furnished
regarding it.
Mr. John D. Rockefeller, Jr., at one time offered to construct
approximately eleven miles of scenic motor road on Mt. Desert
Island for public use at a cost of approximately $4,000,000 under
certain conditions. One condition was that the present Otter Cliff
Radio Station be moved to another location where it would not inter-
fere with the purpose of the scenic motor road
THE
ME XVHI
$2.00 A YEAR
10/26/32
HARBOR
ERAN
MAIL
PARK ATTENDANCE BELIEVED
SE
CARRIER DIES
TO HAVE TOPPED YELLOWSTONE
IN
FULL
Estimated Total Of 237,000 Visitors Within 23,000
Higgins Stricken at
Of Great Western Park's Peak Year--
Odd Follows. Mason
Northbay- In Postal
Acadia Made Best Showing Of All
in Initial Victori
Nearly 30 Years
Score Hung
Attendance at Acadia National
for Eugene H.
With lot of enthur
Park this year is believed to have ex-
Ruddenly last Fri-
ceeded that of the Yellowstone Na-
NEXT ! !
bowling the 1932 lea,
Boothbay, were
tional Park and was within 23,000
Wednesday with the
amily residence on
visitors (f equalling the best year the
What's this. summer again?
turning in a win over
at 2 o'clock, the
great Western wonderland ever had.
First F. E. Davis of Otter
by n score of 141 pir
Ison of the Congre-
By a system of estimates, considered
Creek picks a cluster of big
Carter with n perfect
helating.
reliable by Park officials, they have
healthy raspberries on Oct. 15,
five strings turned in
postal service, a
figured conservatively that the 1932
and now our Isleaford corres.
the evening. Henry
the Bar Harbor
total of visitors at Acadia until Oct.
pondent sends the news that
Tribou, and Morris
liggins would have
1st was 237,000 while published
Arthur Fernald picked a wild
starred for the Odd
birthday on July
Government figures give 1929 the peak
strawberry last week. We alo
Davis, Norman She
then have retired
year at Yellowstone when 260,607 per-
the evidence
Alley were high men "
sons enjoyed its beauties.
And to make the week com-
On Thursday ever
if the late Alonzo
Although not official statements
plete your correspondent while
thony's Y. M. C. A.
irds Higgins, and,
hunting (in vain) for partridge
win over the Clark (
regarding the number of visitors at
was born in Bar
the Western Park which is many years
over Indian Point last Nature
new leam in this yea
ried Miss Anna
older than Acadia and a thousand
day picked is perfect violet!
thony. with 469. an
Boothbay who sur-
times more advertised, has been made
Who's next!
with 472 were the N
son, Ernest, who
this Fall it is generally admitted that
(Continued o
pharmacist, in
practically every park in America
Another son, Fran-
with the exception of Acadia has
18 years ago. A
MRS. GANNETT WILL
Lobsters V
shown great decreases. Figuring on
Higgins of Han-
this basis there is every reason to be-
lster, Mrs. George
lieve that Yellowstone must bow in
GIVE ADDRESS HERE
Carlo
him.
1932 at least to the "little Park on the
before entering
Coast of Maine."
Wobber Was Press
carpenter. During
Republican National Committee-
Last week THE TIMES published
Nation Argued
a man who was
the announcement of a 46% increase
Woman to Discuss the Preal-
knew him and his
at Acadia and stated that the total
dential Situation
BY MRA. Sarth
discharge of the
exceeded 150,000. This was in some
Mail Carrier won for
Southweat Marber
respects right but was certainly mis-
Mrs. Guy P. Gannett. of Portland,
and admiration of
an old film of the Mt
leading. The Park employes who take
National Republican Committeewu-
and fellow carriers
Bar Harbor's first no
take great pride in the record set this
man from Maine, will make an address
dence and goodwill
dated 18Ms. we and
year (of all years) took exceptions to
at the Assessors' Rooms, Wednesday
his routes. He had
The road around
the figures and produced the more im-
evening, Nov. 2, at 8 o'clock. under
many postmasters,
in 1882 for the sum o
pressive amount carefully figured and
the auspices of the Hoover club of Bar
grow from a small
Harbor. sponsored by the women of
An English venuel
checked.
apple quarters to the
the Republican Town Committee
on Band Harbor 11.
Although Yellowstone is somewhat
handsome Federal
IMMA
removed from thickly populated cen-
Water and summer,
Mrs. Gannett in a fine speaker and
Mention in made
ters and not SO easily accessible to
has been prominent in National
years on foot or in
discussion over the
Acadia it has many great centers to
political affairs for some time She
occasion required,
to United States
draw from and has the advantage of
his
work untiringly,
will discuss the institute of the day from
extensive advertising campaigns by
Liberty Diarration
competently.
the standpoint of the present adminis.
railroads and transportation compa-
of antling for the
tration.
though he had suffered
nies, age and fame. To see Acadia
finally doculated that
pressure in recent
It is announced that the public in
be built for 11 The
run ahead of this spot which has been
owledge of any dan-
invited to the meeting and Mrs. C. K.
regarded as one of the Wonders of
tal cause expressions
indition, nor had his
the World is gratifying to all of
Marcyes, vice-chairman of the Repub-
against in the papers
Mrs. Higgins went to
whom have worked so hard to see the
lican Town Committee will give fur
James Home was b
ther details to those who may want
on page 2)
gragational church
(Continued on page 6).
them.
T. Richardso
RONRITE MODEL XI
26 Broadway
New York
November 7, 1932.
Dear Mr. Lynam:
Your letter of November 4th about Mr. Dorr's holdings and
the Wild Gardens of Acadia is received. As you of course know, I
have no interest in either of these matters except as they may
ultimately affect the Park interests. Again, both you and I know
that Mr. Dorr really in the bottom of his heart wants to do the thing
that will make the lands which he has taken such pleasure in acquiring
and which he has so enjoyed owning most useful to the public in the years
to come. On the basis of these two premises, I feel you and I will only
be showing the genuineness of our friendship for Mr. Dorr in seeking
in any way we wisely can to help him to reach a satisfactory solution of
these two problems. To know just what lands are involved in each
ownership, namely, Mr. Dorr's and the Wild Gardens of Acadia, is the
first step. That Mr. Hill can plot for you if you can get the neces-
sary data. To know who are the present directors or trustees of the
Wild Gardens and the terms of incorporation, also the purpose for which
the corporation was created, would help in the study of the problem.
I recognize the difficulty of getting the informationn necessary without
seeming to be inquiring into Mr. Dorr's affairs in an unwarranted way.
Your own judgment will guide you as to how far you can wisely go and I
would not have you take any step that you do not fully approve.
John Very D. truly,
Mr. A. H. Lynam,
Bar Harbor, Maine.
SH
rate Park
Dav
LAW OFFICES
WERE a. DEAS
LBERT H. LYNAM
DEASY, LYNAM, RODICK & RODICK
AVID O. RODICK
SERENUS 5. RODICK
BAR HARBOR BANKING & TRUST BUILDING
BAR HARBOR, MAINE
November 28, 1932.
Mr. John D. Rockefeller, Jr.,
26 Broadway,
New York City.
Dear Mr. Rockefeller:
I have brought up to Mr. Dorr the matter of the land
holdings of the Wild Gardens of Acadia and also of Mr. Darr's
lands, other than his home property, suggesting that the Wild
Gardens Incorporation is not satisfactory and also suggesting
that so me arrangement be made whereby the lands could be
transferred to the Government, under similar conditions as to
their use as now designed for them with the Wild Gardens of
Acadia, and as a memorial to himself, his father and mother.
He did not take kindly to the suggestion. At present
it would be unwise, I think, to try to push it. I can, however,
keep it before him and he may later feel differently.
In the meantime I will prepare a copy of the terms of
the incorporation of the Wild Gardens and the officers and
members for you.
Yours truly,
[A.H.Lynam]
COPY
Pg. I of 3
Last Will, G.B.D. -- Witnessed October 28th, 1918.
I, George Bucknam Dorr, of the Town of Bar Harbor,
Hancock County, State of Maine, do make and publish this my
last will and testament, hereby revoking all wills by me at
any time heretofore made:
I devise and bequeath all my estate, real and personal,
including all property over which I may have any power of
testamentary appointment,
Last Will, Witnessed October 28, 1917, G.B.D.
to the Wild Gardens of Acadia, a corporation organized under
the laws of the State of Maine and having location and its
municipal office in the town of Bar Harbor, Hancock County,
Maine, to hold and employ for the purpose of the corporation
as stated in its act of incorporation and as its directors may
interpret my
Last Will, Witnessed October 28, 1918--G.B.D.-
wishes as to the manner and direction of the property's
employment within the stated limits of these purposes-
In case of my marriage, this will remaining unrevoked, I give,
devise and bequeath all of my property, real and personal,
free from all restrictions, to my wife should she survive me-
In witness whereof I hereunto
Last Will, Witnessed October 28th, 1918, G.B.D.
set my hand and seal this thirtieth day of September in the
year one thousand nine hundred and eighteen-
George Bucknam Dorr
Signed, sealed, published and declared by the said
George Bucknam Dorr, as and for his last will, in the presence
of us, who at his request, in his presence and in the presence
I, George B. Dorr of Bar Harbor, Hancock County,
State of Maine, make and publish this my last will and
testament, intending hereby to revoke all former wills
by me made and to disnose of all property of every kind
wherever situated that I may own or be possessed of at
the time of my decease.
FIRST: I direct my executors to pay my just debts
and funeral expenses as soon as may be after my decease.
SECOND: I give, devise and bequeath to the Wild
Gardens of Acadia, a corporation organized for educational
and scientific purposes, all of my estate, both real,
personal and mixed, to be used by the said corporation
for the purposes now provided in its incorporation and
purposes that may be authorized by any alteration of said
purposes in the future.
THIRD: I hereby nominate and appoint Luere B.
Deasy, Clarence E.Dow and Albert H. Lynam, all of Bar Har-
bor, Maine, as executors of this my last will and testa-
ment, a majority of them to act if any shall die before my
decease or after my decease decline to act. I also direct
that said executors be allowed to serve as such without
giving bond.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF I have hereunto set my hand this
indules
9th day of December in the year of our Lord one thousand
nine hundred and thirty-one.
(sgd) George B.Dorr
Signed, published and declared by the said George B.
Dorr, to be his last will and testament in the presence of us
Pg. 30F3
C
who at his request, in his presence, and in the presence
of one another have subscribed our names as witnesses
thereto, this ninth day of December, in the year of our
Lord one thousand nine hundred and thirty-one.
Natalie C.Small
Bar Harbor, Maine.
Isabelle M. Stover
Bar Harbor,Maine.
Ruth L. Sleeper
Bar Harbor Maine.
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1931 - 1932