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Bar Harbor 19th Century
Bar Harber:
19th-Century
F
29
B3
BAR HARBOR:
S32
1920
THE FORMATIVE YEARS
By
RICHARD A. SAVAGE
A THESIS
Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the
Requirements for the Degree of
Master of Arts
(in History)
The Graduate School
University of Maine
Orono
June, 1970
BAR HARBOR: THE FORMATIVE YEARS
By Richard A. Savage
An Abstract of the Thesis Presented in Partial
Fulfillment of the Requirements for the
Degree of Master of Arts
(in History). June, 1970.
This is a study of the impact of profound social
and economic changes upon the inhabitants of a small
Maine village, Before 1844 Bar Harbor was a humble
fishing and farming hamlet relegated to the poverty of
its neighbors to the east and west. After 1844 all of
this changed, and rapidly. Through the influence of a
few artists, America's growing leisure class "discovered
Bar Harbor, and, almost overnight, the hamlet became a
thriving resort. By 1885 it was second in prestige and
popularity only to Newport.
This thesis examines the "old" Bar Harbor, viewing
it as a typical New England coastal town, and then
analyzes the changes that gave birth to a "new" Bar
Harbor. It is shown that much of the resort's success
can be attributed to the efforts of native Bar Harbor- -
ites, and that only after the difficult early years had
faded into the past were non-residents ready to invest
considerable sums in resort enterprises.
2
By 1870, the local economy was becoming dependent
upon summer residents and tourists. The occasional vis- -
itors of the 1840s were followed by summer boarders, and
after the Civil War, hotels and boarding houses were
built in large numbers. During the 1870s the hotel era
was at its height. But by the early eighties, social
supremacy had passed to the rapidly growing cottage
colony, and the day of the old-time "rusticator" was
gone.
By 1885, the gulf between the boarders and cot- -
tagers was widening. Bar Harbor "society" was becoming
more formal, and the arrival of men of great wealth
clearly charted the path of Bar Harbor's future develop- -
ment. This account terminates in 1885 when the stage
was being set for the ostentation of the "Golden
Nineties. " The pace of life at Bar Harber was quick -
ening, and even the year-round inhabitants exhibited a
new life-style. At least to a degree, provincialism was
giving way to cosmopolitanism. For other Maine residents
there was something to be learned from the Bar Harbor
experience. Tourism offered a way to an improved economy
and a higher standard of living. The lesson was not
lost, and the State of Maine soon became one of the
nation's prime vacationlands.
2
PREFACE
The town of Bar Harbor, Maine, derives its name
from the sand bar that connects the village to nearby Bar
island at ebb tide. Originally known as East Eden, Bar
Harbor was a small and insignificant part of the larger
town of Eden until the middle of the last century. Most
of the history of Eden during the first fifty years after
the town's incorporation centers around its larger com- -
ponents: Hulls Cove, Salisbury Cove, West Eden (Town
Hill), and Eden proper. In consequence, any history of
Bar Harbor must, if it is to begin at the beginning, deal
with the history of the rest of the town of Eden, at
least until after the Civil War when Bar Harbor's prc -
digious and unprecedented growth as a resort thrust the
mother-town into obscurity.
To present-day Americans, and even to some of the
"international jet-set," thoughts of Bar Harbor bring to
mind the wealth and ostentation of the "Gilded Age."
Some still living know well its brief but glorious ren-
naissance during the twenties, Newport of course remains
first in the hearts and minds of most of America's
social elite, though today the memories of Mrs. Astor's
Newport fast are fading into the realm of legend.
3
The fact that the two New England resorts are often
compared. if not equated, speaks well for Bar Harbor, by
far the younger and more remote of the two. Newport has
been a vacation place of note from colonial times, when
the wealthy residents of Charleston, South Carolina fled
the malarial swamps that surrounded that center of early
American culture, and joined with more mundane New York-
ers in sharing Rhode Island's cool and invigorating ocean
breezes. Soon the "summer at Newport" became an inte-
gral part of the lives of America's social set. Other
reserts developed - Saratoga Springs, Southampton, Long
Branch, Nahant, and a few more, but Newport reigned sup-
reme, the giant among American watering places. By
what process, then, did that humble Maine hamlet popu- -
larly called Bar Harbor come to challenge Newport's as-
cendency? And what were the effects of resort develop- -
ment upon the lives of those who made Bar Harbor and en-
virons their year-round home? Certainly the social,
economic, cultural, and political changes that occurred
in Bar Harbor were profound and far-reaching, and it is
the purpose of this thesis to examine and analyze them.
In 1840 Bar Harbor village was populated by members
of four pioneering families - the Hamors, Higginses,
Robertses, and Rodicks; and the Lynams lived at not-too-
distant Schooner Head. While Newporters attended their
gala parties, these hardy people eked out a living as
4
subsistence farmers, or, in the case of the Redicks, as
fishermen. One or two of the younger men in that day of
large families might have gone to sea, but most of the
seafaring members of these families lived in the larger
villages of Eden. For all Edenites life was difficult.
However, such a way of life was not to be their destiny,
for these settlers were beneficiaries as well as captives
of their rugged environment, All around were the unique
beauties of Mount Desert's mountainous eastern shore, and
such beauties could not long remain hidden from the pro- -
bing eyes of those Americans who were striving to create
a distinctly "national" art. Once discovered, an irre- -
sistible and irreversible process would begin, and, at
least during the summer months, the quiet and solitude
that were the historic possessions of the Bar Harbor ro- -
gion, would be shattered.
The "discovery" came in 1844 when Thomas Cole,
founder of the Hudson River School of landscape art,
journeyed to Bar Harbor. Frederic Church, Fitz Hugh Lane
and other artists soon followed, and through their works
(and by word of mouth) the public "discovered Bar Harbor.
Cole and the others merely helped to plant the seeds of
popularity, however, and their widely exhibited canvasses
of Bar Harbor and Mount Desert Island by no means assured
the development of a resort. A positive response was
from the permanent residents was required if Bar Harbor
5
was to grow and prosper.
The economic alternatives to resort development
were not promising. There was not enough timber or lum-
ber for export on a large scale, and barely enough to
sustain local shipbuilding. Shipbuilding held out little
promise as a basic industry once steamers began to re-
place sailing vessels in the 1830s and after. Mount
Desert's soil was too thin and rocky to support large- -
scale farming. Therefore the challenges of building a
resort were welcomed at Bar Harbor. though there were to
be sure a few skeptics, and, with the aid of some outsido
capital, the challenges all were successfully met. The
resulting development of the town from hamlet to world-
famous watering place is one subject of this thesis.
The second area of investigation concerns the
nature and impact of the changes wrought upon the local
inhabitants and the local life-style by the process of
resort development. Certainly the economic changes were
the most far-reaching, New occupations rapidly replaced
the old. Many men and women became salaried workers for
the first time in their lives, while others who nominally
remained "independent" were increasingly dependent upon
the resort trades for their livlihoods. As the resort
grew, a year-round professional class developed, and, at
the other end of the economic spectrum, the growth of an
increasingly affluent cottare colony during the 1870s
6
and 1880s led to the development of an ever larger ser- -
vant class, New demands also were placed upon the local
economy as the nature of the resorters changed and the
wealthy with their distinctive sub-culture began to dis- -
place the more easily serviced rusticators of old.
Culturally Bar Harborites slowly awakened to the
needs of the summer colony, and both boarders and cottag-
ers contributed to the cultural enrichment and enlighten-
ment of the year-round community. Summer residents also
became involved in local politics, and the town's gov- -
ernment was expanded and modernized to meet the needs of
a rapidly growing and heterogeneous community.
Another consequence of change was increased social
stratification. The distinction between resident and
non-resident had always been made, but it now became
necessary to classify further non-residents. Thus there
were boarders (transient and seasonal), and cottagers.
The boarders usually fell into distinct categories -
intellectuals, professionals, artists, politicians,
clerics, or just plain "aristocrats," that is, those with
the correct family tree. Cottagers on the other hand
were either very rich, moderately wealthy, or not quite
SO well-to-do. But despite Bar Harbor's growing sophis-
tication, there remained considerable social intercourse
between and among the various cliques and classes that
constituted Bar Harbor "Society." Even during the 1880s
boarders and cottagers still communicated.
Although town life was at its peak during the
summer months, the cold winds of winter could not dull
the optimism and enthusiasm that had become a part of
Bar Harbor life. The old, routine existence, staid and
static was no longer to be the lot of Bar Harborites.
This study is, then, both a social history of Bar
Harbor - the story of the permanent inhabitants and of
their responses and adjustments to a new way of life,
and a history of Bar Harbor "Society" during its forma-
tive years. This account closes in 1885. for by that
date Bar Harbor's future course of development was clear-
ly charted. A new breed of resorter was becoming dom-
inant, and the foundations were being laid for the ex-
travagance of the "Golden Nineties." Pecumiary emulation
was breeding conspicuous consumption, and Bar Harbor,
like Newport, was to be a showcase for the ostentation
bred by excessive wealth. Bar Harborites were partaking,
albeit in a small way, of the spoils of capitalistic
enterprise.
The story of Bar Harbor's early years could not be
told without the able assistance of innumerable people.
Many native Bar Harborites have shared valuable infor-
mation with me, and Mrs. Barker and Mrs. Snowman in the
Municipal Offices have been most helpful. Special
thanks go to the following advisors whose criticisms
8
have been most valuable: Leslie Decker, John Hakola,
Arthur M. Johnson, and Edward Schriver. The author
also appreciates the many courtesies extended him by
James MacCampbell at Forler Library. Special thanks go
to Robert G. Albion whose encouragement and friendship
have persuaded this student not to abandon history, and
who has always served as an example of what a professor
can and should be.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PROLOGUE.
MOUNT DESERT
10
CHAPTER I.
EDEN
18
CHAPTER II.
BAR HARBOR
39
CHAPTER III.
THE HOTEL ERA
70
CHAPTER IV.
THE SUMMER COLONY
98
CHAPTER V.
CONCLUSION
129
BIBLIOGRAPHY.
133
BIOGRAPHY OF THE WRITER.
1 1
73,#1 (2000).
Book Reviews
Inventing Acadia: Artists and Tourists at Mount Desert. By Pamela J.
Belanger. (Hanover, N.H.: University Press of New England. 1999.
Pp. 174. $39.95 paper.)
Inventing Acadia is the companion volume to an exhibition orga-
nized by the Farnsworth Art Museum in Rockland, Maine. Both
media, text and exhibition, give a somewhat new spin to our develop-
ing understanding of the nexus between tourism and nineteenth-
century class formation by considering works of art in theoretically in-
formed material, economic, social, and cultural contexts. Echoing the
cultural geographer David Lowenthal's point that the identity of a na-
tion, in Belanger's words, "is not simply the product of geology, cli-
mate, or the intrinsic physical conditions of place" but the result of "a
complex process in which images and language about the environ-
ment are transformed to serve social, economic, and political needs"
(p. 7), Belanger, along with J. Gray Sweeney, illuminates art's primary
role in the "invention" of a regional identity that is deeply informed
by, as well as fundamentally constitutive of, an emerging national
consciousness.
Belanger's study, accompanied by Sweeney's essay on the invention
of national parks, puts the work of landscape painters in the fore-
ground of this process of invention. Such "artist-explorers," as
Sweeney calls them, as Thomas Cole, Frederic Church, and Fitz-
Hugh Lane did for the region around Mount Desert Island and Bar
Harbor, Maine, what Albert Bierstadt did for the Rocky Mountains.
The painters not only composed dramatic images which drew tourists
to those regions, but they fabricated the very ways of seeing that en-
abled tourists to make sense of the wilderness areas on a range of lev-
els. The artists' work, in essence, helped crystalize the region's reli-
gious and nationalistic significance at the same time as it propelled the
state's commercial development. Here the techniques of art historical
inquiry become especially useful tools for the cultural historian. The
compositional formulae governed by such aesthetic categories as the
sublime, the beautiful, and the picturesque were adapted to topoi
like wilderness, pastoral, and seascape. Internalized by nineteenth-
159
160
THE NEW ENGLAND QUARTERLY
century tourists, such aesthetic criteria became the standard by which
they enjoyed and gave meaning to the rural sites to which they in-
creasingly flocked.
Moreover, in what is by now a fairly familiar art historical formula-
tion, the aesthetic function of landscape representation served many
Americans not only as the basis for a quasi-religious symbolism of na-
ture but as a marker of class status, reassuring them that their place in
the social hierarchy was, as Kenneth Myers in particular made clear, a
"natural" fact based on intuition rather than learning. This reassur-
ek.
ance and its consequent reinforcement of class boundaries was ac-
myers.
complished, for Myers, through an ideological process of "forgetting."
While I find no specific reference to Myers's work in the present vol-
ume, it is clearly beholden to such analysis of the cultural construction
of landscape, and Belanger and Sweeney might have done well to take
this particular point into consideration as a way to refine their own not
always fully sophisticated ideological analysis.
Landscape, as opposed to the much broader category nature, calls
attention to its status as artifact. Aside from their appreciation of the
crucial role played by composition and point of view in making natural
prospects "readable," artists like Cole and Church were quite capable
of altering the actual disposition of what they painted to make it more
theatrical. To offer up a more pristine and powerful vision, they at
times expunged extraneous or man-made details. Insofar as they thus
heightened the visual appeal of the landscapes depicted, artists en-
hanced the region's commercial possibilities. As Belanger notes,
"Wild and compelling pictures of the Island with just a hint of accom-
odation [sic] served to entice tourists to experience Mount Desert
firsthand" (p. 58).
Belanger's ultimately rather conventional art historical analysis
gains much from her patient contrasting of actual site and artistic in-
vention. While continuing to pay close attention to the religious and
nationalistic implications of nature for the artists and their patrons, a
favorite topic in American art scholarship, she sustains an interest in
the ideological subtexts at stake as well. The result is a significant
expansion of our understanding of the role played by image making
in the increasingly consumeristic world of the nineteenth century.
Sweeney's valuable essay makes this role explicit: "In their paintings
of the [Mount Desert] Island, and of American scenery more gener-
ally, Cole and Church self-fashioned themselves to make it appear as
if they acted solely out of concern for higher artistic, cultural, and na-
tional interests. However, it is evident that privately they understood
BOOK REVIEWS
161
how the images they produced directly supported the emerging in-
dustry of tourism, and that these two seemingly dissimilar fields of
production 'one of the high art visual culture of the reigning artist-
explorers and the other of mass tourism' had many interests in com-
mon" (p. 138).
What ties two such dissimilar fields of cultural production together
is the common denominator of consumerism, a process engulfing and
transforming values and relationships at every level in the second half
of the nineteenth century. The production of consumeristic desire vis-
à-vis nature, as Belanger shows, was readily reconcilable with growing
scientific awareness and close observation of the geological distinc-
tiveness of the wilderness prospects portrayed in art. It was also a key
element in the emergence of the preservationist impulses that culmi-
nated in the establishment of Acadia National Park, impulses that
were in turn closely connected to the consolidation of class elitism as
well as to nationalistic sentiments. If Belanger and Sweeney's mode of
analysis at times sounds overly deterministic in its focus on the pro-
motional aspects of art, as in the latter's statement that "for producers
of high art who aimed at attracting elite patrons, feigning a certain
disinterest in the business of art was advantageous" (p. 140), their
general approach comes as the latest installment in an overdue cor-
rection of longstanding scholarly emphasis on the formal analysis and
spiritual interpretation of works of art.
David C. Miller teaches at Allegheny College. He has published on
nineteenth-century American art and literature and is currently work-
ing on a book on visual-verbal interaction in nineteenth-century New
England.
Literary Federalism in the Age of Jefferson: Joseph Dennie and "The
Port Folio," 1801-1811. By William C. Dowling. (Columbia: Uni-
versity of South Carolina Press. 1999. Pp. XV, 127. $24.95.)
Digging for traces of civic republicanism in the Revolutionary and
early national periods is an old game by now, and yet the excavation
continues to yield new insights into American political and cultural
traditions. Frankly acknowledging his indebtedness both to communi-
tarian theorists such as Charles Taylor and to historians of the republi-
can tradition such as Joyce Appleby, William C. Dowling in Literary
Federalism in the Age of Jefferson discovers a common thread of civic
Liberty
of
CULL
Fogiera
1998
OF
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Bar Harbor Club.
TITLE:
The Bar Harbor Club : Bar Harbor, Maine.
IMPRINT: Bar Harbor, Me. : The Club, [1930?]
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B37
OFFICERS
BUILDING COMMITTEE
EDWARD T. STOTESBURY, President
GEORGE G. McMURTRY, Chairman
CECIL BARRET
WILLIAM McNAIR
POTTER PALMER, Vice President
PARKER CORNING
OLIVER G. HALL
JOHN S. ROGERS, Secretary
CECIL BARRET, Treasurer
OLIVER G. HALL, Assistant Treasurer and Clerk
FINANCE COMMITTEE
CECIL BARRET, Chairman
PARKER CORNING
WILLIAM McNAIR
BOARD OF GOVERNORS
GEORGE G. McMURTRY
JOHN S. ROGERS
CECIL BARRET
GEORGE G. McMURTRY
POTTER PALMER
PARKER CORNING
WILLIAM McNAIR
HAROLD A. HOWARD
POTTER PALMER
PHOENIX INGRAHAM
CHARLES B. PIKE
TENNIS COMMITTEE
A. ATWATER KENT
JOSEPH PULITZER
J. L. KETTERLINUS
JOHN S. ROGERS
JOHN S. ROGERS, Chairman
CHARLES L. McCAWLEY
EDWARD T. STOTESBURY
CHESTER P. BARNETT
JOSEPH T. BOWEN, JR.
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
ENTERTAINMENT COMMITTEE
EDWARD T. STOTESBURY, Chairman
CHARLES L. McCAWLEY, Chairman
CECIL BARRET
GEORGE G. McMURTRY
HAROLD A. HOWARD
J. L. KETTERLINUS
WILLIAM McNAIR
PHOENIX INGRAHAM
2
3
INTERNATIONAL
CHARTER MEMBERS
PARKER CORNING
Albany, N. Y.
GEORGE E. DADMUN
New York
AS OF JANUARY 1st, 1932
WALTER DAMROSCH
New York
DR. JOHN DANE
Bar Harbor
All the wives of charter members are also de facto charter members
EDWIN H. DENBY
New York
FREDERICK J. DEVEAU
Groton, Mass.
MRS. ANNE ARCHBOLD
NORMAN S. DIKE
New York
New York
MRS. PAUL M. ARNOLD
MRS. HENRY F. DIMOCK
Washington
Haverford, Pa.
WALTER AYER
JOHN R. EDIE
Washington
Chicago
CHESTER P. BARNETT
H. HOWARD ELLISON
Philadelphia
New York
JOHN HAMPTON BARNES
MRS. ELIZABETH D. ESPY
Cincinnati
Devon, Pa.
CECIL BARRET
MRS. SHEPARD FABBRI
New York
New York
LLEWELLYN BARRY
J. BROOKS FENNO
Boston
New York
MRS. W. G. BEALE
HAROLD FITZ GERALD
New York
Bar Harbor
MRS. SAMUEL BELL, JR.
EDSEL B. FORD
Detroit, Mich.
Philadelphia
Miss CHRISTINE W. BIDDLE
MRS. E. HOWARD GEORGE
Milton, Mass.
Westchester, Pa.
G. HORTON GLOVER
New York
GIST BLAIR
Washington
GERALD BORDEN
EDWIN GOULD
New York
New York
DEFOREST GRANT
New York
JOSEPH T. BOWEN, JR.
Lake Forest, Ill.
ROBERT P. BOWLER
Miss BELL GURNEE
Washington
New York
MRS. EDWARD BROWNING
WILLIAM PIERSON HAMILTON
Santa Barbara, Cal.
Philadelphia, Pa.
HENRY D. BURNHAM
J. M. HARTSHORNE
New York
Boston
JAMES F. BYRNE
HENRY R. HATFIELD
Philadelphia
New York
MRS. MORRIS HAWKES
New York
C. CARROLL CARPENTER
New York
GEORGE C. HECK
New York
MRS. D. B. C. CATHERWOOD
Haverford, Pa.
MRS. D. CRAWFORD CLARK
HAROLD A. HOWARD
Chicago
New York
MRS. PLATT HUNT
New York
Mrs. MARY F. R. CLAY
Philadelphia, Pa.
PHOENIX INGRAHAM
New York
Miss FRANCES COLEMAN
New York
PETER A. JAY
GEORGE E. COLEMAN
Washington
Garden City, N. Y.
E. LEE JONES
McLean, Va.
MINTURN POST COLLINS
New York
DR. LUDWIG KAST
New York
THOMAS G. COOK
New York
DR. FOSTER KENNEDY
New York
4
5
30205
A. ATWATER KENT
Philadelphia
MRS. HOWARD ROBERTS
Philadelphia
J. L. KETTERLINUS
Philadelphia
ARDEN M. ROBBINS
New York
JOHN W. KILBRETH
New York
JULIAN W. ROBBINS
New York
WALTER G. LADD
New York
JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER, JR.
New York
MARSHALL LANGHORNE
Washington
JOHN S. ROGERS
New York
MRS. LOUIS C. LEHR
Washington
FRANK B. ROWELL
New York
MRS. LEA McI. LUQUER
Mt. Kisco, N. Y.
ARTHUR RYLE
New York
MRS. EDWARD P. MAY
Boston
CHARLES E. SAMPSON
New York
DR. D. HUNTER McALPIN
New York
HERBERT L. SATTERLEE
New York
CHARLES L. McCAWLEY
Washington
MRS. EDGAR SCOTT
Lansdowne, Pa.
Miss MILDRED McCORMICK
New York
HENRY SLACK
New York
ROBERT H. McCORMICK
Chicago
MRS. C. MORTON SMITH
Philadelphia
F. H. McCORMICK-GOODHART
Hyattsville, Md.
CAMPBELL STEWARD
Goshen, N. Y.
MRS. F. E. McCORMICK-GOODHART
Hyattsville, Md.
MRS. M. MASTERS STONE
New York
LEANDER McCORMICK-GOODHART
Washington
HOWARD STURGES
Providence
GEORGE G. McMURTRY
New York
THOMAS BELL SWEENEY
Washington
WILLIAM McNAIR
New York
EDWARD T. STOTESBURY
Philadelphia
EDWARD B. MEARS
St. Augustine, Fla.
JOHN B. THAYER
Haverford, Pa.
DR. JAMES F. MITCHELL
Washington
DR. AUGUSTUS THORNDIKE
Boston
GILBERT H. MONTAGUE
New York
H. H. THORNDIKE
Boston
MRS. THOMAS L. MONTGOMERY
Philadelphia
ARTHUR C. TRAIN
New York
WILLIAM S. MOORE
New York
Miss EMILY TREVOR
New York
HENRY MORGENTHAU
New York
WM. JAY TURNER
Germantown, Phila.
DAVE H. MORRIS
New York
JOSEPH E. WHOLEAN
Washington
GEORGE S. MUNSON
Philadelphia
MRS. A. MURRAY YOUNG
New York
MRS. A. MANSFIELD PATTERSON
New York
CHARLES B. PIKE
Chicago
POTTER PALMER
Chicago
WILLIAM PROCTER
Bar Harbor
JOSEPH PULITZER
St. Louis
MRS. M. TAYLOR PYNE
New York
FULTON J. REDMAN
New York
6
7
QUIET DAY AT BAR HARBOR
New York Times (1857-Current file); Aug 2. 1895; ProQuest Historical Newspapers The New York Times
pg. 5
QUIETDAYATBAR HARBOR
Society Takes a Rest at the Opening
of a New Month.
MUCH INTEREST IN OUTDOOR SPORTS
Many Entries for the Tennis Tourna-
ment Which Will Open Mon-
day-Albert Clifford Bar-
ney Entertains.
BAR HARBOR, Aug. 1.-The first day
of August was spent in a rather quiet
manner by society at Bar Harbor. It
seemed as though its members were taking
a' much needed rest before getting into the
whirl- and bustle of social gayety which al-
ways characterizes this month.
Kebo, however, had a lively day, its ten-
nis courts and golf links being crowded
from morning until evening. The grand
tournament on the tennis courts will open
Monday morning. Many already have en-
tered, and the competition doubtless will be
strong.
Albert Clifford Barney gave a dinner and
reception to-night. Twenty-four were pres-
ent at the dinner. At the reception, held
afterward. there was a large attendance.
The whole affair was in honor of Miss
Neeser, who is the guest of Miss Natalie
Barney. Among those present at the dinner
and reception were the Misses Morton, Miss
Stokes, Miss Helen Stokes, Miss Sturgis,
Miss Marzie Sturgis, John Ford of the En-
glish Embassy, the Misses Coles, Mr. Colby,
Charles T. Garland, Julian Gerard, Mr.
Grinnell, Mr. Geary, Count Szechenyi,
Comte Buisseret, Alfred Leghait, and Ma-
vroyeni Bey.
Mrs. Judge Edward Patterson gave a
dinner to-night to a small party of friends,
among whom were Mrs. Thomas Scott, Miss
Bickley, Miss Mary Scott, Mr. and Mrs.
Morris K. Jesup, Mr. and Mrs. Anson
Phelps Stokes, and Mrs. Alfred C. Har-
rison.
Elaborate preparations are being made
for a grand private dinner and dance to be
given by James A. Garland at the coming-
out party of Miss Louise Garland. It will
take place at Kebo.
Miss Pauline Whittler, the daughter of
Gen. Whittier of Boston, is the guest of
Miss Louise Garland, at Edenville. Miss
Lockwood of Boston is also the guest of
Miss Garland.
Edmund Pendleton gave a dinner to-night
to. a large party of friends at his Summer
home, the Barnacles. Among those pres-
ent were Mr. and Mrs. A. Howard Hinkle,
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Dulles, Mr. and Mrs.
William Meldrum Rutherford, Miss Con-
nelly, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Blair, Mrs.
George Place, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Geb-
hard, and Mr. Bowler.
Mr. Joseph Harriman of New-York gave
a dinner to-night to a party of ten friends.
Among those present were J. C. McCoy,
Herbert Harriman, William Laimbeer, Mr.
Lettauer, George T. Newhall, Mr. Hare, and
William Lawrence Green.
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner Further reproduction prohibited without permission
A large ball is to be given to-morrow
night at one of the hotels here. It promises
to be a grand affair. The decorating is being
done by a New-York firm.
Edmond Kelly, Sherlock Swann, and
Mr. Harvey of New-York were enrolled as
members of the Kebo Club to-day.
President Eliot of Harvard College and
Prof. George Peabody, his brother-In-law,
are enjoying a cruise along the Maine
coast. They will return in a few days.
The hotel arrivals to-day were Mrs. S.
C. Thompson, Mrs. D. A. Gilman, Baltimore;
Miss Jennie F. Fales, E. A. Butler, Seattle;
William Garret, F. H. Jerrell, Ipswich;
Mr. Penny, Hartford; C. H. Cressy. Henry
Heaton, D. E. Cross, Boston; T. H. Ben-
nington, Washington: C. B. Church, New-
York; the Rev. Whittimere and Mrs. Whit-
timere, Boston; M. P. Jones, Miss Jones,
New-York; Miss A. L. Bakewell, Philadel-
phia; F. S. Fisher, F. S. Swan, Boston; Mrs.
J. W. S. Wittows, Baltimore; Miss Wittows,
Mrs. Lewis, Mrs. A. J. Moulton, New-York;
Mrs. John B. Morris, Miss Morris, Baltl-
more: Robert Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Henry D.
Cutier, John W. Pierson, Mrs. Maurice Ma-
son, George B. Fletcher, Mr. and Mrs. W.
M. Watson, E. T. Lewis, Mrs. Arthur Sulli-
van, New-York; Miss Gertrude Sheldon,
George T. Howell, Philadelphia; W. A.
Henry, New-York; Mrs. James H. F. Gil-
lete, Chicago.
Miss Mary Gillete, Howard F. Gillete, Mr.
and Mrs. Sullivan, Boston; Charles Eaton,
Mrs. A. E. Douglas, Mrs. Ronald E. Curtis,
John H. Roe, Mrs. Beale, Miss Beale, Miss
M. S. Beale, Miss Isabelle Watts, Mrs. H.
A. Barclay Lenox Miss Barclay, Miss
Dubois, Dr. and Mrs. Clinton Wagner,
New-York; William Disston, Philadelphia;
George S. Monroe, Boston; Miss E. P.
Thayer, Mrs. Lila Witherbee, Miss A. T.
Witherbee, William D. B. Flint. Dr. and
Mrs. Horace Packam, Col. and Mrs. R. W.
Coles. New-York; Mr. and Mrs. S. G.
Dubois, Boston; H. M. Pomeroy, New-York;
Mrs. E. C. Roberts, Philadelphia; Mr. and
Mrs. William Allen, Mr. and Mrs. J. W.
Clendennin, Mrs. W. B. Hoffman, the Misses
Hoffman, New-York; Miss Fannie A. Rob-
erts, Philadelphia; Miss Lawrence, Mrs.
Anna Lawrence, New-York; C. E. Nicker-
son, Boston; Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Dulles,
Philadelphia; Miss Ida Beal, Mrs. W. P.
Harvey, Miss Harvey, Boston: Miss Mary
Breman, Mrs. Joseph T. Low, Miss Low,
Mrs. William Hazard Field, Mrs. William
A. Perry, New-York.
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner Further reproduction prohibited without permission
before
A Native's Memories
of Old Bar Harbor
By Nan Cole
W
E who were born and grew up in that Maine
- of which my brother, Chester A. Wescott, was
paradise that once was called Eden led a
manager for sixteen years - but we felt no resent-
double life. Each summer our town became the play-
ment or sense of exclusion. After all, our visitors rep-
ground for America's fabulously rich and famous
resented the upper echelons of the entire nation
families, whose arrival was heralded by an advance
and we townspeople, who rendered key services, rev-
guard of carloads of pure-blooded horses. With their
eled in being part of the local grapevine, privy to
coming, most natives buckled down to work around
intrigues and escapades of which outsiders had no
the clock through July and August, in order to relax
linkling. On the other hand some citizens - like my
with their profits during the remaining ten months
father, George Wescott, a contractor who specialized
of the year.
in bringing to life Italian gardens created on paper
Most people never seemed to understand the native
by noted designers - were on terms of first-name
willingness - independent Mainers though we were
friendship with several impressive employers (DOWN
- to cater to visitors who claimed our town as their
EAST, July 1969). Also, the public events staged by
own in the summertime by virtue of their purchas-
our opulent visitors were ours to enjoy and few small
ing power. True, we were barred from membership
town citizens in the world were privileged to view
in The Pot and Kettle Club and the Bar Harbor Club
such magnificence of props and performances.
60
on Sundays makes one trip at 1:30 p.m. Passengers
At left - Window view of upper Po
are advised to make reservations at least a day
Harbor with lobster pots piled hig
in advance.
wharves of the eastern shore and I
Remote on its distant peninsula at Land's End, Port
Island in the background. Above -
Clyde retains many of the simpler ways of an earlier,
lobster boats that have seen better
less hurried time. The nearest supermarket is almost
hauled out on the harb
twenty miles away, but the sea lies always close at
hand. Perhaps nowhere on Maine's Mid-Coast can
there be found a seaside community quite like the
village of Port Clyde.
One such Arabian Nights dream was a lavish en-
was recognized as one of the nation's most fash-
tertainment given in 1899 for over 100 members of
ionable events.
the Bar Harbor Canoe Club at Chatwold, Joseph
We never missed a day of the Horse Show through-
Pulitzer's estate on the Ocean Drive, where natives
out its history. Sometimes we sat in the grandstand
lined up to witness the unforgettable highlight of
to watch the celebrities at close range but, in the
the party - a parade of canoes in the sheltered cove
earlier years, we stood all day by the rail, munching
on the ocean side of Chatwold. The hosts for the OC-
on peanuts and popcorn. The boxes - reserved for
casion were Mr. Pulitzer's daughter and her hus-
summer people and their guests - each contained
band, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Green.
eight hard, folding chairs and cost $500 for the three
Most of the canoes, handmade from birch bark,
days. The Show always opened with a thrilling blare
had been purchased at the Indian Village off lower
from trumpets and bugles, and everyone cheered as
Main Street, now an athletic field - where Penob-
Colonel Edward Morrell's luxurious tallyho led the
scots from Indian Island came many years to camp,
parade, followed by Philip Livingstone and eight or
bringing for sale the products of their winter's
ten other owners of equally elegant tallyhos. Each
handiwork. The Indians also supplied members of the
was manned by coachmen and footmen in bright
Bar Harbor Canoe Club with hand-carved, individual
red, gold-trimmed livery, and the passengers were
paddles with the owner's initials etched into the
beautifully-gowned great ladies, in plumed hats and
wood, and many of the braves were employed to
costly jewelry, sitting in stately fashion under fringed
instruct the children of the rich in the art of paddling
parasols, and squired by impeccably-attired gentle-
the fragile craft over Frenchman's Bay.
men.
Each canoe in the spectacular parade was dazz-
Following the tallyhos came the coaches and
lingly decorated with lighted Japanese lanterns. The
victorias. The magnificent horses, wonderfully
great line of illuminated craft, carrying splendidly
groomed and bedecked, high-stepped around the ring
attired passengers, moved rhythmically around the
with heads held proudly by means of check-reins.
cove to the background music of dozens of strumming
These scenes of overwhelming splendor ended in
panjos, while a full moon shed its glory on the
Bar Harbor with the last Horse Show in 1912, and
breathtaking scene.
soon the automobiles of both rusticators and natives
A year or two later the Bar Harbor Horse Show
replaced equestrian pageantry forever. The site of
DOWN EAST, August 1967) - a community project
the Bar Harbor Horse Show was presented in 1918
rranged by both natives and rusticators - was
by Mrs. Louise Drexel Morgan of Philadelphia to the
eld for the first of eleven fabulous seasons. It took
town for its perpetual use, and it has been known
lace at Robinhood Park for three days during the
since as Morrell Park in memory of her late husband,
ast week in August, and horse lovers from all over
Colonel Edward Morrell.
he country crowded into Bar Harbor on special
Another regular entertainment of those lavish
xcursions by railroad and steamship to attend what
years were the weekly summertime concerts from
rt Clyd
I on th
laspberr
Two o
days a
or's edg
made or a penormance, the
firehouse adjoining the Green
completely drowned out the n
one in Bar Harbor ever purpo
in a moment the Green was
musicians, however, were stran
The players had entered the
ladder which, once they were
beneath the platform until the
tunately, the fire proved to
the audience soon returned t
lounging and smoking while a
The stand on the Village
(
July 21, 1910 by the President
William Howard Taft. He was
since 1890 - to visit us whi
coming created a great furore
week.
Mrs. Evelyn Walsh McLear
any social project, decided to
the presidential yacht Mayflc
distinguished guest. At the 1
Indians brought their baskets for sale.
working in the uptown store C
and happened to be on dut
the bandstand on the Village Green in Bar Harbor.
entered to inquire the price
These concerts originated with a band of local
roses. She was quoted a price
musicians, each pridefully aware both of his talent
a dozen for 12-inch stemmed
and his bandman's uniform. The dark blue suits,
for the 18-inch ones. Witho
trimmed with gold braid, were topped by blue-
Lean ordered 100 dozens C
visored caps, and the brass buttons on the uniforms,
roses, and Chet nearly faint
as well as each man's shoes and band instruments
only four dozens in the shc
all were polished to a high luster that gleamed in
touch with the manager, W
the lights from the bandstand.
New York to fill the order
On concert nights, our family went equipped with
dropped anchor offshore (
a blanket to spread on the ground and each of us
cargo, went out in the laur
carried a camp stool. While grown-ups chatted with
reception committee. He V
friends from neighboring towns, we children would
gangplank, when a hand OJ
run around and play until the music started. Then
him, and a secret service m
we joined our parents, and woe to any one of us
he was doing there. Chet €
who made a noise! Members of the band arrived at
ten 8-foot boxes in the lau
7:45 and when, on the dot of 8, the conductor raised
fetch them aboard, open the
his baton, a hush fell and everyone stood for America.
roses for viewing on the fl
After a program of popular marches, the band con-
plied and, after a thoroug
cert ended with Good Night, Ladies.
tion, the decorating was
I don't remember just when our local musicians
Next day, when Presider
stepped aside in deference to talented visiting pro-
what on such occasions W
fessionals, but for many years a group of thirty
THE LAKES
Orchestra gav
Green. On on
when, in th
whistle at th
ed blasting.
nd besides,
n
issed a fire, S
deserted. Th
the bandstand
by means of
ed, was store
was over. For
lse alarm an
the musician
; rescue.
was graced o
United State
rst President
office, and h
ar Harbor tha
ys a leader
te the salon
honor of th
y brother W
esert Nurseril
Mrs. McLea
herican Beau
an inch" - $
d $18 a doze
tion Mrs. M
onger stemme
use there we
ever, he got
diately phone MEMORIES OF OLD BAR HARBOR
reached the 18th hole, although h
the Mayflow
saved the day. The 17th hole at t
h his fragra
(Continued from page 62)
Golf Club still is called "Howard T
transported t
to climb
th
ulder restrainé
was bothered by how the committee would get
O
NE of the most colorful summe
that portly President up and down the famous ladder
I to know wh
a period of years was William Pi
without mishap. I was too short to see from the
former partner in J. P. Morgan
pointing to t
crowd, SO I pushed and elbowed my way to the front
was ordered
though a tremendously wealthy mar
row, not noticing that I was completely surrounded
from lavish spending sprees to cycle
1 spread out th
by men. President Taft was already in the stand and
salon. He con
ness. He purchased an enormous ti
beginning his speech. My eyes were glued upon the
Salisbury Cove, where he built mass
sfactory inspe
heavy gold watch chain, displayed across President
paddocks - all painted barn red -
) begin.
Taft's expansive chest, which he had a mannerism
; to speak fro
breeder of champion horses. At that
of fingering as he talked. Suddenly, I heard his
Farms was the largest employer in to
e "grandstand
genial voice saying how much he appreciated the
ton hired caretakers, gardeners, arch
ied on page 6.
welcome given him by "the citizens and the young
jockeys, horse trainers, musicians, m
lady in the front row" - which caused me to grin
daily massages, valets, maids, an
adoringly at him from then on! I never did learn
galore.
how he got up on the stand.
As new buildings were erected at H
During Mr. Taft's visit to Bar Harbor, he played
gardens were designed and planted
golf at the Kebo Valley Club, and did fairly well
driveways were built. At one time, th
Bethel, Mainuntil he reached the 17th hole, This difficult hole
thirty men working on a road throug
George Frencrequires a long drive to lift the ball over a sand trap,
Each day, on the dot of 1 p.m., a
and it took forty-two presidential strokes before he
(Continue
Sunrise over Highland Lake, Bridgton, Maine,
In David
HOMES DOWN EAST
A Native's Memories
of Old
Bar Harbor
(Continued from page 67)
rung - the signal for every man in the crew to lay
down his tools and take a siesta for an hour or two.
This was the hour for Mr. Hamilton's daily nap,
and he ordered everyone on the place to do the
same to insure peace and quiet. When Mr. Hamilton
awoke refreshed, the bell sounded for the men to
ry of Union
A HORSEMAN'S PARADISE
resume work.
arized in Be
Modern, urban, horse-training establishment consisting of a
orical nove
very spacious 8-room, sensitively restored Cape with ell and
Often Mr. Hamilton sent for his architect, or his
isolated 5-room and bath apartment. In addition to the 3
visitors wh
masseur, when the only service he wanted was a
spacious bedrooms and bath on 2nd floor, the main house
ore the local
little comradely talk over a highball or beer. Once,
consists of a 12' X 23' living room with fireplace, dining room
ok may als
16' X 20', den 12' X 15', kitchen 18' X 21' with fieldstone fire-
on impulse, he drove to Boothbay Harbor, where a
place, large paneled family room 17' sq. with 2 walk-in closets
friend of mine, Captain Howe, carried on a charter
and 19th cer
and trophy alcove. Attached barn with 10 luxurious box
in the Ma
stalls, large tiled tack room and office. 22 additional box stalls
boat business, and always captained the boat him-
at the Knd
are located in the main barn and separate 30' X 110' barn. Well
self because of the treacherous waters in the area.
ventilated hay storage for over 200 tons. Lovely entrance
When Mr. Hamilton arrived that day with a friend
Union Fa
through stone gate with 200' blacktop drive flanked with
paddocks and rail-fenced 14-mile track. Rear of property is
and his chauffeur, he told Captain Howe he wished
loor woode
wooded, with large evergreens, framing a modern 1/2-mile track.
to hire the boat for the day and skipper it himself.
$85,000.
He was informed that another party already had
soft gray
BOND REALTY CO.
Fair buil
chartered the boat for the day, whereupon Mr. Ham-
REALTORS
uses a colle
12 Revere Street, Portland, Maine
Tel. 207-772-0115
ilton asked how much they were paying and offered
to double the price. When this was refused, Mr.
1200 antiqu
Hamilton offered to buy the launch at a price so
icles, kitch
fabulous that Captain Howe finally agreed to sell.
implement
However, he still wouldn't allow the new owner to
rlooms. T
take the boat out that day without an experienced
1 is some 7
navigator. In the end, Mr. Hamilton told Captain
64 from E
Howe to stay aboard, but after their return in the
WS, a belov
evening, he said he'd changed his mind about buy-
businessma
ing the old boat! Instead, he handed Captain Howe
official at
$1000 for the day's trip.
an of Unio
Ideal site for motel or development housing. 29 acres
At another time, the economy side of Mr. Ham-
570' road frontage - view of Blue Hill Bay and Cadillac Mt.
ilton would take command, and he become penny-
arm in Sea
$29,500.
pinching to an alarming degree. He would roam
born in 187
Robert W. Gray Agency
Broker
(Continued on page 95)
Upper Main Street, Blue Hill
Phone 207-374-2700
complete w
he sink, a C
rocking cha
Fletcher Woods
MAINE'S FIRST CONDOMINIUM COMMUNITY
Designed to fit the needs of the mature
adult who desires to combine gracious
country living with freedom from the
burdens of home ownership.
Each unit consists of 2 bedrooms, liv-
LOCATED IN HISTORICAL KENNEBUNK
ing room with fireplace, dining room,
R. E. MARIER, INC.
equipped kitchen, 1 or 1 1/2 baths, at-
REALTORS and DEVELOPERS
tached garage and patio.
One Fletcher Street, Kennebunk, Maine 04043
Tel. 207-985-3013
90
HOMES DOWN EAST
MEMORIES OF OLD BAR HARBOR
Continued from page 90)
round proclaiming that money was to be saved and
not spent, and demanding that all expenses be reduced
Perkins Cove,
trastically. During this phase, he would sell some
Ogunquit
f his horses and fight over all bills - with or with-
ut cause. Frequently, he fired most of his employees
Four-bedroom year-round
ummarily, but the local ones, accustomed to his
home with large studio, 2
round,
ycles, simply waited for the mood to change when,
fireplaces, overlooking Perkins Cove, 100' from Marginal Way.
ortgage
most invariably, they got their plush jobs back.
Taxes only $439. Offered at $50,000 furnished.
Fred Garnsey
D
CCASIONALLY, scions of the rich were involved
GARNSEY BROS.
Real Estate Broker
NO No 1. MOODY POINT WILLS. MAINE 04099
Insurance & Read Estate
SAVINGS BANK BUILDING. SANFORD MAINE
easy
in unusual shenanigans. For instance, the heiress
)
a great American fortune once left an all-night
arty at the Bar Harbor Club at five o'clock in the
horning. She thumbed a ride with a streetcleaner
ce
nd, haughty in her evening gown and wrap, rode
SWANS ISLAND
1970
is rounds on the truck.
y mod-
superb
Another episode occurred at the Casino when the
A few desirable 200' ocean front lots are being
offered. These are choice deep-water sites in a
rly A-
on of a world-famous figure was seated, with a
beautiful setting including a point and rockbound
de with
roup of college friends, in a box near the stage at
coast - away from it all. Maine provides a 12-
looking
)' front-
amateur prize-fight. Deciding that one of the
car ferry service to the island of Mt. Desert,
n
yet this is one of the few areas free from over-
ine vil-
ugilists had hit a foul blow, the entire group
crowding. A few back lots, with magnificent
Rt. 95.
umped from the box onto the stage and proceeded
views and their own shore area, are also offered.
968.
o start a free-for-all, while the audience egged them
Prices start at $2500.
in with delighted roars. A Bar Harbor policeman
WILLIAM BANKS, Swans Island, Maine Tel. 207-526-2288
ee
ntervened and was about to toss the great man's
4995
DEREP
Central File
P.O.Box 219, Machias, Me. 04654
the most complete list of properties for sale
in WASHINGTON COUNTY, MAINE !
DEREP CENTRAL FILE IS NOT A REAL ESTATE AGENCY
IT IS A REAL ESTATE BUYERS SERVICE WHERE YOUR
RARE it is that salt water frontage at this location is ever
PERSONAL DESIRES ARE CLOSELY HAND MATCHED WITH
THE HUNDREDS OF DESIRABLE PROPERTIES LISTED IN OUR
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FILES; THE MOST COMPLETE LIST OF PROPERTIES FOR SALE
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IN WASHINGTON AND HANCOCK COUNTIES. MAINE.
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etc. Completed in 1958 and designed to last for generations.
Write for FREE INFORMATION !
In the $70's.
The Andrews Agency
Real Estate Brokers
648 Forest Avenue
Portland, Maine 04101
207-773-2200
The MANOR
Designed by William Katzenbach
French Provincial, in the manner of the small chateaux
and manors of Normandy and Brittany, the MANOR has
a graceful balanced simplicity - and the look of having
been designed for future as well as present generations.
Its many French windows welcome and embrace the
surrounding grounds while its pleasant proportions -
like good manners - help it to be at ease and at home
tion
in almost any setting: town or country, wooded hillside
ouse. 120
or open meadow, seashore or suburbia.
ely auto-
Send $1.00 for Plans & Details of Our Products
come of
laude L.
Henry S. Bickford and Associates
35
Elm
Street
Camden, Maine 04843
207-236-4371
A product of Boyne Fall Log Homes - Boyne Falls, Michigan
89
95
WN EAST
wn teeth. My nephew said that his uppel
rotruded and he was most uncomfortable, bu
kidnapper" won first prize and gave Freddie
playing his part.
After I was grown up and with a family of
wn, I often visited at the Malvern Hotel and
ges, of which my brother Chester was mar.
the time. One day we were at lunch in the
ning room when a considerable commotion a
he cause of it was that comedian Ed Wynn,
S
two attractive daughters, was being ushered
e head waiter to a table close to ours.
Air view of The Malvern, Bar Harbor.
Ed Wynn was dressed in a loud-checked SI
at, baggy trousers, a bright red shirt and a bla
ral Mansion
son out, literally by the seat of his pants, when some d-and-yellow tie. On his head was one of
odernized for gracious living.
one shouted out the youth's identity. Our red-face ny hats. His costume hardly was in
keeping
1 and architectural importance.
policeman loosened his grip and the incident wall staid, restricted conformity of the Malvern Hc
3-flight spiral staircase, splayed
forgotten.
ientele. Almost immediately one of the o
SS box locks, grained doors and
or has a large central entrance
Once my nine-year-old nephew, Freddie, erks came to our table, very red-faced, and :
ing room with pantry, modern
drafted to aid a prank. At one of the regal partie my brother: "Mr. Wescott, I didn't know
canopied porch and 1/2 bath.
rooms and 2 baths. Third floor
contestants in a scavenger hunt were asked to fin do. He just breezed by me with a giggle, sig
ath. Full basement with laundry
a red-haired boy with a front tooth missing. Ale register and said, 'We're having lunch here.
Center of town location on 1
acre, with playhouse and green-
astute young man located Freddie, who had re headed for the dining room." Chet assured
house, nicely landscaped and
hair but also a perfect set of teeth. The dauntles erk that he was delighted that Ed Wynn
fenced for privacy. $55,000.
party-goer rushed Freddie to a dentist's home, an osen the Malvern for lunch, where his prese
cajoled the professional man into cementing a childready was adding zest to the usual subd
gency
REALTORS
bridge with a missing front tooth below Freddietmosphere
(Contini
ne 04043
Telephone: 207-985-3361
Often limitated. never duplicated.
A CLASSIC FA
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A great place for a big family on the shores of the
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Write for the Ward folder or send $2 for the
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kitchen, town water, 2 impressive wood stoves.
On the shores of Big Indian Lake, St. Albans (Maine)
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a few minutes from Bangor off Rt. 95. Fine fishing,
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WARD CABIN COMPANY
keep the place bugless. Yours for $15,000..
Box 72-DE Houlton, Maine 04730
THE SAWYER AGENCY, 5 Bai
HOMES DOWN EAST
Every guest in the room was staring with un-
abashed delight at the famous comedian and, for
the time being, the impeccable service was at a stand-
"Ye Old
still. Noting that people were waiting for dessert
Cordwainers
to be served, Chet started for the kitchen to find out
FO
Shoppe"
the reason for the delay. As he opened the swing-
ing doors, he nearly knocked down a group of waiters
A house with charm
and waitresses, who were peering through the glass
and history will be
panels to see "The Perfect Fool" in the flesh. On
yours with the purchase
his return, Chet went over to Mr. Wynn's table
of this 6-room home, built about 1827. In a fine resi-
dential area in Belfast. Has unique cellar (or shop area)
and told him laughingly that service was disrupted
with a wooden floor and 2 ground-level entrances which
while all of the help tried to get a peek at him.
lead onto a rock terrace beneath the 7' X 27' porch.
Ed rose in a flash and, giggling, shuffled over to
Attached barn, 27' wide and 25' in length, is large
enough for 2 cars. $12,000.
the service door, which he opened, and swiftly
planted a kiss on each of two embarassed waitresses.
Country
When he and his daughters had finished lunch
he arose, bowed to the gaping audience which had
Living
watched his every motion, and departed. That was
This could be the one
the signal for the children to rush out to see him
you have been looking
As they passed Mrs. Robert L. Stevenson, she said,
for. A 2-bedroom house
"Hurry, hurry! Perhaps you can get his autograph!'
in the country with a view of mountains and scenic country-
side all around. A 10-acre field for viewing and an additional
They were too late, for Ed Wynn already was on
25 acres, some in hay. Hot-air heat, artesian well and a
his way to his yacht, which was anchored in the
barn, 30' X 20'. $16,000.
harbor.
I had a distinct feeling that Mrs. Stevenson also
CHAPMAN-WEAVER, Realtors
would have liked to have had Ed Wynn's autograph
17 Main Street, Belfast, Maine 04915
That impression arose out of a Bar Harbor native's
207-338-2388
understanding of our distinguished rusticators who
beneath all their affluent glitter and aloofness, were
just as human as we were.
FOR SALE
A GOOD SELECTION OF:
CASTINE
SUMMER PROPERTIES
One ancient marina on deep-water.
YEAR-ROUND HOMES
Two gracious Victorians on a shaded street.
BUSINESS PROPERTIES
One 18th century brick town house on waterfront.
One magnificent 18th century federal house.
ALSO COTTAGES FOR RENT
Castine Real Estate
LAWRENCE S. ROBINSON COMPANY
Vincent J. LaFlamme, Broker
P.O. Box 265, Castine, Maine 04421
SOUTHWEST HARBOR, MAINE
TELEPHONE 244-3223
WANNA BUY THE OCEAN?
PRIME, Deep water frontage in W.
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KINGSLEY
fishing, lobsters, clams in back yard;
FARMS
undiscovered fishing villages. Profes-
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nearby in Winter Harbor. From $11,990 (with your own
beach) to $5990 with rights to private beach. 20% cash
1820 Cape-Type Home - Cherryfield
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"For your protection," title insurance policy is available.
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Write: KINGSLEY FARMS
Vernon E. Pettigrew, Real Estate Broker
P.O. Box 15, Ellsworth, Maine 04605
3 CHURCH ST., CHERRYFIELD, ME. 04622
TEL. 207-546-7011
OR CALL: 207-667-2696
98
The University of Maine
DigitalCommons@UMaine
Maine History Documents
Special Collections
1886
Bar Harbor and Mount Desert Island
Liberty Printing Company
Follow this and additional works at:https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mainehistory
Part of the History Commons
53-page booklet. 1886.
Repository Citation
Liberty Printing Company, "Bar Harbor and Mount Desert Island" (1886). Maine History Documents. 101.
https://digitalcommons.library.umaine.edu/mainehistory/101
This Monograph is brought to you for free and open access by DigitalCommons@UMaine. It has been accepted for inclusion in Maine History
Documents by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@UMaine. For more information, please contact
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Note: See also Lynne N.Manion. "A Playground Contested:
Bar Harbor Natives and Rusticators, 1875-1925."
HARBOR
HAR
BAR
AND
Mount Desert Island.
"An island full of hills and dells
All rumpled and uneven."
"The gray and thunder-smitten pile
Which marks afar the Desert Isle."
PRESS OF LIBERTY PRINTING COMPANY,
107 Liberty Street, New York.
PREFACE.
nor much of the history of Mount Desert is contained in
the following pages. To relate the story of this won-
derful Island and its people would require a large volume.
Nor is it claimed that much is contained here which has not
already appeared in some other form. The purpose of these
few pages is to give, in a brief and concise form, a descrip-
tion of some of the more interesting places found here, to
describe briefly the physical features of the Island, its bold and
rock-bound shores, its coves, harbors and bays, its mysterious
caverns, its wonderful mountains, its highland ponds and lakes,
its curious geological formation, and, in addition, to give a
few of the more salient points in its civil history, and the
marvelous growth of Bar Harbor and vicinity as a summer
resort. It is hoped that the matter is presented in a form
that will be found intelligible, and that the numerous ques-
tions which are sure to be asked by those who contemplate
visiting Bar Harbor, or those who do visit it for the first
time, are here satisfactorily answered.
W. B. L.
AUGUSTA, 1886.
A road leading to the summit of the highest peak offers an eagle's view
of Mount Desert Island with Bar Harbor below and Frenchman Bay beyond.
I Remember Mount Desert
by Frances H. Eliot
photographs by Lawrence Lowry
O
FF the coast of Maine lies a wonderful island
from the sea; woods and trails and streams for fish-
which was discovered by Samuel de Cham-
ing; a rugged coast, with coves and bays, beaches
plain in 1604, named by him l'Isle des Monts D'eserts
and headlands, fine harbors and safe sailing for the
and named by some of us, who have spent seventy
flect of racers manned by the young people. All is
summers on it, "The Blessed Isle" or "God's
surrounded by a sparkling ocean.
Country."
There are automobile roads following the coast,
It seems to combine everything. It has a range of
and one road, a marvelous piece of engineering,
dozen mountains, some of them rising abruptly
goes to the summit of Cadillac Mountain, our high-
I
45
2.
est hill. Near the foot of this mountain lies a charm-
ing pond, or lake, with a "Tea House" near its
dows, or tramping overhead. Just outside Rockland,
in the usually gray and foggy morning, the stcamer
shores. It is a popular place with mountain climbers,
horseback riders, walkers, and automobilists.
would slow down and stop, until it "picked up" the
Whistling Buoy off Monhegan. T can hear that
One now goes to Mount Desert Island by any
modern mode of travel, but in the old days it was
slosh of water on the steamer's sides, now, seventy
remote and inaccessible and was approached almost
years later. We reached Rockland at four a.m.,
where there was a great pounding on our stateroom
entirely by sea. My family started going there in 1881.
doors, for this was where we changed boats.
We took the train to Portland, Maine, where we
In those early years the only breakfast was
boarded a sidewheeler-either the Lewiston or the
served on the Rockland wharf so, after we had
City of Richmond; they were old steamers with few
dressed and got into warm union suits for the
conveniences. They plowed through the rather rough
change to a colder climate, we had our breakfast.
waters to Southwest Harbor, the earliest settlement
Of the food I can remember little, but I do recall
on Mount Descrt Island, arriving at noon with
hearing my father say that "the coffee may have
most of us gray and silent from seasickness.
been made from a photograph of peanut shells"
There a sailboat, its large bottom filled with
After leaving Rockland we wound among the
stones for ballast, waited for us. On the stones our
islands, coming so close to some that one could have
many and large trunks were piled up, and we all
jumped ashore. The wise old captain, just shearing
clambered in and set sail for a sloping beach at the
the reefs and shallows, knew his way around. I
mouth of Northeast Harbor, where we disembarked
remember his friendliness in allowing us children
and climbed into a waiting buckboard. Our lug-
up in the pilot house. He was a taciturn man, as so
gage followed on a "jigger," a long, low horse-
many "followers of the sea" are, but once he did
drawn platform, and we proceeded about a quarter
answer a passenger who showed amazement at his
of a mile over a dusty country road to our destina-
skillful dodging of dangerous rcefs.
tion, the small white house belonging to Everett
The passenger had asked, "Do you know where
Kimball, a fisherman.
all the reefs are?"
By 1884 steamers not only ran direct from Boston
"Nope," was the reply.
to Bangor, but connected at Rockland in the early
"Well," continued the questioner, "you must
morning with a smaller steamer which carried us
know where all the bucys are?"
through thoroughfares and near islands to the har-
"Nope," again came the answer, to which he
bors-Southwest, Northeast, Seal, and Bar on Des-
added, after a moment's silence, "I know where
ert. It was not the Desert we know now; it was a
they ain't."
far-away island, reached with difficulty, and it was
Charles W. Eliot, President of Harvard, traveled
an exciting adventure for me and my sisters and
on these boats each summer, and was once told by
brother. We packed our large trunks and drove
a member of the crew, "We fellows got talking who
through steaming streets in a large hack to Foster's
was the cleverest man we carried on this here 'bot'
Wharf in Boston where we boarded the steamer
for Rockland.
and we voted it was you, Mr. President only we
don't see why you ain't rich." "I never had the
Some of the hardier ones in the family had picnic
time," was the reply, which I am sure left them just
supper on deck, but very soon the boat was out of
as puzzled as before.
the harbor and beginning to pitch and roll, so we
Life was very simple in those days. The vaca-
went to bed in our bunks to sleep fitfully, what with
tioners were largely professional people, having
passengers laughing and talking outside of our win-
long enough vacations to make it possible to go so
far from their winter homes. We counted many
college presidents and professors in Northeast Har-
Monhegan Harbor and town on Monhegan Island.
bor. Harvard, Yale, Cornell, California, Johns
Hopkins were all represented, and there grew a
saying, "You have to have money but no brains in
Bar Harbor; brains but no moncy in Northeast
Harbor, while in Southwest Harbor you don't have
to have either."
It is still possible to live simply even though
Rockefellers and Atwater Kents may be neighbors.
Once when a son of mine was sailing toy boats with
the Rockcfeller children, he asked Johnny Rocke-
feller why his father didn't get him a real boat and
was answered scornfully, "What do you think
are, Vanderbilts?"
46
Northeast Harbor itself was wild and wooded, a
wonderful shelter from the storms. I can remember
when it was so closely packed with fishing vessels
that one could walk across their decks almost to the
opposite shore, and many a time I rowed up the har-
bor and with my oar prodded the seals sunning on the
rocks, to see and hear them splashing into the water.
The native people of this island are proud, inde-
pendent and honest. In the older generation, the
speech was Elizabethan English, such as is still
heard in the Kentucky mountains. One man who
worked for my father, upon being asked how he
had disposed of a dead cat, replied, "I hove her
into the deep." Also there was the answer of the
farmer, whose wife was expecting a baby, to the
eager question asked him each morning when he
Somes Sound, a sheltered sea at Mount Desert.
left the milk. After many "Nopes," one day he
answered "Yep." "Boy or girl?" he was asked, to
for many years, and its great roomy hall was nick-
which, after scratching his head, he replied, "Wall,
named "the Fish Pond," supposedly a place for the
ain't saying it ain't a gal!" Not long ago when I
maidens of that era to "catch" a beau. Shabby
was driving my car on a lonely road I stopped to
shops lined the main street and after visiting them
buy water lilies from a very small barefoot boy, who
and lunching at one of the hotels, we clambered
answered my query as to the name of the pond
aboard our buckboard and at the cnd of two or
from which he had got his flowers with, "It goes by
three hours' driving, walking, and singing we
the cognomen of Lily."
reached our little village once more.
Quaint ways are still evident even in these money-
President Eliot was the first summer resident to
making times. Only last summer my daughter and
build his house. That was in 1881. Bishop Doanc of
I were seeking a tea house only to be told when we
Albany was next, in 1882. On Sundays Bishop Doanc
found one "they had given up serving tea-so many
held services-first in his house and later in the small
people asked for it that they couldn't keep it in
wooden chapel he built, called "St. Mary's-by-the-
stock."
Sea." But those of us who were not Episcopalians
The climate in the old days was colder than it is
went to the services held in the tiny schoolhouse.
now. We wore flannel suits all summer and I
Itinerant preachers, usually Baptists, held forth, and
remember wearing mittens when we went sailing.
I used to go just to hear the stout solemn deacons on
Indeed, I recollect very clearly that one day when
the platform shout "Amen" with surprising sudden-
I was out sailing it snowed! The statement was
ness when they approved of the preacher's senti-
doubted by my hearers, until I found it verified in
ments. Later on, a stone church was built which we
the spring of 1948 in the Boston Globe in an article
called "The Union Church," although the Episco-
(telling of "The cold summer of 1881 when it
palians dubbed it "Saint Charles-in-the-Wood" as
[snowed in Maine!"
against their "St. Mary's-by-the-Sea," the former
Our summers were spent climbing the bare rocky
being the result of the initiative of President Eliot.
mountains, berrying, and going out on the water.
Our captain, a piratical-looking old "salt," wore
I think a description of Bishop Doane deserves a
separate page, for he walked straight out of Trol-
gold hoops in his ears and had "the meanest back
in Maine." Distances were great, and roads steep
and rocky. Once or twice a summer we would hire
The Nelson Rockefeller house, built like a ship.
a buckboard to take us on the long drive to Bar
Harbor, the metropolis of the island, over such
steep hills that we really walked most of the way-
up the perpendicular hills to save our horses and
down the hills to save our necks. Driving over the
great shelf of pebbles at Long Pond was always
exciting. We had to get out of the buckboard and
walk there, too, to prevent the wheels from sinking
up to their hubs.
Bar Harbor in the carly days consisted chiefly of
ast caravansaries, called hotels-large wooden
affairs. "Rodick's" was the largest hotel in Maine
47
4
lope- - a strange anomaly for a New England village
Bear Island Light stands at the
to grasp. Hc was rather a stout figure, with promi-
entrance to Northeast Harbor.
nent features and sandy-colored hair forming a
fringe around his bald head. He wore a large-
spruce was selected for a midsummer tree. to which
brimmed, flat-topped, black felt hat; black frock
all the children were invited. It stood high up on a
coat, and on his waistcoat rested a large-linked gold
rocky mound laden with gifts. Bishop Doane in all
chain holding a gold cross. He wore gaiters from
his regalia (and a most picturesque sight he was)
his knees down, ruffles at his wrist, and a very
stood beside the tree with his dainty little grand-
large ring on his forefinger. It was certainly a new
daughter beside him. Below the two were gathered
type to be among the very puritan Yankees. He
the "tenants"-pardon mc! I mean the other
always carried a gold-topped cane and was accom-
children-who, as their names were called, came
panied by his large mastiff dog.
forward and upward to receive a present. It was all
I often wondered what had attracted him to such
we could do not to "bob a curtsey" or "pull a
a far-away village. Was it missionary zeal to profess
forelock"
his Episcopal belief? Was it a real love of nature's
Living was pretty primitive in those days. There
beauty and simplicity of living? Probably both. He
was no doctor nearer than ten miles and no drug
never forgot he was a bishop, which was an annoy-
store. A butcher who served also as dentist drove his
ing trait to some, such as my father, who resented
cart to the different harbors twice a week, with
the pat on his shoulder and resented being addressed
various joints of animals swaying from hooks in the
as "dear child." But he won his way into enough of
back of his cart, along with a large pair of forceps
the plain people's hearts with his kindness, so that
with which to extract painful teeth of his patrons,
he did build a small wooden chapel and converted
when necessary
some of the native people to Episcopalianism.
Many boats plied between the harbors and our
On Sundays, after the Union Church had been
life was spent largely on the sea. We learned to
built, we all used to pile into the long boat which
swim even in that cold water, as well as how to
had been built for President Eliot at Friendship,
row, sail, and manage a boat. It was the simple life
Maine. It had oar locks for three pairs of oars and
personified. So-called civilization has caught up
held a large company, sometimes as many as
with us, but the hills and pastures are still good for
eighteen people. In that way, like an expedition,
berrying, the mountain trails still becken,
WC would proceed across the harbor and then have
streams and ocean are still ready for the fishermen
a half-mile walk through dense woods to the little
and boats are to be had in which to explore
church-an expedition reminding one of the pic-
fascinating coast and many enchanting islands that
tures we see of Swedes and Norwegians doing the
lie about.
same.
I know of no place that offers such interest and
In regard to the long boat, there hangs a tale.
beauty-the possibilities for a simple life, or a gay
After we had had this boat for two years, Bishop
one, a place where "evil communications do not
Doane asked President Eliot where he had had it
corrupt good manners," a place of friendliness and
made and was told, "at Friendship, Maine." The
neighborliness.
next summer there appeared on the waters an exact
replica, except for a flag flying from its stern with
large letters on it spelling "The Only." To say we
Footnote
were astonished is putting it mildly indeed!
The bishop's little granddaughter asked her
N
the summer of 1901 a small group of summer residents on
grandfather why he didn't have a Christmas tree
Mount Desert Island formed a corporation known as "The
in summer, so the idea was considered and a large
Trustees of Public Reservations" in order to preserve the natural
beauties of the island for generations yet to come. It received
many gifts of mountain tops and beaches and by 1913 had
acquired about 6,000 actes of land. The trustees offered the
land as a gift to the government for a federal park. On February
19, 1919, President Wilson signed an Act of Congress by which
the National Monument became "Lafayette National Park.
later changed to "Acadia National Park" gift 10 the
people forever. Camping sites are provided; forest rangers take
care of the fire question; and thousands of tourists come each
summer to enjoy the island's beauty.
Bar Harbor, well-known 10 readers of society
columns, but only a part of Mount Desat.
48
The following excerpts are from VIA Minutes, Vol. 1
September 27, 1881: A preliminary meeting of Bar Harbor Citizens and others interested in
village improvement was held at the Cottage Street schoolhouse pursuant to a published call of
the meeting in the Mount Desert Herald. Dr. Hasket Derby was elected chairman and Mr. Joseph
Wood, secretary. The matter of a village corporation for the better regulation of public affairs was
discussed and met with general approbation. The chairman appointed a committee on Permanent
Organization.
October 11, 1881: A committee was appointed to introduce an article at Town Meeting that
hereafter the meetings of the Town of Eden be held in the Village of Bar Harbor. The committee
of three was appointed Committee to Wait-on Selectmen.
October 24, 1881: Mr. C.S. Leffingwell, reported for Committee on the Constitution, with
preamble and by-laws. The first article of the Constitution declares that the society will be
known as the Bar Harbor Village Improvement Association. Constitution adopted and meeting
adjourned.
November 14, 1881: Proclaimed First Meeting of the Association, the meeting elected the
Association's officers and Executive Committee.
February 20, 1882: VOTED to insert an article in the Town warrant that all Buckboard Tax
money derived by the Town be given the Association to be expended on the streets of Bar
Harbor, under direction of Executive Committee.
March 6, 1882: A code for the sanitary regulation in the village of Bar Harbor was revised and
adopted. The Executive Committee advised that these regulations be adopted by the Town of
Eden and be enforced at once.
1885: (Note of Secretary): On the 6th of March, 1885, the Town of Eden at its
Annual
Meeting voted "That the polling place of the Town of Eden be changed to the village of Bar
Harbor". All Town meetings have since been held in the village. On Saturday, March 25, 1885, at
a Special Meeting of the Town of Eden, the code of sanitary regulations, approved and
recommended by BH VIA, March 6, 1882, was adopted by the Town.
July 20, 1889: The first meeting was called to order at the Music Room of Hotel St. Saveur, by
Parke Godwin, president of the temporary organization, and upon report ot Constitution
Committee, the constitution was adopted. Officers and Board of Managers for '89-90 were
elected.It was voted that the new Association be considered as a continuation of the V.I.A,
formed in Bar Harbor in 1881.
September 9, 1890: In regard to report on hacks and electric lights, the matter of hack drivers
and public carriages carrying lanterns and the subject of electric lights burning until dawn in
summer was referred to the Committee to Wait on Selectmen, for consideration at Town Meeting
next March. And VOTED to authorize Executive Committee to lease for the Association for one
year, land near West St. Cove, owned by Mr. T. L. Roberts, for the priviledge of tearing down
shanties and the place put in order.
February 5, 1891: A meeting was called at the suggestion of Mr. Jesup, who thought the
Association might do something to prevent the Legislature of Maine in granting additional
priviledges to the Mount Desert Railway, and to send committee to Augusta. VOTED $100 to
oppose the street railway scheme. W.H. Sherman, sec.
September 11, 1891: VOTED that $150 be appropriated for the purpose of removing certain old
or dilapidated houses in the area of West St. known as Peanut Row, or be used at direction of
Sanitary Committee for similar purpose. Roads and Paths Committee reports that a rock crusher
of the best and most modern construction as an implement for producing desirable material in the
construction of roads and sidewalks is necessary. The matter of purchasing machinery is now
under consideration by Special Town Committee. The committee and the VIA should encourage
and assist the Town Committee with presentation at Town Meeting in March.
September 26, 1896: Provisions by Sanitary Committee are VOTED for a VIA Board of Health
(consisting of five medical practitioners) and request of Town of Eden Selectmen of appointment
of Health Officer, with power to enforce sanitary regulations.
August 17, 1897: Appointed committee for the establishment of a village hospital.
September 20, 1898: Voted that the Sanitary Committee be requested to insert regulation of
grave depth and that all coffins be lined with lead, and where burials should be allowed.
July 18, 1899: The Sanitary Committee reports that a telephone was placed last fall in the
temporary hospital by the VIA and has proved to be of great service and comfort for Mrs.
Higgins and the attending physicians. A bill of $24 for balance due for telephone is presented.
September 10, 1901: The Village Committee reports on street cleaning from Hulls Cove to the
Ocean Drive. Up to September 7th, 240 days work for men had been paid by this committee, and
fifty-one and a quarter days for a one horse cart. For seven weeks a boy was employed to go
about on a bicycle all day from Ocean Drive to the Bay Drive and collect the loose papers which
are SO unsightly, but at the end of that time he grew tired of what would have been a pleasure if
there had been no idea of work connected with it, nor could the committee fill his position for
remainder of season.
July 20, 1902: Resolved, that the thanks of the Association be tendered to Dr. C.C. Morrison,
Representative from Eden in the legislature for his co-operative effort that the Association's
committee and success in securing the passage of a law prohibiting the hunting or shooting of
deer on the island.
September 8, 1903: The Sanitary Committee reports that the isolation hospital, called the Pest
House, at Witch Hollow, is now owned by the Town, and this committee's requests were
reasonable and it is in a very efficient condition. The Board of Health has just completed a
number of improvements. All physicians of the Town are urged to attend the committee
meetings.
1907
BHVIA
26
LIFE MEMBERS
LIFE MEMBERS
27
Hart, Mrs. H. C.
Newbold, Mr. C. B.
How. Mr. Charles T.
Ogden, Mr. D. B.
Hubbard, Gen. and Mrs.
Opdycke, Mr. L. E.
LIFE MEMBERS
Jackson, Mrs. C. C.
Peabody, Mrs. A. P.
Jaques, Mr. Herbert
Peabody, Mr, F. H.
Givers
(Jesup, Mr. and Mrs. M. K. Pendleton, Mr. Edmund
of
Jones, Miss Beatrix
Place, Mrs. George
Jones, Mrs. Cadwalader
Platt, Mrs. A. E.
$25 in one sum
Kane, Mr. and Mrs. J. I.
Price, Mrs. J. M. P.
$10 annually for three years
Kennedy, Mr. and Mrs.
Pulitzer, Mr. and Mrs. J.
or $5 annually for seven years
Kingsland, Mrs. W. M.
Rice, Mrs. W. B.
Leeds, Mrs. M. E.
Robbins, Mrs. G. A.
(By-Laws, Article I, Sec. 3)
Livingston, Mrs. J C.
Schieffelin, Mr. and Mrs.
Livingston, Mr. Johnston
Schiff, Mr. and Mrs. J. H.
Longstreth, Dr. Morris
Scott, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar
Abbe, Dr. and Mrs. R.
Coxe, Mrs. A. B.
McCagg. Mr. and Mrs. L.B. Sears, Miss Helen
Anderson, Mrs. N. L.
Crafts, Miss M. E.
McCormick, Mrs. R. Hall Sears. Mrs. J. M.
Auchincloss, Mrs. J. W.
Crocker, Mrs. U. H.
Maitland, Mr. and Mrs. A. Seely. Mrs. W. W.
Babcock, Mr. and Mrs.
Davis, Mrs. A. J.
Markoe, Mrs. John
Sherman, Mrs. Gardiner
Banks, Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Dehon, Miss M. H.
Matthews, Mrs. Nathan
Smith, Mr. and Mrs. C. M.
Barney, Mrs. A. C.
Derby, Dr. Hasket
May, Mrs. J. Frederic
Smith, Mrs. Edward A.
Bass, Mrs. E. W.
Dimock, Mrs. H, F.
Minturn. Mrs. John W.
Smith, Miss Josephine
Bass, Hon. J. P.
Dodge, Mrs. W. E.
Mitchell. Dr. and Mrs.
Stewart, Mr. William R.
Biddle, Miss C. W.
Dorr, Mr. G. B.
Morgan, Miss C. L.
Thompson, Miss Anne
Blair, Mr. and Mrs.
Duncan, Mr. W. B.
Morgan. Mr. and Mrs.
P.
Trevor, Mrs. John B.
Bowdoin, Mr. and Mrs.
Emery, Mr. and Mrs. J. J.
Morrell, Mrs. Edward
Tucker, Mr. and Mrs. A.
Bowen, Mrs. J. T.
Emmons, Mr. R. W.
Morrill, the Misses
Vanderbilt, Mr. and Mrs.
Brigham, Mr. L. F.
Fahnestock, Mr. H. C.
Canfield, Mrs. A. C.
French, Miss C. L. W.
Carpenter, Mrs. M. B.
Gurnee, Mr. A. C.
Cassatt, Mrs. A. J.
Gurnee. Miss D. E.
Clarke, Miss Anna M.
Gurnee, Mr. W. S.
Coats, Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Harrison, Hon. F. B.
Condon, Mrs. T. G.
Harrison, Mr. and Mrs. J.
14
COMMITTEE REPORTS
COMMITTEE REPORTS
15
Report of Village Committee
Report of Trees and Planting Committee
The work of the committee has been reorganized.
GENERAL PLANTING.
Papers and rubbish have been removed from the
The chairman reports that work was done by Mr.
Shore Path and elsewhere every day by one em-
Grant last autumn, in planting on the village streets
ployee. Another has been employed to cut the grass
and in caring for planting done in previous years, at
and trim the village streets. A helper was required
an expense amounting to $233,-no work having been
for this work for five weeks, from July 9 to August
done by the committee since that time. Care of
16. The barrels have been emptied daily, a contract
previous planting, of vines especially, is now necessary
of $3 a week having been made for this part of the
and fresh planting along the roadside where opportu-
work. The committee requests that occupants of
nity has arisen. The places of certain trees, more-
cottages along the Shore Path do not allow grass or
over, which were wantonly destroyed a year ago
rubbish to be thrown on the rocks, or in the water
during the visit of the fleet along the walk on lower
near the shore.
Main street, need to be refilled by others, which can
The appropriation of $500 was insufficient to
be obtained from former plantations on the roadside
meet this year's expenses, and an extra appropriation
that it would now be better to thin out. On this
of $150 was given to finish the work. The sum of
various work $200 could be expended with advantage
$64 was contracted for last autumn. before the present
if this is more than can be spared from other work
committee took charge. The expense of purchasing
$150 would serve for doing what is urgent in the
and painting 30 barrels has been $37, the lettering
committee's work.
$16.25, making a total of $53.25. The repairs to the
cemetery wall and rear fence, and other necessary
VILLAGE GREEN PLANTING.
items have come to $25. The total expenditures
All the trees planted last year and this are doing
have been $608.51, which includes all bills to date.
well, with the exception of certain canoe birches at
The committee asks for $600 to continue the work
the western end of the Green which were attacked
for the coming year.
last autumn by an insect working its way between the
ELIZABETH RUSH PORTER, Chairman.
bark and wood, around the trunk. The trees thus
attacked will need to be replaced. Once established,
the canoe birch is one of the hardiest of trees and not
readily subject to the attack of insect or other dis-
16
COMMITTEE REPORTS
COMMITTEE REPORTS
17
leases, but it is liable to suffer in removal even under
which would ultimately bring a good as well as perma-
the best conditions and is then subject to such attack
nent return.
while its vitality is impaired.
The forestry conditions on such land upon the
One or two of the large poplars on the northern
island are distinctly good. Growth is rapid and pro-
side of the lot, which suffered from the drought last
duction quick the woods which can be grown are
year, are also dying and need to be replaced. Other-
valuable and all the wood grown will always be readily
wise the only planting to be done upon the Green is
marketable on the island itself ; and there is a large
that of a few Norway maples along the southern side
extent of land upon the island, many thousand acres
of the long path, corresponding to those planted on
probably-which, while it is of little or no value for
the northern side this spring along a portion of the
other purposes, would be fertile in tree growth. Such
walk. These uniting with the others will presently
lands rightly treated would be permanently productive,
make this walk a shady one throughout the greater
and as in good forestry the woods would be merely
portion of its length and add considerably to the
thinned from time to time until their main crop of
pleasantness and beauty of the Green.
trees had reached full size and marketable value, not
For these various plantings on the Green your
over two per cent. of these woodlands at most would
committee recommend an appropriation of $200.
ever be cut over in any single year. And this cutting
After this planting is done but little further appropria-
would be massed each year in special areas selected
tion for tree planting on the Green will be required.
with regard to the growth of trees upon them and to
future work. and SO selected also as to exert a con-
FORESTRY.
stant check upon the spread of fires upon the island-
An attempt has been made this summer by the
an important matter in forestry investment as for the
Tree Committee, jointly with the president of the
landscape. The constant disfigurement now caused
association, to initiate a movement looking toward
by cutting in small, scattered areas along the roads
investment by the summer residents, either individu-
and paths, and the danger that exists at present from
ally or in association, in such lands on the island as
fires starting or spreading in the brush left in them
an expert may judge to be of permanent forestry value
which should be burnt, would be avoided under such
and not of greater value for other purposes and their
treatment.
scientific forestry treatment for the purpose of busi-
Under it by far the greater part of the forestable
ness investment under the direction of a competent
lands upon the island would always have good woods
expert. The chairman of the committee, having
-and a considerable portion of them old and fine
given some study to the question himself and con-
ones-growing on them and subject to good care and
sulted experts upon it, believes that sound investment
forestry treatment. This would be infinitely better
can be made in such lands on the island, investment
than the present state of things or anything that could
otherwise be hoped for, and would help, more than
18
COMMITTEE REPORTS
COMMITTEE REPORTS
19
anything else could do, to ensure the permanent
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
beauty of the island, and to add to its attraction as a
FOREST SERVICE
summer home. Nor would it hinder at all but help
Washington,
the outright purchase of such portions of the older
Branch of Silviculture,
September 3, 1907.
woods as might seem to be specially important to
MR. GEORGE B. DORR,
keep permanently forested for the pleasure of our
Bar Harbor, Maine.
drives and walks. Such portions would be but a
Dear Sir
small part of the land capable of good forestry treat-
Mr. Pinchot has undoubtedly written you that he is
ment, and piece by piece they could be acquired as
very much interested in your plan for taking care of
the woods on them became mature, and held as
the forests on Mount Desert Island. Your scheme
public reservation.
for preserving the forests not for purely sentimental
The chairman of the committee believes that this
or aesthetical reasons but also for financial considera-
scheme is practicable and economically sound, and
tions is a very sound one and is in full accord with the
that aesthetic results of great importance to the
principles of true forestry. A work of this kind suc-
island would inevitably result from its adoption. There
cessfully carried out would be of great value to
is no question moreover that the price of wood is
forestry in general, and would serve as a conspicuous
going to advance steadily for many years to come,
object lesson to other forest owners and forest inves-
until the forest crop becomes a profitable one to grow
tors of what can be done in this line The forests
on
in more arid regions than ours and under conditions
Mount Desert Island seem to offer a good opportunity
less favorable to forest growth.
for such an enterprise. and the Forest Service will be
The first step towards such investment is a
very glad to do all that it can to help you in carrying
thorough forestry study of the island by a competent
out your plan.
expert and the preparation of a report upon it and
I do not think it will be possible this fall to make
forestry map. This the chairman hopes it may be
as thorough an examination as would be necessary for
possible to get done within the coming year. The
a full and authoritative report on the situation, which
acquisition of land for forestry purposes would follow
is absolutely essential for your purpose. Unfortunate-
after slowly, land being only purchased when it could
ly, Mr. Cary cannot visit the island this fall. I shall,
be acquired at a price reasonable in view of its own
however, be very glad to send Mr. S. T. Dana, of the
actual value for the end in view and that of the stand-
Forest Service. about September 15, to talk matters
ing wood upon it. In confirmation of his opinion in
over with you and to make a preliminary investigation
this matter the chairman of the Tree Committee sub-
of the conditions there with a view to completing the
mits a letter just received by him from the Forestry
work next year.
Very truly yours,
Department at Washington.
(Signed) WM. T. Cox,
GEORGE B. DORR, Chairman.
Assistant Forester.
22
COMMITTEE REPORTS
COMMITTEE REPORTS
23
Sub-Committee on Newport Mountain Road-
Report of Village Green Committee
way and Bicycle Path
The Green has made great strides this past year,
One hundred dollars will be needed next year for
both in beauty and usefulness. The extensive plant-
resurfacing and repairs on the Newport Mountain
ing in the spring ; the gift of two spruces by perma-
roadway, which is much worn by use and rains, and
nent residents last winter ; the successful transplant-
which, if not put in order before another season, will
ing, in midsummer, of six trees from the new High
have to be repaired later at increased expense.
School lot, with funds specially contributed by six
Fifty dollars will be required for the repair and care
summer residents the gift of two trees from Miss
of the Bicycle Path, on which some resurfacing is
Washington and Mrs. Stanton ; the handsome stone
now in progress at its westerly end. For this work a
seat given by Mr. Roberts ; and the graceful cement
gravel pit has been opened on adjoining land.
bench presented by Mr. Norris -all have combined
GEORGE B. DORR,
to add not only to the adornment but to the comfort
of the Green.
Chairman Sub-Committee.
Inspired by the success of the entertainment last
winter, certain ladies among the permanent residents
are planning to organize another festival this winter,
by which they hope to raise more money to be
expended on the Green. Our committee tenders
them hearty thanks and good wishes for this expres-
sion of their interest. and in SO doing is sure that it
voices the feeling of the Association as a whole.
It is pleasant to record that scarcely a day passes
without some word or appreciation of the Green.
From side streets that have lost all evidences of
country life, come old people who can no longer walk
to the green fields ; and in troops come the children.
-the older one entrusted with the babies because, as
the busy mothers say, 'It's so safe on the Green !"
Increased care and interest have been shown by
36
CHARTER
CHARTER
37
none upon its individual members ; and to make
by-laws not inconsistent with law for the regulation of
its membership and its government.
CHARTER
SEC. 3. The first meeting of this corporation may
be called by any of the above associates, by a notice
published two weeks successively before the time of
LAWS OF 1891. CHAPTER 186 :
said meeting in any newspaper published at Bar
Harbor.
An Act To Incorporate The Bar Harbor Village
Improvement Association
SEC. 4 This act shall take effect when approved.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Repre-
sentatives in Legislature Assembled
as follows :
SECTION 1. Parke Godwin, Fred C. Lynam. Wil-
liam H. Sherman. Morris K. Jesup, Robert Amory,
Charles T. How, De Grasse Fox, Luere B. Deasy,
Edward Coles, Serenus H. Rodick, Henry Sayles,
William B. Rice, David A. Bunker, Elihu T. Hamor,
Addie B. Higgins, Mary G. Dorr, Augustus Gurnee,
A. W. Morrill, Iphigenia Z, Place, Frances E. Wood,
George W. Vanderbilt, Gertrude S. Rice, Louisa S.
Minot, F. G. Peabody, Abby A. Potter, Francis M.
Conners, John E. Clark, George M. Wheeler, Eugene
B. Richards, and their associates and successors, are
hereby incorporated under the name of the Bar
Harbor Village Improvement Association, for the
purpose of instituting and maintaining public improve-
ments in the village of Bar Harbor. and other parts
of Mount Desert Island.
SEC. 2. For the purpose of its incorporation this
Association may receive and hold real and personal
property not exceeding fifty thousand dollars in
amount; make contracts to be binding upon itself but
Properties | Bar Harbor Village Improvement Association
Page 1 of 1
Bar Harbor Village Improvement Association
Quietly working behind the scenes to
keep Bar Harbor beautiful. since 1881
Properties
The Bar Harbor VIA owns several properties in Bar
Harbor:
Bald Rock
Glen Mary Park
How Memorial
Town Clock
We also help the Town maintain the
following properties:
The Shore Path
Veteran's Memorial
Village Green and Agamont Park Fountains
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Bar Harbor Village Improvement Association
Quietly working behind the scenes to
keep Bar Harbor beautiful. since 1881
History
Bar Harbor Village Improvement Association: a private corporation for the benefit of public
welfare and early town planners
THE BAR HANDOR HOUNTAINS. MAINE
The Bar Harbor Village Improvement Association was the first of its kind organized on Mount Desert Island, in
the Town of Eden, in the summer of 1881. Later in the 1890's, similar societies were established in the Town of
Mount Desert in the villages of Northeast Harbor, Seal Harbor and yet later in other island villages. These
societies appear to be unique to Mount Desert Island.
Reported in the Association's First Annual Report of 1890, that is was at the suggestion of a distinguished and
public spirited citizen of New York, (Mr. Morris K. Jesup), that "this society was organized to carry out such
work of amelioration and adornment, as might from time to time be suggested to science and good taste, in
order to bring the village itself into a greater conformity with its beautiful environment." Mrs. Charles Dorr
(mother of George Dorr) is also recognized and credited with the formal establishment of the VIA. Other charter
members included the Association's first elected officers, Parke Godwin, William Sherman (Eden's town Clerk),
Fred C. Lynam (first-elected and longest serving officer), Dr. Robert Amory, Morris Jesup, and Hon. Luere B.
Deasy. Many other local and summer residents served on the Association's Board of Managers, such as E.T.
Hamor, Serenus Rodick, Charles T. How, Augustus Gurnee, Mary Dorr, and George Vanderbilt.
From its inception the Association was a very democratic society with
progressive thinking, particularly by standards of the 1890's; the by-laws
stated that the Board of Managers consist of forty members, twenty of
whom may be ladies. By the Second Annual Report the by-laws state that
the Board of Managers may consist of not less than thirty members, nor
more than fifty members, of which half may be ladies. The objectives of the
Association, as expressed in its Constitution, is to preserve and develop the
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natural beauties of the place, and to enhance their attractions, by such artificial arrangements as good taste and
science may suggest. These lofty ideals were expressed in the speeches of its officers at Annual Meetings printed at
length in the Association's earliest Annual Reports. Eloquent speakers like Vice-president Deasy stated that
attention must be devoted to adorning the streets and opening new avenues of access to the beautiful hills and
lakes, and to the grand outlooks, which make of the island of Mount Desert one of the most picturesque, if Bar
Harbor is to retain its obvious advantages, and to acquire a real supremacy as a watering place, among the
many rival resorts springing up in its immediate vicinity, along the coasts of Maine, Massachusetts, New York
and New Jersey, vigilant and constant spots on the face of the globe."
Early reports reflected the members' far-reaching concerns. Included in the Association's Annual Reports were
updates from committees on Sewers, Roads, Sidewalks and Wood Paths, the Waterfront, the Water and Milk
Supply, Trees, Fire Escapes at local hotels, a proposed police station and lock-up, and a troublesome area known
as "Squaw Hollow" on the shores of Cromwell Harbor Brook. The Third Annual Report reports the Association
passed a resolution that the committee communicate and advise the Town Selectmen of the unsanitary and
threatening condition of the possibility of cholera from "Squaw Hollow", suggesting the only safe way to deal with
these conditions was to empty the place of its inhabitants and have the whole neighborhood disinfected. Extensive
committee reports on the sewers of the Town included the locations of, and relocating of, stables within the
village.
Before the strong central organization of town government, that we know
the talant
today, and before the town changed its name to Bar Harbor, the VIA took
on the responsibility each summer of street cleaning. The VIA provided
wooden rubbish barrels and public settees from Corniche Drive along the
bluffs, to village streets and Ocean Drive. In addition to street cleaning,
many of the town's roads were improved, including the Ocean Drive and
Otter Cliffs Road. Wood paths, all inclusive on the eastern side of the
island, were cleared of fallen trees and kept in passable order for the many
summer sojourners by the VIA.
The responsibility for the many miles of roads and trails was delegated to one of the Association's foremost
committees, that of Roads and Paths, first chaired by George B. Dorr. The Roads and Paths Committee, which
reported annually till 1941, was served by an illustrious group of gentlemen through the years: Waldron Bates
(credited with design of the island-wide network that connected trails of eastern paths to the southern group of
trails supported by the other Village Improvement Societies of Seal Harbor and Northeast Harbor), Professor
Brunnow (whose vision created the spectacular Precipice Trail), among others. This committee was also charged
with the building of several memorial trails, and created maps for resale.
The Sanitary Committee consisted of all medical practitioners of the town and was first headed by renowned New
York surgeon Dr. Robert Abbe. This committee reported on the water and milk supply to Bar Harbor. Among the
influential recommendations proposed by the committee was the establishment of a Board of Health and a health
officer to enforce sanitary regulations, and the allocation of monies for the building and operation of a hospital
(1897).
A special committees appointed in the summer of 1892, the Village Clock Committee, wrestled with the
contentious issue of where the clock should be placed. (LINK)Finally, in the summer of 1896, a village clock
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purchased by the Association for the sum of $1250 from the renowned clockmaker, E. Howard & Co. of Boston,
with tower, was placed in front of Bee's on Main Street - only after obtaining permission from Mr. Albert Bee.
Later in 1904, the Association approached the Town Selectmen to lease the empty "town lot" located on the corner
of Main and Mount Desert Street for the purpose of building and landscaping a village green. The "town lot" had
been the site of the Grand Central Hotel which was razed in the winter of 1899, leaving an unsightly hole in the
ground with cellar walls. The town meeting had turned down the proposal that a Town Hall be built there. The
VIA lease of the Village Green remained in effect through the 1920's when a new generation of VIA members
thought the Town should be maintaining upkeep while the Association got back to the basics of "improvements."
The new generation produced and commissioned long-range plans for the adornment of village streets, the Village
Green by Beatrix Farrand, and island-wide surveys by Dr. Charles Eliot.
- Green Bar Mo
When the first lease was negotiated by the VIA, the Town Selectmen suggested that the clock be removed from
Main Street's narrow sidewalk to the proposed village square at the Association's expense, since the Association
owned the clock. Again, the placement of the clock sparked controversy as to which direction it would face and
about its location in the square. President Parke Godwin appointed George Dorr's committee to resolve this on-
going controversy. In his eight page Report of the VIA Committee on the Village Green, he suggested widening
the sidewalk along Main Street for the relocation of the clock and that it face North/South SO as to provide the best
visibility from both ends of the street. The report was accepted and its proposals approved by the Association, and
the clock found its present location.
Another controversial committee was appointed the next year regarding the restriction of the automobile in Bar
Harbor. The Association voted to secure the cooperation of its sister societies on MDI to adopt a similar manifesto
excluding automobiles from the whole island. Efforts for a joint committee of island societies was formed to
address this most important issue. The automobile issue left summer residents and local residents on different
sides. Later, after the automobile issue was resolved in the State's Supreme Court, and automobiles were allowed
in all island communities, general complaints persisted on the speeding of automobiles on island roads. As late as
1926, the Association hired extra police duty to enforce the 15 MPH limit along Ocean Drive.
By 1919, the Association had grown to include 400 members. In the 1919 Annual Report, excerpted below, the
Association detailed its expanding list of concerns.
"The Town Planning Committee begs to emphasize the fact that Bar Harbor needs a plan to
develop:
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Better approach to wharf path;
Better sidewalks (possibly from Bar Harbor to Hulls Cove);
Better planning for small houses;
Some shore front open to all;
Law to prevent roadside advertising;
Judicious trimming of trees on Ocean Drive and road to Hulls Cove;
All these matters are entirely feasible and will be done when the public realizes the wisdom and
economy in doing so.
(Signed) Beatrix Farrand
Chairman, Town Planning Comm."
All projects were supported by the Association from membership fees and individual contributions. In its early
years, the VIA membership boasted over one hundred fifty members, but some issues like the automobile and
then, much later, the length of the Shore Path, in addition to the declining number of wealthy summer residents,
resulted in a lessening of membership from which the once vital and influential Association has never recovered.
BAR ISLAND AND THE BAR
Local interest and support has always been welcomed by the Association. Today, the VIA consists of a small
number of concerned citizens "quietly working behind the scenes to keep Bar Harbor beautiful", just as their far
sighted and much revered predecessors did in years past.
Compiled by Phil Cunningham 2006
Memorable excerpts from our early Annual Report archives
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Who We Are Bar Harbor Village Improvement Association
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Bar Harbor Village Improvement Association
Quietly working behind the scenes to
keep Bar Harbor beautiful. since 1881
Who We Are
The VIA board is elected during our Annual Meeting, which convenes at the Historical Society on the
third Thursday of August. Our current Board includes:
a. M.
President: Dick Cough
Vice President: Andy Shea
Treasurer: Jon Nicholson
Secretary: Kathy Macleod
Directors: Les Brewer, Phil Cunningham, Jeff Dobbs, Debbie Dyer, Ellen Grover, Tom Testa, Scott West
The VIA would like to acknowledge Les Brewer, who acted as President for over 35 years. Under his quiet and
competent direction, the VIA continued to grow, thrive and provide stewardship for our properties. He continues
to be a valuable resource to us.
All visitors to Bar Harbor, as well as residents, are cordially invited to join the Association. Become a member with
an annual contribution of $20, or become a Lifetime Member for $250. Join today!
Who We Were
Historically, VIA membership read like a Who's Who in America, a venerable mixture of local and summer
residents. Prominent members included the likes of John S. Kennedy, Mrs Joseph Pulitzer, Mrs. J.P. Morgan,
Mrs. George Vanderbilt, Ernesto Fabbri, Dr. Augustus Thorndike, Alfred Dupont and Dr. Robert Abbe (Ezra
Cough, great grandfather of Dick Cough, the present president, was also a past member of the BHVIA).
Waldron Bates, George Dorr and Beatrix Ferrand were among the most distinguished of our early members.
These farsighted individuals were instrumental in designing Bar Harbor's downtown, parks and gardens, as well
as Kebo Valley Golf Course and the boundaries and trails of Acadia National Park. We owe a huge debt of
gratitude to these tireless and giving individuals; their vision created the town and park that we know and love
today!
Waldron Bates (1856-1909) joined the BHVIA in 1892. He was chairman of the Paths Committee
from 1900 to 1909 and President from 1904 to 1905. Mr. Bates was renowned for designing and
constructing trails that would hold up under any conditions and heavy usage, including Cadillac
Cliffs, Canon Brook and Giant Slide. Bates was tragically killed by a train 1909 at the age of 52.
His signature trailmarker, known as a Bates cairn, is still used throughout Acadia and plaques
honoring his contributions are located on the Gorham Mountain Trail and in the Kebo Valley parking lot.
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George Dorr (1854-1944) first visited Bar Harbor in 1868. He dedicated his life and personal
fortune to the preservation of Mount Desert Island, eventually acquiring the land, funds, and
federal support to successfully establish Acadia National Park. Dorr acted as the first
superintendent, and is remembered today as one of the Park's founding fathers.
Beatrix Ferrand (1872-1959) was one of America's most celebrated landscape architects
renowned for private gardens, many of which were located in Maine, as well as consulting work
for some of the country's most prestigious universities and colleges. Over the course of her long
and distinguished career, she received more than 200 commissions, mostly from East Coast
society families.
One cannot underestimate the influence of these early VIA contributors, who shaped not only our community and
National Park, but also our country:
One day in 1889 a prominent Virginian, John Wise, burst into the office of the Speaker of the
House, Thomas B. Reed of Maine, yelling out, "Who's running this government anyway?" Reed
calmly replied, "Why John, the great and the good are running it of course." "Well then," said Wise,
"the great and the good must all live in Maine. Here I come to Washington to do business with the
Secretary of State, and I find he is Jim Blaine of Maine. I call to pay my respects on the President
pro tem of the Senate, and he is Mr. Frye of Maine. I want to consult the Senate's majority leader
and they send me to Mr. Hale of Maine. Then I must take up a tariff matter with the chairman of
the Ways and Means Committee of the House, and who is he but Mr. Dingley of Maine. Then there
is a naval bill I am interested in, and who chairs that committee but Mr. Milliken of Maine. I have
to see about an appropriation for a public building in Richmond, and who's in control but Mr.
Boutelle of Maine."
"Yes, John," said Reed, "the great and the good and the wise. The country is still safe," And out they
went arm in arm to have lunch with the Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, Mr. Justice Fuller
of Maine.
Originally broadcast in 1971 by Ernest Marriner on the 1000th episode of his radio show, Little Talks, in Waterville, Me. The full audio is version is available
here.
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Judith S. Goldstein.
Crossing Lines: Histori's s of Jews
and gentiles in Three Communities.
CHAPTER 8
N.Y.: William Morrow Inc. 1992.
A Summer Empire
ONLY FORTY-FIVE MILES from Bangor, the coastal resort of
Mount Desert Island flourished in summer splendor. Despite
the short distance, the inland lumber city and the remote va-
cation land occupied vastly different worlds. In the late nine-
teenth century, when Bangor lost its grip on stardom and
prosperity, the island-especially Bar Harbor-blazed forth to
fame. Capital and native-born men and women flowed out of
Bangor. Famous magnates and money poured onto Mount
Desert. Alas, Bangor no longer represented the American
dream come true. But Bar Harbor, separated in idyllic seclu-
sion, represented an American dream that was still coming
alive.
Bangor cast a jealous eye and sought to make connections.
The Bangor Daily Commercial led the way: "An erroneous idea
prevails with many in regard to Bar Harbor that should be
corrected. Many think that Bar Harbor, with its beautiful scen-
ery, its wonderfully invigorating air and all its natural advan-
tages, is a place where only the very rich can afford to spend the
summer." The paper reassured its readers: "There is room
enough for all classes of people and they all can enjoy them-
selves in their way." And yet a caveat was in order. "To be sure,
it might be difficult for a man of moderate means, but who had
152
CROSSING LINES
MOUNT DESERT ISLAND: A SUMMER EMPIRE
153
aspirations to social life, to come to Bar Harbor and have entree
Though fresh as ever Nature's beauties smile,
to the old aristocratic families of the country, but he could have
How changed thy people since that former day,
thorough enjoyment in his own sphere and hearty enjoyment at
When, dwelling lonely in their peaceful isle,
that."
They cast their nets, or raked the fragrant hay!
The warning was disingenuous but important. "Aspirations
Thy fishermen, thy farmers, where are they?
to social life" was what Bar Harbor was all about. The resort
No in their stead are monied landlords found;
gave and withheld entrée to its rich new society for all to see.
Thy sons as drivers win the stranger's pay;
Gleefully, William Pattangall measured the summer social
Thy daughters, where the swarming flies abound,
yearnings of Joseph Bass, owner of the Commercial and one of
On clamoring boarders tend and pass the chowder round.
the few Bangor men who owned a cottage in Bar Harbor. "He
longs for a position in society. Longs for it! Rather does he
By the mid-1870's, Mount Desert had been discovered.
hunger for it, thirst for it, crave it as the opium fiend craves the
Not yet a stylish place, Mount Desert already had a stylish name.
drug, or the degenerate craves the exaltation of passion
The brilliant mountain scenery, good air, and summer fun kept
Gaining acceptance was a serious business from the late
the "clamoring boarders" coming, especially to Bar Harbor.
nineteenth century on. Mount Desert Island was a social fron-
Steamships and trains broke the isolation of the island. Boats
tier as well as Maine's most conspicuous connection to the
from Rockland and Portland increased their runs. The rail-
Gilded Age. Along with other new resorts, Mount Desert pro-
road, in 1884, finally made its way east from Bangor, opening
vided a geographical escape from the cities and a social release
up the Coastal Line, which stopped at Mount Desert Ferry, at
from deep conflicts in American life: Christian superiority and
Hancock, before going downeast to Calais. The Maine Central
homogeneity versus a pluralistic creed; exclusivity versus equal-
ferried train passengers eight miles across Frenchman Bay
ity of opportunity; and prejudice versus acceptance of Jews.
from Mount Desert Ferry to Bar Harbor, and then farther on
Before the summer folk arrived, there had been peace and
to Northeast Harbor and Southwest Harbor. By the mid-
tranquillity in the stunning landscape of mountains, seas, lakes,
nineties, over twenty-five thousand people were vacationing on
cliffs and forests. The derisive poetry of Henry Walton Swift
the island.
and Dacre Bush in 1873 recalled the pristine days of untouched
Developers-the native-born, along with those from
nature:
Bangor south to Philadelphia-bought properties, built houses
and opened up roads into the hills behind the hamlets and
along the water. Speculators, led by Francis H. Clergue of
Thou favored isle, from busy haunts afar,
Bangor, put a scenic railroad up Green Mountain (called Ca-
Whose wildness mocks at man's destroying hand,
dillac Mountain in later days) with a $100,000 investment that
No smoky industries thy beauty mar,
failed after just a few years. Enterprising natives and others
No envious spires, no swelling domes, expand
from around the state speedily brought a service industry to
In insolence their petty forms, where stand
life. In the frantic crush to turn the coast into gold, they built a
With shadows creeping o'er their changing green,
tawdry commercial waterfront at Bar Harbor. "To the lover of
Thy mountains, solemn, beautiful, and grand;
beauty," the writer Susan Coolidge, who vacationed in North-
Yet has thy loveliness a softer mien:
east Harbor, observed, "it would be hard to find a more dis-
That sun in all its course gilds not more fair a scene.
couraging object of contemplation than the town proper, with
its irregular huddle of shanty-like shops and ungainly tene-
Alas, before the tourists and cottage owners had appeared, Bar
ments, painted in inharmonious colors and dominated over by
Harbor, Northeast Harbor, Southwest Harbor, Seal Harbor
monstrous hotels of the same flagrant architecture, whose ev-
and Somesville had been little fishing and farming hamlets.
ery line seems an affront to the canons of taste." The ugliness
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155
mattered not at all to those seeking summer solace. By 1890,
Philadelphia from June to the middle of September, its streets
they poured in to fill Bar Harbor's nineteen hotels with four
and drives are thronged by the gaily dressed migratory butter-
thousand rooms-those great "wooden barracks," including
flies of the world of fashion, airing their silken wings in the cool
seven hundred at Rodick's alone.
sunshine of the Maine coast, after comparative inactivity during
But crudeness and crowding did not last for long. Instead,
the winter of the large cities."
Bar Harbor would ensure its success by a spirited display of
There were Vanderbilts, Schiefflins, Opdyckes, Morrises,
family wealth and position. As a resort, it would rank second
Ogdens, Bowens, Thorndikes, Amorys, Palmers, Jesups, Thay-
only to Newport, Rhode Island. In a time of escalating for-
ers, Lawrences, Dorrs, Fabbris, and Pulitzers. A host of advan-
tunes, with the emergence of approximately four thousand
tageous marriages were carefully encouraged as old names
American millionaires between the Civil War and the 1890's,
crossed with new money. Eventually, it would seem, everyone
legions of the rich, as well as well-established families, descended
who mattered became related to everyone else in labyrinthine
on Bar Harbor. Reaping wealth from running railroads, indus-
connections that tied an emerging and aspiring intercity aris-
try, utilities and investment banks, the nouveaux riches, or
tocracy tightly to each other.
"squillionaires," mixed with the "old gentry" of good names and
A special mix of American improvisation and pride, social
valued lineage: doctors, lawyers, small manufacturers and "civic
ambition and European taste flourished in the culture of out-
leaders."
door life on Mount Desert. European travel was an active ref-
The railroads and steamers carried vacationers with cosmo-
erence point for both the old gentry and the nouveaux riches.
politan tastes, exacting standards of hygiene and the ambitious
Returning to the island, they reassured themselves that the
desire to replicate resplendent homes and institutions-
Mount Desert landscape was equal to the beauty of the Bay of
churches, clubs and associations-of their native cities. Families
Naples, the mountains of Switzerland, the lake country of
staked their claims on Mount Desert-many with a tenacity and
Northern England and the fjords of Norway.
attachment that continues to this day. Prime parcels were bought
From Sea Urchins, her newly built cottage in 1889, the
up. Another great American land boom took off. Religion, phi-
piquant writer Mrs. Burton Harrison exclaimed: "How aston-
lanthropy and culture took root. Bar Harbor's summer residents
ishing are these Aladdin palaces at Bar Harbor! One year, one
spawned an impressive set of institutions: their own Congrega-
sees a barren height, with rocks & firs & junipers & bunch
tional, Catholic, Episcopal, Methodist, Baptist and Unitarian
berries, its only inhabitants, the next season, one goes into a
churches; a hospital, a YMCA, a YWCA, the Jesup Memorial Li-
lighted portal, with flunkies right & left, across velvet carpeted
brary and a Greek-like temple, the Building of Arts. Starting in
steps with a hall where 'family' portraits are hanging-there
is
the 1880's, the magnetic mix of land, money and the beau
a dinner cooked by a chef, and after it, music by a secretary of
monde flourished in Bar Harbor.
the Russian Legation & a new baritone from Dayton, Ohioh
By the late 1890's, summer residents, or rusticators as they
[sic]!"
were popularly called, had hurriedly built (or bought) 250 cot-
The commodious and richly furnished cottages were built
tages. Spectacular homes and grandiose gardens, such as Blair
to accommodate families of parents and children, aunts, uncles,
Eyrie built by the New York investment banker Dewitt C. Blair
in-laws, cousins and numerous guests. The sheer numbers re-
and Kenarden Lodge owned by John S. Kennedy, a leading
quired huge staffs of gardeners, drivers, stable hands-even
railroad financier, embellished Bar Harbor and spread its fame.
footmen-along with maids who did endless cleaning, washing,
The summer residents-the comfortable, the quietly rich and
ironing and cooking. Some homes were more formal than oth-
the extravagantly rich-formed complex strata of a beguiling
ers. Louise de Koven Bowen from Chicago settled with her
new society. "The cottages, or villas which encircle the town,"
family in her palatial, manicured, French-colonial cottage in
W. Lapham wrote in his laudable guide to the island, "rep-
Hulls Cove, a few miles from Bar Harbor. Baymeath had eleven
resent the best society of New York, Baltimore, Newport and
bedrooms and ten bathrooms, a room for arranging flowers
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MOUNT DESERT ISLAND: A SUMMER EMPIRE
157
with two hundred vases of every size, and a stable for twenty-
Record wrote of George Vanderbilt's Pointe d'Arcadie, "give
two horses. In the splendor of her cottage at the edge of French-
promise of equaling the famous roads that were built by Caesar
man Bay, Mrs. Bowen entertained thirty-five for lunch every
in the days of yore." Equally astounding was the landscape
afternoon.
work of Beatrix Cadwalader Jones, the daughter of Mrs. Mary
Summer residents imported some of America's finest ar-
Cadwalader Jones of New York. "A young lady who moves in
chitects to design cottages, churches, clubs and libraries. Pea-
the upper circle of Bar Harbor society," the Bangor Daily Com-
body and Sterns; Roche and Tilden; William R. Emerson;
mercial noted, works in a "short skirt which comes to the top of
Bruce Price; Andrews, Jacques and Rantoul; McKim, Mead
a clumsy pair of rubber boots plodding about in the clayey soil
and White; and Frank Furness produced some of their best
directing the men how they shall wield their axes.
Miss Jones
work on the island. Fred Savage, a gifted architect and native of
is a decidedly new woman."
Northeast Harbor, was the most prolific. By 1906, he had de-
The "season" throbbed to the invigorating beat of rigorous
signed over three hundred buildings on the island. The archi-
sports and entertainment: canoeing, sailing, hiking, climbing,
tects built in a versatile array of imitative and innovative idioms:
biking, riding in horse shows and driving over the island in a
Italian, French, English, Swiss, Tudor, Queen Anne, Medieval,
full array of sporting carriages. Society gathered in their cot-
Renaissance and shingle styles. "It is the fashion to call these
tages and exclusive clubs: the Kebo Club for horse shows and
country houses cottages," the architect Bruce Price commented
golf, the Canoe Club, the Reading Club for the covert con-
with judicious acumen, "but the cottages exist only in name.
sumption of alcohol in a dry state, the Pot and Kettle Club for
The cliffs of Newport, the rocks of Mt. Desert, the shores of
male comradeship and gastronomic pleasures, the Bar Harbor
Shrewsbury
have cottages that would be mansions in En-
Swim Club and the Yacht Club. Picnics, teas, dinners, recep-
gland, villas in Italy, or chateaus in France."
tions, dances and fetes, along with exhilarating conversation,
In the annals of American architectural history, Mount
pleased residents and visitors alike. "Intelligent, lively and
Desert claims a small but honorable place. It was on the island
entertaining"-and far superior to that of Newport-was the
that the taste for Queen Anne structures evolved into the splen-
way Edith Wharton responded to the conversation at Bar Har-
did shingle style to house the informal activities of large, vaca-
bor when she visited her sister-in-law, Mrs. Mary Cadwalader
tioning families. William R. Emerson, a Boston architect,
Jones.
started the shingle tradition in 1879 with his design for Red-
The society of the rich attracted the society of the power-
woods, owned by Charles J. Morrill. Shingles covered the cot-
ful. There were visits by Presidents, Vice-Presidents, ambassa-
tage from top to bottom, blending harmoniously with the land
dors, consuls, cardinals and bishops. The appearance of the
and sea. The house captured the ocean breezes and the striking
American and British squadrons further revved an already
coastal light. With seeming abandon, Emerson and his fellow
frenzied social life. It hardly seemed to matter that the Amer-
practitioners of the shingle style employed a varying range of
ican navy was barely a navy: according to one of its critics, the
forms: towers, bays, porches, piazzas, porticoes, loggias, leaded
navy was too weak to fight and too slow to get away. No matter
glass windows and gables.
what, it had enough power to get to Newport and Bar Harbor,
The art of "floriculture" thrived on Mount Desert. The
dazzle the summer population and stir the towns with recep-
transformation of the physical landscape, through planting and
tions and romances.
replanting, was almost as stunning as the erection of the cot-
Such a social life was prime material for boastful writers
tages. "It is a common sight to witness trees coming along
and residents in the 1880's. Mrs. Burton Harrison, ever the
through the village streets with their tops extending above the
prominent and watchful figure in New York, Washington and
roofs of the houses on the side of the streets," the Bangor Daily
Lenox society, observed the doings of Bar Harbor with both
Commercial stated. The magnitude of change led to exaggera-
enthusiastic and ambivalent amusement. "It is so much nicer
tion and awe. "The drives about the estate," the Bar Harbor
here," she wrote her son at Yale, "without the people! The
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159
houses are filling up, however, & the Philistines will soon be
dents took pride in the simplicity of their lives: their closeness
upon us. Already two or three stylish buckboards have dashed
and respect for the local population, the moral and spiritual
up, laden with frills & finery, to leave cards at the Sea Urchins,
cohesiveness of their community, and, above all, their harmo-
alas! If I could only live in a place where there was no necessity
nious, educated counterpoint to the brassy and irksome display
to 'make and [sic] effort'!" But efforts she made. She attended
of Bar Harbor.
flower parades by day and boat parades by night.
In fact, approximately twelve miles-but many hours by
Best of all was the visit of President Benjamin Harrison to
carriage over bumpy dirt roads-from the muted life in North-
the neighboring home of Secretary of State James G. Blaine. In
east Harbor, traffic in Bar Harbor was congested and the streets
the President's honor, Mrs. Harrison (no relation) organized a
were far from clean. Conditions were SO poor that an indignant
flower parade. "Many people familiar with those flower drives
Mary Cadwalader Jones appealed to the commissioner of sani-
in Nice & elsewhere," she proudly wrote, "said the decorations
tation in New York City to send some of his workers-the "white
wings"-to clean up the mess in Bar Harbor. "Simply vile
It
of this were ahead of any they had ever seen." Another day, the
President, in a flower-bedecked steamboat, went on a boat trip
interferes terribly with our summer enjoyments," she was
for several miles around the coast to Somes Sound. Filled with
quoted as telling a reporter from the Bangor Daily Commercial.
diplomats and high society, the boat hit fog and rough seas
Yet, however much Bar Harbor and Northeast Harbor dif-
around Schooner Head, conditions which "had the effect of
fered in taste and style, they still shared a set of underlying val-
reducing many of our gay members to solemnity, not to say
ues and beliefs: a desire for exclusivity, social safety, and relief
silence
His Excellency, who retired to the pilot house,
from congested cities and the problems of new immigrants.
looked rather white, ditto Mr. Blaine
Mavring Bey, the
The social landscape changed quickly: Boarders at Bar Har-
Turkish Minister, was first to succumb, and lay prone upon the
bor's big hotels soon felt unwelcome; throughout the island,
cabin sofa, murmuring 'Mon Dieu, Mon Dieu, pourquoi-est-ce
excursionists-and certainly lower-class immigrants-were dis-
que je suis venu? [My God, my God, why did I come?]'
couraged; and the local population was transformed into a ser-
As the boat entered Somes Sound, the fog lifted, the waters
vice class that tended the luxurious needs of summer residents.
calmed, and the presidential party sailed gingerly around the
In 1890, the ever-curious and analytic Charles W. Eliot
island away from Bar Harbor. They saw a serene landscape: nu-
wrote an essay that praised the simple life of the local popula-
merous small islands lying off of Mount Desert Island; vistas of
tion in the township of Mount Desert on Mount Desert Island.
cleared, vacant land; scattered, isolated farms and houses; a few
Men worked as farmers, fishermen, or shipbuilders; the women
modest summer cottages; and several medium-sized wooden ho-
spun wool, made butter, and tended children and the home.
tels, which thrived with quietly contented summer boarders at
The men were independent, self-sufficient and content. "One
Seal Harbor, Southwest Harbor and Northeast Harbor.
who engages a Mount Desert laborer or mechanic to do a piece
Did anyone inform President Harrison that Northeast Har-
of work," Eliot wryly commented, "will probably receive the
bor possessed a different aura and mystique from other places
impression that it is the employed who consents to do a favor to
on the island? Already, it was a summer enclave with its own
the employer."
carefully controlled dynamic: slow growth, a quiet commercial
Just fourteen years later, Eliot presented a markedly dif-
life, and a discrete, unpretentious appearance. The community
ferent picture. By this time, many local residents had sold much
grew serenely, seemingly from within. Centered around the
of their land to summer people. The men and many of the
founders of the community, Charles W. Eliot, president of Har-
women worked for summer residents, tending shops, provid-
vard, and the Episcopal bishop of Albany, William Croswell
ing food, gardening, doing laundry, working in hotels and
Doane, Northeast Harbor promoted itself through a network
teaching the summer children how to sail. In return, the sum-
of relatives, friends and acceptable friends of friends from Bos-
mer people benefited the town in innumerable ways: they built
ton, New York, Philadelphia and Albany. The summer resi-
new houses, roads, schools, libraries and mountain trails. They
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161
established churches, which significantly improved the religious
Yet the relationships with the service class and local pop-
life of the local population: ministers now regularly performed
ulation were more complicated than such incidents would sug-
christenings, marriages and burials.
gest. Local residents were admired and often idealized for their
In his typically confident manner, Eliot expressed no
skills, fortitude, traditions and uncomplicated ways. "Just as the
doubts about the contributions of the summer people to the
white man," E. Digby Baltzell wrote, "symbolized by the British
year-round residents. Neither did George Street, a Congrega-
gentleman, was roaming round the world in search of raw ma-
tional minister from Exeter, New Hampshire, and a summer
terials for his factories at Manchester, Liverpool or Leeds, so
resident in Southwest Harbor. In his history of Mount Desert,
America's urban gentry and capitalists, at the turn of the cen-
first published in 1903, Street lauded the improved standard of
tury, were imperialists seeking solace for their souls among the
living for the local population. "If they [the summer residents]
'natives' of Lenox, Bar Harbor or Kennebunkport
Those
introduced some undesirable luxuries, emphasized some un-
natives had once owned all the land, they had a pride in their
fortunate class distinctions, and were responsible for some vices
own culture and families, they were sturdy and competent, and
formerly unknown, yet on the whole their influence was healthy
they were Protestant.
in matters sanitary and social and religious."
Some of the natives, however, had surprising forebears, as
Class distinctions showed up in many ways. A native of
Charles W. Eliot discovered. "John Gilley: Maine Farmer and
Northeast Harbor, Emily Phillips Reynolds, remembered as a
Fisherman" was Eliot's homage to one Northeast Harbor fam-
child saving a dollar to have her hair washed and combed at a
ily. Eliot called the Gilleys "the true American type." With deft-
beauty shop in Northeast Harbor. Happily she climbed the
ness, Eliot traced their family history, through maternal and
stairs to the second floor and asked Mrs. Coburn, a black lady
paternal lines, from their present home on Sutton Island off
from Philadelphia, to do her hair. "When I made my request
Northeast Harbor, back to Gloucester, Massachusetts. Interest-
she said she didn't do Natives. Crestfallen, I left and was very
ing antecedents were found in the alliance of Hannah Lurvey
disappointed and perplexed for I had never been called a Na-
and William Gilley, the parents of John Gilley and their eleven
tive before." Emily Phillips Reynolds also learned that the sum-
other children. As expected, Gilley was an English name. But
mer people were not to be disturbed or annoyed. "Keep out of
the name Lurvey, Eliot wrote, was a corruption of the German
the face and eyes of the Rusticators was a common lesson we
Jewish name Loewe. The Lurveys acknowledged that the first
learned early."
Loewe who went to Massachusetts was of Jewish descent from
In Northeast Harbor, they may have appeared for the first
Archangel, Russia. "It is noticeable that many of the Lurveys
time in 1898 when membership in the newly built swim club was
have Old Testament names, such as Reuben, Levi, Samuel,
for summer residents only. At the Bar Harbor Swim Club, it was
Isaac, and Jacob, and that their noses tend to be aquiline."
rumored that when, by chance, a local resident fell into the pool,
Bishop Doane, who was always interested in souls, pro-
the water was drained and the pool refilled. In Hulls Cove, Mrs.
nounced a loving judgment on the natives of Northeast Har-
Bowen remembered a discomforting incident with Larson,
bor. They had known adventure at sea and bravery in the Civil
whom she brought from Chicago to run her stable and oversee
War. "The competency on which they lived simple and un-
the liveries for all her drivers. The only time she ever saw Larson
spoiled lives, of home comfort and neighborly companionship,
angry was when he wanted to purchase a stretcher for the men's
was gained by honest toil and careful frugality." They were
breeches, which the Bowens required to be laundered regularly
"fond of dwelling upon the old times, and full of reminiscences
and which tended to shrink while drying. ''Oh, Larson, that is
of the island in its early condition, intelligently interested in
SO expensive! Can't you and the men put on the breeches and let
public questions of the time, and with a fresh and original way
them dry on you?' He really was quite annoyed and replied,
of putting things, which gave the zest of real raciness to their
'I would not take cold even for Mrs. Bowen,' SO the stretcher was
talk. And they were kind and cordial in all their attitudes to us
bought and the breeches were frequently washed."
who came from outside."
MOUNT DESERT ISLAND: VISIONARIES
171
(owned by Moe Levy of New York, one of them having a thou
sand fully furnished rooms), fourteen garages, two gasoline
CHAPTER 9
factories, car works and train sheds." One of Train's friend
ran "Foley's Furious, Frantic, Frenzied Terrific Twenty-five
Cent Tours Round the Island in Forty Minutes." The old car
riage drivers waited on tables at Moe Levy's hotel. Mount Deser
Island, Foley cried, was just like Coney Island.
Visionaries
If Train's prophecy was dire, the pressures for change
were real. Disputes were erupting on Mount Desert Island: car
versus carriages; the clash between local businessmen and th
summer residents; popular access to the island versus private
exclusion. Nonetheless, the old ladies, their maids and thei
horses stayed around. The farmers did not come. Society di
not leave the island. The Kebo, the Pot and Kettle, and th
other clubs thrived. There were no fires and, for the moment
no autos. And, in Bass Harbor, there were no Jewish owner
running their thousand-room hotels.
But there were, as Train well knew, a few acceptable ex
ceptions. Already, a small number of Jewish summer resident
IN 1907, ARTHUR TRAIN lamentingly called his beloved summer
and merchants were present on Mount Desert. The powerful
home "The Isle of Mt. Deserted." Writing for the Bangor Daily
iconoclastic and eccentric owner of the New York World and S
Commercial, Train imagined the worst on all fronts: autos on his
Louis Post-Dispatch, Joseph Pulitzer, was one. The publisher o
island, farmers in the towns, Jewish hotel operators on the
America's largest newspaper was an immigrant from Hungar
scene and low-class tourists all around. "It was on July 4, 1920,
whose parents were Jewish. He was married to Kate Davis,
ten years after the evacuation of Bar Harbor by its summer
non-Jewish woman in high standing in St. Louis society, wh
residents, that I determined to revisit the scenes of my youth
had learned to her dismay, only after their wedding, that he
and observe what changes, if any, time had wrought there."
husband was Jewish. The rich Pulitzer brought his family t
There were more than he could bear. Gasoline had ignited
Bar Harbor in the 1890's and established them in Chatwood
fires all over the island, charring the land and causing summer
When Pulitzer lavishly renovated the cottage to include a "towe
residents to flee. Bar Harbor was being forsaken even by the
of silence," as the locals called it, his family became one of th
local people who had built hotels for the auto tourists. The
most conspicuous on the island. Walter Damrosch, the musicia
fancy and rich did not drive over. But the farmers did. In
and conductor, was another Jew who settled in Bar Harbo
the deserted town one reckless farmer ran his car over some
Married to the daughter of James G. Blaine, Maine's venerate
dogs, hit the village clock, and rammed into horses and the post
senator and later U.S. secretary of state, Damrosch was easil
office. A day later "six hundred and ninety-seven old ladies who
accepted in Bar Harbor society. In both instances, Jewish me
boarded at the hotels called for their time and left town. They
married Gentile women, and their children, who were Gentile
took with them one thousand three hundred and twenty-nine
were accepted in society at the summer resort.
maids and nieces
Neither Pulitzer nor Damrosch tested the boundaries (
Train spun out his calamitous tale. Hoards of excursionists
the liberality of Bar Harbor's society, but Jacob H. Schiff did. I
came by railroad to the terminus at Bass Harbor, the new cen-
terms of power and prestige in business and philanthrop
ter of island life. It was a "thriving town with two large hotels
Schiff easily qualified for membership in the cottage commu
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MOUNT DESERT ISLAND: VISIONARIES
173
nity. Schiff had come to America in 1865 from a Frankfurt
He was married to a Jewish woman, Theresa Loeb Schiff,
Jewish family, long distinguished by its prominent bankers
daughter of a founding partner of Kuhn, Loeb and Company.
and rabbis. In 1875, he was invited to join the firm of Kuhn,
Compliant and respectful, she joined her husband in maintain-
Loeb and Company, which had started a New York commercial
ing rituals of Jewish observance for their extended family of
bank a few years before. Ten years later he was its senior
Schiffs, Warburgs and Loebs. According to his nephew Paul
partner. "Aggressively ambitious, adventurous, opinionated,
Warburg, Schiff's religion was "a strange mixture of orthodoxy
and strong-willed" was how his nephew James Warburg ac-
and ritualistic liberalism he had concocted for himself
" He
counted for Schiff's impressive success. Short in size, imperious
said prayers after meals, observed all religious holidays, blessed
and formal, Schiff was a forbidding figure to many people.
his children and grandchildren each Friday evening, insisted
From the 1880's through the second decade of the twen-
that his two children marry Jews, attended Temple Emanu-El
tieth century, Schiff, as the head of Kuhn, Loeb and Company,
in New York each Saturday, and did no work on the Sabbath.
was one of the most powerful investment bankers in the coun-
Within his own family, who regarded him as authoritarian
try. Schiff placed American railroad and government securities
and rigid, Schiff encountered mild tolerance and slight interest
in foreign markets. Along with other bankers, railroad tycoons
in religious observance. When his nephew James Warburg was
and industrialists, he rode the attendant wild waves of prosper-
engaged to a non-Jewish woman, his parents never expressed
ity and panic. He advised the Pennsylvania Railroad, for which
any objections. Schiff, however, was unable to contain his dis-
he raised more than a billion dollars in financing, and other
appointment and concern and telegraphed Warburg: "I wish
railroads, including the Union Pacific and Northern Pacific.
you joy
but cannot refrain from telling you that I am deeply
Schiff sat on the boards of the National City Bank, the Equita-
disturbed by your action in marrying out of the faith in view of
ble Life Assurance Society and other large corporations, as well
its probable effect upon my own progeny." Schiff's fears came
as political commissions and many philanthropic organizations.
true. Most of his many grandchildren married into upper-class
Power, however, did not necessarily bring social prestige.
Protestant families.
Schiff was the only one of the elite group of financial magnates
Regardless of his strong identification as a Jew, Schiff
who was not listed in the Social Register at the turn of the cen-
found respect and tolerance for himself and his family on
tury. (The key listing of prominent figures along with their
Mount Desert Island. Starting in 1903, every other August,
professions, clubs and church associations was first published in
Schiff and his wife visited the island with their son Mortimer,
1887 in New York.) According to the historian Frederick Lewis
their daughter Frieda, who was married to Felix Warburg, and
Allen, the omission was due solely to the fact that Schiff was "a
the many Schiff grandchildren. They rented one large cottage
Jew, and the Jews constituted a group somewhat apart; the
after another until they finally settled on Farview on Bar Har-
fashionable clubs were almost exclusively gentile; and the Social
bor's Eden Street, a house with elaborate pseudo-Italianate de-
Register was virtually a gentile register."
sign: fine gardens, terraces and a flower-filled inner courtyard.
Schiff was not only Jewish, but he was the leader of Amer-
The entourage traveled with sixty pieces of luggage, a
ican Jewry in the realms of philanthropy, public policy and
nurse, a valet, a maid and a governess in Edward Harriman's
the growing fight against anti-Semitism-helping to establish
private railroad car, joining the many other private cars on the
the foundations of Jewish life in America in the twentieth cen-
Bar Harbor Express, which went to Mount Desert Ferry. Ed-
tury. His reputation for wealth and charity followed him wher-
ward M. M. Warburg, one of Schiff's grandsons, remembered
ever he went. In 1899, Bishop Potter of New York maintained
the joy of the trip to Bar Harbor. "Each car was a house on
that Schiff was the greatest philanthropist of his day in their
wheels with brass beds in the master bedroom, sleeping accom-
city.
modations for the whole family including upper and lower
He was unique. Wherever he lived-in Maine, New Jersey
berths, which naturally we children adored. Each car also had
or New York-Schiff considered himself to be a religious Jew.
its own kitchen and dining compartment from which one could
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MOUNT DESERT ISLAND: VISIONARIES
183
scenes and noises amid which the greater part of their lives is
Given his stature in the academic world and on the island,
inevitably passed." The signs of city life came most forcefully
Eliot's wishes were hard to resist. As president of Harvard, he
with the automobile. When year-round residents sought to
spent the last years of the nineteenth century building a great
bring them on the island, the struggle with the summer popu-
university through cultivating its graduate programs, improv-
lation was fierce.
ing the quality and diversity of the faculty and converting the
In 1909, for the first time, clashing economic and class
undergraduate curriculum into a new system of elective stud-
interests were explicitly exposed. John T. Hinch, a dentist in
ies. He was independent, deeply religious, outspoken and in-
Bar Harbor and the head of the local automobile committee,
veterately curious about matters great and small. (Mrs. Eliot
accused the "city millionaires" of trying by "every means in
once asked a neighbor in Northeast Harbor what he thought of
their power to make Bar Harbor a quiet, exclusive resort where
a portrait of her husband. After looking at it for a while, the
their little clique can have full sway and where no state of Maine
farmer commented: "Yaas, that's him sure, but he ain't asking
man is welcome." The cottage people, he wrote, knew that autos
no questions.")
would bring a different kind of visitor who would revitalize the
Eliot also wrote and spoke prolifically about the great
hotel life. With a surge of defiance and independence, he wrote:
public-policy debates of his time: the Spanish-American War,
"The businessmen of Bar Harbor are beginning to realize that
the nature of wealth, the restriction of immigration, and World
what the millionaires want is unreasonable and unjust."
War I. Equally free with advice on minute matters of behavior,
Another issue, one of enduring importance, was also com-
he once informed Bishop William Lawrence of Massachusetts
ing to the fore. Preservation of the natural landscape was a
that he should hire a secretary to answer his mail and tele-
matter of growing concern to many of the leaders of the sum-
phone. "Of course," Eliot told the bishop, "you should never go
mer community, especially Charles W. Eliot, whose call for ac-
to the telephone yourself, or be called upon to decide anything
tion invoked the idealism of his son, Charles, who had died not
on only telephonic notice."
long before. A visionary democrat and landscape architect,
Eliot's meeting in 1901 was another triumph for him. He
young Charles had organized the Trustees of Public Reserva-
convinced his fellow residents on Mount Desert Island to es-
tions for Massachusetts to preserve scenic and historic areas. He
tablish the Hancock County Trustees of Public Reservations.
had been equally concerned with Maine's future. "Can nothing
Two years later, the association was incorporated by the Maine
be done," he wrote in 1888, "to preserve for the use and en-
legislature "to acquire, by devise, gift or purchase, and to own,
joyment of the great unorganized body of the common people
arrange, hold, maintain or improve for public use lands in
some fine parts, at least, of this seaside wilderness of Maine?"
Hancock County, Maine, which by reason of scenic beauty, his-
In 1901, the father convened an illustrious group of min-
torical interest, sanitary advantage or other like reasons may
isters, scientists and summer residents including George B.
become available for such purpose."
Dorr, George Vanderbilt and Bishops William Lawrence and
The person whose life was most affected by the Mount
William Doane. "By what means," Eliot asked them, "can some
Desert Island conservation movement was George Dorr, an im-
public reservations of interesting scenery be secured for the
portant summer figure whose family had built Oldfarm in Bar
perpetual use and enjoyment of all the inhabitants of Mount
Harbor in 1878. At the age of forty-nine, Dorr carried an air of
Desert, natives, cottagers and transient visitor alike?" Eliot ex-
formality and aloofness as well as evinced a strong physical
plained that over the past twenty years, he had seen beautiful
vigor. He was a scholar, a professional horticulturist, an inde-
spots on the island become inaccessible. "Place after place where
fatigable trailblazer on the island and sole heir in a family of
I was in the habit of walking or picnicking has been converted
wealth and high social standing in Boston and Bar Harbor. In
to private uses, and resort to it by other than the owner has
response to Eliot's campaign, Dorr donated a large portion of
become impossible."
his own lands, aggressively bought additional properties for the
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185
trustees and pursued gifts of land and money from his peers.
ing the advice of Dr. Simon Flexner and his wife, Helen, JDR,
By 1913-just ten years later-Dorr's efforts had accumulated
Jr., moved to the quieter and less pretentious town of Seal
nearly five thousand acres, including some of the island's most
Harbor. Both he and his wife, Abby Aldrich Rockefeller, sought
scenic mountaintops.
to connect their lives closely to simple New England virtues and
Success on one front, however, produced difficulties on
the beauty of the island. In 1910, he purchased The Eyrie, a
another. Southwest Harbor, with the smallest and least-
mock English cottage set on a high ridge overlooking the East-
powerful summer community, had voted in 1911 to allow cars.
ern Way and the Cranberry Isles. Along with significantly en-
In 1913, pressure built up in the state legislature at Augusta to
larging The Eyrie, JDR, Jr., an amateur landscape architect,
force all of the island's towns to allow automobiles. Within the
started to design and build carriage roads on his extensive prop-
year, Bar Harbor capitulated, while Northeast Harbor and Seal
erty just as he had done at the family's Pocantico Hills estate
Harbor held firm for only two more years.
near New York City.
As a result of the introduction of the automobile and of con-
In his earliest appeals to Rockefeller in 1914 and 1915,
flicts between land speculators and the trustees, in January 1913
Dorr explained that the trustees could not afford to protect
the state representative from Bar Harbor introduced a bill to re-
their land either from fire or from the threat of taxation. Eliot,
voke the charter and tax-exempt status of lands owned by the
on his part, informed Rockefeller that Dorr could not afford to
Hancock County Trustees of Public Reservations. Although
finance additional land purchases and the verification of deeds
Dorr was able to get the bill defeated, he realized that the trust-
on his own. In response to the joint appeals, Rockefeller agreed
ees needed greater protection than they could find in Augusta.
to contribute $17,500, his first substantial gift to the trustees.
With Eliot's backing, Dorr turned to the federal govern-
It was the beginning of a close and fruitful relationship
ment and the national conservation movement, where he felt
among Dorr, Eliot and Rockefeller. As they moved through
more at home in Washington than in Maine's state capital, Au-
intricate negotiations into the larger public domain of the fed-
gusta. He had numerous friends-and friends of friends-in
eral government, the triumvirate took over the leadership of
the small, elitist federal government. Bearing the grace and
the island. Slowly, they stretched their concepts of public access
wealth of a Boston patrician, Dorr had immediate entrée to the
to the island far beyond the privileged boundaries of the small
highest officials in Woodrow Wilson's administration, including
Protestant summer colony. Rockefeller became the active but
the President himself. Dorr embarked on a campaign to give
cautious patron of Dorr's preservation campaign. Eliot became
the trustees' lands as a gift to the federal government in the
the intermediary between the other two: while pressing Rock-
form of a national monument or national park.
efeller for more and more generous contributions, Eliot had to
The process took two years of arduous work and increased
justify Dorr's frenetic activities to the orderly and meticulous
financial commitments from the summer residents. While Dorr
patron.
perfected the deeds and boundaries, Eliot solicited funds. He
If
Mount Desert Island and Bar Harbor were to be sold to
turned to John D. Rockefeller, Jr., with whom he served on
the people of the United States, the island could not be pro-
three of the Rockefeller philanthropic boards, including the
moted as an exclusive resort for the rich. Therefore, Dorr
Rockefeller Foundation set up in 1913 with an endowment of
turned to ornithologists, geologists, botanists and historians to
$100,000,000. Ever ready to assess character, Eliot viewed
convince the public that the one hundred square miles of
Rockefeller-forty years his junior-as a serious, diligent, cau-
Mount Desert Island were unique. A flood of scientific detail
tious and reserved man.
was set loose, describing the island's thirteen granite peaks,
A relatively recent property owner in Seal Harbor, Rock-
nine clear freshwater lakes, many bays, the fjord at Somes
efeller was perfectly suited in temperament and interests to join
Sound, the molten masses, glacial movements, ice sheets, for-
Dorr and Eliot's crusade. On his first extended stay in 1908, he
ests, trees, cliffs, gorges, boulders, coves, harbors, meadow-
had rented one of Bar Harbor's largest cottages. Then, follow-
lands, marshes, aquatic life, migratory patterns of sea and shore
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187
birds as well as vegetation that was uniquely situated at the
country, people who would be responsive to the beauty and
crossroads between the southernmost boundary of the Arctic
inspiration of its scenery, and can get away for a brief or longer
zone and the northernmost boundary of the more temperate
holiday. They are going there now in numbers, but what we
area to the south. A rich history was called forth to retrace the
want to provide for specially is the need of people of moderate
exploits of the early explorers and settlers. The colonial strug-
or narrow means who would appreciate what it has to give in
gles involving the French and English were retold through his-
beauty, interest, and climate."
tories of Pierre deu Guast (Sieur de Monts), Samuel de
Dorr submitted letters of endorsement from such distin-
Champlain, Antoine de La Mothe (Sieur de Cadillac), the Jesuit
guished summer residents as David B. Ogden, George W. Wick-
mission at St-Sauveur, Samuel Argall, Mme. de Gregoire, Mar-
ersham, Rev. A. W. Halsey, Rev. William T. Manning and
quis de Lafayette, Sir Francis Bernard and Abraham Somes.
Bishop William Lawrence. A letter from Jacob 11. Schiff to the
While Dorr was selling Mount Desert, a struggle was under
chairman of the House Committee on Appropriations was in-
way in Washington to promote a national constituency for a
cluded:
unified park system and to convince Congress to create a na-
tional park service under the jurisdiction of the Interior De-
I have been a resident of Mt. Desert Island during the
partment. Both Franklin K. Lane, secretary of the interior, and
summer for the past fifteen years; have visited almost
his assistant, Steve Mather, became strong supporters of Eliot
every nook and corner of the island, and in my travels
and Dorr's efforts. The year 1916 turned out to be climactic:
all over the United States and in foreign countries, I
Congress created the National Park Service; President Wilson
have found no section that Nature has made more
accepted from the trustees five thousand acres of land as a "free
attractive than Mt. Desert Island. I really believe that
gift" to the United States under the designation of the Sieur de
the island is one of the finest gifts God has bestowed
Monts National Monument.
upon the people of the United States, and it is but
For Dorr, the Sieur de Monts National Monument was only
right that they should show themselves worthy of this
the first step toward the proper maintenance and expansion of
gift by seeing to its proper protection and preserva-
the lands the trustees had brought together. More and more he
tion.
turned to Rockefeller, who wanted to extend his carriage paths
over lands owned by the trustees and federal government. Dorr
As Schiff and Dorr hoped, Congress joined the Mount
needed money to expand the holdings of the monument and
Desert Island lands to the National Park Service. The Sieur de
convert it into a federally supported national park. In 1916, the
Monts National Monument became Lafayette National Park in
trustees and federal government granted Rockefeller the per-
February 1919, when President Wilson signed his name to the
mission he sought. At the same time, Rockefeller started to
bill. (In 1929, it was renamed Acadia National Park.) A few
fund the acquisition of lands on the western part of the island.
days later, Dorr wrote to JDR Jr. to thank him for his help. "It
In pursuit of additional moneys, Dorr presented his case in
is the first National Park to be created east of the Rocky Moun-
1918 before the appropriate committees of the House of Rep-
tains, and the first created in this country by the gift of citizens."
resentatives. In a hearing before the Subcommittee on Public
Dorr's achievement was extraordinary, but it carried some
Lands, Dorr tried to meet all the popular concerns of the con-
searing personal costs. Although he was the superintendent of
gressmen. To counter any dubious objections, he twisted and
the new park, he began serving without pay, while his financial
stretched his arguments. When asked about accommodations
situation became more precarious than ever. In July 1919, a
around the park for the traveling public, the patrician Dorr
committee of over fifty permanent and summer residents raised
spoke of hotels and boardinghouses in Bar Harbor-but never
a public appeal for $25,000 to pay Dorr for lands that he had
of the fancy cottage community whence he came. "Our idea as
purchased on behalf of the trustees and the new park.
to the park has been to develop it for the brain workers of the
To protect their lands, Eliot, Dorr and Rockefeller turned
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MOUNT DESERT ISLAND: VISIONARIES
189
from the isolated and exclusive summer colony of the rich and
beauty and grandeur. "Today we had one of those glorious Bar
entered into a complex relationship with the federal govern-
Harbor days," he wrote to his son Mortimer, "when one can see
ment. Yet, on the surface, not much seemed to change. The
almost through the sky into heaven."
new public park slipped easily into the private, elitist world.
In recognition of Schiff's generous contribution to the Vil-
The "brain workers" that Dorr spoke of at the congressional
lage Improvement Society, Dorr named a trail for him on Dry
hearing did not pour into the town. The multitudes from the
Mountain. And in recognition of his attachment to the island,
cities-neither the native born nor the immigrant-did not con-
Schiff enjoyed the honor and departed from his usual posture
verge on the island. In 1920, there were 150,000 visitors to the
of philanthropic self-effacement. Refusing to allow any dedica-
park, many in automobiles, but they hardly changed the tenor
tory plaques to honor his gifts to various institutions and causes,
of the resort.
Schiff maintained that recognition should come only after a
Within a few years, the railroads and steamships saw less
donor's death. But a trail on Mount Desert was different.
and less traffic. The Maine Central would soon abandon Mount
In September 1920, Schiff died after a year of poor health.
Desert Ferry and the trip across Frenchman Bay. Passengers
"Mr. Schiff enjoyed the life here at Bar Harbor and was inter-
would travel to Ellsworth and then by car or bus across the
ested in the resort, being especially fond of the scenery here.
bridge to the island. Eliot sold his carriages and horses. Mrs.
He had many friends among the summer colony and was much
Bowen sent Larson, her erstwhile driver, to visit Detroit. In-
respected by the residents of the town." Thus, the Bar Harbor
stead of horses, he now cared for cars.
Times wrote about Schiff's death in a front-page column. The
Society life in Bar Harbor securely held to its own pace and
long obituary echoed The New York Times in cataloging Schiff's
pleasures. Each summer, with unequaled hospitality and
outstanding business and philanthropic deeds.
aplomb, Mrs. Bowen sent out invitations to the privileged pub-
Several months later, Charles W. Eliot paid homage to
lic of Bar Harbor-to "all the summer visitors, and to those of
Schiff in the Menorah Journal, the publication for Jewish stu-
the natives I knew." The enticing invitation read, "Mrs. Bowen
dents in college. Eliot wrote of the "intimate friendship" be-
at home in her garden on pleasant Sunday afternoons in July
tween himself and Schiff. Proudly, Eliot referred to Schiff's
and August from three until six o'clock." Sometimes as many as
generosity-amounting to $250,000-to Harvard's Semitic de-
two hundred of the select visited her home to share the plea-
partment and museum. "I have never met a keener intelli-
sures of Baymeath.
gence, a more sympathetic yet discriminating maker of gifts
In 1920, Arthur Train's fantasy of fear had not come true.
large and small, a truer disciple of the nameless Good Samar-
There had been no conflagrations, no railroad tracks on the
itan, or a more grateful patriot, Jewish and American com-
island, no Foleys and no frenzied tours. Arthur Train was still
bined."
there, but Moe Levy had not arrived. The few Jewish families
Their relationship involved an honest exchange of views
in Bar Harbor-never more than five to seven at any one time-
on many subjects as well as a common love for Mount Desert.
continued to live quietly and run their modest shops. Their
The two men, Eliot recalled, discussed "business ethics, labor
religious life and Jewish communal activities remained spo-
union problems, international peace and the best way to de-
radic, except in 1918, when as part of the nationwide relief
velop and conserve for future generations the landscape beau-
campaign for eastern Europe, the Jews in Bar Harbor raised
ties of Mt. Desert Island. We wrote to each other rather
$2,000. Schiff helped them to meet their quota.
frequently, and in summer we walked together on the rough
Jacob Schiff remained the one Jew who was accepted by
trails through the woods and up the hills of that wonderful
the summer community. He was the only one who belonged to
island."
the Bar Harbor Swim Club and the only Jew who rented on a
It was a unique friendship-one that flourished on Mount
regular basis. Clearly Schiff felt at home. He visited with the
Desert-between the educator and the philanthropist, the brah-
Eliots. He climbed and tramped over the island and relished its
min and the German immigrant, between the Unitarian and
HIRSCHL & ADLER GALLERIES, INC
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the Jew. They were exceptions-in their liberalism, their active
opposition to immigration restriction, their confidence and
hopes for the future. In his belief in American diversity and
improvement through education, Eliot championed the Jewish
immigrant and encouraged Jewish students at Harvard. Unlike
Schiff, Eliot even supported a Zionist state. Nonetheless, it
would take several more decades before Mount Desert Island
would be home to more than a handful of Jews within the
Gentile population.
On the Porch at Birchcroft, No. 2 by Carroll Sargent Tyson, 1911. This
group portrait shows Tyson's sister, and father and mother, Carrol
senior and Clara, on the porch of their cottage in Northeast Harbor
NORTHEAST HARBOR LIBRARY
Rosserne overlooks Somes Sound in Northeast Harbor. Designed b
Fred Savage, the summer home originally built in 1891 for Rev. Co