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

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France and Frenchmans Bay
France and Frenchmans
Bay
page 2 of the April 6 diotaphone transcription near the middle of
Cylinder 1, but a new subject.
Frenchmans Bay is the la st considerable opening on the
coast as one goes north which lies open freely to the ocean.
up
Beyond,all is one great bay pt which the tide rolls with
sweeping force, that oulimnates in the Bay of Fundy, the name
given by a Portuguese fisherman who came out upon the Banks
to fish in the lattor half of the 16th century, moting
there fishermon from Brittanyand from England -- a truly
Cosmopolitan gathering.
The Bay of Fundy is a corruption
early
of Baiou Fonda, the Deep Bay. The French called it
Baie Francoise, but the Portuguose is the one that held,
handed down from one generation of fishermen to and her, till
it came fixed with all.
For naval purposes Frenchmans Bay, a name which goes back to
the early 17th century when the Fronch province of Acadia
stretched down to the Penobsoot and Frenchmans Bay was the
r endesvous for #rench vessels gathering for attack on the
New England ooast or for shelter in attack. The
pleasantest
prexent and most fortile part of Nova Sootia , the best in soil
east
and exposure and the most free from fog, lies no nearly
of Mount Desert
from
Island, though somewhat to the north. It is A
well sheltered coast, relatively free from fog,
page 3 April 6
and sheltered too, in case of war, from the attack of
enemies from overseas.
The famous Fishing Banks represent an ancient coast line,
that of its Continental Sholf beyond which the ocean bottom
descends rapidly into oceanic depths. This ancient coast
line extends far out northward and eastward from Nova Scotia
and from the fossil evidence must have once been, in far off
timed, the fertile and well-protected home or a rich, almost
sub-tropical flora, extending the- with 11 ttle change as far,
quite certainly, as the Potomac. Nova Sootia itself extends
southwart to meet Geroges Bank, ascending from the Cape Cod
repion, the waters of a great river draining once the Gulf
of Maine and carrying to the sea through a deep out north
of Georges Bank the drainage from a great forested valley; 14
but is sunk now beneath now the ocean but was once a great
plain, dwelt in, the evidence show s,
by browsing horse', feeding on leaves of deciduous trees
and broad-footed to boar them up in low-lying, marshy ground.
The moustains of Mount Desert ALL of ignoous origin
once united in a vast diko of granite whose great crystals
geologic sense
show long oooling, even in the
under a super
incumbent mass thousands of feet in t hickness as the
of cooling tells, which long donudation of the region has left
because of its superior hardness, standing above the sea which
a
has engulfed the rest. Later and relatively recantly, vast
ice sheet formed in the Labrador and Katahdin regions and
page 4, April 6
moved slowly southward, a.. solid, dividing the ancient
granite mass into separate isolated peaks, the Island's
though
present mountain chain. It is a great history, **** but
dimly apprehended, That it covers the whole development of
life on land, vegetable and animal aliko with we clearly know
from he rare evidence left behind. And that of life upon
land goes further ages back to life within the sea, which
recoded andwas the source of all its varied life on land, plant
and animal.
Compass Harbor, to return to that, is the only
Bay/ I know unon the Island, though there may be others,
bottomed with quartz sand, the delightful to see and for
children to play upon, that comes from the coast southward
Orden's Point, the point from which
bounded on the
northern side to the vicinity of Schooner head, is the most
ancient on the Islnad, built up of hard old rock, and except
at Caompass Harbor is cliffed and bold, leaving no opportunity
for sand to gather.
Compass Harbor got its name from t he early
settlers from the shores of Massachusetts Bay,tt -
settlers who did nt como direct from overseas at the
end of the Acediannperiod, who named it from its plaeting
opening due north toward toward the Gouldshoro Hills,
which give that whole section of the coast its unrivalled
beauty,
It makes excent! ma1ly good mooring ground, where
I kept my boat, The Wrong
Dorrs Boat, the Wren
page 5,
April 6
Cy1 3
built for me by the elder Burgess, Edward Burgess, who
safely
built some of the earlyoup defenders,
for eighteen
nearly
years though a great midsummer storm once wrecked
it as it strained upon the hook of inch thi ck iron by which
it was moored, till, when the S torm was over I found it had
just hold by chance, being all but straightened ant.
Onnosite Compass Harbor and the Oldfarm shore lies,
a mile away but nearer, seemingly, the bold, rounded
mass of Bald Porcupine, a tax dense MASS of ancient lava
rock poured out from same bonch or crack probably in the earth's
surface, on top of its more anoient Cambrian rook which one
may see lying in strata beneath the lava at the eastern
its
foot of the great cl'ff, the sea gulls' nesting place.
This island now belongs to my friend and neighbor, on
northern
that
Ogden Point, which forms the eastern bound of the Harbor
as it does the southern bound of Cromwell's Harbor, a superb
sitro, but limited practically to the single house site.
Mrs Browning bDught the island because I told her of what
Congressman Crampton, who once stayed with me at Oldfarm with
his wife, on their way back fromCanada, told me KX that unless
we secured that island which we were then looking at from
my Oldfarm winde- porch, we would wake uo some day and find it
covered with huge advertisement so conspicuous an opportunity
*
first
It ine
cyl 3 page 6, April 6
for them were its cliffed faces, west and south, past which all
boats went by.
So,
when I had done, I thought, my share
I invited Mrs Browning to purchase it for our joint protection,
which she, repeating to her son, he bought it for her and
incidentally for mo as well. But there is nothing to be
done with it but to hold it nd she would gladly give it to
the Park, I know, should tt be desired.
The Old farm property is one of the best and most
fertile pieces of farmland on the Island, long cultivated
when
which he did
for my father purchased it in the summer of 1868, the first
spent here and a dozen years before we built the Oldfarm house.
one of the
It was an early farm grant, the earliest on the island, dattnex
stretching back with straight parallel sides onto the no thern
front of the mountain once called Noport for no known reason and
now by its Government renemings: Champlain. that further
is now part of Acadia National Park, given to it by me,
when the Park was formed. The Mount Desert Nurseries occupies
the central portion which was-- constituted the 'Cousena'
country farm and our Oldfarm house overlooking the Bay, rises,
built of red-tinged granite from the Gorgo, rises from one of
the most beautiful house sites I know upon all the coast,
taken in can junction with the beauty of the shore and gardens.
File
Until the establishment of Acadia National Park on
the coast of Maine the National Park System was without contact
with the sea. Such contact upon an islanded and mountainous
coast is one of Nature's great experiences; that allwwho could
might share in it was the purpose of this first eastern park's
creation. The gathering of the lands that make it, held since
colonial times in private ownership, commenced twenty-one years
ago this summer, the United States owning nothing then but
lighthouses along the coast. Formed originally by gift, it is
growing still by further gifts.
Mount Desert Island, within whose sea-girt bounds the
Park has been till recently confined, is the largest rock-built
island off our Atlantic shore and owes its existence to a vast
dike of granite upheaved, molten, with terrific force into now
vanished strata of ancient coastal deposition whose erosion thr
ough
countless centuries has left the granite standing out to form a
singularly bold range of wind-swept peaks, fronting the sea, which
forms the dominant landscape feature of the Park.
A steel and conorete drawbridge -- a world war memorial
connects the Island at the Narrows with the State highway system,
a concrete road leading from it to Ellsworth, the County seat,
placed midway to Bangor at the head of tidal waters on the
Penobscot River.
2.
One of the important features of the Park from the
motorist's point of view is its easy and beautiful approach
from the great motoring centers of Boston and Portland, from the
another is
White Mountains or Quebec; and/the picturesque, historio terri-
tory that lies beyond it in the Canadian provinces of New Brunswick
Nova Scotia, and Cape Breton. From New York east, the New England
coast leads on to it with splendid ocean-skirting roads and
famous stopping places on the way. Creating an objective worthy
of that approach the United States is now building in the Park,
under charge of the Federal Roads Bureau, a magnificent motor
road to the summit of Cadillac Mountain, the highest point on
our Atlantic coast where from an elevation of over fifteen
hundred feet one looks out over "ocean's vast expanse" to the
far horizon where it vanishes to sight.
Acadia National Park is the only National Park in
the United States title to whose deeds goes back to colonial
days and royal governments of France and England. The first
owner in private right of Mount Dosert Island was a soldier and
hardy adventurer of old family in France whose name automobiles
have carried round the earth, Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac, the
founder of Detroit. To him the Island, together with two
square leagues upon the opposite mainland, was granted in
ancient feudal fashion by the Provinco of Quebec and confirmed
to him by the King of France, Louis XIV.
3.
Occasionally one comes in the chain of title by
which the United States now holds these lands upon deeds that
bear the signature of Cadillac's granddaughter, Marie de Cadillac
as she signs herself, to whom and to her husband, coming to these
shores shortly after the American Revolution, the General
Court of Massachusetts in gratitude to France for her help in
the war confirmed the ancient title so far as regards the
eastern portion of the Island, that fronting on Frenchman's
Bay where Bar Harbor is today and the national park office.
It was in the Commission given to another nobleman
of France, the Sieur de Monts -- Lord of Mountains -- in
December, 1603, by France's great warrior king, Henry IV,
to establish the French dominion in America that the name
Acadia first appears, and the King there speaks of it
as familiar to him from the accounts of traders and fishermen
returning from its shores. It then and for a century after-
ward included eastern Maine, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and
Cape Breton, a noble heritage taken in conjunction with the River
of Cariada -- the St. Lawrence and its banks - the Great
Lakes and the valley of the Mississippi, which the enterprise
of France's hardy mariners and explorers and the devotion of
her priests had won and which the ambition of her monarchs lost
on European battlefields.
4.
The last hundred years mark man's conquest of distance.
century ago, sailing craft, moved by uncertain winds, was still the
best means to reach Mount Desert Island or its region. Now, with
a high-powered car one can come easily from Boston in a single
day, or leisurely in two, spending the night at any one of a
number of famous points:along the way and keeping, if one will,
within sight of the sea the whole way, or passing inland to the
State capital, Augusta, at the head of the long tidal estuary of
the Kennebec, All routes are beautiful and the roads are good.
Resort to Mount Desert Island has been always from
the country over, not local nor mainly from New England. In the
days following the Civil War many came from the Confederate
states, from Virginia and Pennsylvania and Washington. Now they
come by motor car from every state east of the great divide,
seeking the cool New England coast from all the hot interior, And
in these visitors to the Park one sees how the automobile is
welding the nation into a single whole, educating by contact, one
section with another, and broadening all horizons.
Unlike the great western parks formed from the public
domain 1n/wild and solitary places, Acadia National Park is placed
among old And long-established resort communities which furnish
the visitors to the Park through private enterprise, controlled
by competition, with what is provided by concessioners in other
parks. Such enterprise is quick to respond to the demand and
all who come can count on being well provided, simply or ex-
pensively as their desire may be.
Note This appears 4h the
Histricol'Associa "achilein SMP
The Sieur do Monts National Monument on the coast of Maino
is the only national park, other than battle-cite momorial, in the
eastern portion of our country It was formed by the gift of oitizens
and accepted by the President for its historic interests no less than
for its unique and striking coastal landscape. Its deeply divided
range of granite mountains, bare-topped with darkly nooded bases, was
the first feature noted by Champlain In his exploration of our coast,
made - in September, 1604 - from Do Monta! first colony at the mouth
of the present Saint Croix River - named for it - in the founding of
Acadims and Mount Desert Island, the 'island of the wild and solitary
mountains! was the first land he touched within the present bounds
of the United States.
Tine years later, 1. 1613, the Island became the ahosen
cite of the first French missionary oolony planted on the American Con-
tinent, settlement being made at the entrance to Somes Sound, at the
mountains' southern foot.
whis settlement, whose story is told at considerable length
in the Jesuit Narratives by Father Biard, one of the leaders of the ex-
pedition, was named by them, as the Log-oloud they arrived in lifted,
disclosing the poaceful beauty of the soenes Saint Bauveur - in gratitude,
as it is stated, for the Divine guidance which had load them across a
dangerous and unchartered sea to a spot so fair. It was the later
wreaking of this settlement, together with a succeeding attack upon
the opposite Nova Sootian shore, by an armed vessel from Virginia
unded by Samuel Argall, that commenced, according to Parkman,
the century and a half of warfare between the French and English
for the control of North America; and for & century of this, until
the Peace of Utrecht in 1713, the broad, land-locked bay that
bounds Mount Desert Island on the eastern side and is still known
as Frenchman's Bay was the recognised gathering-place of vessels
for naval expeditions by the French against the English and rendez-
TOUS for their return.
Two generations later Mount Desert Island was deeded in
foudal fashion by Louis XIV to Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac,
soldier of anoient family in France then serving in Acadia and
later to become the founder of Detroit and Governor of Louisiana.
He is recorded as living on the island with his wife in 1688, on
the shore of Frenchman's Bay, in a memorandum drawn up in that year
by Sir Edmind Andros for the English government, wi th reference to
a descent on the Acadian coast.
Ceded to England with the rest of Acadia save Cape Breton
by the Peace of Utreaht, the Island ultimately passed into the
possession of Massachusetts, which while yet a province gave it to
its last Colonial Governor, Sir Franois Bernard, in reward for
2
securing to It that portion of Acadia which now forms part of Maine,
against the rival claims of Nova Sootia; and after confiscation of
his property in the Revolution, returned its western half to his son,
John Bernard, and gave its eastern half to the granddaughter of
Cadillao and her husband, Monsieur and Madame do Gregoire B French
refugees, who came out to America bringing letters from Iafayette -
who thereupon came down and lived, and died, on it, becoming citizens
of the United States.
From these two gifts of lassachusetts, both proceeding from
earlier ones by the Crowns of France and England, it is that the
titles to the land the government now holds, to both the eastward
and the westward of Somes Sound, proceed.
with these and other old historical associations linking
the new Park with France, and with its own broad outlook over the
seas toward her, it is planned to make it serve a unique funotion
among our national parks, and embody in its lands and mountains an
enduring memory of France's old relation to the land and of our friend-
ship and alliance, past and present, with her. In accordance with
this plan, warmly supported by the present Secretary of the Interior,
the Hon. Franklin K. Lane, Senator Halo of Maina has introduced &
bill, already passed by the Senate and favorably acted on by the
Public Lands Committee of the House, to change the Siew de Monts
National Monument, proclaimed by the President two years ago, into
3
a mattonal park under the name of the Iafayette National Park, chosen
to express the breadth and inclusiveness of the commemorative inten-
tion. And the United States Geographic Commission, whose practice
is habitually most conservative, has revised in harmony with this
plan the names of certain of the mountains in the Park and given them
others related to the Island's early history - Champlain, Cadillac,
Aoadin, and Do Monta are all recorded 1m this NV, while the mountain
near whose foot the early Jequit settlement was made, has been named
in memory of it Saint Sanvour Mountain. The site of this missionary
settlement, still known as Jesuit Field locally, is a broad grassland
sloping gently to the sea at the entrance to Somes Sound and looking,
it would seem, not greatly different from what it did when the Jesuits
and their colonists game sailing in. A fine
harbor,
noted
as
such
by Governor Bernard in his still extant account, lies in front of it,
sholtered by lessor islands, and the mountains make its background.
There are few spots in the world of greater beauty in its northern type,
and few - apart from of ties - more certain to be widely visited in years
to some. Nor could my be more fitly ohosen to commemorate in a national
way these early missionaries, the story of whose steadfastness and de-
votion forms SO striking a chapter in that of the early French occupation
of this Continent.
In commemorating, accordingly, other features of the Island's
early history, those who have the development of this first eastern
rightly done competitivity invite the
Cardinal in thin got to of the Catholio Church to to
point Attoo of laymen from its ranic to cooperate with
R establishing on the cite described, on Land now
nation MT owned and at the oro ing point of beauty on our
coast, and, appropriate memorial, L harmony with
other of tentorio charaoter intended 1. tho Fork, and L
Ath its Landscape notting.
Before formally extending this invitation, as is
done, Centrance that such a atep would be consonant with
Kar views and wishes has been infor 11y obtained,
And Ru menoo has expressed in a personal interview his WAYM
interest in the.plan.
5
not
e
In the Lafayette National Park Maine possesses the
unique distinction of having the first National Park created
by Congress to the eastward of the Rooky Mountains, and the
first accessible without a distant journey to the great city
populations of the eastern states. In it, it possesses the on
National Park, east or west, that borders on the ocean and
adds its interest and refreshment to those of its land area;
and in it also, it possesses the only National Park with
historical associations going back to the first settlement
of America or the establishment of the United States.
What the Lafayette National Park has to offer is
unique in other ways. It is the only National Park that
exhibits the summer beauty of the Appalachian forest or
the glory of its autumnal follage; it is the only one that
forms a sanotuary for eastern wild flowers or for eastern
birds; and it is the only one that offers to its visitors
the opportunity of sailing upon coastal waters and the
sport of deep BGQ fishing.
Maine has & wonderful coast, formed by the sinking
of an old land area worn by streams, and its invasion by
the sea, which has transformed its valley into ocean bays
and estuaries and its hills into island; and the oulminating
point of this coast in & scenio sense lies at Mount Desert
where the Lafayette National Park has boen oreated.
2-
Grandour depends far more on form and character than
on extent, and the range of the Mount Desert Hills, though
rising only to heights of from one thousand to fifteen hundred
feet above the sea in which its feet are set, is built of
anoient granite, deeply ice-eroded, and is given treble value
by the vast, blue ocean plain on which it looks.
From
earliest time the two elements in nature, woods and flowing
springo apart, that have gathered about themselves romance and
poetry and made appear to the imagination have been the sea
and mountains, and it is the combination at Mount Debert of
sea and mountain, unique on our Atlantic coast, which now gives
this first of eastern National Parks its singular.
The land area of the park, the sea apart, however,
has remarkable variety and interest. Occupying at the present
time about ten thousand aores, it stretches across the Island
from east to west, containing in a continuous ohain & dozen
mountain peaks, separated by deep ravines and passes. It oon-
tains, also, lying among the mountsins, a number of beautiful
fresh-water lakes, and one magnificent fiord, Somes Sound.
It contains portions of the now rare primeval forest, with
broad stretches of younger woodlands, the haunt of birds and
deer, and contains, trodden by the feet of generations,
soores of miles of osirn-marked mountain trails and woodland
paths that are capable of superb extension in the National
Park service hands. But, for the multitudes who will need
3-
and BOOK the refreshment of this pork in years to come, the
greatest opportunity perhaps it offers lies in the nationally
owned and island-sjeltered waters that surround it on all
sides but one, facing the open ocean, and stretch away through
deep and narrow waterways and land-looked reaches of the sea
to Castine and other points of interest on Penobscot Bay, or
past them up the flooded river-valley Champlain explored and
found BO beautiful in 1604, to the head of navigation at Bangor
For these waters - owned and controlled by the
National Government in complete possession - form in themselves
a wonderful water-park, hundreds of square miles in extent,
which the National Park Service plans to use in connection
with its land are, as the development of the park progresses,
by means of EL house-boat system of simple, inexpensive
charaoter which will enable people coming from the heat and
confinement of city life in summer to get the 0001 refresh-
mont of a northern sea in surroundings of extraordinary
beauty, moving at will from mooring ground to mooring
ground and rowing, fishing, small-boat ssiling, or oanoeing
as they go, with statione for mail service and supplies along
the way.
Though the Lafa yette National Park itself is
a new creation, the President signing the bill creating it on
the 26th of February, 1919, after first accepting, two years and
a half before, its area for a national monument - the Sieur
de Monts - it has & long history back of it in that of Mount
Desert Island, of which it occusies the principal soonio part
and from whose beauty it has sprung.
Mount Desert Island was discovered on September
5, 1604, by Champlain, who had come out with the Siour do
Monts, a Huguanot nobleman and soldier to whom Henry IV
of France, its great warrior king, had given vice-royal
powers to occupy for France and colonize "le paya et
territoire de l'Acadie" - "the lands and territory of Aoadia"
a name of Indian origin apparently which appears for the first
time in Do Monts' commission. De Monta, with Champlain's
aid, selected as the site for their first colony - named
by them Sainote Croix - an island in the mouth of the
present St. Croix Rivor- which led to its being adopted
when the boundary was finally established botween the United
States and Canada as the starting point for that boundary.
While De Monts was superintending the con-
struction of buildings for tho colony and making ready for
the coming winter, he sent Champlain westward to explore
the coast. Champlain, after waiting for a few days in the
neighborhood of St. Croix for fog to lift, sailed in one long
day's sail to Frenchmen's Bay, and came to rest - after nearly
wrecking his 1steen-sailed, open boat upon & rook that was
awash + in a 'good harbor' on the Mount Desert shore, to the
eastward of Bar Harbor probably. Later, having exlored the
upper bay and asoertained the land to ba an island, he
passed around its seaward front and mude friends with
Indians the smoke of whose fire he saw issuing from a cave at
5 -
the mountain's foot, and guided by them sailed up the Penobsoot
river, which he called the Norumbegue, to the head of tidal
waters.
This is the first mention on record of Mount Desert
Island. Chemplain, impressed by the wild and rugged oharao-
ter of the bare-topped mountains, olothed bolow in dark ever-
groens to the water's edge or to the fringing oliffs, named
it the 'Isle des Monts deserts'- the 'Island of the Wild
and Lonely Hills, according to the French moaning at that
time of the word "dosert." The English, lster, named the
Island Mount Mansell, in honor to Sir Robert Mansell, vice-
admiral of the Ohannel Fleet and member of the New England
Council, but Champlain's name prevailed and has come down
to us with this trace of its French origin that the accent,
looslly and properly, is thrown on the last syllable, Mount
Desert, as the Maesachusetts fishermen and traders caught it
from the French.
In 1613, Honry IV having been assassinated and
Do Monts - his influence lost at Court - having withdrawn
from his enterprise, the French Jesuits sent out 9. miscionary
expedition to the Indians, the first in EL great series, which
after various vioissitudes arrived in Frenohman's Bay, where
landing was mede and mass celebrated on the Mount Desert shore,
the Jesuits naming their colony Saint Sauveur, in gratitude
to the Divine Guidance that had led them in safety, over
8-
a dangerous and uncharted sea, to 80 fair a spot. Persuaded,
however, by Indians who had an encampment at the entrance to
Somes Sound, whose site at Manchester's point a deep shell
mound still identifies, they placed their colony opposite on
beautiful aloping meadow looking seaward which is still
known as Jesuits' Field. Later that same year, this colony
was wrecked by an armed vessel from Virginia, oommended by
Samuel Argull, whose attack - made without warning and in a
time of peace - was the first aot of overt warfare in the long
contest between the French and English for the control of
North America.
In 1688 Mount Desert Island again appears, as
granted - first by the Province of Quebec and then by Louis XIV
in a dded, countersigned by Colbert, that still remsins on
record, - to Antoine do la Mothe Cadillao, & soldier of
Acadia of noble family, who is listed also by Sir Edmund
Andros, governor of New England, &B then living, with his
wife, upon its eastern shore, on 'Winskenge, or Frenohman's
Bay.
Cadillao later, .svinm gone to Canada, become the
founder of Detroit, but still at that time signed himself
in his deeds, "Seigneur of Monts Deserts."
In. 1713 at the Peace of Utrecht, Louis XIV,
defeated on the continent of Europe, ceded Aoadia - with the
exception of Cape Breton - to the English, and with it Mount
Desert Island.
In 1759, after further wars, Quebec fell,
7om
and with its fall the last French possessions in America -
Louisiana apart - passed permanently to the English. It was
not t111 then, when peace brought security, that settlement
from Mascaohusetts along the eastern coast of Maine began,
but from that period the present settlement of Mount Desert
Island may be datod.
Shortly after, in February, 1762, the General
Court of Massachusetts gave the Island of Mount Desert,
ignoring Cadillao's early claim, to Governor Franois
Bernard, the last colonial governor of Massachusetts, as a
regard for "extraordinary services." And in September
of that year, he came down to inspect his new possession in
'the sloop Massachusetts, starting from where she lay 'off
Castle William in Boston Bay's and kept a Journal of his.
trip which may still be road in manusoript in Harvard
College Library.
Governor Bernard arrived on Ootober 2, 1762,
entering, to quote his own words, "a spoaious bay formed by
land of the great island on the left and the Cranberry I8-
lands on the right. Toward the and of this, which we oal1
Groat Harbor, we turned into a emaller bay called the
Southwest Harbor. On the north side of it is a narrow
entrance to a river or sound which runs into the island
eight miles, and is visible for nearly the whole length.
We anohored about tho middle of the Southwest Harbor."
8-
Governor Bernard stayed for several days, noting the
abundant game birds, the "artificialness" of a beaver's dam,
the fine salt marhaes, and the rooks "perpendicular to a great
height" upon Somes Sound. He surveyed the Great Harbor, too,
and laid out the town of Southwest Harbor with house lote
for settlers of four aores each, and 'out lots' free, under
a plan calculated for trude and business, for which the
situation, boing in the direct course of all the vessels
ooasting along the shore and the great plenty of fish, which
will afford a staple commodity, make it very suitable."
Governor Bernard's plans were good and Southwest Harbor has
beena port of oall and a great fishing port for generations,
but when the Revolutionary period came he took the English
side, his real estate was confiscated, and Mount Desert
Island again became the property of Massachusetts,
In 1784, Governor Bernard's son, John Bernard,
calling himself a citizen of Bath in the Province of
Maine, sent a petition to the General Court of Massachusetts,
asking to have restored to him his father's possesaf on in the
Island, bequeathed to him in his father's will, claiming to
have been loyal to the commonwealth; and the request
was granted to the extent of giving him an undivided one
half interest.
9.
Two years later, another petition was presented to
the General Court, this time by the granddaughter of
Cadillao and her husband, Monsieur and Madame de Gregoire,
who brought letters in support from Lafayette and asked that
Cadillao's anoient ownership of Mount Desert Island be con-
firmed to them; and the Oommonwealth of Massachusetts,
honoring the request on grounds explicitly set forth of.
national regard and friendship, gave them the other
undivided half.
In 1794, the Do Gregoires' "Part or moiety of the
Island called "Mount Desert" was set off by the Maesachusetts
Supreme Court from that granted to John Bernard, the eastern
half - containing now Bar Harbor, Seal Harbor, and
Northeast Harbor - being given the De Gregoires, who there-
upon came d wn and settled at Hull's Cove, on Frenchman's
Bay and died there, selling their lands to settlers; and. the
western half; containing Southwest Harbor and Bass Harbor,
was given to John Bernard, who soon, however, parted with his
interest and returned to England, ultimately becoming
Governor of the Barbadoos and St. Vincent, where he died.
All titles to lands upon Mount Dosert Island,
except for a few early settlers' rights, go back to the
ownerships established by these two grants, made by the
Commonwealth of Massachueetts but finding their origin
in earlier grants, linked with a wealth of early history,
it is that the title of the United States to the lands now
forming the Lafayette National Park is derived.
10.
In view of the interest of these old associations,
and their national character, the United States Geographic
Board upon the Park's establishment re-named a number of
the "Monts Deserts" - which separately had no early French or
English names - to make them hereafter, represented on the
Government maps and charts, tell all who pass, by land or sea,
xomowhat of the Island's early history and the men
associated with it. Memories of Champlain, Cadillac, Bernard,
Mansell,Acadia, and Saint Sauveur are now, as it were, em-
bodied in this noble monument - a landmark from the sea
already in John Winthrop's time, who records in his
journal passing it on his way to Salem in 1630.
De Monts, the founder of Acadia, a singularly
gallant and arresting figure as he appears in Champlain's
and other old accounts, is commemorated not by & mountain
but. by a flowing spring, generous and constant in its
gift of water, and by the beautiful old woods about it,
near Bar Harbor.
The Park itself - creuted during the war's course when
so many of the nation's youth were laying down their lives
in France, the anoient owner of these lands - was named
for Lafayette, since his spirit was their spirit and his
name stood asno other for the friendship between the nations,
and the willingness to adventure life itself, 'beyond the
seas', for human right and freedom.
***
Lafayette National Park, created by Act of Congress during
the war, lies in the old French province of Acadia on the deeply
embayed and many-harbored aoast of Eastern Maine. Mount Desert
Island - 1' Isle des Monts deserts - whose superb, ocean-fronting
grani to heights it occupies, was discovered and named by Champlain
in September, 1604, when the deoiduous trees among the charaoteris-
tic pines and hemlooks of the Acadian coast were turning to red and
gold. Then, all to the south as far as Florida was wild and
forested to the water's edge, inhabited by the nativo Indians
only.
To France belongs the honor of the first colonization
of America to the north of the Spanish. It was an undertaking
broadly and nobly conceived by France's greatest king, Henry
IV - Henry of Navarre - warrior and S tatesman. His lieutenant
in this enterprise was a soldier of anoient family in southwestern
France. Pierre du Guast, Sieur do Monts, who, with his father,
had followed him through the Religious Wars and whom - greatly
trusting, Champlain tells us - he had appointed governor of the
ancient city of Pons in Saintonge, a city of refuge for the
Huguenots.
9
Reach, Isle au Hault, Catino and others. Outside, one passes
into a world-famous fishing ground extending to Gorges Bank
formed by glacial deposits on the ancient continental shelf,
and thenco to New Foundland. Hardy fishermen from the coast
OI France haunted these waters in numbers as early as the
middle of the sixteenth century, making a perilous voyage
in quest of Lenten Cod.
The breath of adventure hangs over them, and none naa
expresse d this better than Champlain in his dedication to
the Queen mother in 1613 of his book telling OI Do Monts
and his Aaadian ventures:
"Among all most excellent and useIul arts, that
OI navigating has always seemed to me to hold first place.
For 80 much the more that it is hazardous, and accompanied
by a thousand wrecks and perils, so much the more is it
estoomed beyond others, boing in no way suited to those who
lack courage or self-confidence. This art it is that from
my earliest youth has drawn me to itself, and led me TO
expose myself during nearly my whole life to the impetuous
waves of the ocean."
if r
Dictaphone - February 6, 1940.
Mount Desert Island, the shores and islands round
about it to Penobscot Bay and River, were settled mainly
by people from Cape Cod who as soon as the wars with the
French were over, sailed down in their schooners and
other craft, exploring at first as did Somes and Richard-
son whom Governor Bernard found establishing themselves
by the two water powers at the head of the Sound and the
four settlers whom he at the same time discovered on the
Cranberry Islands opposite its mouth where they had no
water power indeed but excellent harborage. It was all
very simple; the sea gave them their livelihood at Cape
Cod, they had their boats and, taking their opportunity,
they could sail down eastward to the wooded and harbored
shores left vacant by the French and settle there if they
found their opportunity good. Lumber and salt fish were
their exports and means of livelihood and they had their
boats. They were a hardy people, forthright, honest and
used to little. It was the descendants of these folk
that Mr. Tracy found there ninety-odd years later, or
friends who had sailed down and joined them. It was all
as much a part of Massachusetts so far as the coastal
region went as Cape Cod itself. And they brought along
with them, changing little, their religion and schooling
and their ways of life.
The rest of Acadia, where the British would let
them, remained largely French after the fall of Quebec
and Cape Breton.
The French Acadians who remained after the wholesale
deportations to Louisiana, where they carried their customs
and their language with them and still form today a distinct,
important element in the State, still do so along the
shores of New Brunswick, Cape Breton and elsewhere in the
old French province. Their tongue is still the old-time
French of the Acadian province, founded by De Monts, and
I have a great regard for them as I have seen them at Bar
Harbor where many of them came down to work when new homes
were building for summer-folk and work was a-plenty.
Her husband is pure French, descended from the early Acadian
settler stock, but she herself who bore in her maiden years
with other of her kin the delightful name of d'Aigle, or,
lessbeautifully, Daigle, which being translated to the
vernacular would mean 'one from the eagle. I So far so good,
but her d'Aigle stock is mingled
in
the
person of my housekeeper's grandmother with Irish blood, and
the tale of this interesting. There was famine, bitter
famine, throughout Ireland a hundred or so years ago and
the English government of that day, seeking to prevent
starvation, arranged with captains of vessels coming out
to the New Brunswick shore to take out children and leave
(February 6J 1940)
38
them there. And so it was my housekeeper's grandmother,
a child of twelve, was brought out with her younger sister
of nine in her charge, and they both were landed on the
New Brunswick shore with a kindly farmer and his wife who,
well-to-do, nobly accepted the burden and brought them up.
The children, when they were taken up to the farmhouse to
be left, spolee English only; the farmer and his wife spoke
only French. But someone was found in the neighboring
village who could interpret, and with plenty of good whole-
some food to eat they soon caught on. Her grandmother
remembered nothing of her family name nor did she know
whence they sailed, but she could see, as in a picture,
her mother weeping with a third babe in her arms as they
came to fetch away the older ones, never to be seen again.
And the father, too, stood by in distress but, whether
the choice was given them or not, the crops had failed
them and the children had to go. It was, as it were, a
a
flashlight on one single scene telling the story of a
famine and the welcome strangers of another race and
speech gave the two little children, the older caring
for the younger in strange maternal charge.
Another story told me by my housekeeper, come down
from her grandmother, was of a little boy not above 3
years old brought out similarly by the captain of a
New Brunswick-St.Lawre
sailing vessel and deposited, alone, upon the shore,
nce
not far from where she and her sister had themselves been
brought. The captain of the vessel took him himself on
shore
and,
lifting him up upon the bank, pointed
4.
(February 6, 1940)
out to him the farmer's house nearby and told him to
go up there and he would be cared for. Then the captain
returned to his vessel and sailed awaw. The child made
its way, crying, across the field to the farmhouse and
the farmer's wife, seeing him, came down to meet him and
took up with her to the house. But he, too, could
speak no French nor could they speak English; BAX someone
was found who could, but there was little he could tell.
They adopted him and made him one of them, their youngest
child. There was plenty of land for the clearing and the
older children as they grew up went off and made their own
nearby
homes and the little boy, the youngest of them all, remained
to inherit the house and home where he had been received 80
kindly and lived, respected, to an old age. Things like
that give one a respect for the people among whom they are
done. In neither case had any arrangement been made by the
English Government or anyone for these children's reception,
nor was any payment made or sought. It was out of the kind-
ness of the heart that it was done.
Memories.
Another striking story of a deathbed soene was
one told my mother and myself by a Frenohman of dis-
tinotion, one of the leaders of the Hugenot ohuroh in
France, who had come out on a special mission to raise
funds for their oburch in France. He brought letters
from some of the leading men in France and one of them
was to my mother, for it was after my father had died.
My mother invited him to come and dine with us, quietly
and alone, and we had a strangely interesting talk with
him which I have remembered always. One story that he
told was of his father, a Hugenot of the old stamp, of
ereot and stately bearing whom they all looked up to and
obeyed. He lived to a great age but during the last few
years of his life he lost the old stately habit, finally
he fell ill and the family gathered around his bed.
They thought that he had passed away but presently life
returned and looking at this son, his oldest, he said to
him, "Give me my olothes"! Now in talking with this
son some years before he had spoken of death and said
it was like going on a journey; one took what was fitting
the place wither one was bound, and the son remembered it.
Accustomed always to obey implicitly, they helped
their father rise up and olothe himself, when drawing
himself up to his full stately height and looking at this
Memories -2
son he said, "Mon fils, de vais en voyage"!--My son I
go upon a journey- and fell dead.
He told me also of a strange experieme that he
had once had, climbing in Switzerland, of being overtaken,
while he waited for oomrades to join hid, high on a
oliffed mountainside, by what is termed the paralysis
of the snow,when finally his life seemed to go out
of him, leaving the body, though ever acutely conscious,
and being finally brought back to life through the
arrival of his oomrades.
Besides Governor Bernard's journal, the Bernard papers in
the Harvard College Library contain a description of Mount Desert
at the time of the governor's visit. It is written in Latin and
ascribed to "an officer of the Cygnot," doubtless a naval officer
in the governor's suite. The translation runs as follows:-
"Mount Desert is a largo mountainous island lying 10 loagues
west from the Island of Grand Mannan in the mouth of the Bay of
Funday, it is in the Lattitude 44, 85 North, and Longitude 67,
20 West. It appears as the Continent from the Sea, but is divided
from it by an arm running between it and the Main, but at low water
may be crossed by a narrow nook near the West end as the Inhabitants
report. Its natural Productions are Oak, Beech, Maple, and all
sots of Spruce and Pinos to a large Dimention, vis: 34 inohes
diamoter. Ash, Poplar, birch of all sorts, white Oodar of a large
Sise, Sasafraes, and many other sorts of wood, we know no name
vory
for a/groat variety of Shrubbs, among which 1s the Filbert. Fruits,
such as Rasberrya, Strawberrys, Cranborrys of two Sorts, Gooseberry
and Currants. It han all soba of so11, such as dry, wet, rich, pood
and barrons with great Quantitys of Marsh, a number of Ponds, with
runs fit for mills. Quantitya of Marble, and its gonorall thought
from the appearance of many Parts of the Land there are Iron and
Copper Ore. Its Inhabitants of the Bruto Creation are Moose, Deer,
Bear, fox, Wolf, otter, Beaver, martins, Wild Cat, and many other
Animals of the fur kind, all kind of wild fowl, Hares, Partridges
brown and black. But the most valuable part of this Island is the
extraordinary fine Harbour in it, which is formed by the Islands as
described on the annext Sketah of it. Codfish is over taken in
any Quantitys with very convenient Beaches for drying and ouring
them. Shellfish of all sorts except the oyster, none of which we
saw, fine Prawns and Shrimps. Therenlies from it a rook above Water,
about 8 Leagues from the foot of the great Islands, and 5 Leagues
from the Duok Islands, which is the nearest Land to it; this rock is
dangerous from its being deep Water both within and without it, so
that sounding 18 no warning, you will have 40, 45, and 50 fathom
within half a mile of it, it is steep to all sides except to the
East Point of it, where it runs off foul about Pistol Shot, but
dries at low water; the Tide near this rook setts strong in and out
of the Bay of Funday, its to be seen about 3 Leagues, and appears
white from being always covered with gannetta which breed and roost
there. Its length 1s 500 fathoma from the N. E. Point to the 8. W.
Point, and by/observation we took on it, in in the Lattitude 44, 08 X.
I shall say no more than that & good look is necessary, and
without you strike atself, there is little or no danger of being
bery near it, and the might 18 the most dangerous Time to see it.
A Beason built of Stone of which the rook itself will furnish,
about 50 or 60 feet high, would render it of little danger; the
Harbour is very convenient for naval Equipments from the Number of
fino anchoring places and Islands, a very fino rendesvous for fleets
and Transports in case of an expedition to the West Indies, as each
division of men of wan-and Transports may have different places to
wood and water in, and Islands enough for encampment and Refresh-
ments of men, without any danger of desertion or Irregularity.
The King's Dook yards might be supplied for many years with Sparrs
from 27 inohoa and downwards to about hook span, Dooks may be
easily made for Ships of the greatest Draught of Water. The above
Island is about 30 miles coastways, and 90 miles in Circumference
not including all its losser Islands within a Leaguo of its Shores,
which are supposed to be included in the grant of it to Governor
Beynard of Xassachusetta Bay by that Colony.
*x. B. There are great Quantitys of Pease sufficient to feed
immunerable Number of Herds and Cattle, a great Quantity of Cherries,
both of which are natural to the Islands.
"It obbs and flows in these Harbours 21 feet at Spring Tides,
and about 15 or 16 feet at common tides, which never run so strong
but a boat may be soulled against it. water 18 ever to be had in
the dryest Seasons conveniently) the best anohoring ground in the
world."
Mount Desert Island -- l'Isle des Monts deserts was
discovered and named by Champlain in September, 1604, when
the deciduous trees among the characteristic pines and hem-
locks of the Acadian coast were turning to red and gold. Then,
all to the south as far as Florida was wild and forested to
the water's edge, inhabited by the native Indians only.
To France belongs the honor of the first colonization
of America to the north of the Spanish. It was an undertaking
broadly and nobly conceived by France's greatest king, Henry
IV -- Henry of Navarre - warrior and statesman. His lieut-
enant in this enterprise was a soldier of ancient family in
southwestern France, Pierre du Guast, Sieur de Monts, who,
with his father, had followed him through the Religious Wars
and whom - greatly trusting, Champlain tells us -- he had
appointed governor of the ancient city of Pons in Saintonge,
a city of refuge for the Huguenots.
It was the Peace of Vervins, ending the long desolation
of the Religious Wars, which released the energies that made
such colonization of a wild and distant continent possible,
and laid the first foundation for the magnificent development
of America.
De Monts was commissioned by the king, in noble words,
to colonize and Christianize "the lands and territory of
Acadia," a name that first appears in this commission though
the king states it was already familiar to him from the ac-
counts of fishermen and traders. He brought out with him
Champlain -- most famous of French mariners and he it was
who first among recorded white men set foot upon Mount Desert
Island and explored its shores.
Reaching first the coast of Nova Scotia, De Monts and
Champlain sailed on into the Bay of Fundy and chose as site
for their first colony of Acadia an island in the tidal mouth
of what is now the Saint Croix River, named for it and now
the commencement of the national boundary between the United
States and Canada.
While De Monts was establishing the Saint Croix colony
he sent Champlain on a voyage of discovery westward, in an
open, lateen-sailed vessel with a dozen sailors. Detained
at first by fog, Champlain came finally in a single, long
day's sail into sight of the Mount Desert Mountains, rising
like a great beacon from the sea, and turned into Frenchmans
Bay.
2
the Chole Ioland formed originally a single
township, the township of Mount Desert. The principal
settlements In It word Somesville and Southwest Harbor
but scattered groupe were collected CO new settlers came
around the virus harboro where coastal vessels could
put In bring goods and load with lumber. One such
w Northeast Barbor the sito of on early Indian
cottlement; others on the cautom aldo of the Island
WITH Saliabury Covo, Bully DOYS and Bar Harbor. After
the and of the Grouch occupation in 1759, with the fall
of Louisburg I Cape Broton and Quebee In the following
way cottion from the Province of Xassachusetts Bay
Camo gradually drifting down, approaching from the
went and when deeds word dretto it was the western side
of the bland toing toward Penobacot Bay that became,
in 10801 description, the Island's front.
As new settlers came, the towns were organised,
the Town of Edon was laid out, defined by a line drawn
Lor the head of otter Creek straight by the compass
across the lakes and mountains to include the Island's
restorn dido and the shore beyond it, nearly one half
of the Island,
Town meetings then word hold at Salisbury Covo,
E control to the Town and this was the state of things
when wo first came In 1868-69, when Bar Harbor, growing
the Town offices word established there, not
Without opposition, and Tota otings hold.
From the realinder of the original township the
fishing ao unities collected at Southwest Harbor, so
planed from the cholter it efforded from southwest winds,
and with not one And because of its prosperous
fithing industries and extensive harbor Southwest Hardon
became the obiof settlement of the Island, at which,
when steamboat Lines card organised, the steamer touched
bringing Straight and careting and loads of salted fish.
That too was the state of things unt11 1868 when, with
the growing summer visitor business the Portland.to
Bootport coasting steamers first included Bar Herbor in
their route.
By land Mount Desert Illand was then reached by sta
from Bangor with stops upon the way at the tavern by
Phonlips Lake and at Ellsworth, the county seat, which
it the CIES was a prosperous 1t bering industry, the sea
reaching It for coastal Cob Onera, mill power provided
by the above, and lunder available from:the:whole
Union River Basine
S.
The Droup coperating Tount Desert Island from
the Inland meat oroaned on horseback only when the
Glad was out word crossed, from the early eighteenth
contury on by 0 PLOKOGY wooden bridge, with a draw
for cotling vessole and a toll taken, and this was not
roplaced till aster the World War when the state took
It OVER and a 0 memorial to those who
COLL in the World Wash was built, ct the expense of
Town and Countro
The road over thing starting from the State
capital at Augusto and passing along the Ioland's
northorn Short through Salinbury COVO and House Covo
to Bar Barbor where the Federal Government postoffice
pr.5
and oustome house for the Ioland are established, contin-
uos on th moo as 0 state highway nton through the Gorgo
to otter Creek and Northeast Harbor where
It ends, 10 the moat important road upon the Island,
passing through Tto DID olpal Scomer resident commun-
Itless wh built for motor traffic and much bued.
It has two sections of great beauty upon it - the one
where it orosses the Bluffs from Hulls Cove to Bar Harbor
and the other where it turns with a bold sweep into the
gorgo, at the outflow from the Terna
Acadia,
The first time the name Aoadia appears in record was in the
commissions given to the Sieur de Monts by Henry IV of France,
King of Nevarre originally and a Hugenot, and by his Lord High
Admiral Du Cede Montmorence to come out and take possession in
the name of France of the lands and territories 'pays et terri-
toires' de l'Acadie' of which the King states he has he ard in
accounts given him by returning fishermen and traders, That was
in December 1603.
The Sieur de Monts was a Hugenot, as had been, until he
became King of France Henry the IV, when for reasons of political
necessity if he were to become the King, he became a Catholic,
the o hange doubtless did not seem to him important, liberty of
conscience for his Hugenot followers did, and as King of France
he was in position to obtain it for them.
These commissions, dated from Paris in December 1603 were
printed by de Monte a few years later when he was back in France,
to show the privileges they granted him for trade and commeroe.
He sailed out from Brest the following March, Champlain accompanying
him, and landing firet on the coast of Nova Scotia explored in
a smaller vessel which had accompanied him the Bay of Fundy,
giving it the name Baie Franooise but by the Portugese fishermen
afterward Bio Fundo, the Deep Bay, which name in the end prevailed.
Acadia -2
While de Monts was establishing his first colony on an island
in the tidal mouth of the Sainte Croix River he sent Champlain
down in an open, lateen-sailed boat to explore the western coast,
and after being held up for a few days by fog Champlain sailed
down before a brisk north wind to Frenohmans Bay which he entered
that same afternoon toward dusk, sailing on until he came to the
Narrows where the bridge to the mainland is, where he nearly
wreoked his boat upon a rook that was awash, and laning to
repair her on the mainland shore saw that Mount Desert Island
was an island. The next day he sailed back, to Hulls Cove
apparently, where he saw smoke ascending from an encampment of
Indiana with whom he endeavored to make friends which, with the
aid of two friendly Indians he had brought with him from Sainte
Crois, he did the following morning, directed by them he sailed
around Mount Desert Island, the seaward way, and through the
archipelago of sheltered waterways and islands to Penobsoot Bay,
naming as he passed, the mountainous island that lay off it to
the south L'isle a'Hault, then he proceeded up the long estuary
of the Penobsoot to its first falls by the eite of the present
oities of Brewer and Bangor, making friends with the Indians
there, and thence returning to join the Sieur de Monts at
Sainte Crotx,
He gives in his journal, published at Brewt
a few years later, a delightful account of the beauty of the
river he sailed up which was clothed with heavy evergreen forests
3
Aoadia 03
on the western side down to the water's edge but on the opposite
side was like a park with open spaces and deciduous trees, birches
and maples doubtless in preponderance, tturned in the early fall
to glorious color.
The next account we have is that of two Jesuit fathers who
conduoted an expedition equippped and sent out by a pious lady of
the Court, King Henry now dead, slain in the streets of Paris
during 8 procession, by a religious fanatic, and de Monte at
his native home in Southwestern France, where King Henry had
established him as Governor in the ancient oity of Pons in the
Province of Santonge on the youthwestern coast of France, which
King Henry described at the time, for its fertility and smiling
landscape,as a pearl in the crown of France, and there he vanished
from sight.
The two Jesuit fathers after a stormy voyage sailed in the
dusk and fog into Frenchmans Bay, believing it to be their goal,
the entrance to Penobsoot River, then called the Norêmbegue, the
name Penobacot belonging not to it but to the Indians who dwelt
upon its banks. When the fog lifted in the morning and they
found themselves in safety amid beautiful soenery they named
their landfall and intended settlement, Saint Sauveur since only
the hand of God could have brought them aoros8 the dangerous sea
Acadia -4
in safety to a land BO fair. But presently Indians, settled
at the eastern entrance to Somes Sound, where the village of North
east Harbor is today, hearing of the coming of the Frenohman
and having found Frenohmen friendly and good to trade with, sent
a canoe around tobring them to their neighborhood, which they
acoomplished diplomatically by telling the French fathers that
their Chief Asticou was sick unto death and desirous of being
taken into the Church. So they up-anchored and sailed around to
find Asticou in good health but desirous of establishing them upon
the opposite shore, where there was a fair southward sloping meadow
then as now, which is still known as Jesuit Field. It was a
lovely spot, well suited to their needs with shelter for shipping
and good springs of water. So there they settled and began their
work of establishing their colony, having brought with them goats
and hseep and fowl, supplies of seed for sowing and agricultural
implements. But while the work was still half done an English
vessel, from the James River Colony in Virginia, who se Commander
one Samuel Argall having heard of their establishment, sailed in,
the Nations at peace at home, and commenced firing on the Nasoent
Colony 88 BOON as he came within reach, killing some, others fleeing
into the woods and the two Jesuit fathers, heads of the expedition
being carried off by him 88 prisoners, to the James River settlement
whenee they were dispatched to England and released. It is to
them we owe, in Jesuit narratives, the full account of the whole
5
Acadia -5
expedition and its fate. This, Parkman the historian says,
was the first act of overt warfare in a century and a half of
battling between France and England, the French colonies and the
English settlements, along the Atlantic co ast for the possession
of America north of Mexico.
Nothing more is heard of the Island of Mount Desert till
grant of it, and of two square leagues upon the opposite mainland
by the Narrows, was made by the Province of Quebeo to a soldier
of fortune in Acadia, Antoine de la Mothe Cadillao, in a deed
which is still on record in uebea and which was afterward con-
firmed by a special grand, feudal in character, by Louis XIV which
established him 88 seignior de Monts Desere and the adjacent lands,
He seems to have built himself a home upon the Island shore on
Frenchmans Bay, at Hulls Cove probably, being 80 listed in an
ancient deed, but on his home being destroyed by a raid from the
colony of Massachusetts Bay, he made his way across to Quebeo
and placed himself under Frontenac, then Sovereign there, and
made himself an imperishable place in history by establishing
the oity of Detroit -the City of the Strait, d'Etroit--finally
becoming Governor of Louisaiana, which then included the whole
Massissippy valley from the Great Lakes south, which position he
retained until he died, some four years later,
Aoadia -6
In 1713 the result of
upon the Continent due to
the masterly generalship of the Duke of Marlborough, Louis XIV
signed a paper called the Peace of Utreoht which ceded, for this
was the war of the Spanish Suocessi on involving Spain as well as
France, the great rook fortress of Gibralter to the English and
in the same document the whole of Acadia, savehonly Cape Breton,
but retaining the Saint Lawrence valley and what remained to France
of Lou issana. a long period of battling and border warfare
followed, the cession being one of name alone, until 1758 when
Louisburg, the strong fortress, fell under a combined land seige
by Colonial troops from the Province of Massao busetts Bay and the
English bombarding and attacking from the sea.
Some inoidents
in that seige are worth recording in contract with the warefare
of today, for their ohivalrous character in which men fought
gallantly with men and left women and children alone. The
following year Quebec itself was conquered in a battle on the
Plains of Abraham above the City and peace thereafter, by English
domination and the export of mal-contents among the Acadians
to new home 8 in the wamplands of the Mississippi delta, and
immigrants from the Province of Wassachusetts Bay began to come
to Mount Desert Island.
The island itself waa given in its entirety, save for a few
squatters rights, by the Massao husetts Province to its last
English overnor, Sir Franois Bernard, who ame down in 1763 to
view his new possession, sailing in a Government vessel from
Aoadia -7
Fort William in Boston Harbor and bringing with him 8 consider-
able suite of surveyors and officers who explored the land, laid
out the town of Southwest Harbor in lot 8 for sale andleft a
description in Latin of the Island which in crabbed handwriting
is now lodged in the library of Harvard University.
Sir Franois Bernard records that there were then two settlers
upon Some 8 Sound and four on the greater Cranberry Island, whish
shows well the superior importanoe attached to 8 situation border-
ing the open sea, the only highway then and main source of food
supply, while the positions taken for settlement by the two settler:
upon Some 8 Sound shows equally another aspect of their life, the
trace in wood, both being established where streams of considerable
size came down and mills could be established, the one settlement
was by Some 8 where the water from Great Fond comes down with a
good flow at its entrance on the sound; the other by Richardson
where the water come s down from Aunt Betty's Pond, mills at both
placeS having continued until within recent time. Governor
Bernard was rowed up the Sound to make a visit on Somes who was
there for his second season, and there now to stay having brought
down with him his wife, a notably housewife, and four comely dau-
ghters, whence he walked across to view the 'artificialness" of
a beaver dam above the mill site on the stream flowing through
intermediate basins from Great Pond.
This was in 1763. Sir Franois Bernard, a lawyer traine d,
8.
Aaadia -8
had been useful to the Massaohusettw Bay Colony in securing for
it against the claims of Nova Sootia, that part of Eastern Maine
once belonging to Acadia and now, owing to his activity in the
United States, not Canada. It was in reward for this, designated
as ediet inguished service' that the people of the Provime of
Bay, represented by their Legislature, granted him
the island of Mount Desert, but presently as the Revolutionary
War approached, he lost his popularity with the Colonists and
retired to England. The people when the Revolution came, taking
back their gift and confiscating the stately mansion he had built
himself upon Jamaioa Pond in Roxbury where a delegation from the
State Legislature is represented as driving out in thirteen
one-horse shays on an embassy whose
he did not grant but
entertained them kindly with oakes and wine.
After the war was over Sir Franois Bernard's son, John
Bernard, who had remained quietly in Maine during the Revolutionary
war, came before the General Court of Maesaohusetts and petitioned
it to renew to him its grant to his father of Mount DeBert Island,
and the Court, in kindly feeling toward him, granted him not the
whole but a one-half undivided possession in it.
IL
DHEMAR
have been
gue
The first Adhymar said to be a relation of Charleme to is
and by tradition, to have conquered Genoa and Corsica. There is
descending from Asse
an
old Italian poem telling of the conquest of Corsica which bore the
title Adhemaro, and makes this Adhemar its first sovereign. At all
events, the family, a powerful one in early days in the lands be-
tween the Rhone and sea part are still
Histo-to from La Chesnaye Debbo1s termed terros franches "for on account
Nipe g the greater of which (17 67)
apparent
of certain rights secured to them appropriating - issues from the Go-
Gemmi
thio times as powerful war-lordef with Montelimar as their capital
residence, but!elsewhere also in that region in different branches
Spouse mt
Provence and Damphine were their provinces. Montelimar was in
up where Unispase Said have sailed Conquest-
Damphine, on the Rhone Avignon was not War away. It was the land of
and
its
Roman occupation, enriohed by thoir remains. And it was the land
where First found (moth
the tot Crusade book its impulse. 1900 the account in Hare of
u
Pope Urban II speech and the warriors cry of 'Dieu le vent.' And
note
the must
look up oppinal sources. The Count do Grignan who married Mme. de
-2-
in sain
Sevigne's daughter gooms to have been the last of the race, and his
where MO de Dunini stand month Tom
oastle went down in ruins the Revolution. But the Montelimar
my
early
or central branch seems to have come to an end early. Montelimar is
from said the Latin to be Montiliam A - that Admari day, or Aymari
part
of
being
fenting
which conoairably -Latin cognomen for
northmen, ad-Mare, vince this tradition
of of Canoa and Horsiua would Indicate au thoir origin,
60mkng up the Rhone afterward to ratd and finally to Bettro down upon
was
the rion ROMAN province that/in early times the wealthy and set-
tled-part of Pranso. The name is apalt in the old doods both Athemar
7hr name
and
AZOMAT
Indifferently.
It appears in the old chronicles and his-
tories of the borly time abundant1Jf Got La Cheenaye-Desbois
heriod
(states this.) only takes up one branch of it, not dwelling at Monteli-
mar E that family being then, and long perhaps, extinoti) and begins
late
referring only in a few words to the earlier greatness of the
Race. The de Mont s start apparently in the North, in what is Belgian
Ground FLAmbert asheman
/
Digned its Charter of th City 8
Montelimer hr 7198 called th
Mons Chartu because it was
lugraud On a marble flab
wh still effect h th Hotel
di will of Montelima -
buy Anddhema Win estab d due di
Genoa by Smith . Charlemagn 1
But
Bath Nobless d Provenci
traces
th filiation to thinton for
Greand adhema, Comt of
Orange, lims al th end of
th 10th Century
alamas, Birth R Pay
Ctar
brink
in Crusad Kist gin dr
Hist II 8.2
C
Heat. d M.lifarn
de Coston
dissand adhim Squ di Syjne montal d 31 -
Contina th oldn branch which
from Thwn end 12th
the
becam Illinet thitt IA
middly th 4th Centry
His yourner Gu broth High Someon di higham
to family Seeman
his Seigneuris
to the
Umbradel becam oftened in the Centa Century
Comi of Proven m/257, 16th
but Win Contround m Children
the grind Gashard di Castill one the whotook
Jasiste Blande d' addinas, when man
Memo r arms THE n adhim -
The limit adhema who Sul- 4
I crimes the Ston Charter
tom Absigmatic
Marsulla agr of Monteil,
Erigna Anbagn etc
The Sament adhus into
Sgr d la Gands : He daughter of
Pm Drangs
( founder branch
afterwall dam. ch - that-
of
newfdu Rhm
EPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR.
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE,
If
LAFAYETTE NATIONAL PARK,
C
BAR HARBOR, MAINE.
Atalian Party translation
autum Gid
ADDRESS ONLY
THE DIRECTOR. NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
WASHINGTON, D. O.
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
WASHINGTON
November 19, 1918.
Dear Mr. Dorr:
I am inclosing copies of two Italian
publications, "Il Paroo Nazionale dell'Abrusso"
and "Le Vie d'Italia", and of the hearing before
the House Committee on Military Affairs of the
Sixty-second Congress on the proposed Mammoth
Cave National Park. Please return these pam-
the frontive Z
phlets to me when you have finished with them.
Cordially yours,
tneem alhigher
Aoting Director.
Mr. George B. Dorr,
Custodian, Siour de Monts Nat. Monument,
Bar Harbor, Maine.
(Inclosure 4764.)
recombor 18
the (bright)
to oover
the
NO
Champion www.rivon than
Alta.cortain repotitions,
other in extempo;
of Looslity by vih
nothing to any
with this xogion. C: Ab they now
I think An interesting statements
Ger Brown
M Horaoo
Assistant
PEASE Serviced
PREFACE TO THE THIRD EDITION OF
La Chenaya - Desbois
Two motives have led us to re-publish the
Dictionary of the Nobility of La Chenays-Desbois;
its rarity and its utility. Its rarity is such
that single copies have been sold in public sales
for the sum of 1800 francs. Its utility is incon-
testible. This Dictionary is in effect the "Nobil-
iare", the most vast and the most complete that we
possess not only in France but also in Europe.
What labor, what researches, we may even say what
courage, was needful to the Author of this Diction-
ary to accomplish this great task, and what diffi-
culties must have come to hinder it. La Chenays-
Desbois lived in a time when, without care for
the morrow, the Nobility, strong in its past
never dreamed of ooming Revolution, bringing with
it the destruction of deeds and titles, the burn-
ing of Family charters. Accordingly, part of its
2.
members made no response to the appeal of the Author,
whose constant aim was to write his Genealogies only
on documentary evidence that could not be overthrown.
However, after the appearance of the first volumes
of the second edition, this indifference ceased.
Authentic documents flowed into the oabinet of the
Heraldio Savant from every side. Nothing shows
better than this movement the esteem attached from
then on to the work of La Chenaya-Desbois.
Schlesinger Frores. Paris, 1863.
PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION
We propose to give in this Second Edition
of the Dictionary of the Nobility the Genealogies
of the Nobles by Race and the Nobles by Birth, af-
ter Memoirs and papers that have been submitted to
us for our examination, both those relating to
Families which now exist and to others which have
become extinot. It is idle to dwell upon the
3.
importance of a work whose principal object is to
give a faithful picture of the great Houses of France,
and of those which have merited and received Nobility
through service rendered to their Country and the State.
Their History represents that of Heroism. It recalls
the names of famous Warriors, of illustrious patriots
who have fought for their Country and their Prince,
of men who have served usefully in public work or
have been honored for their gifts and virtues. One
is eager to know these great men, those Noble Families
that valor and fortune have raised above the people, to
give them example of duty and of virtue.
True Genealogies are as valuable to History as
Maps are to Geography. The latter teach to identify
the place; the former, the relative position of our
Noble Families. What Science is more necessary to
History than that of Genealogy? It is through it
that men learn to distinguish ancient and illustrious
Races from new Families. It is in recalling to those
latter their prescribed limits that one preserves to
the first the rank reserved to them. Accordingly,
one sees that none but those whose ambition finds
4.
itself checked by this Soience that exacts knowledge
80 wide that one may say there is none more difficult
to acquire.
Besides the origin and position of the ancient
and illustrious Houses whose names are preserved in
the records of our History and in its private memoirs,
we find other Noble Families whose genealogies have
never yet been published. The Genealogies which
follow are all based on original documents submitted
to us, or on momoirs of reliable character passed up-
on by Judges in their own locality.
Notes La Chesnays-Desbois makes a distinction in
his Proface between the Nobles of Race and the Nobles
of Birth, the latter being those who have been at any
time enobled; while the Nobles of Race are those who
have always possessed lands giving them Nobility.
For them, title from some conferring source would
destroy their Nobility.
XVII
Jean-Balthazar de Mons, Baron of Cabrerolles,
father of the Sieur de Monts, founder of Acadia,
paid homage to the King, Francois II, for the Seig-
neurie of la Marcelliere and the Marquisate of la
Marcillion. He served in the Army from his earliest
youth, first as Ensign, then as Lieutenant-Captain
of Arquebusiers, and in 1586 as Mestre de Camp with
five hundred "Enseigns" under his command. He fought
bravely in the battles of Saint Denis, November 10,
1567, and of Moncontour, October 3, 1569; was wounded
at Coutras, October 20, 1587; bore himself bravely
in the battle of Ivry; and was wounded again at the
siego of Epernay in 1592, dying two years later of
his wounds.
He married on the 20th of May, 1572, Delphine
de Latenay, daughter of the Noble Antoine, former
Captain, and of Marguerite de la Mairie.
Their children were:
Jean Jacques, Seigneur de Cabrerolles, Marquis
do la Marcelliere and Captain of a Company of Foot
Soldiers, who married Anne-Mario de Mercouran.
XVIII
Balthazar, brother to the Sieur de Mons,
Pierro du Guast, rendered homage to the King,
Henry IV, in 1594, for the Marquisate of la Martois,
the Lands of Autignac and la Marcillion, rendering
homage for them again to Louis XIII in 1614 as
Seigneur-foncier and Haut Justicier of the Lands
and Seigneuries of la Caussade, Lentheric and
others. He served in the army and became Captain
of 100 Men at Arms and Governor of the Fortress of
Aqua Pendente, being selected also by the Prince of
Conde, who ruled the Province, to lead the Noble
Host of the Ban and Arriere-Ban on account of his
ability and great merits.
He married in 1592 Jeanne Marie-Anne do Latenay,
a relative on his mother's side. They made a joint
will on the 9th of April, 1620, naming their children,
and died that same year, being buried in a tomb he had
built himself in the Church of Autignac.
The children of Balthazar were
Jean Jaoques, who, having served in the Marine,
entered, with the King's permission, the service of Her
2.
C
Royal Highness Christine of France, Duchess of Savoy,
who gave him a Commission, drawn in Latin, to command
two vessels.
Balthasar, who follows.
Blaise, who was received in 1601, when yet in
his oradle, as a Chevalier de Malte.
Louis, received also in his infancy as a Chevalier
do Malte, but who quitted the Order to marry, contrary
to the will of his father, who disinherited him. He
served in the Regiment of Allot as Lieutenant, in that
of Saint Just as Captain of 100 Lances.
He married the Noble Gabrielle de Feroul, Mar-
quise do Saint-Sernin, niece of Gabriel do Foroul,
Chevalier do St. Jean de Jerusalem, who made a will
in her favor, 13th April, 1629.
XIX
Balthazar de Mons, second of the name, nephew of
the Sieur do Monts of Acadia, paid homage to Louis XIII
for the estate of Saint Aunes and the fief of Magelas
in 1623, which came to him by his father's will. He
served "from his tenderest youth" in the Regiment of
Mirepoix, was Captain in that of la Bastido, then
Captain of 100 lances each "lance" representing
half a dozen men of various equipment - rebelled
with his brothers, taking the part of the gallant Duo
de Montmorency, beheaded by Richlieu, but none the less,
having made his submission to the Kind, was appointed
by him Mestro do Camp and freed from all tax or charge
upon his property, "1n recognition", said the Prince,
"of his services and those of his ancestors, and for
the high esteem in which I hold him." In 1641 he was
selected by this Monarch to be Under-Governor of his
son, the future Louis XIV.
He married on May 21, 1645, Jeanne de Fabry, daughter
of the Noble Jean de Fabry, Chevalier, and of Catherine
de Gout. They had eleven sons who all entered the Army,
serving "from the Cradle."
2.
The eldest of these sons, Antoine, was killed in
Italy, Lieutenant in the Regiment of Normandy.
Balthazar, the second son, entered the Regiment
of Picardy in 1672 in the capacity of Lieutenant, passed
through all grades and followed King James to Iroland.
On his return to France he was made Lieutenant-Colonel
of the Regiment of Michel Croat, was placed at the head
of the Regiment of Berwick and made Brigadier in 1690,
Chevalier de Saint Louis in 1696, and was killed at the
head of his Regiment in the battle of Cassano on the
16th of August, 1705. He was so highly esteemed by
his brother officers that they composed the following
epitaph in his honor:
Voila les restos de ce guerrier,
Dont la valeur si distinguee
Do plusieurs Rois de sur la terre
S'est faito couronnee de laurier,
Depuis longtoms par son epee
Que la mort a su mettre a bas
Par les souffrances de la guerre.
Craignons la tous tant que nous sommes,
Elle pout bion s'on prendre aux hommes
Puisqu'elle a mis do Monts a bas.
3.
The third son was Louis, who served in the Regiment
of Allot, in which he became Captain in 1688, the 13th of
April; then entered that of la Tour la Bastide as Lieu-
tenant-Colonel, and was killed in Italy.
The fourth son, Francois, served in the Regiment
of Vivonno as Captain of Grenadiers, appointed in 1689,
and was killed in Italy.
The fifth son, Jean-Francois, received as Chevalier
do Malto in 1667 was killed in Italy as Captain of Gren-
adiers, being appointed in 1688, the 13th of April.
The sixth son, Etienne, served in the Regiment of
Navarro, in which he was Captain of Grenadiers, but an
affair of honor obliged him to expatriate himself. He
went to Russia, where he was made Chamberlain of the
Cear, Peter I, and became by his wit and striking figure
one of his favorites. He married there and left a daugh-
ter who married the Seignour de Balley, Chamberlain of
the Emperor.
Another son, the seventh, was made Knight of Malta
in 1670, and retired from the service when Lieutenant
in the Regiment of Piedmont.
The eighth son, Joseph, became a Knight of Malta in
1671. He entered the Regiment of Ploardy in 1672, was
4.
made Captain of Dragoons in 1680, was mortally wounded
in Italy and made his will in Latin on the 28th of April,
1690.
The ninth son, Alexandre, continued the Family.
The tenth son was Jean Jaoques, who entered the
Marine, passed through all grades, was made Captain of
a Ship of War, and commanded the right wing in the naval
battle which the Count of Toulouse gave in 1705, and in
that which the same Prince gave subsequently near Malaga.
The eleventh son, Aphrodise, became Lioutenant
of Granadiers in the Regiment of Picardy in 1674 and
died two years later.
XX
Alexandre Joseph do Mons, Chevalier, born on
the 5th of February, 1651, entering the Church was
surnamed 'do la Capelliere', but later quitted the
tonsure to embrace the profession of Arms. He be-
gan as Lieutenant in the Regiment of Champagno in
1674, was appointed Captain of Grenadiers in 1689,
Commandant of Batallion in 1703, Chevalier de Saint
Louis in 1705, was made Lieutenant-Colonel six months
later, and in 1711 Brigadier of the Armies of the King.
Appointed in 1714 Governor of Perpignan, he died in
Paris in June, 1714, from the re-opening of old
wounds, and was buried at Saint-Eustache. The record
of his services tolls that ho was present at nine-
teen sieges, seven battles and twenty lesser on-
gagements, in which he was several times wounded --
his worse wounds being from a ooup de fou! at the
battle of Floury and a 'coup de pistole! at that of
Ramillies, where he was left as dead upon the field.
He was pensioned "in recompense for noble actions in
the wars and services reported to the King", as certifi-
cates set forth given by the Marshals of Villars and of
The river Chiers, which still bears its an-
oient name, rises in France not far from the Bel-
gian frontier and joins the Meuse a few miles from
Sedan. Mons -- in Flemish Bergen -- the capital of
the County of Hainault from the 10th century on,
was founded by the Countess Waudru as a holy shrine
and abbey in the depth of the vast forest of Ar-
donnes. Built over deep beds of coal, Mons, home
seat in the middle ages of a "poor, proud people",
is now the wealthy center of a great coal-mining
industry.
One of the earliest titles of honor in France,
now only used for royalty, was Sire, from the Latin
Senior, Elder, which gave rise also to Sieur and
Seignour. One of the proudest and most powerful
Houses in Northern France in the middle ages, that
of Coucy, had for its motto:
Roi ne suys
No prince, ne duc,
2.
No Comte aussi.
Jo suys 10 Sire de Coucy,
and the Sires do Pons bore it as a title in the
South with equal pride.
In 1095, the year before this will was made,
there had been a great and famous gathering at the
old oity of Clermont, the Latin, Clarus Mons, in
the mountain region of Auvergne. Pope Urban II
came and delivered an impassioned speech calling
on the knights and people of the West to rescue
the Holy Sepulohre from the Infidels. As he
finished, the gathered warriors clashed their arms
and shouted 'Dou le volt' -- 'God wills it', and
putting on cross-marked mantels, prepared in advance,
pledged themselves to the resoue of the sacred shrine.
The great leaders in the First Crusado were
Raymond, Count of Toulouse, a Sovereign Prince and
the most powerful war-lord in the south, and the
Adhomars of Montelimar, sovereign princes also and
great lords. The army that they led, splendidly
3.
equipped, was formed of the nobility of that southern
land, wealthy and cultured in comparison with the
ruder north.
THE HOUSE OF DE MONTS OR MONS
The House of do Monta or Mons is as illus-
trious as old; it prides itself on having served
our Kings and the States since the most remote
centuries in military employs. It has contributed
Viceroys, Ambassadors, Generals, Governors of Pro-
vinces and Cities, Prelates, Heads of Orders and
Knights of Malta. The historians of Savoy, of
Languedoo and of Dauphine make mention of them.
I
The line of descent followed by this family
goes back to Rodolphe de Mons, son of Ragnier,
Count of Mons, Hainault and Brabant, who is on
record as taken with his two nephews by the King
Lothair in a castle on the banks of the river
Chiers that Ragnier, his father, had seized from
Lord Ursion in 956. His lands were confiscated
and added to the royal domain.
2.
Rodolpho do Mons was killed in the siego of
Luxembourg, leaving -- his widow -- the Countess,
Adelaide, of an anoient Family of Vionno in Bur-
gundy, and a son, Gosvin de Mons.
II
Gosvin do Mons is recorded in a dood of the
year 997 where he is referred to as son of the
"Magnifique et Puissant Homme; Rodolphe, Comte de
Mons." His son Gosvin, second of the name, married
Jeanne-Imengardo, who appears with him in a joint
will leaving their property to their two younger
sons, Alexandro and Izoard, in the event that their
four other sons, Hugues, Philippe, Lambert and Gir-
audonnet failed to return from their voyage d'Outre-
mer, -- Beyond the Sea -- the First Crusade. This
deed is of the year 1096.
III
Philippo, one of the four sons mentioned in
this deed, lived, on his return from the Crusade,
3.
upon an estate given him in feudal tenure by Giraud
and Giraudonnet Adhemar of Montelimar. This Act, of
the 21st September, 1099, recites that Hugues de Mons,
having distinguished himself with his brothers in the
Holy Land under Giraud and Giraudonnet Adhemar, Sov-
ereign Lords of Montelimar and its lands, in Valdog-
nie, Province of Dauphine, these Lords gave in fief
the estate of. Saint Georges-do-Lene, in Savasse, to
Philippo do Mons, for the benefit also of his brother,
Hugues, in recompense for their praise-worthy (louable)
services in the Holy Land, where two brothers perished
in the siego and capture of Jerusalem; and for having
saved the life of Giraud Adhemar on the day of Holy
Friday (July 15, 1099) in the storming of the city.
2.
Pierro, Sieur de Monta and Seigneur du Guast,
the founder of Acadia under a Commission as viceroy
given him by the King, Henry IV, and dated, at Paris,
December, 1603. A Huguenot soldier, he served under
Henry of Navarro and had been appointed by him Gov-
ernor of Pons, an ancient city of Saintongo in south
western France, which had been established by Henry
on becoming King of France, as a place of security
for Huguenots.
Balthasar, who follows.
Jaoques, the fourth son, and Jean, the fifth,
both became Chevaliers do Malto; Jean, received
in 1592, being entered on the Order's roll as le
Chevalier do Guast.