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

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Mt. Katahdin V.P. Proposed
Mt.Katahdin N.P.
proposed
1915
Became 1st Maine State geologost
u.of llaine professor (189/7-0
Brother of George Pertzins Merrill.
18
Bangor Historical Society
Dates: 1857-1935
the present location was the only one available for the pur-
pose. The case, of oak and plate glass, with certain fittings,
etc., cost us about $150, the balance, $50, being made up by
individual subscriptions from our members.
Col. Pullen, to whose zeal and practical helpfulness we are all
w
KTAADN
deeply indebted, gave here his last service to the Society.
Mr. E. M. Blanding was appointed as his successor, and has
P.24
PROFESSOR LUCIUS H. MERRILE
been particularly active in securing the necessary subscriptions.
Delivered at the Quarterly Meeting, April 6th, 1915
The only part of the cabinet work now behind hand is the
labeling of a part of the contents of the new case on the lower
floor. As soon as all departments of the work are up to date
It may be asserted that every state in the Union possesses
the Society should make an annual appropriation for the repair,
some natural attraction more or less peculiar to itself. Our own
restoration and binding of such of its collections as require
State is no exception to this rule. The beauties of our rugged
attention.
coast bring us thousands of visitors each year, while our
The one need of today is the installation of two or three
forests, lakes, and streams are never-failing attractions. But
electric lights in the ceiling of the new case.
Maine possesses another attraction, more distinctive still,
Respectfully submitted,
well-known, indeed, to the lumberman and hunter of central
Maine, but practically unknown to the greater mass of our
(1506-1927)
CHARLES A. FLAGG.
Bangor, Jan. 4, 1916.
citizens and therefore scantily appreciated-our one great
mountain, Ktaadn.
re-
Ktaadn's chief claim upon our attention is not its altitude,
which is over one thousand feet Tess than that of Mount Wash-
1915-1466 Frank Huenney, the
ington. It consists rather in its isolation, its abrupt slopes,
the sharpness of its curved crest, its remarkable basins, its
slides and the magnificent views to be had from its summit of
Hm.
import
lakes, rivers, and wooded plains to the south, and the rugged
hills to the north and west.
The mountain IS not, as sometimes pictured, a single peak,
intro. bill of n.m.
although it may appear as such when viewed from certain
congress must Hataldian had
standpoints. On the contrary, it consists of a huge mass of
granite, some ten miles in length from north to south, and pre-
that the development seem Greets 3
senting no less than five named summits and several lesser
peaks. The configuration of the mountain is peculiar and
difficult to describe without a diagram. The ridge or crest,
which may be considered as the backbone of the mountain, is
a
doubly crescentic, its outline suggesting a written capital E,
the two concavities opening to the north and east. These
enclosures are known as the North and South Basins, the latter
statements coupons,
being by far the larger and more impressive.
The First and Second North Peaks mark the western boun-
Dover.
of
haway,
tree-la
20
Bangor Historical Society
dary of the North Basin. They are several hundred feet lower
than the more southern summits and require no special mention.
The highest point, known as West Peak, lies about midway of
the curved crest surrounding the South Basin. The first ascent
of the mountain of which we have record was made in 1804,
and the elevation of this peak was then estimated at not less
than 10,000 feet. In 1820, during the investigations incident
to the settlement of the northwestern boundary dispute,
Loring and Odell, representing respectively the United States and
Great Britain, from a series of barometrical observations calcula-
ted the height as 4685 feet above the waters of the West Branch
of the Penobscot at the mouth of the Aboljackarmegus, which
latter level they estimated at 650 feet. This would give a
total elevation of 5335 feet. In 1873 and again in 1874 Dr. M.
C. Fernald carried a mercury barometer to the summit and by
comparative readings computed the elevation at 5216 feet.
Dr. Fernald afterward made two more determinations of the
height of the mountain, concerning which he has recently
written:
"I find two determinations made later with the Repsold
vertical circle which I regard as more nearly accurate than
those given by the barometrical observations. The first was
made in November, 1878, with Orono, Houlton and Katahdin
the three points involved in the triangulation, and Orono the
station at which the readings of angular altitude were obtained.
The second was made in October, 1884, with Lincoln, Orono,
and Katahdin the three points in the spherical triangle, and
Lincoln the station at which the angular altitude of the summit
of the mountain was secured.
"The observations of 1878 reduced, gave the height of the
mountain at the base of the monument 5248 feet, and the
observation of 1884 reduced, gave the altitude 5272 feet. Re-
garding the observations as of equal weight and averaging the
figures, we have 5260 feet as the result of these two sets of ob-
servations. From later determinations made by other parties
and by other methods, I am satisfied that this result is very
nearly accurate."
More recently, a party under the direction of Professor H. S.
Boardman, by a triangulation and traverse survey, estimated
Ktaadn
21
the height at 5273 feet. It will be seen that Professor Board-
man's figures differ from the average of Dr. Fernald's later
work by only thirteen feet, a fact that would indicate that the
latter's conclusion as to accuracy is amply justified. It is
interesting to note that Dr. Fernald's latest figures and those
of Professor Boardman differ by a single foot and lack but
seven or eight feet of a mile, By mounting one of the three
stone heaps or "monuments" which mark the summit, the
ambitious visitor can boast that he stands a good mile above
sea level and that the whole population of Maine is below him.
About one-third of a mile to the east of the highest summit is
East Peak, eighteen feet lower than the first. The elevation
of these two points is SO nearly the same that the unaided
delusion, the point on which the observer stands always
is unable to decide which is the higher. By a curious optical eye
the lower. Still farther to the east, forming the southeastern seems
tremity of the mountain crest, is Pamola. Perhaps the wildest ex-
part of the mountain lies between these two latter summits.
Geography and Geology of Ktaadn," says that this particular
Professor C. E. Hamlin, in his "Observations upon the Physical
section presents "a savage and chaotic desolation that is probab-
ly without is parallel in Eastern North America." Between
East Peak and Pamola occur a number of minor elevations
rising abruptly from the crost and termed the Chimneys. The
crest floor here is narrow, on one side falling off precipitously to the
of the Basin, 2000 feet below. So narrow is the ridge and
SO abrupt the descent on either hand that one unaccustomed
to climbing might well feel a little timidity in its
although under ordinary conditions it could hardly passage, be con-
sidered dangerous.
From the West Peak the mountain drops off slightly to what
is termed the Tableland, a nearly plane surface inclining gently
to the northwest and covered with angular fragments of the
red granite of which the upper half of the mountain is com-
posed. This tableland is estimated to cover five hundred
or nearly a square mile. Between the North and South Basins acres,
of there is a depression called the Saddle. From the lowest
this depression the descent into the South Basin can part be
readily accomplished, the trail for much of the distance follow-
22
Bangor Historical Society
ing a ravine which at certain seasons is said to be the bed of
a torrent. For the latter purpose it may serve very well,
but for a highway it is capable of improvement. If one is
camping in the Basin, this same ravine furnishes the most con-
venient route to the summit.
The South Basin is the most striking feature of Ktaadn.
In shape it is like a horseshoe, its opening being to the north
and east. From its floor, strewn with masses of granite which
have been loosened by the frost and have fallen from the cliffs,
the mountain rises almost perpendicularly to the main summits,
2300 feet above. Near the center of the Basin is Basin Pond,
a shallow body of water, fed during the summer by almost daily
contributions of rain or melting snow. Its clear waters are as
cold as those of an arctic sea, a fact that may account for the
absence of visible life of any kind. In winter the snow is said
to accumulate here to a depth of eighteen or twenty feet.
Many years ago the Appalachian Club constructed a very
comfortable camp in the Basin, but it has long since disappeared,
either by fire or the slower process of decay. It is a fascinating
spot in which to camp. It is true the darkness comes early,
owing to the height of the western barrier, but the dawn is also
early, and the crest, when first tinged by the morning sun,
is worth going far to see. Good water, so often lacking in
camp, is abundant, while blueberries and highbush cranberries
are to be had in unfailing quantity. The drawbacks are the
frequent showers, the constantly shifting winds, and the cool
nights. One of the charms of camp life is cheerful evening
fire. Here in the Basin it is impossible to escape the smoke
which pursues and finds you out, however caref lly you may
select your seat. The chill is due to the altitude and the short
daily exposure to sunlight. Frosts are not unusual here in
August and even the day temperature may at time suggest to
the visitor that he is in a sort of natural refrigerator.
The so-called "slides" of Ktaadn mark the paths of avalanches
and are visible from the south for many miles. The East Slide
starts from the east spur of Pamola and extends half a mile
down the slope, with an average inclination of about thirty
degrees. It is said to date from 1825. The Southwest Slide
was formed in the spring of 1816, the rocky debris that covered
Ktaadn
23
the mountain having been loosened by frost and heavy rains.
Beginning half a mile below the brow of the Tableland, the
avalanche swept down the mountain side, carrying everything
before it and cutting a wide swath through the forest below.
Its path is nearly four miles in length and in places two hundred
feet across. Through this rent in Ktaadn's mantle one can see
what lies below: granite, always granite, gray on the lower
slopes and red above. Owing to the scantiness of the remaining
soil, the vegetation thus removed has been slow in reasserting
itself, although it is gradually creeping up from the base.
Throughout its length this huge scar is strewn with rock frag-
ments of every size, up to that of a fair sized house. While
the pavement is irregular and the footing uneven, yet the
absence of the dwarfed and almost impenetrable growth that
characterizes the upper margin of the timber makes this a con-
venient route to the summit for those who approach by way of
the West Branch.
IIe who goes to Ktaadn should make provision against bad
weather, since he is almost sure to encounter it. Nearly every
published account of an ascent includes mention of rain, Jack-
son, Hitchcock, Thoreau, and Winthrop all sharing in this
experience. Some fifteen years ago a party of botanists spent
ten days on and about the mountain and they record that it
rained on every day but one. If the day seens to have passed
without the usual visitation, one may confidently look for at
least il shower at night. In fact, Ktaadn manufactures its own
weather and in doing SO displays a marked predilection for
showers.
Twice it has been the writer's good fortune to be on the
surimit on a perfect day, without a breath of wind and with no
clouds visible except those immediately over the mountain.
On these days the cloud factory was found to be in full opera-
tion. A thin wisp of vapor could be seen stealing up the side of
the mountain, thickening as it rose, and finally adding itself
to the overhanging canopy. In the meantime another new-
born cloud could be detected creeping stealthily up from
Note. In the picture on the opposite page showing the East and West
Peaks of Ktaadn, the West Peak, or highest point, is shown upon the
right and is marked by stone heaps or monuments.
24
Bangor Historical Society
Ktaadn
25
another direction. And so the process went on, the operation
impossible to penetrate it if it were not for an occasional path,
being a continuous one. Apparently this is Ktaadn's way of
said to be due to the passage of caribou. Whether these animals
shielding his royal head from the too ardent rays of the summer
actually make these tracks I cannot say, but no other explana-
sun.
tion of their existence seems to be forthcoming. It is certain
This process of cloud making is easily explained. The lower
that they make use of them for I have several times picked up
slopes, exposed to the bright sun, become heated, and the warmth
their discarded horns in these paths. The trees are so unusual
is communicated to the air, which expands and rises. At a
in appearance and are so well described by Thoreau in his
greater altitude the air is cooled and condensation to clouds,
"Maine Woods," that a brief quotation requires no apology.
and in many cases rain, naturally follows. When one camps in
He says, "I scrambled on all fours over the tops of ancient
the Basin he encounters all sorts of home-brewed weather,
black spruce trees, old as the flood, from two to ten or twelve
sometimes half a dozen distinct brands in a single day.
fect in height, their tops flat and spreading, and their foliage
This little, shut-in part of the earth seems to be complete in
blue and nipt with the cold, as if for centuries they had ceased
itself, and the meteorological conditions that prevail in the
growing upward against the bleaksky, the solid cold. I walked
outside world affect it but little. The dampness of the moun-
some good rods erect upon the tops of these trees, which were
tain has a marked effect upon the vegetation, since flowers
overgrown with moss and mountain cranberries. It seemed
flourish in the crevices between the rocks in the scantiest of
that in the course of time they had filled up the intervals be-
soils, where two consecutive days of drought would prove fatal.
tween the huge rocks, and the cold winds had uniformly leveled
When near the summit of the North Peak with a friend, it
all over. Here was the principle of vegetation hard put to it."
was once my good fortune to encounter a thunder storm which
"Old as the flood" is a slight exaggeration, yet it is true that
proved an interesting and almost terrifying experience. Ac-
these trees are much older than their size would indicate. On
companying each of the flashes-which seemed to come with
one occasion one of our party laboriously hewed down a small
quite unnecessary frequency-there was a single sharp, ear-
tree about six feet in height and four inches in diameter at the
splitting crack, the flash and report being simultaneous. For
base. A section of the trunk was brought away and later cut
some reason there was no roll or reverberation, dead silence
and smoothed SO as to bring out more clearly the lines of annual
ensuing until the next flash. Probably the danger was no
growth. On close examination these lines were found to
greater than elsewhere; but it was difficult to rid the mind of
crowd each other so closely that an exact count was impossible.
the impression that each bolt found its mark and that the rash
By the use of a magnifying glass no less than one hundred and
intruder into these upper realms was likely to prove the chosen
forty-three rings were distinguished, thus proving that the
target.
tree at the time of cutting was nearly a century and a half old.
The flora of Ktaadn is varied and interesting and one need
In other words, it was a sturdy, though doubtless lowly
not be a botanist to see that it is out of the ordinary. The
sapling, when John Hancock affixed his signature to the Declara-
lower slopes are densely wooded-or were until man elected
tion of Independence.
otherwise. Farther up, the trees assume a dwarfed aspect and
Many of the plants found on the mountain are peculiar to
the climber suddenly emerges into the open where the eye
these altitudes or to cold and exposed situations. Here are
sweeps over and across the tops of the trees. Here the growth
several species of Lycopodium or clubmoss not found elsewhere
is largely of black spruce and fir, often so stunted and abnormal
in the State. The little mountain sandwort, Arenaria Groen-
in aspect that the species is not readily determined. In the
landica, is abundant. So, too, is the mountain cranberry,
depression known as the Saddle there are dense thickets of this
Vaccinium Vitis-Idaea, the berries of which are bitter when
description, SO scraggly and unyielding that it would be almost
raw, but cook to a most delicious sauce, serving admirably to
26
Bangor Historical Society
relieve the monotony of camp fare. A dwarf birch, Betula
glandulosa, with round leaves the size of a penny, a vine rather
than a tree, runs around among the rocks as though seeking
shelter, as indeed it probably does. A species of saxifrage occurs
on the mountain that is not found elsewhere in Maine, although
found in Labrador and Greenland.
The arctic or alpine character extends to the minutest forms
of plant life. At the request of a friend interested in diatoms,
I once collected from the shallow water of a small lake near the
entrance to the South Basin a minute amount of the slimy cover-
ing of a submerged boulder, to the untrained eye as devoid of
life as the boulder itself. From this small gathering, less than
half a thimbleful, my friend separated and identified the
siliceous valves of no less than seventy-six species of diatoms,
a number of which were distinctly alpine.
The basins of Ktaadn naturally suggest volcanic craters, and
there are those who seriously entertain the proposition that
the mountain is an extinct volcano. Beyond the outward
configuration there is nothing to support such a theory, while
evidence of a contrary nature is full and conclusive. Nowhere
in the vicinity is there anything in the nature of the volcanic
ejectamenta of which volcanic cones are built up, neither lava
nor eruptive fragmental matters. The mountain consists
entirely of granite, a rock formed under conditions that are
quite foreign to surface cruptions. If the geologist were asked
to indicate that place in Maine where the earth's crust was
most likely to yield to the pressure of subterranean forces, he
would probably name this locality among the last.
Of the geological history of the mountain we know very little.
We do not know the source of the enormous force that pushed
the semi-fluid mass up through the older rocks, or the conditions
under which the pasty magma consolidated. No one has ever
seen, no one can ever see, a granite in the process of formation.
The stone bears internal evidence that it crystallized under
immense pressure and at great depth. The mountain owes its
present prominence not to any great upheaval, but to the
erosion of the softer overlying and surrounding rocks, and the
consequent exposure of the harder and more resistant core.
Ktaadn, however, furnishes valuable testimony which bears
Ktaadn
27
upon
the Glacial Period. Geologists tell us that the whole of
New England as well as the country to the north was once
covered by an immense ice sheet, thousands of fect in thickness
and thousands of square miles in extent. This great mass
moved south with irresistible force, eroding, scoring, and
polishing the underlying rocks, carrying away the soil and de-
tached masses, filling up the old drainage channels and other-
wise greatly modifying the topography. The thickness of this
ice sheet has long been a disputed point among geologists, but
it is believed that the conditions then must have been very
similar to those prevailing in Greenland today. In Greenland
the ice sheet is not continuous, since the tops of the higher
mountains protrude through the ice. Did the summit of
Ktaadn escape, or was that also submerged?
This question has been ably discussed by Professor Tarr of
Cornell. On the surface of our more resistant rocks, and es-
pecially where the rocks have been protected by an overload
of earth, we often find the unmistakable evidences of glacial
action. The upturned edges of the shales, the prevailing rocks
of this vicinity, frequently retain these markings, even after
long exposure to the weather. But granite, although a harder
rock than shale, undergoes a comparatively rapid disintegration,
especially when exposed as on the upper half of Ktaadn. It is
not surprising, therefore, that this mountain retains no mark-
ings of this nature. It does, however, give us other information
bearing on this point.
In ascending the mountain by the Southwest Slide, one finds
in the debris of which the lower portion of the slide is composed
a great many fragments of rocks of a nature differing radically
from that of the mountain itself. As he goes higher he finds
the transported masses becoming less and less frequent and as
he approaches the summit it is only by careful scarch that
such foreign matter can be detected. Professor Tarr claims
that he has found drift boulders upon the very summit, a dis-
Note. The map shown on the opposite page is reproduced from a paper
by Professor C. E. Hamlin on "The Physical Geography and Geology of
Mount Ktaadn." (Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at
Harvard College, Vol. VII, No. V). The area included is about ten miles
from north to south and seven miles in width. The points of compass are
indicated by the names of the prominent features.
28
Bangor Historical Society
Ktaadn
29
covery that in his opinion sufficiently proves that the ice of the
only by the phonetic theory. Evidently the Indians laid great
Glacial Period passed entirely over the mountain.
stress on what we may term the second syllable of the name and
There are many routes by which one may reach and ascend
very little upon the first and last. The following authorities
Ktaadn. I have approached the mountain a number of times
may be quoted among those who used this spelling:
by way of Sherman Mills and have a lively recollection of the.
Henry D. Thorcau in the "Maine Woods;" John Springer
roughness of the road and the chill of the Wissataquoik waters.
in "Forest Life and Forest Trees;" Professor Ralph S. Tarr of
An easier and better route is by the West Branch. Leaving the
Cornell, in a "Bulletin of the Geological Society of America;"
train at Norcross, the visitor may take the small steamer through
Professor C. E. Hamlin of Harvard College, in a paper on the
North Twin, Pemadumcook, and Ambejijis Lakes. From the
"Geology of Mount Ktaadn;" William Willis and Judge C.
head of the latter lake one may proceed by the aid of a guide and
Potter, both considered high authorities in the Abnaki dialects:
canoe up the West Branch to the mouth of the Aboljackamegus
J. Hammond Trumbull of Hartford, who has been termed
Stream, from which point a blazed trail leads to the foot of the
"the most eminent living authority on Indian dialects;" Dr.
Southwest Slide. Each route has its advantages, but the latter
T. Jackson, our first State Geologist; Moses Greanleaf, in
affords many fine views that one does not get by the eastern
his map of Maine, 1829. In his "Survey of the State of Maine,"
approaches. On the other hand, it requires the services of a
Greenleaf adopts the second spelling and seeks to justify the
guide to pilot one through the deadwaters and to assist at the
change by the statement that while the Indian pronunciation
numerous carries.
"would probably be better expressed by the letters Ktaadn,
The name of the mountain has suffered at the hands of
all in one syllable with the sound of a as in father, yet the first
writers and map-makers. Ktaadn, Katahdin, Ktardn, and
"is next to impossible for organs accustomed only to English."
Cathardin, have all been noted by the writer. Only the first
The longer spelling has now become SO general that it is to be
two are in use today and the second appears to meet with more
feared that the Ephraimites will prevail, if for no better reason
general favor. Nevertheless, there is SO much to be said in
than that they "cannot frame to pronounce it right."
favor of the first that it has been used in this paper. The
We have in Ktaadn a great natural asset which has never
word is from the Abnaki tongue and is said to signify "highest
met the appreciation which it deserves. Some years ago the
land." As the Indians had no written language, the spelling
Hon. Mr. Guernsey introduced a bill into Congress one purpose
of their place-names is that of the early explorers, who, it may
of which was to include this mountain in a national forest re-
be assumed, chose a combination of letters which represented
serve. Unhappily this end has not yet been accomplished.
as nearly as possible the name as it sounded to them. In other
That it will come some day cannot be doubted; but it should
words, they spelled phonetically. Undoubtedly much of the
come before the axe of the lumberman and the fires which too
confusion which we find in the spelling of Indian words is due
frequently follow the axe shall have completed their work of
to the fact that some of the early explorers were English, some
devastation. Maine is called the "Pinc Tree State;" but how
French, and some Dutch. In spelling phonetically, we can
many of us have ever seen a fully matured white pine, the glory
readily understand how an Englishman might adopt a spelling
of the forest primeval, the "pumpkin pine" of the lumberman?
differing from that used by a Frenchman, since the letters in
I have never seen it. 1 do not expect that my children or my
their languages often have different values.
children's children will ever see it. It docs not take long to
In looking up the scanty literature pertaining to the moun-
erect memorials in stone and bronze; but to restore a forest is
tain, it is noticeable that a large proportion of the earlier writers
the work of generations. We can construct half a dozen Panama
used the spelling Ktaadn. Now this is an unusual sequence of
Canals while a white pine is growing.
letters in any of the languages named and we can explain it
If Congress cannot be induced to act, why should not our
1
30
Bangor Historical Society
Legislature take action and create a state reservation? The
proposition has been widely discussed and the women's clubs
have done noble work in bringing the subject before the public.
But we must not stop here. The matter should never be
MOUNT KATAHDIN AS A NATIONAL PARK
allowed to rest until it receives the attention which it deserves.
Nature has been generous to us; let us show ourselves worthy
HON. FRANK E. GUERNSEY, M. C.
of this great gift.
Delivered at the Quarterly Meeting, April 6th, 1915
When your genial secretary, Mr. Blanding, invited me to attend
this meeting of your society and hear Prof. Merrill of the Uni-
versity of Maine speak on Mt. Katahdin, I gladly accepted, as
I have taken great interest in Maine's greatest mountain and
the region thereabout, which I hope and believe will eventually
be taken over by the federal government for forest reserve and
national park purposes, in accordance with a measure I have
before Congress to that end
I have been deeply interested in what Prof. Merrill has stated
here today about Mt. Katahdin and its surroundings, the
wonderful scenery of the region, its forest, innumerable lakes
and streams. Owing to Prof. Merrill's many ascents of the
mountain and explorations in its vicinity, his statements have
added interest and value, and they confirm all I have heard
about that section of our state. The professor is performing
important work in presenting the information he has gathered
to the public, which is already awake to the necessity of govern-
ment protection of the remnant of our forest and the opening
and preservation of a national breathing place. Combine the
forest reserve and national park ideas, and a double purpose
will be accomplished. Maine's future depends upon its almost
innumerable water powers, which may be converted into
electricity to move machinery and do the manufacturing of
the nation for all time. The continued value of the water
power will depend upon the maintenance of the flow of our
streams; preservation of our forests is absolutely necessary to
*On the 17th day of April, 1916, Hon. Frank E. Guernsey, Member of
Congress from the Fourth District of Maine, reintroduced in the 64th
Congress the bill which was in the previous Congress for the establish-
ment of a Mount Katahdin National Park.
PROCEEDINGS
OF THE
UNIVERSITY OF MAINE
Bangor Historical Society
LIBRARIES
DEPARTMENT
CHEMISTRY
1914-1915
LAMAINE
1865
State of Maine Collection
RAYMOND H. FOGLER LIBRARY
GIFT OF
James Gannett
BANGOR, MAINE
1916
Ag 8/1:64-xak
A
MOUNT MAINE KATAHDIN NATIONAL PARK
1/19/12
5081
FOR THE EAST
IN
EASTERN FOREST RESERVES
WESTERN NATIONAL PARKS
SPEECH
02
HON. FRANK E. GUERNSEY
1916
mails
OF MAINE
July
8
Il
Steeir
IN THE
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
Namura
APRIL 13, 1916
41115-15015
WASHINGTON
1316
y
169885
SPEECH
OF
HON. FRANK E. GUERNSEY.
The House in Committee of the Whole House on the state of the Union
had under consideration the bill (H. R. 12717) making appropriations
for the Department of Agriculture for the fiscal year ending June 30,
1917.
Mr. GUERNSEY. Mr. Chairman, I am interested In the agrl-
cultural subjects which are dealt with by this bill, as I repre-
sent a very large agricultural district. One county in my dis-
trict probably raises more Irish potatoes than any other county
in the United States. But this bill deals with other subjects
besides agriculture. It deals with forestry subjects; and in that
connection I wish to call the attention of the House to some
phases of the legislation now pending.
1911
In 1911 the Congress of the United States committed the
Federal Government to a wise polley-th of establishing na-
tional forest reserves in the East. The policy was Inaugurated
after years of effort, and was upheld by a powerful public
sentiment among the great population of the Eastern States.
So important was it that means should be taken to preserve
and increase the remnant of the once vast forests of the Atlan-
tlc seaboard in order to continue and maintain the flow of the
rivers that industry dependent upon them should not cease and
public health should not suffer, that It was not belleved that
the policy once adopted would ever be abandoned by Congress.
Nevertheless, I have examined the provisions of the appropria-
tion bill now pending before the House in vain for provisions
to continue the acquisition of forest-reserve lands In the Eastern
States although the bill provides many millions of dollars for
forest reserves and national forests in the West and even in
far-away Alaska, far from the great eastern centers of popu-
latlon that contribute through taxation toward the millions
herein appropriated for western purposes.
41115-15045
3
3
4
5
I do not question the wisdom of a dollar of the large sums
In the western part of the State of Maine, on the watershed
set inside for these western forest lands. The expenditures, in
of the Androscogyin, something over 81,000 acres had been desig-
my opinion, are fully justified. This is a great country, with a
nated for examination by the National Forest Reservation Com-
future that 110 man can foretell, but I do most emphatically
mission.
question the desertion of eastern forest projects, which by the
THREE MILLION UNUSED.
report of the National Forest Reservation Commission up to the
Failure of Congress to provide money to continue these na-
close of the fiscal year ending June 30, 1915, represent 1,030,466
tional undertakings In the East can hardly be excused on the
acres that had been approved for purchase and surveys com-
ground of other pressing national demands, as Congress nt least
pleted. Of this amount 770,692 acres had been fully examined
should make available by reappropriation the $3,000,000 in the
as to title, and title to 348,275 acres had been acquired by
Treasury which were set nside for this work, but which has
the United States. All lands up to June 30, 1915, that had
never been drawn. for this reason: Under the act of Congress
been approved for purchase including those that had been ac-
of March 1, 1911, $1,000,000 were set aside for enstern forest
quired, amounted to 1.317.551 neres
reserves for the fiscal year that began June 30, 1910, and
Obviously, large sums expended in examination of surveys
$2.000,000 for the fiscal year 1911, but those years passed before
and title examination will be lost to the Government by the
the commission was ready to call upon the Treasury for the
abandonment of these projects now. The expenditure of the
money, owing to the careful and conservative manner in which
Government for surveys, appraisals, and title examinations up
the commission was proceeding In acquiring lands. As n result
to June 30, 1915, amounted to $743,112.60, or 56 cents per
the $3,000,000 reverted to the Trensury.
acre In addition to the cost of the preliminary steps, $6.883,-
The refusal of Congress to make available this money that
901.30 had been spent in payment of lands. This was at the
had been previously appropriated amounts to a repudiation of
average cost of $5.22 per acre,
governmental obligations that Congress entered Into with the
Briefly 1 will call attention to the location of the eastern
people in 1911.
forest-reserve lands purchased or contemplated for purchase.
I want to say here that I have every reason to believe that
In the State of Georgia 96,977 acres had been approved for pur-
the distinguished chairman of the Committee on Agriculture,
chase up to June 30, 1915, and of 35,174 acres the title had been
as well as many of the members of that committee, believe
acquired.
that Congress is in honor bound to keep those obligations, and
In the State of North Carolina 269,883 acres had been ap-
are not in any way In sympathy with the discontinuance of
proved for purchase and 69,507 acres acquired.
Government eastern forestry undertakings.
In the State of South Carolina 23,064 acres had been approved
EARLIER FOLLY.
but none acquired.
The people in the Enstern States, which is the older settled
In the State of Tennessee 267,843 acres had been approved
part of the United States, have been taught by hard experience
and 72.930 acres acquired.
what the destruction of our forests mean, and to-day they
In the State of Virginia 294,540 acres had been approved and
look back in amazement and in deep regret upon the short-
46,409 acres acquired.
sighted folly of the earller authorities of those States who
In the State of West Virginia 1,317,551 acres had been ap-
disposed of State holdings in immensely valuable virgin tim-
proved and 348,275 acres acquired.
berlands to the speculators of the earlier days at prices as low
In the State of New Hampshire 256.467 acres had been ap-
as a shilling an ncre and, in soine instances, at even a lower
proved for purchase and 106,112 acres acquired.
41115-15645
41115-15645
4
6
figure. The authorities in those days seemed to consider it a
undertakings of the Government, every dollar invested In east-
wise policy to get rid of the "woods" as fast as possible.
ern forest lands will increase in value and be returned to the
The only justification that I have heard advanced for the
Treasury, all in addition to the chief purposes of the under-
discontinuance of the eastern forest policy, inaugurated in 1911,
taking, and, what is more, the States In which these lands are
is that It comes within the administration's order to cut all
acquired will not in the end lose through belng deprived of
expenditures; but Is this the place In which to make a cut? I
taxable property, for the reason that under the Weeks law they
believe not. Millions are being appropriated by this House
receive 35 per cent of the net income derived from the lands.
weekly for objects that begin to disappear from the start.
The wisdom of the policy can not be questioned.
Forest-reserve purchases begin to increase from the start.
EUROPEAN NATIONS.
Ten years ago, when the agitation was first started, lands
European nations have long protected their forests by regu-
could have been acquired at from one-third to one-half what
lating the cut and by other methods conserve timber growth
they can be purchased for to-day. The lands that have been
in the Interest of their people. Not only have they conserved
acquired would cost more to-day and still more to-morrow.
their forest lands, but they have gone to greut expense in re-
Timberland values are increasing in this country constantly,
foresting large areas.
nnd will continue to increase as the forests are reduced by the
Every country and every nation that has failed to care and
saw and the ax in responding to the ever-increasing demands
maintain its forests has been impoverished through such fall-
upon them
ure. The millions of Europe, after centuries of experience,
The chief justification for the passage of the $40,000,000
recognize the Importance of protecting the forests as a method
river and harbor bill by this House within a few days was
of regulating stream flow, and on the regulation of stream flow
that it took care of projects that are under way. The eastern
the value of our water powers is dependent. Each passing
forest-reserve lands are projects that are under way. Evi-
year will find us more and more dependent upon water power.
dences of that fact are found in the report of the National
Each year we are reducing our avallable supply of fuel found
Forest Reservation Commission, 1915, House Document No. 130,
within this old earth.
Sixty-fourth Congress, first session.
We are encroaching on the stores of coal and exhausting the
The commission states in this report that from two to three
reservoirs of oll, bringing us nearer to the day when we shull
times the amount of forest lands already approved for pur-
have to look to water power for heat as well as lighting and
chase should be acquired before the undertaking is complete.
propelling force.
They place the maximum amount to be acquired In the eastern
If this Congress passes into history with a record of having
forest reserves at a little under 4,000,000 acres, while the
abandoned the policy of acquiring national forest reserve lands
amount approved for purchase to dute Is a little over 1,300,000
in the East out of the fast-disappearing remnant of such lands,
aeres, and their judgment is borne out by hundreds of men with
it should and will bring down upon it the everlasting condemna-
expert knowledge of the situation backed up by the opinion of
tion of the generations yet to come.
those Interested in the movement that brought the matter be-
I will insert at this point in my remarks an extract from the
fore Congress.
annual report of the National Forest Reservation Commission
RETURN TO THE TREASURY.
The creation of eastern forest reserves is not a new matter.
for 1915, above referred to, as follows:
The demand for them started more than 10 years ago and the
The wisdom of the Government's acquiring and administering ex-
tensive bodies of forest land at the headwaters of the great navigable
movement has been on the increase since. Unilike some other
rivers has become entirely clear. Far-reaching good will result in sufe-
41115-15645
41115-15640
5
8
9
sheds guarding the streams from erratic flow and in protecting the
from destructive erosion, to which they are subject when water-
ber 152 and include vast arens. They are administered in the
which cleared. A basis will be afforded for permanent Industries in unwisely
ing otherwise are in danger of ceasing to be productive and of regions becom-
public interest. The merchantable trees are cut according to
a mennce to the navigable rivers and to the communities situated
scientific foresters. The smaller trees are conserved and allowed
upon them.
The and appropriations which were made have been sufficient to start the
to grow until of proper size before being cut, and the forests are
work make very substantial progress. Through the care
thereby perpetuated.
in istration making purchases the lands acquired are SO well situated for exercised admin-
NATIONAL PARKS.
point. good would be accomplished. But the program should not stop at
and use that even should appropriations cease considerable
In addition to the national forests of the West, the Federal
It should go further However, the commission does not this
Government has set nside for the preservation of natural scenery,
upon the program as requiring expenditures through a long period look of
time, but rather through only a limited number of years.
as well as conservation, great sections of wild country as national
this commission that the work can best be done under of
Renewing its recommendation of the last year, it Is the judgment
parks. I will mention them in the order of their erection.
able covering periods of five years each, the appropriations becoming appropriations
In 1832 In Arkansas a national park was established which in-
annually and remaining available until expended, as is now avail. the
cluded 46 hot springs, covering an area of 1} square miles.
this case. Experience has shown that it is Impracticable to attempt to
is work under appropriations which expire with the fisent do It
In 1872 the Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming, the
through force periods of not less than five years. When the work was
also of the utmost importance that appropriations be continued year.
greatest of all our national parks, was established, and contains
a of timber cruisers title examiners, and surveyors had begun
3,348 square miles, and it is said to contain more geysers than
assembled and trained, a task which required two years. It would to be
all the rest of the world together. Petrified forests, the Graud
most In tbe unbusinesslike to have to disband this force on account of be
appropriations. If purchases were suspended, It would a gap
Canyon of the Yellewstone, lakes and streams, and n vast wilder-
require much time and expense to build up a new force and get also
way the again the negotiations that would have to be.broken off. under
ness, which forms r. retrent for the wild life of the country,
cruises and examinations which have been made and which Many had of
which swarms with elk, moose, deer, antelopes, and bison, as well
resulted touch in purchases would have to be made over again and the intimate not
with the land situation which is now enabling purchases to
as birds and fowls of the air. In this place of safety for wild
forward desirable smoothly would be lost, From every point of view it is highly go
life all live together in harmony with nature and with man with-
It that appropriations continue without a break.
the basis is again of emphasized that the Congress establish this project
out fear of being disturbed or injured, demonstrating that wild
an appropriation of $11,000,000. One million dollars upon
animal life is dangerous only when pursued by man as game or
priated for the year 1010 never became available at all. Instead appro- of
year 1911, which would have been unbusinesslike and would have
hastening into purchases in order to utilize the appropriation for the
an enemy.
In 1890 the national park of the Yosemite in California came
suited tive In loss to the Government, the commission adopted the conserva- re-
polley of making purchases only after full information had been
into existeuce, and it includes the reniarkable Yosemite Valley,
secured By in regard to each tract and reasonable prices had been obtained.
which is described us a crack in granite mountains 7 miles long
the so doing it established the work upon a sound basis, but nearly all
$2,000.00 appropriated for the year 1911 reverted to the Treasury.
and less than a mile wide. Some of its snow-topped mountains
priated. These appropriations which were not utilized ought to be reappro-
rise to a height of 21 miles.
In the judgment of the members of the commission, the work should
In 1890 the Sequola National Park was erected, and contains
be carried forward in a steady, systematic way. Since the existing
237 square miles, and it also contains the greatest trees in the
action appropriations reased with the fiscal year 1915, it is recommended that
be taken by the Congress during the present session to
world, thousands of years old, many of them reaching to n height
1917 the appropriations at th rate if $2,000,000 per year from the fiscal continue
of nearly 300 feet.
Delations available until expended.
to the fiscal year 1921, inclusive, and that it make all the appro- year
The same year the General Grant National Park, in the State
In the discussion of forest reserves for the East I have made
of California, was established. It contains 4 square miles, but,
some reference to the national forests of the West. They num-
with the park previously mentioned, is said to contain 12,300
41115-15045
monster trees more than 10 feet in diameter.
41115--15645
6
10
11
In 1892 the Casa Grande Ruin of Arizona, containing pre-
historic Indian ruins, was set aside as a national park.
a national forest reserve in the Mount Katahdin region in the
Next there came into existence, In 1899, in the State of Wash-
State of Maine, to protect the stream flow of two of Maine's
ington, Mount Rainier Park, with an area of 324 square miles.
greatest rivers-the Kennebec and Penobscot-and in turn
In 1902 Crater Lake National Park, In southwestern Oregon,
maintain great water powers, developed and undeveloped,
containing 245 square mlles, was set
which, If fully harnessed, would turn all the machinery of all
In 1903 and aside. parks
the New England States; and out of the forest reserve acquired
1904, in South and North Dakota, two were
set inside, called Wind Cave and Sullys Hill, respectively.
by the Federal Government that there be created a Mount
In 1906 Mesa Verde Park, In Colorado, containing 77 square
Katahdin national park, as within this region there prises
miles, was established by the Federal Government.
Maine's greatest and most majestic mountain, standing by itself
In 1906, in Southern Oklahoma, the Platt National Park was
in a wonderfully wild country, presenting the most striking
brought into existence, and In 1910 the great Glacier Park, of
scenic features of the East, the great Maine forest stretching
Montana. containing 1,534 square miles, with more than 250
away on every side as far as the eye can see, broken only by
glacler-fed lakes, was set aside,
numberless enchanting lakes which feed swift-moving streams.
The latest park to be created in the West was in 1915, when
It is in such a region that Mount Katahdin rears its towering
the Rocky Mountain Park, in Colorado, containing 358 square
peaks more than 5,000 feet. Around Its northerly base flows the
miles, was established by Congress.
Penobscot River on its way to the sea, and to the southwest of
These grent parks and forest reserves, lying west of the Mis-
the mountain lies the largest lake In New England, Moosehead,
sissippi River, are serving now, as they will continue to serve,
the source of the Kennebec.
In the region of Mount Katahdin there lies the greatest
purposes SO useful that none will question their continuance SO
long as this Government stands; but their very number and the
natural fish and game preserve in North America east of the
importance attached to them by our Government and the people
Mississippi. This remarkable region is within easy access to
as a whole adds emphasis to conditions that exist in that sec-
the people of enstern United States. It naa not contain cura-
tion of our country that lies east of the MississippI River and
tive hot springs, but It has a life-giving atmosphere that has
within the bounds of which live two-thirds of the population of
long acted as a magnet to the health and pleasure-seeking
the Republic. a condition as to population that will always pre-
people of the Nation. It may not equal the Yellowstone in
vall.
geysers, canyons, and petrified forests, but It has fascinating
The Atlantic seaboard will always be the niost populous, as
streams, deep gorges, and the fir and the pine. It may not pos-
the commerce of the world will continue for all time on the
sess the world-famed beauty features of the Yosemite, but there
Atlantie
are those who contend that It possesses features equally as
East of the Mississippi River there Is not a single national
attractive.
park that the millions in the Eastern States can visit and
The importance of Congress taking steps to save the Mount
enjoy--a condtion that ought not to be continued. and one that
Katuhdin region to the people of the United States can not
Congress can remedy.
be overstated. Once this forest is removed, an asset of great
national value will be gone, probably for all time.
THE MOUNT KATAHDIN REGION.
A MOUNT KATAIIDIN NATIONAL PARK.
In a bill that I presented in the last Congress, and will reintro.
duce in this. it is proposed that legislation be enacted to create
The Mount Ketahdin region as a national park would pro-
41115-15045
vide a retreat for the wild life of the eastern section of our
country, and would insure a place of safety where animal and
41115--15645
12
13
bird life would propagate their species under natural condi-
1912.
tions and Insure the perpetuation of such life not only within
the park but to the entire eastern country
Four persons shot and killed; mistaken for deer.
Three persons shot; mistaken for deer not fatal.
As a national park It would not only benefit wild life In
Thirteen persons accidentally shot and killed.
securing to It 11 place of freedom from the hunter's gun but man-
Teu persons accidentally shot not fatal.
1018.
kind as well Thousands of our eastern citizens would like to
go into the Maine woods and enjoy for a season out of door and
Five persons shot and killed ; mistaken for deer.
One person shot and killed mistaken for a mink.
camp life but for the feur of the hunter's gun which seems to
Ten persons accidentally shot and killed.
point with unerring aim when a human being is mistaken for
Fourteen persons accidentally shot not fatal.
1014.
game.
During the past 10 years 110 persons have been fatally shot
Six persons shot and killed; mistaken for deer.
One person shot and killed mistaken for a rabbit.
in the hunting seuson, and 114 shot but not killed, according to
Eight persons accidentally shot and killed.
Twenty-three persons accidentally shot not fatal.
the official figures of the commissioners of Inland fisheries and
1015.
game of Maine, which I will incorporate in detail below:
Six persons shot and killed; mistaken for deer.
MEMORANDOM OF HUNTING ACCIDENTS FOR THE YEARS 1906 TO 1015,
One person,she ; mistaken for deer not fatal.
INCLUSIVE
Six persons accidentally shot and killed.
Eighteen persons accidentally shot; not fatal.
1900.
Two persons shot and killed; mistaken for deer.
In calling attention to the danger from the hunter's gun as a
One person shot and killed mlstaken for Dear.
No record of nonfatal accidents this year.
reason for setting aside a section of wild country as n national
park that would be free from such danger, I am not speaking in
1907,
the interest of Maine people alone, but in the interest of the
this year.
Three persons accidentally shot and killed ; none mistaken for deer
people of all' the Eastern States, ns a multitude from these
No record of nonfutal accidents this year.
States go to Malue annually for recreation and health, which
1908,
can only be obtained through the freedom and enjoyment of
Two persons shot and killed; mistaken for decr.
Ten persons accidentally shot and killed.
out-of-door life.
No record of nonfatal accidents this year.
1900.
f
The State of Maine for months in summer and fall, due to its
Chronelogy
exhilarating climate, inland lakes, forests, and its extended,
Four persons shot and killed mistaken for deer.
picturesque coast has become the playground- of the Nation. As
Two persons shot; mistaken for deer. not fatal.
Nine persons accidentally shot and killed.
our country develops the demand upon Maine as a place for
Sixteen persons accidentally shot ; not fatal,
recreation will rapidly increase, and the Nation may well con-
1910.
sider that it has certain duties that it ought to fulfill to secure
Two persons shot and killed; mistaken for deer.
for the peopie the fullest enjoyment and advantages of this
Two persons shot mistaken for deer, not fatal.
Four persons accidentally shot and killed.
American Switzerland.
Nino persons accidentally shot; not fatal,
A national park in the Mount Katahdin region would be a
1911.
long step taken by the Federal Government to secure to the
Two persons shot and killed; mistaken for deer.
people for all time the advantages I have mentioned, and such
Two persons shot mistaken for deer, not fatal.
Eleven persons accidentally shot and killed.
a park once made accessible through the development of park
Fourteen persons accidentally shot not fatal.
41115--15645
41115-15645
14
roads and trails would, In my judgment, be visited and enjoyed
annually by thousands of our citizens.
The Legislature of Maine has memorialized Congress in the
interest of this project. It has the indorsement of a very large
number of organizations throughout New England. It has the
most hearty support of the New England press, and, In addition,
individuals not only in New England but in other Eastern
States have expressed their enthusiastic support in favor of a
Mount Katandin National Park.
41115-15645
O
Frank E. Guernsey - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Page 1 of 1
Frank E. Guernsey
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Frank Edward Guernsey (October 15, 1866 - January 1, 1927) was
a U.S. Representative from Maine.
Born in Dover, Maine, Guernsey attended the common schools,
Foxcroft Academy, Eastern Maine Conference Seminary, Bucksport,
Maine, Wesleyan Seminary, Kents Hill, Maine, and Eastman's
College, Poughkeepsie, New York. He studied law. He was admitted
to the bar in 1890 and commenced practice in Dover, Maine.
Treasurer of Piscataquis County 1890-1896. He served as member of
the State house of representatives 1897-1899. He served in the State
senate in 1903. He served as delegate to the Republican National
Convention in 1908.
Guernsey was elected as a Republican to the Sixtieth Congress to fill
the vacancy caused by the death of Llewellyn Powers. He was
reelected to the Sixty-first and to the three succeeding Congresses
and served from November 3, 1908, to March 3. 1917. He did not
Frank Edward Guernsey
run for reelection but was an unsuccessful candidate for the
Republican nomination for Senator. He served as president of the
Piscataquis Savings Bank and trustee of the University of Maine. He also engaged in the practice of law.
He died in Boston, Massachusetts, January 1, 1927. He was interred in Dover Cemetery, Dover-Foxcroft,
Maine.
References
Frank E. Guernsey (http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=G000517)at the
Biographical Directory of the United States Congress
Retrieved from"http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Frank_E._Guernsey&oldid=4590953781
Categories:
1866 births
1927 deaths
Maine State Senators
Members of the Maine House of Representatives
Members of the United States House of Representatives from Maine
Maine Republicans
People from Dover-Foxcroft, Maine Maine politician stubs
This page was last modified on 5 November 2011 at 06:02.
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms
may apply. See Terms of use for details.
Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a non-profit organization.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_E._Guernsey
1/19/2012
Fogler Library: Finding Guide to the Lucius Merrill Papers
Page 1 of 3
1865 THE UNIVERSITY OF
Raymond H. Fogler Library
MAINE
Apply Now
Emergency
Special Collections: Guide to the Lucius Merrill Papers
Summary Information:
Collection Title: Lucius Merrill Papers
Date of Collection: 1891-1974
Box Numbers: Boxes 2483- - 2484
Quantity: 2 ft.
Administrative Information:
Provenance: Gift of Merrill Family, 1997.
Access Restrictions: No restrictions
Preferred Citation: Lucius Merrill Papers, Special Collections, Raymond H. Fogler Library, University of Maine
Copyright: Contact department for copyright information
For Additional Information:
Special Collections Department
University of Maine
5729 Fogler Library
Orono, Maine 04469-5729
(207) 581 1686
Biographical Information:
Dr. Lucius Merrill was born in 1857 in Orono, Maine. He attended the University of Maine and graduated in the class of 1883. From
1885-1887 he worked as Assistant Curator, Department of Lithology and Physical Geography at the U.S. National Museum. He
joined the University of Maine Experiment Station in 1887 as an analytical chemist and was associated with the Station throughout
his career. In 1888 Lucius Merrill was appointed Instructor of Biological Chemistry and later Agricultural Chemistry. Towards the end
of his career he was a professor of Geology and Economic Geology. In 1908, he was awarded a Doctorate of Science from the
University of Maine. In 1929, Dr. Merrill was appointed State Geologist. He retired Emeritus from the University of Maine in 1931,
and died in 1935. He was brother to George Perkins Merrill.
Edward Osgood Merrill was born in 1916 and graduated in 1938 from the University of Maine in Chemistry. He was a professor of
Biochemistry at the Agricultural Experiment Station until his retirement in 1979. He died in 1987.
Contents:
The collection contains both academic and family papers of Lucius H. Merrill and of his son Edward O. Merrill and and Edward's
son, Alan Merrill. These include lecture notes, research notes, letters, correspondence, diaries and journals.
Arrangement:
Arranged by genre, with Edward O. Merrill and Alan Merrill papers at the end.
Finding Aid:
Box 2483
Box 2483 f1
Diary (Lucius Merrill), 1891-1892.
Box 2483 f2
Diary (Lucius Merrill), 1891-1892.
http://library.umaine.edu/speccoll/FindingAids/Merrilll.htm
1/19/2012
Fogler Library: Finding Guide to the Lucius Merrill Papers
Page 2 of 3
Box 2483 f3
Personal Journal - no date.
Box 2483 f4
Personal Journal - no date.
Box 2483 f5
Memorandum books (2) - contain some diary entries- 1920's.
Box 2483 f6
Correspondence - no date.
Box 2483 f7
Correspondence, 1890's - 1909.
Box 2483 f8
Correspondence, 1909-1910.
Box 2483 f9
Correspondence, 1910-1919. Empty Envelopes Only. Folder 1 of 6.
Box 2483 f10
Correspondence, 1910-1919. Empty Envelopes Only. Folder 2 of 6.
Box 2483 f11
Correspondence, 1920-1932. Empty Envelopes Only. Folder 3 of 6.
Box 2483 f12
Correspondence, 1920-1932. Empty Envelopes Only. Folder 4 of 6.
Box 2483 f13
Correspondence, 1920-1932. Empty Envelopes Only. Folder 5 of 6.
Box 2483 f14
Correspondence, 1920-1932. Mostly Empty Envelopes. Folder 6 of 6.
Box 2483 f15
Marriage Announcement - Lucius H. Merrill & Lydia Buffum - 1893.
Box 2483 f16
Teaching - Lecture and Research. 1920's - 1930's.
Box 2483 f17
Teaching - Lecture and Research. 1920's - 1930's.
Box 2483 f18
Teaching - Lecture and Research. 1920's - 1930's.
Box 2483 f19
Teaching - Lecture and Research. 1920's - 1930's.
Box 2483 f20
Teaching - Lecture and Research. 1920's - 1930's.
Box 2483 f21
Teaching - Lecture and Research. 1920's - 1930's.
Box 2483 f22
Teaching - Lecture and Research. 1920's - 1930's.
Box 2483 f23
Teaching - Lecture and Research. 1920's - 1930's.
Box 2484
Box 2484 f1
Botanical Samples
Box 2484 f2
The Hexagon of Alpha Chi Sigma, vol. 22, no. 7, April, 1932.
Box 2484 f3
Publication no. 666, 71st Congress - Appropriations to the Department of the Interior
- Feb. 14, 1931.
Box 2484 f4
New York Agricultural Experiment Station, Bulletin no. 358 - February 1913.
Box 2484 f5
McGraw Hill Books on Mining, Geology and Petroleum Engineering - circa 1920's.
Box 2484 f6
Nuts As Foods in Foreign Countries (France, Italy, Syria and Korea) - 1898.
Box 2484 f7
Maine Masque - Treasurer's Notes - 1912.
Box 2484 f8
Poetry
Box 2484 f9
The Little Lost Princess, A Pantomime in One Act - no date.
Box 2484 f10
"List of Books in Our Library" - Merrill Home Library - no date.
Box 2484 f11
Bernard Holliday, Bookseller - Old and Rare Books on Science, Natural History
Medicine
- Advertising Pamphlet - 1932.
Box 2484 f12
Jones Cove Shell-Heap - 1929; The Diving Rod - 1917.
Box 2484 f13
Maine Agricultural Experiment Station - Official Inspections - 1937, 1940.
Box 2484 f14 Farm and Home Week Program - March, 1931.
Box 2484 f15
The Nation's Library - circa early 1900's.
Box 2484 f16
Are You Driving Down Cadillac Mountain? - no date.
Box 2484 f17
Newspaper Clippings.
Box 2484 f18
Business Reply Cards.
Box 2484 f19
Business Reply Cards.
Box 2484 f20
Business Reply Cards.
Box 2484 f21
Receipts
Box 2484 f22
Receipts
Box 2484 f23
Family Memorabilia
Box 2484 f24
Covers and Misc.
Box 2484 f25
Edward O. Merrill - Grade School Workbooks and School Papers.
Box 2484 f26 Edward O. Merrill - Paedagogus of Lambda Chi Alpha, 1934.
http://library.umaine.edu/speccoll/FindingAids/Merrilll.htm
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Fogler Library: Finding Guide to the Lucius Merrill Papers
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Alany MerrillneSereoral betterus 1968 19Calendar
Box 2484 f28 Alan Merrill - Personal Letters, 1969-1974.
Box 2484 f29 Alan Merrill - Personal Letters, 1969-1974.
Box 2484 f30 Alan Merrill - Personal Letters, 1969-1974.
Box 2484 f31 Alan Merrill - High School - Newspaper Clippings.
Box 2484 f32 Alan Merrill - College Years - The University of Maine.
Box 2484 f33 Alan Merrill - College Years - The University of Maine.
Box 2484 f34
Alan Merrill - Photos - early 1970's.
Box 2484 f35 Alan Merrill - Metal Sculpture - Invoice Sheets.
Box 2484 f36 Alan Merrill w Metal Sculpture - Invoice Sheets.
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Proceedings of the
30
2/04
Bangor Historical Society (914-1915.
Legislature take action and create a state reservation? The
proposition has been widely discussed and the women's clubs
have done noble work in bringing the subject before the public.
But we must not stop here. The matter should never be
MOUNT KATAHDIN AS A NATIONAL PARK
allowed to rest until it receives the attention which it deserves.
Nature has been generous to us; let us show ourselves worthy
of this great gift.
HON. FRANK E. GUERNSEY, M. C.
Delivered at the Quarterly Meeting, April 6th, 1915
When your genial secretary, Mr. Blanding, invited me to attend
this meeting of your society and hear Prof. Merrill of the Uni-
versity of Maine speak on Mt. Katahdin, I gladly accepted, as
I have taken great interest in Maine's greatest mountain and
the region thereabout, which I hope and believe will eventually
be taken over by the federal government for forest reserve and
national park purposes, in accordance with a measure I have
before Congress to that end.*
I have been deeply interested in what Prof. Merrill has stated
here today about Mt. Katahdin and its surroundings, the
wonderful scenery of the region, its forest, innumerable lakes
and streams. Owing to Prof. Merrill's many ascents of the
mountain and explorations in its vicinity, his statements have
added interest and value, and they confirm all I have heard
about that section of our state. The professor is performing
important work in presenting the information he has gathered
to the public, which is already awake to the necessity of govern-
ment protection of the remnant of our forest and the opening
and preservation of a national breathing place. Combine the
forest reserve and national park ideas, and a double purpose
will be accomplished. Maine's future depends upon its almost
innumerable water powers, which may be converted into
electricity to move machinery and do the manufacturing of
the nation for all time. The continued value of the water
power will depend upon the maintenance of the flow of our
streams; preservation of our forests is absolutely necessary to
On the 17th day of April, 1916, Hon. Frank E. Guernsey, Member of
Congress from the Fourth District of Maine, reintroduced in the 64th
Congress the bill which was in the previous Congress for the establish-
ment of a Mount Katahdin National Park.
32
Bangor Historical Society
Mount Katahdin National Park
33
such maintenance. Our great rivers, the Penobscot and Ken-
millions of people in eastern United States. In our state
nebec, can only be maintained through perpetuation of the
is the last remnant of the virgin forest that once swept the whole
forests at the head waters of these rivers in the Mt. Katahdin
Atlantic coast. Something must, and will, in my opinion, be
region.
done to preserve it.
Let the federal government take over such area for that pur-
pose, and a great work will be accomplished.
Let the territory so, taken over be converted into a national
park and with its scenic points, lakes, streams and forest
made accessible to the public through the construction of roads
and trails, the benefit therefrom will be of incalculable value
for the present generation and the generations yet to come.
Such a park would draw to this state thousands of visitors an-
nually. It would be a place of recreation for camping and
fishing; a place where our people might seek out-of-door life
and health, free from the danger of being shot down by the
hunter's deadly rifle through being mistaken for a deer or
moose; a place where the wild life of our forest could retreat
and propagate their specie unharmed and thereby assure a
continuance of wild fowl, deer and moose in our state for all
time.
The federal government has already adopted the policy of
establishing forest reserves in the east. It has undertaken it
in the White Mountains and in the southern Appalachian
range. National parks to the number of fourteen have been
erected in fifteen states, all of them west of the Mississippi
river, but they are thousands of miles away from the great
centers of population in the east. The census of 1910 shows
that continental United States contained about 92,000,000
people. It also disclosed that two-thirds of that population
was east of the Mississippi river-that is, over 65,000,000, and
the greater proportion of that number are located along the
Atlantic seaboard, which in all human probabilities will con-
tinue to be the most densely settled portion of the United
States.
Only a limited number of these people have the opportunity
to visit the great national parks of the far west. Those visiting
these parks are individuals who have time and means to travel
long distances. Locate within the state of Maine a national
park, and it will be comparatively within easy reach of the
Tilbury House, Publishers
132 Water Street
Gardiner, ME 04345
Copyright © 1997 by Neil Rolde. All rights reserved.
First Edition: October, 1997
Contents
Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Foreword
vii
Rolde, Neil, 1931-
The Baxters of Maine : downeast visionaries / Neil Rolde.
Introduction
ix
p. cm
CHAPTER
1
Legacies
2
Includes bibliograpical references (p. ) and index, ISBN 0-
88448-190-5 (alk. paper), -- ISBN 0-88448-191-3 (pbk. :
CHAPTER
2
Family History
14
alk. paper)
CHAPTER
3
Public Service
39
1. Baxter, James Phinney, 1831-1921. 2. Baxter, Percival
Proctor, 1876-1969. 3. Politicians--Maine--Biography 4.
CHAPTER
4
Young Percy
55
Maine--Politics and government--1865-1950. 5. Maine--
CHAPTER
5
A Political Baptism by Fire
77
Politics and government--1951-
CHAPTER 6
The Historian
93
I. Title
CHAPTER 7
F25.B32R65 1997
Back in Politics
115
97444. 104'092'2--dc2
CHAPTER 8
Prelude to Power
141
[B]
97-29670
CHAPTER 9
Governor Percy
157
CIP
CHAPTER
10
Alone, and then "Regoolarly" Elected
181
Design: Edith Allard, Crummett Mountain Design, Somerville,
CHAPTER
11
En Route to a Magnificent Obsession
201
Maine
CHAPTER
12
Katahdin, and Conservation
Jacket Photos: "Katahdin Reflected" by Scott Perry; Baxter photos
Consciousness
223
courtesy of the Baxter Collection, Maine State Library
CHAPTER
13
Creating a Park
Editing and Production: Jennifer Elliott, Rebecca Schundler,
243
CHAPTER
14
Travels
Barbara Diamond
260
Layout: Nina Medina, Basil Hill Graphics, Somerville, Maine
CHAPTER
15
The Later Years
283
Scans and Film: Integrated Composition Systems, Spokane,
CHAPTER
16
Managing the Heritage
311
Washington
Jacket/Cover Printing: The John P. Pow Company, South Boston
An Author's Note and Afterword
331
Book Printing and Binding: Maple-Vail, Binghampton, New York
Index
336
Kataham, and Conservation Consciousness
ference on Conservation, "the first of its kind not only in
Eliot and his friends were transplanting to Maine a
America but in the world may well be regarded by future his-
mechanism already in place in Massachusetts, where the
torians as a turning point in human history."1
Trustees of Public Reservations formed one of the earliest
Teddy Roosevelt's influence on Baxter came in different
land trusts in the U.S. Dorr's ties to the formative conserva-
guises. The national monuments, which predated the idea of
tion movement were through his cousin Charles Sprague
national parks, had helped establish the principle of donating
Sargent, who ran Harvard's Arnold Arboretum and collabo-
privately bought lands to a governmental entity for public
rated with John Muir and Gifford Pinchot.
preservation. Baxter's idea of buying Katahdin and its sur-
Out of the gathering in the Music Room in Seal Harbor
roundings with his own money and donating it for a public
eventually came Acadia National Park. Dorr, like Baxter, was
purpose was hardly original.
a lifelong bachelor and devoted his entire life to the creation
The first celebrated instance of private land being given
of a magnificent public park. Like Baxter, he spent his own
to the government to preserve it occurred in California in
money to acquire land, but unlike Baxter, he had help along
1908. William Kent, a native of Marin County (just north of
the way. The first gift of property came from Mrs. Charles D.
San Francisco), made his mark in Chicago as a businessman
Homans of Boston, and critical support was offered by Dorr's
and political reformer. Returning home, he learned that some
friend, multimillionaire John S. Kennedy, on whose yacht he
beautifully forested land he owned was about to be seized by
had sailed aboard to the momentous meeting in Seal Harbor.
a water company through eminent domain, primarily for its
A verbal bequest from Kennedy on his deathbed was honored
timber value. Instead, Kent gave it to the government for a
by his reluctant executors after pressure from Dorr, who was
national monument, 47 acres of gorgeous giant redwoods,
as tireless as Baxter in his efforts.
which he named Muir Woods (today expanded to 485 acres).
That Acadia became a national park rather than a state
An obviously delighted John Muir responded with dry
entity was due to the action of the Maine Legislature. In the
Scot's humor, saying, no doubt with the most exaggerated of
1913 session (Baxter was not a member of it), local realtors
highland burrs: "That SO fine divine a thing should-a come
and other opponents of any park in their area had a bill intro-
out o' money-mad Chicago! Wha wad a 'thocht it."12
duced to annul the charter of the Maine Trustees of Public
Another well-known example which had to be familiar
Reservations, a group set up through Dorr's influence. Enlist-
to Baxter, occurred in Maine. George Bucknam Dorr was
a
ing the help of the speaker of the house, John Peters of
wealthy Boston Brahmin who summered in Bar Harbor, and
Ellsworth, Dorr defeated the attempt. But he then decided he
on an August day in 1901, he received an invitation from
needed federal protection. Three years of lobbying in Wash-
Charles W. Eliot, a fellow summer resident and the president
ington, D.C., finally brought him to the first stage of his
of Harvard, to attend a meeting in Seal Harbor. The purpose
goal-national monument status-and it took another year of
was to explore the idea of establishing in and around Mount
lobbying to eke out an appropriation, and finally a bill sub-
Desert "reservations" of land for perpetual public use.
mitted by Maine's Senator Frederick Hale obtained the COV-
236
237
consciousness
age
eted title of national park. Called Lafayette National Park at
only of degree. While governor, he even publicly expressed
the outset, it became Acadia ten years later with a donation of
his support for Lafayette National Park, despite his dislike of
nearly the entire Schoodic Peninsula from a lady married to
federal programs in Maine.
an English lord who objected to the name of a Frenchman
The tie-in between conservation of waterpower
who had aided American revolutionaries. She would give her
resources and conservation of scenic areas was brought vividly
land if Dorr changed the name. Acadia, the ancient French
to the fore during Percy's freshman term in the Maine
name for the region, seemed an ideal compromise.
Legislature by an issue that erupted in California but attracted
Therefore, models were not lacking as Baxter developed
national attention. Teddy Roosevelt was president when the
his own feelings about conservation.
oddly named Hetch Hetchy controversy hit the headlines-a
Were there even ethnic and class undertones to what was
furor ignited by John Muir when a part of Yosemite, the
happening? Stephen Fox, in John Muir and His Legacy, dis-
magnificent Hetch Hetchy Valley, was threatened with flood-
cusses George Bucknam Dorr's magnificent obsession as very
ing by a reservoir dam built to provide water to the growing
nearly the swan song of a dominant social group whose power
city of San Francisco. This battle did not end until the admin-
was slipping away. Referring to Dorr, Fox writes:
istration of Woodrow Wilson, almost a decade later, and Muir
In particular, this witness of the decline of his family,
lost. The integrity of Yosemite was violated, and Percy
class, and region liked nature for inspiring his historical
learned that a governmental designation of a piece of land as
imagination, implying an unbroken tradition that held
a "reserve" or "monument" or "park" did not guarantee its
him to a fading, chimerical past.13
preservation-a valuable lesson to keep in mind when he was
creating his own park.
But a quote of Dorr's put his motivation more in the con-
The issue of conservation remained hot in presidential
text of an American version of Old World institutions, where
politics throughout Percy's formative years in politics. The
aristocrats in a country in which aristocrats could not legally
split between Roosevelt and Taft that helped lead to Percy's
exist, had to tailor their notions of "noblesse oblige." Said
defeat in 1910 concerned acreage that Roosevelt and Gifford
Dorr:
Pinchot wanted to conserve-primarily waterpower sites-
and that Taft's interior secretary, Richard Ballinger, wanted
Our national parks alone can supply the imaginative
appeal that is made in older lands by ancient works of art,
not only to develop but to give away. When Taft fired Pinchot
by ruins, and old historic associations. 14
as head of the Forest Service, the clash burst into the open,
helped lead to a three-way race for president in 1912 and
Baxter, in a sense, was cut from the same cloth as people
Democrat Woodrow Wilson's election.
like Dorr and Charles W. Eliot-Anglo-Saxon, rich, well-
The reaction of both Baxters to the conservation history
educated, Harvard Law School, and Yankee. Being from
of this era was not totally consistent. James Phinney greatly
Maine instead of Boston made a difference, to be sure, but
admired Teddy Roosevelt, but not necessarily for his conser-
238
239
vation ethic. In a tribute that he penned to the former Rough
was Percy's opening shot to seek the nomination, himself. Yet,
Rider, he was more concerned with Roosevelt's efforts to curb
perhaps in a subtler fashion, its very outrageousness was a
"the rapidly increasing horde of monopolists who were
mode for burning all bridges.
absorbing the wealth of the nation." His fears were that dis-
In any event, 1928 was also a year that saw the way clear-
plays of extravagance by the idle rich and by the managers of
ing for Percy to harbor realistic hopes of initiating his
great industries, if left unchecked, would lead to the "increas-
Katahdin dream. Death again was a catalyst. Garrett Schenck,
ing unrest of the proletariat stirred to envy... " Percy's own
the CEO of the Great Northern Paper Company, passed
progressive actions followed from his father's line of self-
away, removing a principal obstacle to possible negotiations.
interested logic, which both of them suspended in 1912 when
they supported the Republican Party's candidate Taft instead
of Bull Mooser Roosevelt. And although Percy's goal of quit-
ting politics and of buying Katahdin had been formulated by
1
How Glooskap Outwits The Ice Giants, And Other Tales of the Maritime
1926, his public behavior certainly gave the media cause to
Indians retold by Howard Norman, Little, Brown and Company,
think otherwise-that, indeed, his ambitions were still politi-
Boston, 1989; page 53.
2
Chimney Pond Tales. Yarns told by Leroy Dudley. Assembled by
cal. Possibly the most notable occurrence of this sort was in
Clayton Hall and Jane Thomas with Elizabeth Harmon, The Pamola
1928. Loyal Republican Percy was in Kansas City in June of
Press, Cumberland, Maine, 1991; page xvi.
that year as vice-chairman of the Maine delegation to the
3 Ibid; page 9.
G.O.P. National Convention. For reasons best known to him-
4 The Maine Woods by Henry David Thoreau, Bramhall House, New
self, he used the occasion to issue a blockbuster of a declara-
York, 1950; pages 271-72.
5
tion that drew eight-column headlines back in Maine.
Ibid.; pages 277-78.
6
Greatest Mountain by Connie Baxter, Scrimshaw Press.
It was nothing less than a brutal frontal attack on Gover-
7
Ibid.; page 321.
nor Owen Brewster. Percy called his successor a Klansman
8 Breaking New Ground by Gifford Pinchot, Harcourt Brace and
and a traitor to the Republican Party. This sensational revela-
Company, New York, 1947; page 101.
tion was buttressed by his claim that Brewster had come to
9 Ibid.
him in January 1928 and proposed a diabolical bargain by
10 Quoted in Man's Dominion, The Story of Conservation In America by
which he, Baxter, was to run for governor and Brewster for
Frank Graham, Jr. M. Evans and Company Inc., New York, 1971.
U.S. senator. In return, Brewster, who allegedly joined the
11 Breaking New Ground; page 352.
12 John Muir And His Legacy, The American Conservation Movement by
Klan in Washington, D.C., would guarantee Percy 20,000
Stephen Fox, Little, Brown and Company, 1981; pages 135-36.
KKK votes and also get rid of any potential Klan candidates.
13 Ibid.; pages 137-38.
Concluding, Percy declared that "His (Brewster's) nomination
to the U.S. Senate, in my opinion, would be a calamity."
Conventional wisdom would deem that such an outburst
1
240
241
LAND, TREES, AND WATER, 1890-1915 / 137
fine divine a thing should have come out of money-mad Chicago! Wha
a New York industrialist acquired eighty-five acres on top of Cadillac
wad'a' thocht it!"
Mountain, and followed it in 1909 with a large chunk of his family's land.
With these additions the initiative passed from Eliot to Dorr. For the rest
Down the coast of Maine, just beyond Penobscot Bay, the island of
of his life Dorr made the preservation of Mount Desert his special mission.
Mount Desert offered some of the most striking topographical features in
"George Dorr is an impulsive, enthusiastic, eager person," noted Eliot,
the eastern United States. Scattered through its thirty thousand acres were
"who works at a high tension, neglects his meals, sits up too late at night,
springs, rapid little streams, rugged granite outcroppings, thick coniferous
and rushes about from one pressing thing to another; but he is diligent, as
forests on the landward side of hills and in the deeper valleys, and still
well as highly inventive and suggestive." A cousin of Charles Sprague Sar-
lakes, clear and cold. Surmounting the lower granite peaks, Cadillac
gent, he came from the same background of secure privilege. Born near
Mountain, the highest of them, rose quickly from sea level to fifteen hun-
Jamaica Pond, brought up in one of the first homes built on the filled land
dred feet. It loomed over the fishing village of Bar Harbor, solitary and in-
of the Back Bay, inevitably educated at Harvard, as the last of his family
congruous.
line he symbolized the Indian summer of Brahmin Boston. His father, a
During the years after the Civil War this bracing mixture of ocean and
banker, served in both houses of the legislature; his maternal grandfather,
mountain, unique on the East Coast, drew an annual colony of artists,
a Salem sea captain, later made a fortune in business and served as trea-
writers, and rich people to summer homes on the island. The family of
surer of Harvard and the Boston Athenaeum. The Dorr home was adorned
George B. Dorr of Boston built one of the first patrician houses in Bar
with oriental ceramics and furniture from the family's years in the China
Harbor. Among their seasonal neighbors and social peers the Dorrs
trade. As a boy George knew grace, beauty, and stability: the qualities he
counted President Charles W. Eliot of Harvard, a Dana, a Schieffelin, and
later tried to protect on Mount Desert. "My earliest recollections," he said,
various Vanderbilts and Rockefellers. For the embattled gentry at the turn
"are concerned with gardens, our own and my grandmother's before we
of the century, Mount Desert offered a literal island of tranquillity, an an-
ever came to Mount Desert." Isolated by a severe stuttering problem, he
nual refuge from an urban society cracking open in alarming ways. "The
spent his summers largely by himself, exploring the island, taking special
set at Bar Harbor is exceedingly exclusive," an observer remarked; "it is
delight in uncovering underground springs. Further distanced from his
inside of the Four Hundred and is made up of the One Hundred tip-
parents by the Victorian convention of decorously concealed feelings, the
toppers."
three found common ground in their love for the island. "We all three had
In the fall of 1901 Eliot called a meeting of a dozen of the island's well-
great reserves, even from each other," he recalled, "and lived our own lives
born landowners. Progress - in the form of numerous middle-class
out, not readily opening ourselves out to others." He never married; once,
owners, who were buying smaller parcels of land and developing them -
when his mother brought home a likely prospect for him, he climbed a tree
was threatening the pristine beauties of Mount Desert. The group
Source
until it was safe to come down. After his parents died he lived alone in the
launched a nonprofit landholding trust, the Hancock County Trustees of
house at Bar Harbor, keeping a watchful eye on island affairs, depleting his
Public Reservations, patterned on a Massachusetts group founded earlier
fortune by adding new parcels of land to the trust.
by Eliot's son, a landscape architect. "The time fitted well," George Dorr
Around 1909, real estate developers and small landowners started build-
recalled, "for it lay between two periods, of the private owner grown sud-
ing cottages on Eagle Lake above Bar Harbor, thus endangering the village
denly to wealth and that of the multitude set into movement by the new
water supply. Since both Dorr and the local water company wanted to
mechanical age." Mediating between the two, the Hancock County Trust-
keep Eagle Lake inviolate, the situation threw them together in a peculiar
ees were chartered by the state legislature to accept private gifts of land
alliance. The company condemned the lake properties and then financed
and hold them, tax-free but for public recreational use, in perpetuity. The
their acquisition by Dorr's group. "I could do what others could not," Dorr
land was thus both protected and available to the multitude. After two
noted, "without being open to the charge of acting for some special interest
small initial gifts, nothing further happened until 1907, when Mrs. Charles
in seeking
further lands for the protection of the Bar Harbor Water
Homans of Boston donated a substantial tract, with a small lake, on New-
Company." Thus provoked, the local real estate interests in 1913 intro-
port Mountain. Inspired by this addition, Dorr with financial help from
duced a bill in the state legislature to annul the charter of the Hancock
2
138 / THE AMERICAN CONSERVATION MOVEMENT, 1890-1975
LAND, TREES, AND WATER, 1890-1915 / 139
County Trustees. Dorr hurried to the capital, talked to the Speaker of the
a final showdown over Yosemite. Like these lesser episodes, the last
House (a friend from Bar Harbor), and after ten days of lobbying managed
Yosemite struggle derived from a water problem, produced unlikely alli-
to quash the bill.
ances, and defied analysts who favored symmetrical political explanations.
The narrow escape led Dorr to seek permanent federal protection. Using
the precedent of Muir Woods, an earlier gift of privately held land, he
)call
A tangled snarl of interests, with each side claiming to represent the public
against private monopolies, the issue four times seemed dead, only to flare
offered the tract on Mount Desert to the federal government as a national
relate
up again. For Muir, past seventy during the heaviest fighting, it made an
monument. He and Eliot exploited all their social and political connections
ironic denouement to his lifework. "Ever since the Yosemite National Park
in Washington. (Opposition arose from David Houston of Agriculture; but
was established in 1890 my own real work has been sadly interrupted in
he had taught under Eliot at Harvard, and a letter from his old president
trying to assist in its preservation," he noted in 1907. "While a single peak
converted him.) Through a Boston friend Dorr obtained an interview with
or dome, tree or cascade is left, the poor stub of a park will still call for
Mrs. Woodrow Wilson. In 1916 the President accepted the land as a mon-
protection." His career as a pioneer conservationist ended where it started,
ument. Two years later it was promoted to park status, and eventually was
in a canyon of the High Sierra.
given the permanent name of Acadia National Park.
IV
Dorr stayed on as self-appointed guardian, living to the age of ninety-
one in his echoing old house, ever on the lookout for new donations of land
In the northwestern corner of the park the Tuolumne River tumbled
to his park. "Our national parks alone," he said in old age, "can supply the
down into a long, narrow gorge. It traversed the three and a half miles of
imaginative appeal that is made in older lands by ancient works of art, by
the valley floor and passed through the southern end, resuming its course
ruins and old historic associations." He liked wild nature for the usual rea-
down the mountain range. The valley, called Hetch Hetchy by the Indians
sons of biology, esthetics, and personal freedom. In particular, this witness
in reference to its grassy meadows, first drew Muir's attention in the early
of the decline of his family, class, and region liked nature for inspiring his
1870s. He described its close resemblance to the more celebrated Yosemite
historical imagination, implying an unbroken tradition that held him to a
Valley: "formed by the same forces, lying at the same height above sea-
fading, chimerical past. American society kept reinventing itself. Nature
level, occupying the same relative position on the flank of the range," and
offered stability.
with similar plants and waterfalls. At his urging Hetch Hetchy was in-
cluded in the national park act of 1890.
In varying degrees, efforts to preserve Niagara Falls, Muir Woods, and
Within a few years the city of San Francisco made its first proposal to
Acadia were all provoked by water resource problems. Yet the contending
turn Hetch Hetchy into a water reservoir by plugging the southern end of
parties fell into no pattern. In two cases the preservationist fought against
the valley with a dam. Rebuffed when Muir and the Sierra Club raised a
the utility company; in the third, with it. Kent and Dorr were old-money
protest, the city tried again in 1901 during the reform administration of
Ivy Leaguers, while McFarland left school at twelve to work in a print-
Mayor James D. Phelan. For years the privately owned Spring Valley
shop. Kent alone defined himself as a socialist; yet McFarland, the most
Water Company had been treating the city to high rates and poor service.
conservative of the three, found himself inveighing against a capitalist mo-
Phelan, an advocate of municipally run utilities, revived the Hetch Hetchy
nopoly and citing Elihu Root as an argument for the popular election of
plan to rescue his city from Spring Valley's acknowledged failings. At his
senators. McFarland was conservative except regarding conservation; Kent
behest a right-of-way bill, allowing water conduits through national parks
was progressive except on the question of progress itself. Dorr claimed the
"for domestic, public, or other beneficial uses," passed Congress in Febru-
glossiest lineage, yet he wound up admiring Franklin D. Roosevelt, the
ary 1901, zipping through with little discussion. The Sierra Club only
noted traitor to his class. Dorr and Kent delighted to lose themselves in a
learned of it after passage. Under its provisions the city applied to the Inte-
real wilderness, while McFarland felt adequately wild at his summer home
rior Department for the rights to Hetch Hetchy. But Ethan Hitchcock re-
in the Poconos. The three shared only their concern for nonmaterial con-
jected the plan in January 1903 and again in February 1905 because of his
servation and their amateur status in the movement.
general policy of keeping utilitarian projects out of the national parks.
Niagara, Muir Woods, and Acadia were all eclipsed at the time by
After the second ruling, Gifford Pinchot, Hitchcock's persistent adver-
140 / THE AMERICAN CONSERVATION MOVEMENT, 1890-1975
LAND, TREES, AND WATER, 1890-1915 /
141
3
sary in government conservation circles, took up the scheme. A champion
the influential Outlook on November 2. Ascribing the plot to "mischief-
of both public utilities and the tapping of park resources, Pinchot declared
makers and robbers of every degree from Satan to Senators trying to
that Hetch Hetchy might be dammed with no esthetic loss. ("Just the
make everything dollarable," he defended the valley's scenic value, de-
same," Muir wrote Johnson, "as saying that flooding Yosemite would do it
plored the absence of public discussion, and pointed out alternate sources
no harm.") In November 1906, with his friend James Garfield soon to re-
outside the park that would cost more economically but less esthetically.
place Hitchcock, Pinchot suggested to Marsden Manson, the city engineer
The dam advocates, pricked to respond, attacked Muir in kind. "John
of San Francisco, that the application for Hetch Hetchy might fruitfully be
Muir loves the Sierras and roams at large, and is hypersensitive on the
renewed. The following summer, with the Sierra Club away on its outing
subject of the invasion of his territory," Phelan wrote Garfield. "The
in Yosemite, Secretary Garfield quietly held a hearing in San Francisco.
400,000 people of San Francisco are suffering from bad water and ask Mr.
Lawyers and engineers for the city presented their case for the dam. No
Muir to cease his aesthetic quibbling."
dam opponents appeared at the hearing. The Sierra Club returned from its
Behind the rhetorical sallies, all but obscured by the smoking verbiage,
outing to find the long process already under way.
the fight involved more than bad water. To conservationists in the Pinchot
At once Muir and Johnson sent protests to their friend the President.
camp the concept of "multiple use" implied the highest, most efficient ap-
Not previously involved in the matter, Roosevelt asked Garfield to investi-
proach to resources. A dam should ideally provide drinking water, regulate
gate alternate water sources. A month later, in early September 1907, Muir
floods and erosion, irrigate crops, and - especially - generate electricity.
recounted for TR the long history of Hetch Hetchy dam promotions.
Hydroelectric power could eventually pay the costs of construction; in pub-
"They all show forth the proud sort of confidence," said Muir, "that comes
lic hands it also might remove a key utility from monopolistic abuses. Pin-
of a good sound irrefragable ignorance." This latest effort, he added, could
chot often warned of "the water-power trust" with its platoons of lawyers
only succeed by deceptions and keeping the facts from the public. "As soon
and lobbyists. "Whoever dominates power," said Pinchot, "dominates all
as light is cast upon it, nine tenths or more of even the citizens of San Fran-
industry." For their part, the defenders of Hetch Hetchy regarded hydro-
cisco would be opposed to it. And what the public opinion of the world
electric power as the Trojan horse of the whole fight. Other sites might
would be may be guessed by the case of the Niagara Falls." Roosevelt sent
provide water alone. Hetch Hetchy, as a natural reservoir at a high eleva-
Muir's letters along to Pinchot and Garfield but remained noncommittal.
tion, was especially suited for both water and power. The dam advocates,
Abstractly he would like to protect Yosemite, he told Muir, but would have
though speaking only of San Francisco's need for water, seemed curiously
to yield to public opinion: "So far everyone that has appeared has been for
resistant to the consideration of other sites. The preservationists also knew
it and I have been in the disagreeable position of seeming to interfere with
that a generating plant and transmission lines would further disrupt the
the development of the State for the sake of keeping a valley, which ap-
Yosemite landscape. As the ranks formed overtly over water, the power
parently hardly anyone wanted to have kept, under national control."
issue hovered in the background, a source of unspoken mutual suspicion.
(P.S.: "How I do wish I were again with you camping out under those great
In the spring of 1908, as Garfield was deciding whether to grant a permit
sequoias or in the snow under the silver firs!")
under the right-of-way law, Muir offered a compromise: take Lake
Thus challenged by the President, Muir set about rousing public opin-
Eleanor, a few miles north of Hetch Hetchy and within the park, in order
ion. "This Yosemite fight promises to be the worst ever," he confided to
to save the valley. Using the lake as a reservoir would cause less damage
Johnson. With the help of William Colby he put the Sierra Club on record
than inundating the valley. "I am trying to see if we can not leave the
in opposition. They sent recruiting letters to women's clubs and other
things on the line that you indicate," TR wrote Muir, that is, damming
mountaineering groups. Colby and Johnson talked with private water
Lake Eleanor and letting San Francisco depend for a generation or so
companies, who for their own purposes provided information against the
upon that and the Tuolumne tributaries." Roosevelt passed the idea along
dam. (As in George Dorr's efforts for Acadia, the preservationists lined up
to
Garfield - but only as a suggestion, without his usual snap, leaving the
with a private utility.) Reaching back to earlier Yosemite battles, Muir got
final decision to his cabinet officer. In May, Garfield granted San Fran-
in touch with former Secretary of the Interior John Noble and William
cisco a permit, subject to congressional approval, to dam Hetch Hetchy. "I
Herrin of the Southern Pacific. His first published broadside appeared in
think you must feel, as I do, that a child of ours has been mutilated,"
400 / NOTES FOR PAGES 128-135
NOTES FOR PAGES 135-143 /
401
4
Page
Page
128 "Many thanks": JM to W. F. Herrin, Feb. 26, 1905, MP.
135 The water company's condemnation: Jonathan E. Webb in California Out-
128 Harriman and Cannon: E. H. Harriman to JM, Apr. 16, 1906, Alex Miller
of-Doors, Oct. 1919, copy in box 112, William Kent Papers.
to JM, May 10, 1906, MP.
135 "1 know": William Kent to JM, Jan. 17, 1908, MP.
128 "either from indifference": Letters of TR, ed. E. E. Morison, 5:293-294.
135-136 "Compared with Sequoia": JM to W. Kent, Feb. 6, 1908, Kent Papers.
128 "The fight you planned": JM to R. U. Johnson, July 16, 1906, JPB.
136 "The set at Bar Harbor": William E. Dutcher to T. G. Pearson, July 9, 1907,
129 "the lumber syndicates": Letters of TR, ed. E. E. Morison, 5:604.
AuP.
129 "I have one": McGeary, Pinchot, 55.
136 "The time fitted": MS fragment, n.d., Dorr Papers.
129 Pinchot and wider use of reserves: Hays, Conservation, 39-40; Steen, Forest
137 "George Dorr": C. W. Eliot to Ellen Bullard, Sept. 1, 1915, Dorr Papers.
Service, 74.
137 "My earliest": MS fragment, Jan. 26, 1940, Dorr Papers.
129 "He was" and "He had": Pinchot, Breaking, 154-155.
137 "We all three": MS fragment, Dec. 22, 1938, Dorr Papers.
130 Use Book: Steen, Forest Service, 79-80.
137 Cottage building: Bar Harbor Times, Oct. 31, 1963.
130
"The conservation movement": G. Pinchot, The Fight for Conservation
137 "I could do": MS fragment, Oct. 15, 1941, Dorr Papers.
(1910), 44.
138 Muir Woods precedent: G. B. Dorr, Acadia National Park (1942), 28.
130 Hitchcock as Secretary of the Interior: Hays, Conservation, 72-73.
138 "Our national parks": "What Do National Parks Stand For?", MS in Dorr
130 Omission of JM: G. Pinchot to R. U. Johnson, Apr. 13, 1908, Johnson
Papers; and on this historical/cultural rationale for national parks, see A.
Papers.
Runte in Journal of Forest History, Apr. 1977.
130 "The moral": SCB, June 1908.
138 Dorr and FDR: G. B. Dorr to FDR, June 25, 1940, PPF, FDR Library.
130 "P. is ambitious": JM to R. U. Johnson, June 2, 1908, American Academy
139 "Ever since": JM to J. R. Garfield, Sept. 6, 1907, "WS."
Papers.
139 "formed by": JM in San Francisco Bulletin, Aug. 13, 1875.
131 Olmsted-Norton campaign: A. Runte in New-York Historical Society
139 "for domestic": Jones, JM and the Sierra Club, 90.
Quarterly, Jan. 1973.
140 "Just the same": JM to R. U. Johnson, Mar. 23, 1905, MP.
131 "Niagara's claim": H. G. Wells in Harper's Weekly, July 21, 1906.
140 Pinchot's suggestion: G. Pinchot to Marsden Manson, Nov. 15, 1906, in
131 "We are permitting": J. H. McFarland in Ladies' Home Journal, Sept.
Transactions of the Commonwealth Club of California, June 1907.
1905.
140 "They all show": JM to TR, Sept. 9, 1907, "WS."
132 "badly infected": J. H. McFarland to Stephen Mather, Dec. 6, 1912,
McFP.
140 "So far everyone": TR to JM, Sept. 16, 1907, MP.
132 "Nothing else matters": J. H. McFarland to R. B. Watrous, Dec. 14, 1912,
140 "This Yosemite fight": JM to R. U. Johnson, Sept. 2, 1907, JPB.
McFP.
141 "mischief-makers": JM in Outlook, Nov. 2, 1907.
132 "Pinchot does not": J. H. McFarland to C. R. Woodruff, Apr. 13, 1908,
141 "John Muir loves": James Phelan to J. R. Garfield, Nov. 21, 1907, "WS."
McFP.
141 "the water-power trust": Pinchot, Fight, 27-28.
132
"I trust you": J. H. McFarland to JM, Jan. 10, 1914, McFP.
141 JM's compromise: JM to TR, Apr. 21, 1908, in folder 65.31, MP.
132 "a rampacious": J. H. McFarland to E. Mills, Apr. 20, 1912, McFP.
141 "I am trying": TR to JM, Apr. 27, 1908, Roosevelt Papers.
132 "If the country": J. H. McFarland to R. U. Johnson, Feb. 4, 1909, JPB.
141 TR's action: TR to J. R. Garfield, Apr. 27, 1908, "WS."
133 "Boast we well": McFarland in Ladies' Home Journal, Sept. 1905.
141 "I think you must": R. U. Johnson to JM, May 23, 1908, MP.
133 "Turn on Niagara!": J. H. McFarland to Ernest McFarland, Apr. 9, 1943,
142 "It was just": TR to R. U. Johnson, Dec. 17, 1908, JPB.
McFP.
142 TR's request to Garfield: William Loeb, Jr., to J. R. Garfield, Dec. 17, 1908,
133 "You can little": T. E. Burton to J. H. McFarland, Apr. 10, 1906, McFP.
"WS."
133 Response to McFarland's articles: Edward Bok to J. H. McFarland, Apr.
142 "monopolizing San Francisco": JM in SCB, Jan. 1908.
19, 1906, McFP.
142 Colby's supposition: W. E. Colby to R. U. Johnson, Nov. 19, 1908,
133 "There has been": J. H. McFarland to JM, June 19, 1911, McFP.
McFP.
133 The 6,550 letters: Chautauquan, Aug. 1907.
142 "We do not": JM et al., "To All Lovers of Nature and Scenery," Dec. 21,
134 "Mr. Root now": TR to J. H. McFarland, Oct. 24, 1908, McFP.
1908, in box 7, PP.
134 "I have a dozen": J. H. McFarland to Burton, May 1, 1912, McFP.
142 "I am sure": Wolfe, 316.
134 "a surrender": J. H. McFarland to T. E. Burton, Jan. 27, 1914, McFP.
142 Taft and Johnson's argument: R. U. Johnson to JM, Sept. 7, 1909, MP.
134 "I am a mighty": J. H. McFarland to S. Pray, Mar. 4, 1914, McFP.
143 "He refused": Bookman, Feb. 1915.
134 "I would gladly": JM to Mrs. Howard, Sept. 1900, MP.
143
"he never": Frank Swett memoir, p. 13, in "Recollections of John Muir"
135 "My life": Roderick Nash, Wilderness and the American Mind (rev. ed.,
(1965), Bancroft Library.
1973), 172.
143
"All seems coming": JM to W. E. Colby, Oct. 21, 1909, MPB; and see R. A.
135 "you are a barbarian": Ibid., 153.
Ballinger to JM, Dec. 27, 1909, MP.
Frank Steeper. 2002.
BAXTER STATE PARK AND THE ALLAGASH RIVER
B
axter State Park and the Allagash River covers two
spectacular areas in the northern Maine woods. Baxter
State Park, with more than 200,000 acres, is the largest
park in the country purchased by one individual, former
governor Percival P. Baxter. The park includes Mount
Katahdin, the northern terminus of the Appalachian Trail
and the highest peak in Maine. Breathtaking photographs
portray the scenic Allagash River, which was designated a
wilderness waterway in 1966 by the Maine legislature. It
was the first state-managed river area in the National Wild
and Scenic Rivers System in 1970.
Included in this volume are stereoscopic photographs of
Mount Katahdin from the early 1870s. This mountain,
sacred to the Native Americans, has an atmosphere that
is masterfully conveyed in the extraordinary photographs
used in this history. The Allagash River is portrayed as it
was before the wilderness waterway was created. Baxter
State Park and the Allagash River chronicles the progression
of the river and park from lumbering, hunting, and fishing
to its eventual preservation and tourism.
Frank H. Sleeper has authored numerous titles in
Arcadia's Images of America series. In this history, he has
captured the picturesque beauty of two of Maine's most
visited sites. For more than thirty-seven years, Sleeper was
a reporter and columnist for Portland newspapers. He has
also served as a correspondent for Time Incorporated
magazines. A Maine historian and preservationist, he is
proud to present this photographic history of two of
Maine's most distinctive treasures.
PUBLISHED BY ARCADIA
AN IMPRINT OF TEMPUS PUBLISHING, INC.
$19.99
ISBN 0-7385-3993-0
51999
780738"509938
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
One way or another, this project has been ongoing for 14 years. At that time, Buzz Caverly
1
the author the pictures that make up the Kidney Pond camps chapter of this book. Stan ,
Jackie Greaves of Presque Isle gave the leads that brought many of the pictures in the chap
focusing on the people of the Allagash.
Once again, Earle Shettleworth, executive director of the Maine Historic Preservat
Commission, came up with a crucial set of photographs, possibly the oldest ever taken of Mo
Katahdin. Vital photographs were also supplied by Marcia Pond-Anderson, curator of
Lumbermen's Museum in Patten. The author was led to her by Ed Rogers, a grandson of
founder of the Lumbermen's Museum. Lore Rogers, and Elliott Hersey, who appeared as a
in the author's history of Winchester, Massachusetts, which was published by Arcadia.
Robert and Richard Putnam (now both of Ohio) have lent photographs for 14 years; tl
images of the Allagash appear in this volume. Craig and Terry Hill of Shin Pond Village I
many of the shots that make up the fourth chapter. Bill Greaves, district forest ranger out of
Island Falls district, led the author to the Hills and kept him from putting a photograph in
book that did not belong there. David Putnam, lecturer in science at the University of Ma
at Presque Isle, was very helpful. So was Dean Bennett, author of The Wilderness f
Chamberlain Farm.
In conclusion, thanks go to the author's son, F. Bruce Sleeper, an attorney in Portland, for
last-minute efforts on this book. It should also be made clear that Buzz Caverly and Bob and D
Putnam will have their photographs by now, photographs that the author held for 14 years.
Dedicated to former Gov. Percival P. Baxter, who fought
the good fight and won, and to Irvin C. "Buzz" Caverly Jr.,
the Cornville diplomat who has flourished as park director.
Bowdom College Interlibrary Loan
MENTS
INTRODUCTION
At that time, Buzz Caverly lent
More than 100,000 people visit Baxter State Park and the Allagash Wilderness Waterway
chapter of this book. Stan and
annually. Two thirds of them go to the park; the rest canoe the Allagash. They line up in
/ of the pictures in the chapter
Millinocket on the first of January to try and get the best locations at the best times in the park.
It is hard to judge what former Gov. Percival P. Baxter would have thought about this. He
Maine Historic Preservation
certainly would have felt he did the right thing by creating a park that would remain forever
the oldest ever taken of Mount
wild. That rightness has also raised cries from people in the area who hate to see camps razed
ond-Anderson, curator of the
or access cut down or made more difficult.
if Ed Rogers, a grandson of the
Here is where Buzz Caverly Jr., the present park director, comes in. All diplomats do not
Hersey, who appeared as a tot
come from Cornville, but this one did. Diplomacy did not solve all problems, however, and Buzz
S published by Arcadia.
has had to take his share of slurs, slams, and just plain nasty words over the years. As a result,
photographs for 14 years; their
he has acquired a thick skin. You could not find a better fellow for the job.
Hill of Shin Pond Village lent
Why, after all these favorable words, are there no photographs of either Governor Baxter or
district forest ranger out of the
Buzz Caverly in this volume? In the case of the governor, many photographs of him have been
om putting a photograph in the
used in other publications. The author hoped to discover the photographs of Arthur Rogers,
nce at the University of Maine
who probably took more shots of the governor, especially in the Mount Katahdin area, than
uthor of The Wilderness from
anyone. However, the reports indicated that time had taken its toll on nearly all of the
photographs. I feel the governor would look with approval at this effort to preserve pictures of
an attorney in Portland, for his
the area he loved.
Buzz Caverly and Bob and Dick
And what about Buzz Caverly? In 1960, Caverly was already climbing the ladder to become
he author held for 14 years.
park director, but he was not yet in that post. The author had word that others were working
on books about him, which is why there are no photographs included.
Let us now turn to what is explored in this history. There are two trips, one of which is up
Mount Katahdin with photographer A.L. Hinds of Benton. Remember that Henry David
Thoreau climbed the mountain late in the summer of 1846. Hinds's photographs were taken a
ter, who fought
little over 25 years later. They are certainly some of the first photographs ever taken of the
uzz" Caverly Jr.,
mountain. The collection is located in the Augusta headquarters of the Maine Historic
Preservation Commission. Do not look for any great differences from the way the mountain
as park director.
looks now. As Governor Baxter pointed out, Mount Katahdin is changeless, which is a reason
why he thought the wilderness around it should be preserved.
The second trip is through the Allagash area in the summer of 1946 by Ervin E. "Mike"
Putnam and his son, Robert. Some of the area the two covered was within the present Allagash
Wilderness Waterway. Some of it is outside the waterway but is certainly part of what was then
known as the Allagash in those days. Over the past 56 years, there have been great changes in
the Allagash, many of them involving logging roads and access to both the region and,
unfortunately, the waterway.
While Buzz Caverly is cutting down on access to Baxter State Park and eliminating camps
that have either passed their use or have become somewhat dangerous, the Allagash Wilderness
Waterway has not been able to preserve its complete sense of wilderness. Unfortunately, You
cannot see the changes in the 1946 photographs. cut you can look at those photographs and
then make an Allagash trip yourself. Just compare what you see in the 92-mile-long waterway
with the photographs presented here.
Also seen is the Mount Katahdin region more recently. Some images, for example, show
loggers at work in what is now the park area. Some of the cutting practices in those days were
pretty horrible. Governor Baxter had a series of what can only be called fights with pulp and
paper companies in the area as he moved to acquire land for the park, a good part of which was
on land owned by those companies and by logging firms.
The saga of Kidney Pond Camps in the park unfolds. Started in 1902 by the Hunt brothers,
it was officially taken over by the Baxter State Park Authority at the end of 1987. Many of the
facilities, including flush toilets, were removed at that time. There is no electricity or running
water in the cabins now. It was a turn toward the wilderness experience that Governor Baxter
wanted, but it caused considerable controversy at the time. This is another time when Buzz
Caverly's diplomacy, combined with his thick skin. worked things out. There is no controversy
about Kidney Pond Camps now.
Around the edges of Baxter State Park are places with names like Ripogenus, Chesuncook,
and Shin Pond. Chesuncook used to be the starting point for many visitors who traveled around
the Allagash River. It was a time of canoe carries to reach the river from the lake. Also view
the park area from Shin Pond, which lies to the east.
Moving to the Allagash River, we find ourselves looking at a few of the region's more noted
people. They include Al and Patty Nugent of Nugent's Camps; Fred King, who was a guide in
the area and had a campsite named after him; Wilfred "Sleepy" Atkins, Allagash guide, game
warden, and sporting camp owner; Percy Jackson. who became a river guide at the age of 12;
and Ira McNally, a guide for many years in the area. In the final chapter, we take another look
at the Allagash. Many of the photographs in this last chapter were taken in the first 20 years of
the 1900s.
This is not an all-inclusive history of Baxter State Park and the Allagash River. It is,
however, a more thorough pictorial history of the areas than has ever been completed. Arcadia
Publishing's Images of America series helps popularize history by bringing it to a community or
area level. It serves to make public photographs that have never before been published. This
book, it is hoped, does just that.