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

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Museum reports ANP
Museum Reports AND
D6235
MUSEUM REPORT
ACADIA NATIONAL PARK
August 1 to September 1, 1936
Status of Exhibit Plan
The necessary studies preliminary to preparing an exhibit plan have
been nearly completed during this month. Museum Curator Lewis, who
reported at the Park on August 1, has studied the museum needs and situa-
tion and has prepared reports on the following:
1. Park visitors
2. The educational program at Acadia
3. Nearby institutions affecting museum development
a. Abbe Museum
b. Islesford Museum
C. Mount Desert Island Biological Laboratory
d. Roscoe B. Jackson Memorial Laboratory
e. Appalachian Mountain Club
Similar studies of museum needs and museum sites are nearly finished.
These will be incorporated in the museum plan.
Development of the museum story has commenced, but has not reached
a definitive stage. Regional Geologist Chadwick assisted greatly with
the geology story during six days at the Park. Dr. Lehnerts, professor
of geology at Hunter College, has contributed to this story, also.
Dr. Steinmetz from the University of Maine and Dr. Rehder of Harvard,
botanists, have also assisted during visits to the Park. Historical
aspects of the Park story have been discussed with Mr. Hadlock, curator
of the Abbe Museum. Dr. Sawtelle, of the Islesford Museum, and Mr. Dow,
of the Resettlement Administration, have supplied historical information.
Dr. Cole, director of the Marine Biological Laboratory, has advised on
the marine story. The curator has studied the museum story in the field
as occasion permitted. A tentative offer of the Building of Arts for
museum purposes was studied and its refusal advised because the building
was unsuited, poorly heated, and involved expense repair, alteration
and upkeep.
Status of Equipment Orders
The motion picture projector, Bell-Howell Model S, 500 W., has been
received. It has proven to be very satisfactory. Notice was received
-2-
during the month that a contract had been awarded for the fumigating
case for study skins. A second pair of binoculars has been requested
for use in the educational program and for research.
Collections
The principal accessions have been in the herbarium. During
August Mr. Neal, student enrollee, has added over 300 plants to the
collections. The mounting and labeling has been completed for about
50 specimens.
Ranger Naturalist Favour prepared study skins of a great blue heron
and of a flying squirrel.
About a dozen insect specimens have been collected and mounted,
and one Ringnecked Snake (Diadophis punctatus).
During Mr. Chadwick's visit a number of geological specimens were
collected for possible display rather than for study purposes.
Graphic Devices
Forty lantern slides on biological subjects, 50 song slides and
200 feet of colored motion pictures were added to the visual education
supplies. Two volumes of Nature Notes were bound and four reels and
containers for 16 mm. film were obtained.
Branch Museum
The displays set up at Sieur de Monts Spring have functioned during
the month satisfactorily. The collection of bog plants was revised and
a display of mosses added. About 40 named plants were on exhibition
beside the spring house.
While not a branch museum, the Abbe Museum functions as such in the
Park. The curator of this museum was assisted in revising one of his
cases to a narrative type of exhibit. The case before and after revision
is shown in the accompanying photographs. As an outcome of this work,
the directors of the museum are allowing the curator to undertake a
general improvement of the exhibits, which will be of great value in the
Park educational program.
Plans are being considered for a future branch museum and observa-
tion station on the summit of Cadillac Mountain. Definite plans were
initiated by Mr. Disher during his visit to the Park, and the location
and contents are now under discussion.
Dr. Leland, vice-chairman of the National Park Advisory Committee
CUFI: NEA:2/ 1/38
UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
ACADIA NATIONAL PARK
November 14, 1936.
The Director,
National Park Service,
Washington, D. C.
Dear Mr. Cammerer:
The plan outlined in the accompanying paper, prepared after long
and comprehensive study by Mr. Ralph H. Lewis, Field Curator, receives
my fullest approval. Arrived at independently, it represents what I
have had in mind myself for many years as the ideal situation for a museum
that would combine the presentation of Acadia National Park's unique
marine biological field with that of its bird life, representative of
its position as a prominent land-mark and feature along the ancient
coast migration route of birds to northern nesting grounds as well as
local, and of its plant life at the meeting point of two great regional
floras. But not till the present time have the conditions of Park
ownership and Park road development been such as to make it practical
and give it the prominence which the Museum should have.
There is no other situation either in the Park or elsewhere on the
coast outside it that offers opportunities so great and comprehensive.
I trust it may be adopted and plans for the Museum prepared.
Yours sincerely,
(Signed)
GEORGE B. DORR
Superintendent
GBD-0
Enclosure.
UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
ACADIA NATIONAL PARK
BAR HARBOR, MAINE
September 17, 1936.
Museum Deve lopment
[Ralph H. Lewis.
in
NPS Field curata
Acadia National Park
Education in a national park is carried on essentially by the
museum method. The park itself is a museum, in a very real sense; and
the educational officers act as curators, explaining the exhibits
nature and history have provided. In such a situation the function of
a formal museum becomes supplementary. Museum development does not
replace the naturalist or historian leading his parties into the field,
but gives him another tool for making the park story clear. The park
museum is equipped by its nature to serve the park educational program
in several ways. In the first place, the museum can explain those park
features which are too complicated for verbal treatment. This is,
perhaps, its primary function. Secondly, the museum can summarize in
one place and in brief time the park story. In the third place, it
can reach effectively many of the visitors who do not remain long enough
to engage in the scheduled educational events.
I. The Need for a Park Museum at Acadia.
The need for a park museum at Acadia has been felt for so long
and by so many Park Service officials that it seems scarcely necessary
to justify it further. However, recent studies (reported in Sections II,
III and IV, following) make this need so evident that the reasons for
establishing a park museum may be stated with renewed emphasis.
Acadia National Park receives over 300,000 visitors each year.
The great majority of them are in the Park fewer than twenty-four hours.
Less than 5% of these visitors obtain any help in under standing the Park.
This situation constitutes the problem of education - of inter-
preting the Park to the public. The present educational program is
taxed in reaching the fraction of visitors now contacted. The
schedule of educational activities leaves barely enough free time to
maintain the tonus of the staff, and many of the groups participating
already are too large for effective handling. If four men can reach
less than 5% of park visitors, it is obvious that expansion of the
personnel (while important) can never solve the problem. Furthermore,
the length of association with one-day visitors is too brief for any
adequate presentation of the Park story by personal contact. In fact,
the Park story is so varied that the full educational program cannot
cover it completely with the means now available. Naturally, the geo-
graphical arrangement of geological, biological and historical features
in the Park does not correspond to the logical arrangement of the Park
story; and field trips cannot give a connected interpretation of the
story.
A park museum, wisely placed and properly executed, will do more
to solve the educational problem for Acadia than any other agency that
could be established. While it is not contended that a museum will
contact every visitor, it will place within easy reach of all of them
the means for understanding the Park. The one-day visitor can spend
an hour in the museum and find significance in what was scenery alone.
The visitor who stays to enjoy the Park more fully will find his field
observations coordinated and synthesized in the museum. The park
naturalist will be able to develop the basic generalization of his
subject matter, which is impossible in the field. The museum is to be
considered, of course, as a supplement to the program of education in
the field; but as a supplement, it can fulfill these urgent needs:
1
A means for telling the mass of visitors what the Park
signifies.
2.
A means for telling the Park story as a whole.
3.
A means for making graphic explanation of the difficult con-
cepts involved in the Park story.
Without a museum the Park cannot interpret itself to the vast
majority of its visitors; with a museum, it can. Acadia's story is
too complex to be told without the well-tested aid of a park museum.
II. Visitors to Acadia.
The visitor is the primary factor to be considered in park museum
development. It is for him that museums are built; and the successful
museum must be keyed to his interest, his intelligence, the length of
his stay, and to where he stays and goes while in the Park.
The estimated total number of visitors in 1935 was 316,114. Unlike
certain western parks with limited entrances and paid admissions,
Acadia can keep no accurate record of the number of visitors. Two
voluntary registers are kept, and the occupants of the campground are
recorded carefully. All other figures are estimated from these records
and from occasional car counts by rangers. Of the three hundred thousand
visitors, about one-ninth come in the spring and fall, while eight-
ninths visit the Park between June 15 and October 1. There are
practically no winter visitors.
Although visitors come from all over the United States and from
2
are not particularly applicable to the Park's history. The local
geography is pointed out from vantage points, as follows:
l. Names of mountains and islands
2. Courses of trips
3. Estates
The campfire lectures cover both identification and more general subjects.
In summary, the educational program at Acadia includes a full
schedule of activities which requires the full time and effort of the
naturalist staff. Even so, less than 5% of the visitors are reached.
There seems slight possibility of increasing the number of effective
contacts with the present staff. A very few more activities might be
squeezed into the schedule, but any increase in the size of groups will
markedly lessen the educational effectiveness of the work. Successful
nature guiding requires small groups, and those now handled are fre-
quently larger than is desirable. An augmented educational staff
would increase the number of contacts, and be of great value to the Park;
but to increase the staff sufficiently to reach 300,000 visitors seems
out of the question. If this were possible, however, the educational
program would still be incomplete. The naturalist's program concen-
trates on familiarizing the visitor with the common forms in the Park
-
the field for which nature guiding is adapted. This work lays a
foundation of interest, upon which an understanding of the more general
aspects of the Park story can be built. The educational program needs
a supplementary agency which will bring together a summary of the
scattered elements of the Park story into a coordinated narrative, and
explain the important general concepts not clarified in the field. A
park museum, if it is self guiding, will do this and at the same time
will place the Park story within reach of the mass of one-day tourists.
IV. Other Institutions Conditioning Kuseum Development in Acadia.
Several institutions on Mount Desert and nearby islands are en-
gaged in the advancement or dissemination of knowledge. The present
programs and planned development of these organizations will affect the
scope and location of the park museum. The six institutions most influ-
ential in this regard are:
a. The Abbe Museum
b. The Islesford Museum
C. The Mount Desert Island Biological Laboratory
d. The Jackson Memorial Laboratory
e. The Laine State Entomological Station
f. The Appalachian Mountain Club
These are described below, with estimates of their influence and
10
recormendations for action in each case.
a. The Abbe Luseum
The Abbe Huseum is generally so called in honor of its founder,
although its corporate name is the Lafayette National Park Museum of
Stone Age Antiquities. The museum is located at the Sieur de Monts
Spring, a center of interest within the Park, and functions as a park
museum.
The museur grew out of an interest in archeology acquired by
Dr. Robert Abbe, a summer resident of Bar Harbor. Dr. Abbe and his
friends built and endowed the museum, but Dr. Abbe died before the
building was completed. The museum, its lands and building, are
owned by the National Park Service. However, the endowment and the
administration of the museum are in the hands of a board of trustees
having no connection with or responsibility to the Park Service. The
trustees are able, and several of them distinguished men, but without
special acquaintance with museuu work or with archeology. They ad-
minister an endowment reported about $50,000, which is conservatively
invested (in Canadian Government bonds).
A small, attractive, fireproof building containing a lobby, an
exhibition room and an office houses the museum. The octagonal exhibit
room is equipped with six table cases and one large center case having
storage drawers beneath. The cases are of good Library Bureau construc-
tion. The room is lighted by six large windows, which give ample
light. Reflections are not unusually bad. The exhibits consist of
Indian artifacts arranged in more or less order, but placed about as
thickly as possible. Labels are not explanatory in the main. The pur-
pose is simply to display specimens. A curator and assistant are
employed during the summer months to keep the building open and to
carry on any educational work. They answer questions and lecture to
special groups. The museum maintains a small research program con-
sisting of occasional excavations and publications. The excavations
are
destructive and are carried on solely to enlarge the collections. The
four publications issued have been popular accounts of the following:
The Jones Cove shell-heap (1929), the red paint people (1930), modern
Indian handicrafts in Maine (1932) and a life of Dr. Abbe (undated).
The endowment of this museum has been handled carefully, and the
income is sufficient to hire curatorial workers. Under the present ad-
ministration any scholarly work done by the museum, or any improvement
in the exhibits will depend on the initiative of the curator, since the
trustees are not actively interested in further development of the
museum. It is conceivable that, with the replacement of the original
trustees during the next ten or fifteen years, the board may decide to
turn the endowment and administration over to the Park Service. (This
was legally impossible in 1929.) The present trustees are not so
11
inclined, partly because of the memorial character of the institution.
The presence of a museum of archeology within the Park, which
reaches many park visitors and which is regarded by many as an unusually
fitting memorial to a man who put his dreams into action rather than
into criticism of the inaction of others, naturally affects any
further museum development in the Park. The Abbe Museum is advantageous-
ly located; it has ample space and equipment to tell the Indian story;
and it has the money to maintain its work. In view of these facts
it would be both tactless and extravagant to duplicate the work of this
museum in the regular park museum. It seems evident that the field
of archeology should be left to the Abbe Museum, and that its facilities
be used in the Park educational program.
The present curator of the museum has cooperated in the Park edu-
cational work as much as possible, and any incumbent would be likely to
assist to some extent. The museum is kept open during the visiting
season of the Park, and is free to all. The curator delivers lectures
to groups brought by the park naturalist, and speaks in the campfire
series. Further desirable cooperation will lie in the direction of
improving the exhibits. The park museum will attempt to tell the story
of the Park by graphic exhibits. At present the Abbe Museum fails to
tell its portion of the story adequately. However, at a recent meeting
of the directors, funds were appropriated ($500) to permit the curator
to
revise and vitalize the exhibits. The successful completion of this
work will lead to a full use of the Abbe Museum in the Park program.
b. The Islesford Museum
Islesford Collection, Incorporated, a small museum of history, is
located at the western end of Little Cranberry Island in the settlement
of Islesford. The island itself is two and one-half miles south of Seal
Harbor, the nearest town on Mount Desert Island, across a fairly sheltered
channel.
A corporation of ten to twelve members, residents of Little Cran-
berry either permanently or during the summer, own the collection and
the buildings which house it. The holdings of the corporation comprise
an old wooden building, a rather new brick building, and the plot of
land on which they stand. The corporation incurred a debt of approxi-
mately $2,500 in erecting the brick building, and the debt now stands
at about $1,200. There is no endowment and no income, the building and
work being maintained by Dr. Sawtelle, the founder and curator.
The main museum building is a one-story brick building with a
wooden roof. It was built by island masons supervised by Dr. Sawtelle,
and without the aid of chitectural drawings. There are three exhibit
rooms and a large entrance hallway. The space is apportioned as follows:
12
English and French Room, Mount Desert Room, Cranberry Island Room, and
the hallway filled with old broadsides of local interest. The Lount
Desert Room also contains a library of several hundred volumes. The
collections in the first two rooms are very largely framed photostats
of documents, engraved portraits and maps, interspersed with a few
original documents, a number of old prints, and objects of relic nature
(old piano, chair, a few ship models, et cetera). These are hung thickly
on the wall in. chronological order. Portraits predominate. In the
Mount Desert Room most of the material is biographical. The Cranberry
Island Room contains objects for the most part. Old furniture, a little
china, pewter, a. few shipping relics, a miscellany of similar objects, all
associated with the island, are housed in this room. There are drawers
full of old family tintypes, and a small vault containing the town
records and various other documents and records. The collections have
grown out of the interest of Dr. Sawtelle, a retired scientist (physicist
or chemist) and a summer resident on Little Cranberry. A few years ago
Dr. Sawtelle actively engaged in research in local history, was familiar
with American and European sources in Maine history, and published a
number of articles on the history of this region. During the past few
years, however, his health has precluded such activity. The museum re-
mains his hobby, and he keeps the doors open for visitors most of the
time. The collection is not catalogued and Dr. Sawtelle alone knows the
source of most of the do cuments and photostats. At present two cata-
loguers are at work, however. In addition to a weekly excursion of
Park visitors the museum reaches a small number of persons having some
particular interest in the local history. It is the latter group for
which the museum is keyed. Its extremely isolated location eliminates
most tourists, although regular ferry service ( . 50 round trip) is avail-
able. The small wo oden building belonging to the museum formerly housed
the collection. It now contains the overflow from the new building.
The present financial condition of the Islesford Collection will not
permit any increase in the collections or services of the museum. With
the exception of Dr. Sawtelle, the trustees do not appear to be actively
interested in the development of the museum. The museum has been offered
to the Park in the past, somewhat tentatively and with many conditions.
Recently an offer has been made to give the museum to the Park with the
sole condition that it continue under Dr. Sawtelle until his death. It is
felt that the offer should be accepted. Any present inconvenience caused
by the conditional clause will be repaid in good will.
The Islesford Museum affects museum development in Acadia by its
presence, its purpose, and its work. Two museums of history, covering
the
same territory and periods and within a short distance of one another,
must cooperate or conflict. The field of history in the Park cannot be
left to the Islesford Museum, because it does not give visitors a clear
historical narrative and because it cannot reach the majority of Park
visitors. If the Park acquires the museum, the site and collections
will be suitable for research rather than for exhibit for the most part.
It has been suggested that the museum be used a.s a supplementary exhibit,
in which the history of Acadia is developed in more detail than is possible
in a general park museum. Its greatest present influence is as principal
local authority on the history of the region.
13
Park visitors are welcomed to the museum, but its main interests
are not educational. As yet no attempt has been made to utilize its
library and documentary material for developing a park historical narra-
tive, but the museum probably will cooperate willingly. Cooperation in
these two respects should be maintained as long as the museum is a
private institution. Attention should be given the wharf, owned by a
small corporation, now about $500 in debt. The museum would be inacces-
sible without the docking facilities, and provision must be made for its
maintenance. There is a provision in the deed that the dock will revert
to an island family if not maintained free to the public.
C. The Mount Desert Island Biological Laboratory
The laboratory is located at Salsbury Cove on the north shore of the
island near the main road leading from the mainland to Bar Harbor, and
nine miles from the latter.
The laboratory was founded in 1898, organized as a scientific corpora-
tion in 1913, and moved to Mt. Desert Island in 1921. The corporation
consists of scientists, Bar Harbor businessmen, and a group of contributing
associate members - wealthy people interested in biological research. The
laboratory has no endowment. Its entire support comes from three sources:
l. Contributions of interested summer residents - the chief source.
2. Fees for laboratory facilities.
3. Annual dues of members.
At present the annual budget is about $3,000, approximately two-thirds
of which comes from private contributions. The laboratory is out of debt
and has functioned under a somewhat curtailed program in the depression years.
The Mount Desert laboratory is a research institution, concentrating
on studies in the experimental biology of marine forms. Its well-equipped
laboratory buildings house a small library, a dark room, and working space
for 20 to 30 scientists. Two collecting boats, equipped for dredging and
towing, as well as less expensive collecting, are maintained. Most of the
scientists using the laboratory are biologists of established reputation
(often fame) working on problems of fundamental importance. While rela-
tively few universities are represented, the laboratory is widely known
and respected. Its financial status compares favorably with most biolog-
ical stations, although a few are well endowed.
There is no indication that the laboratory is actively seeking an
endowment. Under present conditions it should be able to maintain its
facilities and work indefinitely. This requires, however, constant
economy and constant solicitation of assistance. The corporation is eager
to increase its income, and the best method seems to be to increase the
interest of visitors to the island in the laboratory. It has been decided
that a museum and aquarium would be the best means of effecting this, and
several wealthy people have been approached with the idea that it might
be built and endowed as a memorial. Such a museum might be free or might
be used as a small source of income. It would be located by the main
road. The museum would concentrate Oil marine biology.
The Mount Desert Island Biological Laboratory will play, without
14
question, a considerable part in the park museum. The laboratory is
the only biological station of general reputation on the Gulf of Maine.
Since the major Park story is marine biology, the museum will be called
on to interpret this subject. The laboratory will be the principal
judge of the standards and validity of interpretation. It will be the
source, of necessity, for most specimens of marine forms for exhibition,
study collections, or aquaria; and for much of the factual material of
the marine story. If the laboratory establishes a museum, there will
be imminent danger of overlapping and rivalry where cooperation is greatly
to be desired. Since the early establishment of both the park and
laboratory museums is uncertain, allowance must be made in the museum
plan for either eventuality. If the laboratory's museum materializes,
every effort should be made to make it a cooperative enterprise, or at
least, to fix the limits of the two in a mutually satisfactory manner.
Whether or not the laboratory builds its own museum, it will continue
to
affect the park museun in subject matter, material, and activities, as
long as it exists on the island.
Cooperation between the park museum and the biological laboratory
rests on a fundamental relation in purpose. Sound educational work
depends on sound research, and research is dependent on interested
laymen for support. It is quite in keeping with the public interest
served by the Park, that the museum should call attention to the work of
a neighboring scientific institution of merit. An exhibit on the work
of the laboratory would go far toward repaying it for the specimens - live
or preserved - the use of its library, and its advice which have been
offered to the Park. This appoars to be a promising basis of cooperation
if the laboratory does not establish its own museum. If the laboratory
does build a museum there are three possibilities. First, the field of
marine biology may be left to it and the park museum may devote itself to
other fields. This arrangement would be satisfactory if the laboratory
museum were free, popular and of high educative quality. Secondly, the
laboratory might be induced to confine its efforts to an aquarium, which
is too expensive an undertaking for the Park, while the park museum used
exhibits to enlarge on the marine story. The third possibility would
be to have joint ownership or control of the one museum. This arrange-
ment is conceived as an endowment through the laboratory and administra-
tion through the Park Service, as at Yavapai. Noncooperation would hurt
both. The laboratory is willing to cooperate, but dubious, since Park
Service officials have promised extensive cooperation which did not
materialize. The second possibility, that the laboratory build an
aquarium while the Park build a museum, is advanced as the most satis-
factory solution from the Park's standpoint.
d. The Jackson Memorial Laboratory
The Roscoe B. Jackson Memorial Laboratory for the study of cancer
is located on the outskirts of 3ar Harbor near the campgrounds and near
the entomological station.
15
This laboratory is a private institution whose work is directed
by Dr. C. C. Little. It is amply endowed. The laboratory building is
a two-story brick structure splendidly equipped with library, laboratories
and technical equipment. There is a year-round staff augmented in the
summer by additional workers.
The laboratory is devoted to the study of cancer. Following the
early work of Dr. Little, attention has been centered on the hereditary
aspects, and a great deal of genetic work on mice has accompanied the
cancer work. The laboratory represents a major school of thought on
cancer, and has produced some outstanding results. Visitors are wel-
comed, and are conducted through the laboratory every afternoon except
weekends. In addition to the offices and individual laboratories, visitors
see a few exhibit charts on mouse genetics. Most of the visitors are
medical men.
The laboratory was established in 1930, and no expansion is planned,
so far as is known. Its work will be maintained at the present level
permanently, it is supposed.
A laboratory of active and eminent biologists located close to the
Park and within a five-minute walk of the public campgrounds will have a
potential influence on educational biology in the Park. The work of the
laboratory is fundamental and of wide popular interest. The stay of
certain Park visitors could be enriched by contact with the work of this
laboratory. Its influence, which is now morely potential, might be
tapped by a museum exhibit or by referring to its open seminars in the
program of educational activities. It will be of some influence in
judging the soundness of biological interpretations in the Park educa-
tional work.
The laboratory opens its weekly seminars to Park visitors, and wel-
comes them during visiting hours. It would undoubtedly assist in
planning an exhibit for the park museum on its work, and would supply
some material if needed. Its own exhibits could probably be borrower
for temporary special displays. Its library would be available for
reference purposes.
e. Maine State Entomological Station
The Maine Forest Service Insect Control Laboratory is located on
Mount Desert Island within a few moments' walk of the public campground.
This laboratory is the only field entomological station in the
State. The Forest Service maintains it with biennial appropriations of
state funds. The work of the laboratory is largely research in
economic entomology, although some control work is done. As a state
laboratory concerned in insect control, it welcomes inquiries and
16
visitors. It distributes booklets on insect pests and maintains a
synoptic collection for education purposes. The entomologist, Dr.
Brower, is an excellent taxonomist as well as economic entomologist,
and has built us an extensive collection in addition to the synoptic
display.
The laboratory is located in quarters loaned to the State and its
permanency as a neighbor to the Park is correspondingly uncertain.
While the field conditions are fairly typical of the State, the
location is not quite as central as might be. As far as is known there
has been no indication or thought of transferring the laboratory else-
where, but from the standpoint of the park museuri, the possibility
must be considered.
Dr. Brower has been highly cooperative with the Park educational
staff, having donated specimens, determined collections, and prepared
exhibits for the naturalist. His assistance is a valued asset in
interpreting the insect story of the Park. The principal effect of the
station on the museum, however, lies in the possible duplication of study
collections. A study collection of insects represents a considerable
investment of time and money. In view of the difference in immediate
purposes and the uncertainty of the state collection remaining at hand,
it is felt that some duplication is justified and that the museum should
plan to include an insect study collection.
f. The Appalachian Mountain Club
The Appalachian Mountain Club, one of the strongest outdoor
organizations in the Northeast, maintains a summer camp on Echo Lake in
the western part of Mount Desert Island.
The Appalachian Mountain Club was established in Boston in 1876.
It is unusually well organized, with over 4,000 members and chapters
in
other New England states and New York. Its committees build trails,
erect shelters, maintain camps, and prepare maps throughout the mountains
in these states. The club has sufficient income to own and maintain the
land and structures involved in these activities. It is supported by
its large membership of relatively well-to-do people. The camp on
Echo Lake was established about fifteen years ago on land given to the
club. Campers are charged nominal rates, which maintain the camp and
its program without help from other club funds.
The Echo Lake Camp has several permanent buildings, electric
lights, and running water. Sleeping accomodations are in tents. The
quota of 72 is filled through most of the summer. The campers engage
in summer sports, viz., hiking, sailing, canoeing, swimming and boat
trips. The program is conducted by club leaders, who change every two
17
D. C in
UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
ACADIA NATIONAL PARK
BAR HARBOR, MAINE
Museum Report
September 1 to October 1, 1936.
Status of Exhibit Plan
Part I of the museum plan for Acadia Natural Park was completed
during this month and submitted to the Superintendent for study. It
comprises a development plan for the Park. In addition to-revisions
of the studies listed in the August Museum Report, this portion of the
plan included the following reports:
1. Need for a museum
2. Museum sites
3. Proposed museum development
4. Maine State Entomological Station
Work on Part II of the museum plan, the museum story, was continued
during the month, principally through the study of secondary sources.
Status of Equipment Orders
The fumigating case for study skins was received this month and put
to immediate service. The Park carpenter constructed a temporary
herbarium case, which is likewise in use. Late in the month a large
equipment list was submitted to Equipment Engineer A. B. Russell. A
telephoto lens for the motion picture camera was purchased from Park
funds and a mimeograph machine has been ordered with funds from the same
source.
Collections
The mounting of herbarium specimens was completed by CCC enrollees.
Mr. Neal, student enrollee, continued to collect and classify plants
until the termination of his appointment early in September. The Arnold
Arboretum notified the Park of the determination of several plant speci-
mens.
Ranger Naturalist Favour prepared study skins of about twelve birds
and three mammals during the month. He collected and preserved a few
snake specimens. Several of the birds were sent in by lighthouse keepers.
A representative collection of Park rocks was gathered and submitted
to Professor Harold L. Alling, University of Rochester, for study. This
was done at the su grestion of Regional Geologist Chadwick.
Graphic Devices
Additional motion pictures of natural features in the Park were
taken by the Park Naturalist.
Branch Museum
The Abbe Museum continued open during the month, but ferry service
to Islesford was discontinued early in September, preventing visits to
the Historical Museum.
The curator was absent on annual leave from September 18 to the end
of the month. While away he visited the Buffalo Museum of Science and
Fort Ticonderoga with Acadia museum problems in mind, and consulted a
number of specialists at the University of Rochester on study collection
problems.
District Historian Small visited the Park for a few hours during
the curator's absence.
Respectfully submitted,
Maurice Sullivan,
Park Naturalist.
by:
Ralph H. Lewis,
Field Curator.
2
UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
ACADIA NATIONAL PARK
BAR HARBOR, MAINE
Museum Report
October 1 to November 1, 1936.
Status of Exhibit Plan
Curatorial work during the month of October was devoted to develop-
ment of the museum story. proposed Part II of the museum plan. The
geological story of the park was formulated, together with a partial
bibliography on the subject. The biological story of land and fresh-
water forms was outlined and most of the sources consulted. Dr. Brower,
Assistant State Entomologist, assisted materially in evaluating the
aspects of this story. The phases of park history to be given museum
treatment were studied, and a tentative outline prepared. Several
conferences were held with Mr. Hadlook, Curator of the Abbe Museum, on
historical sources and interpretations. In connection with this part
of the story one trip was made to the Bangor Public Library.
Regional Geologist George B. Chadwick was at Acadia from October 8
to 11, and 17 to 31. During these periods the curator spent nearly full
time in the field assisting Mr. Chadwick, who was making a thorough study
of the highly complex park geology. This study was as essential to the
development of museum exhibits as it was to the nature guide program,
and, accordingly, the curator endeavored to assist in every way possible.
Status of Equipment Orders
A pair of binoculars were received from the Museum Division during
October and were highly useful, both in bird study and in geological
recomoitering.
Following correspondence in which the list was condensed, notice
has been received that most of the equipment requested, including office
equipment, work table, drawing instruments, camera, lamp and projection
bulb, is now on order or is being supplied from Museum Division stock.
From park funds the following equipment has been received: type-
writer, mimeograph machine, mimeograph stylus, and telephoto lens for
the motion picture camera. On order are motion picture film reels and
loans, and lantern slide covers.
Collections
Study skins of two horned larks, a white orowned sparrow, and a
vesper sparrow were prepared by Park Naturalist Sullivan and former
Ranger Naturalist Favour. Several animal specimens which were collected
during the month were kept alive in the laboratory. These will be
reported as they are added to the permanent collection.
Five species of Lyoopodium were added to the herbarium during the
month.
Approximately 100 specimens of the rooks of Mount Desert and
neighboring islands were collected by Regional Geologist Chadwick.
Many of these will be used in preparing thin sections for petrographic
study by various specialists, and others will be retained as part of the
permanent collections. With full locality notes and expert determinations,
these specimens should form the nucleus for an adequate study collection
on park geology.
Eight books, purchased from park funds, were added to the library
during the month. These included five important references for classifica-
tion of local forms, The library received a donation of 175 back numbers
of the National Geographic Magazine, 40 of the Bulletin of the Garden
Club of America, and 54 of Horticulture,
Graphic Devices
One hundred feet of excellent colored motion pictures were added
to the collection by the Park Naturalist, Twenty-two photographs of
geological, biological and archeological subjects were taken during
the month for later use as lantern slides.
Branch Museum
The Abbe Museum continued to receive a few visitors during the month.
Mr. Hadlock, curator of this museum, conferred several times with the field
curator regarding the revision of his exhibits. As an initial step,
Mr. Hadlook devoted considerable time to preparing the "story" his muse'um
should tell.
The field curator returned to duty from annual leave on October 5.
Respectfully submitted,
Maurice Sullivan,
Park Naturalist.
By
Ralph Lowis,
Field Curator.
RL:NEA
2
UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
ACADIA NATIONAL PARK
BAR HARBOR, MAINE
Museum Report
November 1 to December 1, 1936.
Status of Exhibit Plan
CED
Superintendent Dorr approved Part I of the museum plan and for-
warded it to the Director. A number of maps and photographs were
prepared and submitted to supplement this portion of the plan. In
connection with his review of the plan, Superintendent Dorr visited
the recommended museum site with the Naturalist and the Curator. He
located the site definitely and instructed the Bureau of Public Roads
representative to make necessary provisions in the contract for the
road passing this site. These provisions included a pedestrian under-
pass and piping for outdoor aquaria. Data on types of piping were
collected for the B. P. R. engineer. The Superintendent visited with
the Curator other proposed developments in the vicinity of the selected
site.
During the month work was concentrated on Part II of the museum
plan, the museum story. The geological bibliography was revised, and
the historical story and the biological story of land and freshwater
forms were formulated with their bibliographies. Thus three of the four
sections of the park story are now completed.
Status of Equipment Orders
A Recomar camera was received from the Museum Division during
November. The appended photographs indicate its adaptability to the
museum's needs, as well as to the Naturalist's work. The first two
pictures show the storage cabinet (received in September) in use,
The remaining pictures of museum specimens are suitable for catalogue
illustrations and for lantern slides.
The following office equipment was received during the month:
1 Steel Desk
1 Wooden Desk Chair
1 Desk Lamp
1 Set of Drawing Instruments (Assigned to Field Curator)
1 Drawing Board
1 T Square
1 90° Triangle
1 30°-60° Triangle
1 Protractor
1 Ruling Pen
From park funds a haze filter, a portrait lens, ten dozen lantern
slide covers with glued strips, motion picture film reels and cans were
received.
Collections
To protect the collections from insect infestation all bird and
mammal specimens were placed in either the storage case or display
case. Both cases were fumigated with carbon tetrachloride and sup-
plied with naphthalene flakes. Three bird specimens, however, were
too large for either case and are as yet unprotected. A serious
menace to the collection was found in a box of uncleaned mammal skulls,
which provided a breeding place for clothes moths. The box was removed
and cleaning was undertaken as rapidly as equipment permitted. About
ten skulls are now under treatment and others will follow.
One book, purchased from park funds, was added to the library
during the month. A justification was submitted for the purchase of
eighteen additional books from E. C. W. funds. Donations of copies
of National Geographic Magazine continued during the month, and the
series is nearly complete from 1911 to date.
Graphic Devices
One hundred feet of colored motion pictures of excellent quality
were added to the collection by the Park Naturalist. A number of
photographs for lantern slide use were taken during the month, and
some uncolored movies were made of natural history subjects by the
Park Naturalist.
Branch Museums
The curator of the Abbe Museum prepared an account of his museum
story and sent it to the field curator as part of the cooperative
agreement with that institution. The story is being studied preparatory
to the recommendation of exhibit revisions.
In compliance with directions, the Park Naturalist, Curator, and
a CCC enrollee visited the Islesford Museum and collected as much
information regarding the building and collections as time would permit.
Plans were discussed for a series of temporary exhibits for next
summer to be located at Cadillac Mountain, Thunder Hole, Sieur de Monts
Spring, and the public campground. The subjects for these exhibits were
selected and specifications were completed for one of them.
The Curator addressed the Bar Harbor Bird Club on November 13, on
the origin of bird names.
Respectfully submitted,
Maurice Sullivan,
Park Naturalist,
By:
Ralph Lewis,
RL:NEA
Field Curator.
UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
ACADIA NATIONAL PARK
Bar Barber, Mine
Day 6, 1941.
Memorandum for the Regional Director, Region One:
Attention, V. R. Ludgete, Regional Chief of Planning.
The possibilities in museum construction at Aondia National
Park formed the topic of considerable conversation when Ur. Fint,
Mr. Sullivan, Mrs Sution, Hr. Badley and I were assembled here
recently Saratofore, the whole general project_hr4 lain darmant
as & $175,000 itax indexed 3-10 in the Park's Project Construction
Program. As such, it represented coverage of the requirements for
a central Part I as outlined in Field Curator Halph H. Lewis'
report, dated September 17, 1956, on #Huneum Development in Acedie".
These requirements were:
1. Four exhibit halls.
2. & large study collection FOOD,
3. A small vault.
4. & study FOOD adjacent to the collection,
S. An office for the Park Naturalist,
6. Am office for his assistants.
7. An office for the curator.
8. & staff laboratory.
9. An assembly or leature roca.
10. A library-reading room and stack space,
12. A lobby.
It was generally agreed that the cost of aveis A that had stalled
its programs as a project and upon restudy of the Park's present
and future development, it was concluded that the telling of the Park
story would more likely require several smaller decentralized units rather
than # concentration of facilities in one buildings the western
section of Mount Denert Island very plausibly could develop to
stature equalling that of the eastern section, Park roads could
be increased in milenge to connect the two sections and a Park head-
quarters night be located at # site that equalises the distances
between each half of the Park and the point of entry onto the Island.
These are, of course, all possibilities but they are probable enough
to require that suseum development at Acadia be kept plastic rather
than allowed to solidify, and the cesta of the initial structure be
2.21
UNITED STATES
4.22.2
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
Asadia National Park
Bar Barbor, Mine
March 3, 1967
MEMORANDUM for the Registal Director, Region One.
Reference is made to your memorandum of February 19, 1947. to
which was attached a copy of Leting Director Tolson's menorandum of
February 11, referring to the proposed development of facilities em
Cadillae Mountain, and suggesting that a branch inuseum be included in
the revised Project Construction Program for Acadia National Park,
Before discussing HUBOUR possibility as for the future, I think e
statement of what has happened in the past is pertinent, so that n common
and well defined starting point for future museum planning will be sisar
in everyene's mind.
Our files sontain a mass of correspondence, reports and other data
which relate to need for and plans to provide # sus eram in headia, Since
receiving your nemorandum referred to above I have been going over that
material and it boils down to substantially this:
That the need for R museum WRE first made of matter of record
Tan.1935
in & report on the subject by park naturalist Stupke in
January, 1935.
that prier and subsequent to that date the matter was from
quartly discussed and five possible sites considered.
That in the summer of 1936 a. comprehensive study of museum
needs in heedia was made by Pe 1ph 5. Lewis; that he prepared
a report on the subject and recommended that Otter Cove be
the site and that a museur be built. Be further recommended
that a branch museum be built on Cadillae Mountain.
That Superintendent Dorr consumer in the Lewis report by
letter to the Director dated November 14, 1936.
That Asting Drector Deneray approved the report on December
18, 19:6,
Using the 4P proved report as E bads for planning, studies were
made, sketah plans drew and a PCP form, B-10, combining the central
numers at Otta Cove and the branch museum on Cadiliae Mountain ma
submitted in March 1939.
Sometime in the months between Brch, 1939 and May, 1961 the
combined project WEB broken down end new POF forms prepared. That
for the Otter Cove Homeman appeared as project 3-10-1, dated 11-$6-41,
prepared by R.R. Julian; Junior Architests that for the Cadillae
Mountain branch museum appeared as B-27, dated Myn 1961, prepared by
5.L. Brease, Resident Architect.
The next mention of the Otter Cove Huseum occurred in s memorandum
from Hr. Carnes, Acting Chief of Planning, datoÉ March 98 1942 to
the Regional Chief of ?lanning, Region One. I quote briefly
it not for the fact that the Director has expressed
the opinion that a maseum(at Otter Cove) such has been sagges-
ted by Mr. Bresse should not be considered at teim time.
That noted as a suspend order on further planning for the Otter
Cave Museum The order to abamdon the project oame later in a I
random from the Rerional Director te Sumerintendent Dorr, dated
ugust 24, 1942. I quotes
*The following summarised concents are the result of the dia-
cuscions recently held by members of the Sushington and Region
One Seadquarters staffs concerning the Advance Planning Program
for Acadia National Park"
then follows :
*Project B-10-1, Mus aum. Otter Cove
Cancel."
Later in the SAMP meme radias the following appears *In now of
the recommendations of the Director, we saggest that 8-10-1, Other
Cove be dropped from the progress the next time a revised
priority Hat is prepared.*
The Project Construction Program was next revised in October, 1944.
In that revision B-10-10 Otter Cove Museum, was withdream. The Cadillao
Branch Suseum, B-27, was revised as 2-87-1 and was submitted.
By Mr. Talson's menorandum of February 11 we are now instructed to
withdrew and cancel project 3-27-1, Observation Station, Cadillae Zoun-
tain, from our construction wrongers. This will be done in our current
ACP revision,
(These several moves leave us where we were at the beginning of the
susam propeeal, that is, in the position of starting anow with our
planning.
The first question which cases to my mind is: If our planning for
a central auseum is to be based on its location apart free headquarters,
will it void our existing plan for an administration building which
includes a wing for a suseum so that that Project will have to be revised?
2
The next quastion is: Bus the Miroctor indicated that be is now
willing to consider a museum at Otter Cove. The subage indicated END
PCP 2-10-2 prepured by Mr. Surna and Dr. Smerson to be between
ene-fourth and one-third of that prepared by btr. Julian, but the estim
noted cost is only about one-sixth less.
It secure to as that before for construction
are made, a restatement of museum objectives and long rang# planning
should be made and approved. That any be implied in ur. Teleon's THE
randum of February 11, but I think a clear statement, concurred in my
x11 concerned and approved by the director should be adopted.
(1
have no thought of quibbling over this matter, nor do 1 wish to
be looked upon as an obstructionist. Larly want to know that there is
a policy or prorram to DO followed with respect to development.
& is needed, and as BOOD as possible.)
B. Lu Sadley,
Superintendent.
In triplicate.
$