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

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Roads-1924 Hearing Before Interior Secretary
Roads: 1924 Hearing
before Interior Secretary.
DEPARTMENT OF THE NTERIOR
ACAD
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
CARRIAGE RD
ACADTA NA ONAL PARK
FILE No.
PAPERS
Relating to Road Hearing
before
Secretary orie
March 126
1924
Note:
This is the title-page ofa 141-page Notebook held in
Computersive for Chapmen and Peters Archies were not included
the Santelle Research Center at A.N.P.It is not
Note: See also Ronald H. Epp chronological file for 1924 containing
additional primary documentation for the Dorr biography.
12/20/2008
ACADIA NATIONAL PARKER
ACADIA NATIONAL PARK LIBR.
ADDRESS ONLY
Beep
THE DIRECTOR, NATIONAL PARK SERVIDE
WASHINGTON D a
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
WASHINGTON
July 20, 1922.
Dear Mr. Dorr:
Referring to your letters of June 14th and 16th
on the tentative Lafayette Park road and road-trull plan, which
I personally inspected on the ground early in June (the Director
himself for a few days accompanying you and me on our Inspection),
I have just concluded a thorough review of the project with First
Assistant Secretary Finney of the Department in whose particular
bailiwick the national parks fall, covering thoroughly the scope
of my report to the Director of June 10th and also other points
of possible importance in connection with the development of the
project, and we have both approved it as per Exhibit B attached.
This Exhibit is an exact copy of the similar Exhibit B in this
office having Secretary Finney's and my signature.
We are convinced that the project is well thought
out, and will enable the enjoyment of the wonderful natural
beauties within the Lafayette Park by all visitors without
merring the beauties of the landscape in any way, or intruding
upon areas that should be preserved for quietude and repose:
in fact, special attention has been given that areas such as
the amphitheater section, Sargent Mountain Ponci, and numerous
other beautiful valleys and secluded spots be lcept away from
too close proximityto these roads and trails. The road to
the top of Cadillac Mountain is important, though it is equally
important in my opinion that no road go to the top of any other
mountain in the Park.
The plan is approved, and whenever you have sufficient
donations to go ahead with the work you may do so, boaring in
mind to keep the roads and road-trails as Inconspicuous as
possible.
I should mention for your information that we
have had cordial letters from Senators Hale and Fernald and
Congressian Nelson, assuring their great interest in this
project, and giving their unqualified endorsement to 1t.
Cordially yours,
Mr. George B. Dorr,
Supt., Lafayette National Park,
Acting Director.
Bar Harbor, Maine.
Inc. 1107.
Woodlawn therean. A-60.
Mark
H.
Cambridgo, Nass.
got My dear Sir:
1 February 1924
I have just read on the outside page of the National
Parks
Bulletin
published
21,
1924,
a
Lottor
which
you
lately addressed to Benator Fletcher of Florida concerning the
Government's policy about the creation of National Parks.
attention was at once directed especially to what you say about
the Lafayette National Park; because I have been 0 sunner resident
at Mount Desert for forty-three years past, and have served from
the berinning as President of the lancock County Trustees of Pub-
lic Reservations, a corporation which gave to the Covernment the
entire acreage now held in the Lafayette National Par! and has procur.
ed several thousand scrae more which it proposes to Five to the
Government.
You state correctly the real park value of the Lafay-
ette National Park, except that you onit one of that Park's rarest
features, nanely, the combination of very striking water views of
buy and ocoun with the landscape.
This combination of buy and
ocean views with hill and valley prospects is unique on the Atlantic
coast of the United States.
Your statement that any park area "rust be susceptible
of effectivo development to mako it accessible to the people and of
convenient administration and control" is perfect. On that prin-
ciple a developing work has been going on at the Lofayotte National
Park for two years past on a plan accepted by the Department of the
Interior and the National Park Service. !evertheless, D few weeks
ago you issued an order to ctop all work on the Lafayette National
Note: See Sertes I, file "1924 for additional documentation
the charges brought to the Interior Secretary by Senator Repper,
2
Park this winter.
This you did when you were assaulted by Senator
Pepper in his usual confident manner. Senator Pepper has been a
summer resident at Mount Decert for many years, and holds very
strong opinions about the undorirablonoss of making the National
Park accessible to the people. No objects to the construction of
roads in the Lafayetto National Park, whether they be intended for
horse vehicles or for automobiles. He does not wish to have the
natural scenery marred by the scars made by building roads along a
hillsido or across a valley, oven if he knows that all marks of the
road can be "planted out" within a for years. It annoys hin when
he in following a footpath to bo obliged on a sudden to cross a
road sixteen feet vide, and the better road it is the more he objects
to being obliged to walk across it.
Senator Pepper has proached these doctrines to the resi-
dents of Mount Desert for many seasons; but he has made very few con-
verts.
In general, the summer residents at Mount Decert who own
cottages situated on the shores or on the lower hills agree with you
that the Lafayette National Park ought to be made conveniently ac-
cessible to the people, particularly of the State of Maine.
Your
rescinding of your order to stop work on the Park gave great satis-
faction to hundreds of residents on the Island of Mount Docort. Your
prompt action was, I suppose, due to your conviction that the Son-
ators and Reprosentatives from Maine know better what was needed
and desired by the people of Hount Decert than Senator Pepper did.
I bog leave to support warmly your judgment in this matter.
Mr. George B. Dorr, the Superintendent of the Lafayette
National Park, I have known from his boyhood up, and his father and
mother before him.
He is thoroughly informed about the woods,
plant life and animal life on the Island of Mount Denert, and is a
nan of extraordinary public spirit.
D inherited from his father
and mother a considerable fortune, which has now all come into pub-
lic and poni-public undertskin r towards improvement of Mount Denert
Island for the best kind of public enjoyment; 30 that lie is now liv-
ing on the modert salary he receives from the Government.
'ron the
point of view of a public official he has one defect against which
precautions can eacily be takon. He is liable to talk too long
about any business which interests him. Agrinct this defect you
can onaily take procautions, if you have occasion to consult him.
If you have need of a week's respite from work - which
seens to me highly probable - you would secure effective isolation
and experience a very welcome change of air and scone, if you would
spend a week at Mount Desert, seeing for yourself under the guidance
of Mr. Dorr the extraordirary beautico of the Island and its fitness
as
the site of a National Park. You can take such a respite at
any season of the your, winter or cummer, spring or autumn, provided
you take with you a suitable variety of clothing.
Sincerely yours
[C.W.Eliot]
lion. Hubert Work
Work
H.
OF
SECURITY
SECURITY
THE SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR
WASHINGTON
However
February 4, 1924.
Dr. Charles I. Eliot,
Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Dear Dr. Eliot:
I thank you for your letter of February 1, dis-
cussing the National Park question.
Because of the divergent opinions among those inter-
ested, I was inclined to delay road building in the Laf-
is
ayette Park until I could have a better understanding,
myself of the situation existing there.
If I can get those interested together for a con-
ference, I am sure they will not be so far apart in their
conclusions as appears from ex parte statements of each.
I am promising myself a visit to this far eastern
park, probably during the hot weather, but in the mean-
time I hope to advise myself on the merits of the express-
ions I have been permitted to hear on this subject.
I am,
Very respectfully,
Huberhwork
Charles WV Eliot to George B. Dorr Esq.
Cambridge, Mass.,
7 February 1924.
Ny dear Dorr:
Yours of the 5th is at hand. I have
received notice of the meeting of the Hancock County
Trustees of Public Reservations at Bar Harbor, and
will sign the necessary deed whenever received. The
tract will be a very valuable acquisition for the
Lafayette National Park.
There is certainly a remarkable outpouring of
talk and tears over Wilson's death; but I doubt if
it means that the American people is now going to
do what he wanted them to do in 1920.
That is,
I doubt if the American people as a whole has recover-
ed from the moral collapse it experienced in 1919.
Moral reforms, like educational reforms, are very
slow.
Lodge has certainly not improved his own
position before the country by what he lately said
in the Senate.
I wrote a rather full letter to Secretary Work,
the main objects of which were to warn him against
Pepper and to thank him for his prompt recall of his
7
February 1924)
2.
order to stop work at the Lafayette National Park
this winter.
What is to be apprehended is that
the present movement in favor of economics in the
National Service will extend to the parks, where
economies mean reductions or postpolement of the
public enjoyment of the Parks. There are only two
regions of public expenditure in which economy is
even a less legitimate motive than in the Parks,
namely, the postoffice and the public schools. In
those two departments economy is positively silly;
because it is well known that expenditure there
means increased productivity and higher profits in
the important industries, and hence in national
well-being.
Sincerely yours,
Charles W. Eliot.
George B. Dorr, Esq.
ADDRESS ONLY
THE DIRECTOR. NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
WASHINGTON, D. c.
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
24th
WASHINGTON
7'L
February 12, 1924.
Mr. John D. Rockefeller, Jr.,
26 Broadway,
New York City.
Dear Mr. Rockefeller:
I found it necessary to come on to
Washington before I got this letter off which I enclose.
CBD (n
I received word from the National Park Service that
a
Ser Ripper
fresh attack was being made upon our work and plans by
Senator Pepper, using the influence of his official po-
sition with the Secretary of the Interior, Dr. Work, to
whom the whole matter of course is new. And my
presence
here was needed. I was happily able to forestall success-
fully his first attack and think all coming well, but I
have had an anxious time. I shall be able now to get away
from here within a few days, when I shall come to New York
and shall see you. A hearing on the subject has been ap-
pointed by Dr. Work for the 26th of March, for which I am
JSBY
preparing. I have the Park Service and the National Parks
Association strongly wit th me, President Eliot, the Trustees
of Public Reservations, and the whole State of Maine.
I
have no question as to the result, but it will not de to take
&
anything for granted or leave anything undone that may help
to present the matter rightly.
Yours sincerely,
George B. Was
ms. 15.Kinball,
3
Parker House,
[March 1924]
Boston,
^
Dear Mr. Kimball:
I am much obligoo for your letter.
not of the neighborhood. Lafayetta Park The is real the question, property of the Nation,
velopment the giving of employment to the logal people therefore, but the 1s not
visitors of the Park for the bonefit of as many ultizens best and do-
as oun usa it.
much Desert interested as anybody in the welfore of the Tan as
You know me well enough to be Bare that
be bound Island. But as a Senator of the United States people I should of Mt.
work to oppose a plan for giving them employment 12 the
were not for the beet intereuts of the Park.
paths centere for ridors; and, three, by a very Iss roads to
three way only: one, by troils for podestricing two, by bridle
In my opinion the Park should be developed in
for automobiles.
and to typical view points, much policies to be stratogic available
work of roads not intended for use by utoschiles but lsid a not- out in
What in happening 1s the construction of
the for theory that every part of the Park should be made accessible
horse-drawn vehicles. This is a rich ssn's folly. It des-
troys the wildorneas for pedestrians and compere without bonofit
ing elaborate roado which they cannot use.
ting the mats of people in autos who will be Tritated by find-
I hope that none of the domagogues here in Wash-
ington will discover the fact that ho[Department of the Interior
in practically surrendering the control of a National Park to a
repreventative "oil man". We shoul a have a fine outburst of ora-
tory if that were disclosed - especially as the plan 1s not a
people's project but a rich man's hobby.
I think that the following areas should be protected
againat roada: - the Bubble Pond Valley; the area north of the
Bubile and west of Ergro Lake; the Sergent-Jordan Auphitheatre.
I think that there should be an automobile road up
Green Mountain and an o ther dong the eant side of Eagle Lake,
through the carry to Jordan's Pond and along the esst side of the
Po nd to the J.P. house.
I think the following roads, now constructed or
under constructions and intended to be closed to automobiles, are
a detriment to the Park and of no road 1880 to the public; the road
from Lower Hadlook to Jordan's Pond; the road along the west side
of Jordan's Pond; the road along the West aide of Sargent Mountain,
penetruting the water-fall area and the road around the north end
of Sargent Mountain.
As to fires, there in a lot of nonsense talked. Mr.
Rookefeller and Mr. Dorr announce 11 as their intention to "plant
out" the rouda so as to make them invisible. This is necessary to
prevent scarring the landscape. But if it 1s done it vantly lessens
their value as fire protectors, Moreover, an you point out, even
Some's Sound will not stop a real fire. The only safety in the vig-
ilanoe of the wardens. If they are on the job we don't need roads.
If they are not on the job, the roads will not help.
As you know, I have been almost au much of a Maine
man as a Pennsylvanian. I know every part of Maine. I have been a
constant visitor to Mt. Desert Island for thirty-five years and a
tax-payer for more thin twenty. My personal enjoyment is largly
confined to the extreme western part of the Island where my
Woodlawn Museum. A-60.
Page a
COPY.
in. My interest in the Park is in no sense a salfinh ein's
I crimp wint to ade is developed for the enjoyment of the largest
mabes of people who 1009 151 but I believe it to be unintelliged 11y
increasing to its accountinitity for the great utomobile riding pub-
destroy the very things which make for enjoyment without TO
110. no amount of loosl employment can justify this.
Yours Ancerely,
hid
E.G. Wilepper
Woodlown Museum A-61.
Senator Pepper to Mr. Kimball
1
COPY
March 3, 1924.
Mr. L. E. Kimball,
Parker House,
Boston, Mass.
Dear Mr. Kimball:
I am much obliged for your letter.
Lafayette Park is the property of the Nation, not of the
\
neighborhood. The real question, therefore, is not the
giving of employment to the local people, but the best
development of the Park for the benefit of as many citizens
and visitors as can use it.
You know me well enough to be sure that I am as much
interested as anybody in the welfare of the people of Mount
Desert Island. But as a Senator of the United States I
should be bound to oppose a plan for giving them employment
if the work were not for the best interests of the Park.
In my opinion the Park should be developed in three ways
only: one, by trails for pedestrians; two, by bridle paths for
riders; and, three, by a very few roads to strategic centers
and to typical viewpoints, such roads to be available for
automobiles.
that is happening is the construction of a network of
roads not intended for use by automobiles but laid out in
2.
Pepper to limball
the theory that every part of the Park should be made
accessible for horse-drawn vehicles. This is a rich man's
folly. It destroys the wilderness for pedestrians and
campers without benefitting the mass of people in autos who
will be irritated by finding elaborate roads which they cannot
use.
I hope that none of the demagogues here in Washington
will discover the fact that the Department of the Interior
JOR: Jr.
is practically surrendering the control of a National Park
to a representative "oil man". We should have a fine outburst
of oratory if that were disclosed especially as the plan is
not a people's project but a rich man's hobby.
I think that the following areas whould be protected
against roads: the Bubble Pond Valley; the area north of the
Bubbles and west of Eagle Lake; the Sargent-Jorden Amphitheatre
.
I think that there should be an automobile road up Green
Mountain and another along the east side of Eagle Lake, through
the Carry to Jordan's Pond and along the east side of the pond
to the J. P. House
I think the following roads, now constructed or under con-
struction and intended to be closed to automobiles, are a
detriment to the Park and of no real use to the public; the
road from Lower Hadlock to Jordan's Pond; the road along the
west side of Jordan's Pond; the road along the west side of
Sargent Mountain, penetrating the water-fall area; and the
road around the north end of Sargent Mountain.
3 Pepper to Kimball
As to fires, there is a lot of nonsense talked. Mr.
Rockefeller and Lr? Dorr announce it as their intention to
"plant out" the roads SO as to make them invisible. This is
necessary to prevent scarring the landscape. But if it is
done it vastly lessens their value as fire protectors. Boreover,
as you point out, even Somes Sound will not stop a real fire.
The only safety is the vigilance of the wardens. If they are
on the job we don't need roads. If they are not on the job,
the roads will not help.
As you know, I have been almost as much of a Maine man as
a Pennsylvanian. I know every part of Maine. I have been a
constant visitor to Mount Desert Island for thirty-five years
and a tax-payer for more than twenty. My personal enjoyment is
largely confined to the extreme western part of the Island wher e
my camp is. Ky interest in the Park is in no sense a selfish
one. I want to see it developed for the enjoyment of the
largest number of people who can use it; but I believe it to
be unintelligent to destroy the very things which make for
enjoyment without really increasing its accessibility for the
great automobile riding public. No amount of local employment
can justify this.
Yours sincerely,
[G Pepper]
x
S
no.
NEW ROADS ON MOUNT DESERT ISLAND
The Bar Harbor Times of March 5th has important news about
the building of additional roads on the island and about the
protest made by some of the summer residents led by Senator
Pepper.
The size of the group represented by Senator Pepper is
not at the moment known. There will be those who do not agree
with him, and there are naturally many diverse theories as to
the best ways of developing the island. Many people, however,
are of the opinion that, although in the first instance a
national park was being created in the hope of preserving
the beauty, wildness, and secluded spirit of this reservation,
policies may be adopted that will end in a contrary result.
Those interested in the island do not as a whole seen to
have been informed of proposals being made in Washington ; and
at the present time, when the building of new roads is being
considered, few know exactly the location and extent of such
roads. There is fear that, in spite of declarations to the
contrary, these roads will defeat the policy of conserving the
charm of our hills and woodlands.
The road to the top of Green Mountain will give joy to every
visitor on the island. One can only hope that it will make
as inconspicuous a mark as possible on the mountain and that
no object of any sort for a commercial purpose will ever be
permitted upon any part of it.]
There is no lack of sympathy for the wish to have between
Bar Harbor and Jordon Pond house a more direct route than now
exists. It might be pointed out, however, that the public al-
ready has motor roads of beautiful, characteristic scenery in
the Ocean Drive, the Gorge Road, the Brown Mountain Road,
Sargent Drive, and the road to Southwest Harbor. Jordan Pond
valley is the only region left to nature. The motor road now
proposed, to extend from the north end of Bubble Pond westward
round the Bubbles, then southward and across the western side
of Pemetic to the Jordan Pond house, means the invasion of an
area of peculiar impressiveness. As this road is to be 200 feet
above the level of the pond, 1t will make a long scar across
Pemetic.
In addition to this motor road, carriage roads are planned
this section. One is to run from the north end of Bubble
for Pond westward to the north of Sargent. Another is to go from
Eagle Lake Road along the went side of Eagle Lake to connect with
the road to Sargent. They will enter regions prized by many na-
ture-lovers for the present illusion of remoteness. If the
land they open up should eventually be demanded by visiting
campers for their use, that would menn a service for B large
number of people but in that service the beauty of these places
would be bound to suffer.
This policy of road building is to be discussed In Wash-
ington, before the Department of the Interior, at 10 o'clock,
on the 26th day of March; and individuals interested are wel-
come at the hearing.
If you are in sympathy with the point of view represented
by Senator Pepper, will you kindly sign your name to the follow-
ing petition to be presented at that time? The paper with your
signature should be sent to me at once.
FRANK B. ROWELL,
470 PARK AVENUE,
NEW YORK CITY.
The undersigned petitions:
First: That the carriage road from the north end of Bubble
Pond, proceeding westward on the north side of the Bubbles
to the carriage road around the north end of Sargent Moun-
tain, together with the carriage road extending therefrom
on the west side of Eagle Lake to Eagle Lake Road be el-
iminated.
Second: That the portion of the automobile road extending
from the north end of Bubble Pond around the north end of
Pemetic Mountain and proceeding thenco along its western
side to the Jordan Pond house be eliminated.
Third: That, while not disapproving of e more direct motor
road between Bar Harbor and Jordan Pond, the adoption of a
different location be urged and a location calculated to do
the least harm to the beauty and serenity of the Jordan Pond
district.
Fourth: That, to the end that the Park may remain untouched
by further inroads of modern civilization, a committee be
constituted comprising representatives of the Village Im-
provement Associations of Southwest Harbor, Northeast Harbor,
Seal Harbor, and Bar Harbor, for the purpose of conferring
with the Superintendent of the Lafayette National Park in
relation to Park affairs, in order that the property owners
and residents of the island, as well as others, may be in-
formed of contemplated developments prior to a final deter-
mination or the beginning of any new work.
The undersigned is not sending this notice as the repre-
sentative of any organization of people.
FRANK B. ROWELL
Ellwworth, Maine, March 8, 1924.
Hon. George Wharton Pepper,
United States Senate,
Wishington, D. C.
Dear Senator Pepper:-
You were very kind to send me 11 copy of letter
[He]
you wrote Kimball and I think it may lead to a better under-
standing of your position, which will clear up the whole
situation. I have not answered your letter before because
I wanted to come East and get some more information.
It 113 perfectly clear to the now that the people
here have inleunderatood your position to Botte extent and you
have misundo retood them. We all have the Baine object in view,
namely, the best and most intelligent long distance develop-
ment of the Park for the use of the people of the country,
having not so much reference to the rich man's individual
tastes 88 to the on joyment by the large body of people. It
would be 2027y, nu you muggest, to make any development of
thin Prink for the benefit of one Bmail class only.
I infor from your letter to Limbe:1 that he had
written you taiking some point of the eisp eyeant of a large
number of 15012 which work on the Park ronde would give. That
shown a very narrow Incil view point which is not shared by
anybody, having in mind the beat development of the Park and
should not be thought of or considered for H. moment.
In order to allow exactly what has been done and
what the Interior Department two years ago authorized to be
done and whit the poople in this section are very earnest in
their desire should be done, I have had prepared a plan above
ing the section of Mount Desert Inland 6ant of Somes Sound
with the main public road shown upon it and the Park area in
pink. The automobile rond, propoued and under construction,
is shown by the green lines, the solid being constructed,
the barred being under construction, and the parallel green
Woodlawn Museum A-60. Full letter of incomplete copy.
G. W. P.
3/8/34.
lines being the continuation of the proposed automobile
roads. The brown lines represent roads for horses only,
being dirt roads, not wide enough for automobiles, ex-
cept in onue 02 emergency, the Bolid brown being construo-
tell ronds, the barred brown being under construction and
the Barallel brown being proposed roads in continuation
of the others. You being very familiar with the location
onn Hpppy this plan to the face of the earth at once.
There are no elevation lines on it but the Government ohart
which I enclose gives their on a smeller scale.
I agree wish you entirely that there should be
13. very few automobile roads to strategic centers and typical
view points. Idon't know as you will think that enough
have been planned. The only one a contemplated are the two
which you suggest 111 your letter so be desirable, namely,
one up Green Mountain and another along the east Hide OI
Eagle Lake through the carry to Jordon Pond and along the
eant side of the Pend to the Jordon Pond House. These two
roads are very important and through the support of some
wealthy people, principally Mr. Rockefoller, who is interested
in the plan approved by the Park people in 1922, a considerable
part of the road by Eagle Lake to Jordon Pond has already been
constructed and I hope nnother year till be completed. That
will be 12. wonderful thing for the people who want to come from
away and visit the Park. Most people now come in automobiles,
as you know. It is 80122 to be a magnificent road, costing
Bome $50,000.00 a mile, which will be au good for the next
generation as this and 1B not costing the Government a dollar.
It will afford pleasure to hundreds of thousands of people
within the next few years. The automobile road up Green
Mountain, I fear, is not quite BO near to us, but if we can
get broking and help for it, it ought to come and it will be
one of the grantost attractions on the Atlantic Coaut. No
other automobilesroedu are proposed and I should doubt if any
others would or could be built for many years. I think it
ouight to be known that the plane for the automobile ronds
above mentioned meet with your cordial support because I do
nos think that haB been thoroughly understood and there has
been Soloe unfortunate feeling engendered on the Island on
that conount. will try to see that that impression is
corrected. We feel that you are in a way one of our residents.
Woodlawn, A-60
G. W. P.-3.
3/8/34.
11.11.1 the Sucratary The DIAN or the roved Interior by the National Park Service
mentioned, Park boing the only onea in the foods above
superate road . One was the In automobile 1932 Included two
earth ens t aurinoe or Hujtle Lake and Jordon Pond, great the section other of tize
for Nutomobiled horden, not at prement wide enough or use perhaps good passengers,
and rund of narrow width for of funt being an
This 1 is the combined 10/18/13 of Surgent and Jordan completed,
anoiroling and being one continuous road when enough
the only rond proposed in that section and Mountaine.
naciunary wide, it to 14 road of Bone kind into the Park 18.8 1 : that is
BB would Boom 1111 11" this were nB little detrimental on
not wall built and constructed in an artistic manner
it possible. in Whore built, (and it in now largely constructed)
In the Landnoape.
to Interfere with the view or be any objectionable feature HO as
A considerable part of this road is not on the
Government Land but the 12121.10 will have the use of 11. Only
two Smill linka of that road are wholly undonstructed across
the Park, one adroan the northern end about three-quartern
of a mile in 101/tt and one in the southern part of not more
than two-thirda or a mile, from Mitchell Hill toward Jorden
Pond. The barrod brown Line north from the west shore of Jordan
Pond 10 anothes Linky but 1s unles construction. When there
three short linka are constructed there w111 be this one com-
plate road around the MILBE of mountains.
The advantage of th1s road is that it gives UB
access to the Park from the West and Bouth sidea. It =leo
furnishes or decommunication from the southwest Valley
to the country Bouth of Jordan Pond. It enables people to
come into the Park either on foot or with horses. There is
no network of rondo nt A11 but this one narrow road running
around the mountain.
A COND of Boine kind to get into this large section
of the Park 1s abiolutely necessary for Administration purposes.
Grame has got to be protected and fire looked out for and this
one principal rond weel adapted for these two purposes,
so well 813 for the une of people coming in largely on foot to
use the Park.
Woodlown A-60
17. P. -4-
3/8/24.
wastern the section so important 88 the permanent in the road
Personally I do not think the dirt road
in eastern, because the latter will accomolate automobile
more small people, links but unless we are permitted to finish vistly the three
would completes the road around the mountain, we prebably
which in the thousand acre tract West of Jordan 2nd
osuda both are pert of ons plan which is backed by the citisens be-
not get the entomobile road whior everybody wante.
and financed by private enterprise and not by the Covernment.
In 1922 the plan comprising these two comparatively
email and vory essential road systems was approved by the De-
partment and the director of the Park, Mr. Dorr. was authorized
to enlist the interest of Individuals In the project
socure subscriptions for the purpose of completing the roads
as wall as for possible additions to the Park. M2. DOTT 1112
sible to do this, and among the principal ones whose support
was secured for the plan was Mr. Rocknfallor, who stread to
come to the aid of the plan 0.3 a wholo. givin the nae of the
roads over his 01/17 land and furnishing a largo and of money
for the building of the antomobile road as world as the other.
This money has bean raised and speat in reliance the plan
for the two 2008 systems approved by the Department and on the
strength of the good faith of the Government. If YOU pretent
the completion of one of these two road 3ystens ve cannot in
decency ask for support both other. If the interest 0.0
generous private citizens is ooolod. the or) have to
stop and the whole plan of development charlioned sit' no
prospect of its completion in this gonoration. That eill be
a calamity impossible to contempleto. The great voln of the
Per's to the people would be ruined. None of de Could to
be responsible for that. I am sure that you 121 agree with
me that that must be evoided.
I agree with you that gertain areas in this section
must be protected ageinst roads. The Bubble
Poul
Villa
should
not Lava any roads and none is contounlatel there. I em soook-
ing. of course, of Government land. I Delieve there is a road
in that vioinity called the Boyd Road that has been there ever
since I can remember, but that cannot be helped now even is it
is a detrimont. The area north of the Babblos and west of
Eagle Take should not have any more roads, but that is a matter
we cannot control through the Government ag it is still private
land.
As to the Sargiht-Jordan Amphitheater, you may ro-
member thst & road was started there but abandoned on your
suggestion that it would be inadvisable.
I hope that this plan and this explanation will
Woodlown A 60
W. P. -54
3/8/24.
bring us all nearer together and perhaps entirely so. With
your support of the two autonobile roads making one system on
the eastern side of the ponds in the Green Mountain section
and the practical connection of them with the completion of
the small links of the dirt roads on the west, the fact that
a large part of the latter. 30 far as they are on Government
land at all, has been built in years past, some before the
Park land was acquired, and the feet that 11 this plan is
killed now there will be practically no road leading anywhere
and an immenso amount of money wasted in isolated links, with
various other considerations which I have briefly referred to,
combine to make it most imperative from a practical point of
view that the management of the Park be permitted to finish the
job it has undertaken.
I have not spoken of the wishes of the people in
the
immediate locality. Naturally they are not the only ones
to bo considered, but the nearer you get to the Park the more
interested are the people in it. I find that there is a
tremendous and overwhelming support of the plan to build these
roads. It would be a bitter disappointment and a serious blow
to the people if anything happens to prevent the carrying out
of the plan. I earnestly hope that on studying the situation
you will withdraw your opposition to the small links yet to be
built to finish the complete road around the Sargent Mountain
tract with the understanding, which I think ought to be made
plain, that no other or further roads are in contemplation
or should be authorized.
with very kind regards, I am
Yours very truly,
Johaphy
EJobe A. Peters]
ITIONAL ARCHIVES
10-23
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
LAFAYETTE
NATIONAL PARK
FILE No.
Part 2.
ROADS
etters in Suffert of Development
Letters of Opposition
Re scarings of Mar. 26,1924
2
-
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
LAFAYETTE NATIONAL PARK
BAR HARBOR, MAINE
OFFICE OF THE SUPERINTENDENT
15, 1934.
Denr Mrs. Techay-Swith
I write in the absence of Mr. Dorr to answ r the
letter which has just reached me as Acting Superintendent
of the Prees, to state the the large liberality which has made
possible the driving roads end bridle paths entering the
National Pept lords on the shol Humber to sticou and
Northeast Herbor side is principally but not wholly
due to Mr. Rockefeller,
The ronds built in connection with there over
the private lands adjoining, left freely open to the
public with motors clone excluded and giving access to
the Park which has as yet no legal eccess on this sido,
is due to Mr. 'OC efeller wholly, the has regarded
this as a contribution to the pleasure of Park visitors
and his summer prodident neighbors.
incerely yours,
0
a.
I.
Tynam,
cting tendent.
3HL is
3.
OF THE INTERIOR
RECEIVED
DEP'T
OF
THE
MAR 17 1924
PAZPANE
REPLY
NIONAL PARKS
MAR 17 1924
MAILS &
For Secretary's Signature
S-OFF
17.
The Secretary of the Interior
Dear Sir:
I am just in receipt of a letter stating that a
Committee is to appear before you on March 26th in re-
lation to The National Lafayette Park in Maine. May I
be allowed to write just a few lines in reference to the
work.
Mr. Dorr who has been the prime mover and most
instrumental in securing the lands, and presenting them to
the Government as a National Park has given his time,
strength and money to this end. There has been no graft,
no dishonesty, no selfishness in the whole thing, only a
feeling that this beautiful region should be kept as a
Park and the wild life preserved and protected SO that
other generations may enjoy what we do now. Mv home over-
looks a portion of the Park, and it is a great joy to drive
through it, thanks to the thoughtful generosity of Mr.
Rockerfeller, who at his own expense has opened up some of
the most beautiful sections of The Park by well planned,
and well constructed roads. These are open to old and young,
as well as to carriages, and those on horseback, not how-
ever to motors.
Now 11 there is a certain element who "loving nature",
as they say, do not like to see the mountain sides scarred
with roads" Nature will take care of this and is already
covering over the "scars" with briar and bramble, flowers
and ferns. These "lovers of nature" object to these roads
as it interferes with the privacy of their picnics. They do
not picnic on the road. They simply cross them in order to
get to the denser woods.
In the meantime through the generosity of one man
the gates of the Park have been thrown open, not only to
those of who enjoy tramping, but to those who feeling the weight
is years, can easily be driven through. Such an opportunity
seldom presented to a community as having the work done
building is expensive, and this too has given work to all who
for them and might not occur in hundreds of years, for road
wish to avail themselves of the opportunity. All other na-
tional Parks have been opened up, why not this one? I only
THE A
4.
-2-
wish I could persuade you, Mr. Secretary, to visit us
at Mount Desert, and let me drive you through the Park
and see its beauties. I know then you would realize
how much has been wisely done to save and protect the
land as well as to open it up.
Very truly yours,
Virginia Thiarh machay Smith
me arey! Maskey-Smith
1325- Supleunta sh.
3H1 A adona
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
WASHINGTON
5.
March 11, 1924.
The Director,
National Park Service.
Sir:
When I was in Boston on February twenty-third, I
attended a meeting of the New England conference for the
protection of National Parks. This meeting was held in the
club rooms of the Appalachian Mountain Club, and there were
present representatives of the Appalachian Mountain Club,
Massachusetts Forestry Association, Society for the protec-
tion of New Hampshire Forests, Boston Society of Landscape
Architects, Massachusetts State Federation of Women's Clubs,
Massachusetts Horticultural Society, Massachusetts Federa-
tion of Planning Boards, New England Trail Conference,
Brookline Civic Society anu the Boston Society of Civil
Engineers. The meeting was presided over by Mr. Harlan P.
Kelsey, Chairman of the Conference.
After a thorough discussion 01 the pending Baroour
bill for the creation 01 the Roosevelt-Secuoia National Park,
a gentleman by the name of Peabody asked permission to discuss
plans for road building in Larayette National Park.
Mr.
Peabody showed numerous maps and pictures and strongly urged
the New England Conference to oppose certain road building
projects. Me stated that Senator Pepper of Pennsylvania had
prepared a strong speech condemning the road projects
developed for Lafayette Park and expects to deliver this
speech on the floor of the Senate. He stated that the other
people interested in the Park had asked that the speech be
not delivered until an effort was made to secure the
stop ing of the road work through the Secretary of the Interior.
He explained that the Secretary ordered a hearing in his office
on March twenty-sixth.
The argument that seemed to impress most of the
people at the Conference was that at the present time it is
EHIL 14
possible to go from one side of Mount Desert Island to the other
6.
in not exceeding thirty minutes, and that if the proposed road
is built through the Park this time can be reduced to fifteen
minutes. He contended that the road was not necessary, that it
would spoil the wilderness charm of the Park. He contended
further that these projects have not been passed upon by
competent landscape engineers ana that the work was not being
done in accordance with the principles of landscape preserva-
tion. He said that many of the proposed roads were designated
on the maps as carriage roads, but contended that they would,
when built, be opened to automobiles, if not immediately,
certainly later on.
Mr. Peabody made a very fine presentation, and not
having seen Lafayette Park and also not being familiar with
the details of the road plans, I must .confess that I. was quite
convinced by his argument that if the road work should not be
stopped the plans should be thoroughly investigated by the
National Park Service and our landscape man detailed to study
the situation. I felt very much embarrassed as I was unable
to make any argument in reply, when called upon to speak,
except to state that as Mr. Dorr, the Superintendent of the
Park, was in Boston he should be called upon to make a state-
ment in behalf of myself ani the National Park Service. When
asked as to whether our landscape engineer had visited lafayette
Park, I stated that I could not recall when he had made a visit
to that Park and believed he had not had the road plans under
consideration.
The Conference finally went on record as being of
the opinion that landscape men should study the road projects
and that, pending this study, construction work should be
stopped. The Conference also directed that it should be
represented at the nearing to be held March 26th.
I feel that the National Park Service is in a delicate
situation in this matter ana that we shoula proceed slowly in
the approval of plans for continuation of the road work.
Mr. Peabody made the statement that he did not think
it would be ossible to stop the Cadillac Mountain road, which
2
3H1 A and
7.
is included in our general road budget. I gathered from his
talk that it was the hope of himself and his associates,
probably also of Senator Pepper, that at the meeting in
Washington a compromise could be agreed upon whereby the road
across the Park and certain so-called carriage road projects
would be stopped and the Cadillac Mountain construction work
allowed to proceed. However, this may not have been in his
mind at all. It is merely a conclusion I drew from certain
arguments he advanced.
Xnare Horace M. m Albright, arough
Field Assistant to the Director.
3
3H1 14
CED AT THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES girgfinging
Jonn your
8.
you
NARA, CP, R679, CCF, Acalia,
March 10. 1924
The Director of National Park Service:
Dear Sir:
Please let me emphatically approve the continua-
tion of the road building program already approved by
the Department of the Interior, for the development of
the LaFayette National Park on Mount Desert Island,
Maine.
The location of the roads has been carefully
studied and if followed out will afford means of access
to parts of the Island now only possible to visit on
foot. As the National Parks are presumably for the good
of the public, it would seem rational to make attractive
points in the park scenery accessable, provided this can
be accomplished without permanent disfigurement to the
landsoape.
As I have been a summer resident of the Island for
forty years and have done much professional work on the
Island and in its immediate neighborhood, I have kept
informed of the progress of the road=building as out-
lined in the Park and have approved the various steps in
the accomplishment of the well thought-out plan. Tempo-
rary defacement is, of course, unavoidable when large con-
struction is necessary; this should not alarm the most
conservative, however, as the scars will be covered in
the course of a few years by the planting and arrange-
ments which are carried on simultaneously with the con-
struction.
The homely adage should be remembered, that an
omelet is not made without breaking eggs, and those who
are worried by certain details of present construction
should remember that in all large schemes any temporary
discomfort must be accepted in view of developments
which should be planned for the use of those generations
which will follow ours.
Respectfully yours.
F/S
Beaury banant
9.
COPY.
Hinckley, Allen, Millinghast E: Phillips.
Counselors at Law
Turks Head Building,
Providence, R. I.
March 13th, 1924.
A. ii. Lynam, Esq.,
Lafayette National Park,
Bar Harbor, Maine.
Dear Mr. Lynam:
I am in receipt of your letter of March
11th with reference to the hoaring that is to be had bo-
fore the Cecretary of the Intorior on March 26th relative
to the road development of Lafayette National Park. I
r
grot to have to advise you that I an strongly opposed
to the proposed motor road through the lake valleys and
possibly to the bridle path and driving road. I have
recently bought a surmer residence at Scal Harbor and while
I realize that the National Park system is for the benefit
of the whole public, I believe that the interests and wishes
of the sumer residents who spent hundreds of thousands of
dollars to develop Count Desert and malco it beautiful for
summer homes should be of the first consideration.
I cannot
believe that the legitinate develo ment of the Lafayette
National Park requires the building of a notor road through
its most beautiful parts. Members of the public who really
enjoy nature and who want to S 00 the Park in its real natural
beauty should be af orded real facilities for making trips
to it and tranping over it, and in my opinion, the building
of a motor road is greatly destructive to the natural beauties
of the Paris and its legitinate use. Naturally, therefore, I
cannot contribute to the purpose suggested by Mr. Dorre
Yours very truly,
(signed) Arthur 11. Allen
T.
14 March, 1934.
Dear Mr. Dorr:
I
have not yet received a reply from Senator
Pepper to my long letter. I wrote him that I was sending it
before it was sent. I Hend you a copy of his reply in which
he claims that he has obtined a regruit in the person of
McIntyro. Hadn't you bettor see McIntyre and explain to
him that it is not 80 much the desire to have the road
around Sargent Mounuain closed to autombiles as the necessity
that the situation requires it for the present, and that,
without that road, it may be very doubtful whether we got
the automobile roads. Perhaps you cannot do this, but let
Harry Lynam do it.
It may be well to have McIntyre see the letter
that Pepper wrote to Kimball and my reply, and then perhaps
we can frame up a letter for McInture to write Pepper, be-
cause he must be heard from again; otherwise Pepper will
quote him, at the hearing, as being on his side.
Let McIntyre, also, see a copy of the petition
that we signed in Ellsworth, that Judge Deasy drew, and see
if he would be willing to sign one like that.
Very truly yours,
[John A. Peters]
George B. Dorr, Esq.,
Bar Harbor, Maine.
14 March, 1924.
Dear Ira:
In the eastern part of the State we need your help
as a lawyer as well as a statesman in the matter of the Nation-
al Park on Mount Desert Island.
Two years ago the Interior Department authorized a
system of roads in two sections of the Park, both extremely des-
irable and earnestly desired by all the people in the vicinity
and all other in Maine who know the situation. We didnot want
to ask the Government for any money, and didn't think we would
get it if we did, so the Department authorized the Director,
Mr. Dorr, to solicit private subscriptions. He did so with great
success. Mr. Rockefeller being tapped for the largest amount. A
fine automobile road in the vicinity of Green Mountain is being
constructed largely with Mr. Rockefeller's money. Also, as part
of the same plan, a horse road, for foot passengers and horses
only, in the western section of the Park. This is for admin-
istrative purposes and to permit people to get in there on foot
largely, as that section of the Park is not BO much used. Later
on that road can be made into an automobile road if we get the
necessary money.
That road is also partly built, only three
small links being uncompleted.
It has not cost the Government
a dollar$ when completed it will be of great benefit to the State.
Senstor Pepper goes to Northeast Harbor in the summer
and our work is not going on to suit him. He is more in favor, I
think, of allowing the Park to be entirely wind, which of course
would be nice to people who oan afford the time and money to climb
over it. But the traveling public now goes in automobiles, and we
must have those automobile roads in the Green Mountain section.
They are going to be permanent roads, as good for the next gener-
ation as this, costing fifty thousand dollars a mile, of which the
Government pays nothing, If they are completed hundreda of thous-
ands of people will enjoy the Park in the next few years.
This Park should not be a rich man's Park or a one-
I
man Park, but should be accessible to the use of all the people.
It must not be shut up or fixed so that people cannot get into it
except by climbing mountains, because they will not go under those
circumstances. The mountains havealways been there, and people
have never gone before.
Please read the enclosed copy of letter from Pepper to
Kimball, and from me to Pepper. I have tried to placate him and
not make him hostile, and I hope that we can compromise. But, if
JAP-IGH.
2.
it becomes necessary to fight, we must do so, and I am personally
of the opinion that one man from Pennsylvania, even if he is a
senator, should not control the destinies of all the people of
Maine, although, so far, he has been able to hold this thing up
and even to cause the Department to fix a time for hearing
practically for the people of Maine to show cause why this road
should not be stopped.
I
Personally, I think it is an outrage on us, but I cannot
say that except to you. You can catch more flies with mole see
than with some other things.
The whole trouble comes right here: Pepper has not con-
sented to the automobile roads in the eastern section, which are
the ones we went most. But the trouble is that we cannot get them
unless the others are built, because the Government isn't furnish-
ing the money and Rockefeller and the others supported the plan as
a whole, and the Department approved it two years ago, and the
supporters have contributed money to the plan as a whole, and the
whole plan has been carried on in that way, and if part of it is
out out we probably wouldn't get any more money for the rest of
it, and the work will have to stop with isolated sections of it
up in the air getting nowhere; and there would be howl here that
you could hear to California.
We went your help at the hearing, if it becomes neces-
sary to have it. I am sending John Nelson a plan like the one
sent Pepper. I will ask you to take the plan and read over the
letters with that in view and be ready to be vociforous for us, if
necessary, on the twenty-sixth. There will be plenty of facts,
arguments and witnesses down there to use; the only question is
utilizing them properly. Nelson represents the Park district
here and will have to take the lead, but he has got to be backed
up thoroughly of course.
This is a preliminary letter to get you in touch with
the situation through the correspondence with Pepper. I will let
you k ow what his answer to my letter is.
Very truly yours,
[John A. Peters]
Hon. Ira G. Hersey,
House of Representatives,
Washington, D.C.
the PH.
GEORGE L STEBBINS
CAREOR DENCAN CANDLER
TSB FIFTB AVENUE
march 15. 1924
NEW YORK
wear Judge Peters
ghan no alwaysable To day s The
letter wice 2e conduced
9 had a lack with m R and we have anumed
for m Debevore a good new York lawya to go
to the hearing with me to represent The 5. H. Rose I
h in while to Talle genual male of the
Kro undings & speak if it seems has
9 had a lakk with m Delevere & m 2114
aish unless other arran annues have
been made that you would head The dely alem
housing Pra fraus that if m Don is in
from manu a Hancana Co and guide am
charge ha will 5 To preve loo much + lack 100
for Peakaks This is all is
planned + of cerve if
4-are Dracy were in charge comea Z 0.75
yes 9 Throals you can un dusland [homes am horlans me
year it is To releve mm Don of that sort of
informating ] I am unling Nany by m am
you not mentioning This pant as Janka as
9 do Is you so are you process look onto The
matter 7 aderce me
A-60
GEORGE L STERBINS
CARE OF DUNCAN CANDLER
753 FIFTH AVENUE
NEW YORK
more unleresled is that is is mee
to have The having In that is user
come our all req his if
conder chea for line dont want
Ym Dar to Try To know Too the
List me know how the
situation appears to you
Your very sen may
Team L own m
Wood Hown. A-60
George L. Stebbins
care of Duncan Candler
753 Fifth Avenue
New York
March 15, 1924
Dear Mr. Lynam
Yesterday I had a talk with Mr. Debevoise in regard
to the hearing at Washington & we both agreed that it would be
a great help if Judge Peters would attend it and unless other
arrangements had been made take charge of the presentation of
our case.
Perhaps Judge Deasy will do that & if so it would
of course be equally satisfactory.
We fear that unless there is a cool guiding hand at
the wheel we may n our eagerness try to prove our case too
much and of course with Peters long experience at Washington
and keen judgment he would be invaluable. Mr. Lincoln Cromwell
of Northeast Harbor and New York will go to the hearing and is
a good man. Very even tempered & with good judgment.
If I am wanted to talk I will try & not say too much
but my interest in the paths & roads on the Island dates back
farther than most.
In 1895, I worked with Waldron Bates laying out and
constructing the system of paths and trails that has meant so
much to the Island. With him & Sargent of Northeast Harbor
I rebuilt & keptup the Bubble Pond & Wildwood Farm road & as
stated in my letter of the 12th I bought the Eastern Shore
Land Co. tract of 3000 acres and the Sargent Mt Tract of about
1500 acres & with the backing of Mr Dorr & Prest Eliot raised
the money to give these tracts to the Park. . My associates at
-2-
Seal Harbor & I gave 1000 acres-- Pemetic & The Triads and
contributed largely to the Sargent Mt & Bubble Mt tract
I dont write this to talk about myself but simply
to let you know what standing I would have at the hearing
Please keep me posted so that I may advise Mr Debevoise
of the situation
The hearing I understand is March 26th 11. A.M.
Where in Washington-- At Secy of Interiors office?
Yours sincerely
GEROGE L STEBBINS
P. S. My experience in the west has shown me how important it
is in National Parks to have both trails -- horse and donkey
roads and auto roads. They have all in the Pike's Peak region
where I have recently lived.
COPY
TO the Director of National F rk Service,
Washington, D.C.
Dear Sir;
It is .ith dismay I have heard of the
recent opposition to the road building in Lafayette
National Park. were I the only one who is affected
it would of course mean little, but I am sure the
many generous persons who gave land to make this
National Park possible will be greatly disappointed
not to have the beautiful scenic parts of our Island
of Mount Desert developed.
Years ago the paths over the mountains
were made and maintained by different individuals,
also by village Improvement Societies. These paths
helped to call the attention of visitors to the
beauties of forests, mountains and sea. Is it
possible that our Government after accepting the gift
of the Park is not going to do its share in making
its roads? roads which must make accessible other
spots which are forbidden to us who no longer can
climb mountains?
Lafayette Park is a gift to the Nation, a
rare combination of mountain and sea. I would I could
bespeak your good will and support of a place dear to
a western Woman who has been true to her Maine home
for over thirty years.
Respectfully,
(signed) Kate D.Hinckle
Cincinnati, Ohio.
March 16, 1924.
hine, arch 10, 1924.
Non. Jeopre heating Pepper,
United tates enate,
ashington, it. C.
Dear Sennion Poppor:-
2
an very ratch official to you for your' letter of
the
17th, mich, think, holma clear up the situation. As
I and before, 100 have the same object in view, so vit, the
best; Interest of the public nt lense, and the only question
is as to the best veg of achieving it
a sorry that you think the road around the
outsain treat, Si Mataice. If it 1s a mistake
it was made about UNO yours 200 when the road was Into out un-
der the direct supervision of the National Park Service and
the MODY has progressed 000 Par and too much money has been
spent on it not in I oblision, to The it foneible to abandon
it and T chink that you will finally agree with no in that
proposition, especially in vice of the fact, Mich I trice to
emphasize before, that this - conclusion is so bound up
with the completion or the eutomabile FORC'S that NO RDC no
anxious for that we can't drop me without dropping both.
I do not think it would be fonsible, end cortainly
not just to the poople of about no. greatly interested in
1110
manifer, to now at this 1010 da leave the question as to
whether the partly Statehod road sho la he comleted to any
outside body appointed by the Secretary or otherwise.
The location of this road in the vestorm section was
extained and approved by she officials of the ark Corvico who
onne down hore in person and went over the route, muggested
30.00 changes, and the road was built, or is boing built,
exactly as laid out by then. the plan comprehending those
two wond systems was also approved and supported in writing by
Senator Valo and ernald and Depresentative Welson in 1922.
I take it the only object In referring it to another body
would be to inform the ecretary as to the desirability or
otherwise of completing the road, which is just what this
henring next edmonday is to be for midi, AS I understand it,
there will be present at the hearing everybody competent to
advise the ocretary and supply 1: with a complete source of
information on every subject bearing unon the matter The
Secretary can roally got none information from the people who
will be present nt that mooting than ho could possibly get
from any comission no might appoint. Desides that, of courso,
1: is highly important that the matter be sobiled now.
G.
P.
-2-
3/19/24.
Porsonally, however, I quite endorse your surgestion
that in the futuro an advisory body right be created to study
and make rocomendations in the mettor of any future ronds,
although the fact should not be lost eight of that the people
in the Pork ervice are the ones provided for that purpose and
the Socretary of the Interior at any time can call upon anybody
at any time for advice or suggestions. I do think, however,
that in the future it would be wise to have fu 11 cooperation
so far 0.3 possible by all interested personsand I for one shall
strive to bring that about. I believe I have lately been made
one of the directors of the Trustoes of ublic insorvations.
a to your suggestion about the colo Inko-Carry-
Jordan pond poute, you RNO alwandy aware that that road goos
in the place you desire 1t, that is along the vestern base
of enetic ountain. I notice you suggest, however, that
this automobile road ought not, to touch Bubble Pond Anywhere,
that it may be lest 2010 open for the use of caspers, podes-
trians and suturong"
The automable road is alventy built in that section
and docs at one point, before it swerves off to the westward,
very nearly couch the pond. This is necessary owing to the
surface of the earth in that locality.
the rond could not
have been carried throu any other course or account of a
ravine
in that vicinity. it is not desirable that this pond
be used for the purposes you mention, in fact this purpose is
prohibited because the pour is a cource of the water supply
for for arbor running inco agle also and both Takes are
protected from campers, SWIMMERS, etc. by regulations authorized
by law in this state.
c all appreciate the fact that there are some people
few in curter, who are opposed to this suto nobile road system
end do not agree with you and no that it 16 necessary, AS a
matter of fact, practically experient for the best use of the
art by the public, and very likely COMO of these people may
be at the bearing, but their objections are entirely selfish.
They don't want automobiles in their Imediate vicinity.
That meter was fought out and takon cero of by the logislature
of this Cente more than ten years ago and you and I know that
the public will come to this MARK in automobiles in great
numbers and that is about the only way they will come and if
they do not have those autouobile roads there will be a riot,
no that opposition really cannot stand for a moment.
c here, knowing the value of your support and be-
lieving that WC want to accomplish the sano things, will
appreciate it highly if you would 6.0 to the hoaring next
adnesday and state your position, being in favor of the
automobile rands an plannedand, if I understand it correctly,
Shops:
-3-
that while you still consider that an error was made
originally in planting the section of road ir the western part,
that it would be unviso not to finish it at the prement time,
1,0 having been so meanly COT lated, undfurther that in your
optistion an advinory body about be Arranged for in the future
to states i is thantica in the water of any future monda.
There 1 t b: some differences of opinion about this latter
million the others my not fool as I 20, that there would be no
objection to anch e. body. That matter could be handled in the
frience.
The
Additional feder you 10 not to have this plan of
road lutting stopped. If 11; is stopped it would be A very
serious thing for 135 in this locality and (1)) interfare and
perhaps 1133 the battling of these words which 50 bith be !leve
are necessary.
it 10 to any that you must not for $ moment con-
sider
declinion to cour to the State Convention,
The
Republicans STC expection you and count wyon your befre here.
They have a NEW High regard for you and there is not a reason
in the world why it glight concerning this
show change your ettitude or course any colverent ent.
It wou? be . good deal more entarmosing 2f you ctd not come
than
:
7012
came. mare is of course a MM approad interest
in this road indiction nian for the ari, socially in the
auto while parts, 1ri you favor in INC .11 in Mipore was at
first a About your position but that is being
corrected and by the +1 e in have the date Convention horo,
with this mosting next adnesdey behind us, everything will
be perfectly and T cannot un you 500 strongly
no: to disappoint uc on that occasion
ith kind regards, I an
Youre very truly,
[John A.Peters]
COPY
Augusta, Maine,
March 17,1924.
My dear Secretary Work:
I understand that a hearing soon is to
be held at your Department in regard to the
construction of certain roads in Lafayette National
Park, I ount Desert Island, Maine. In my opinion
the
completion of the program of road construction means
a great deal, not only for Mount Lesert Island but
for the entire State of Maine and New England. The
beauty and picturesqueness of L fayette National
Park is unsurpassed. The building of roads will
open to the public the most beautiful sections of
the Park and also will afford much needed protection
against forest fires.
The people of Maine are becoming more and
more interested in this wonderful location and we are
fortunate in having summer residents whose public
spirit permits them to expend large sums of money in
the public interest. Certain of the proposed roads
are to be open I'or motor traffic, while others are
confined to horsedrawn vehicles. The people of my
State consiger this rrangement entirely reasonable
and are overwhelmingly in favor of the development of
the Park and the continu tion of the road building
program.
With kind personal regards, I am,
Faithfully yours,
(Signed) Percival P1Baxter
Governor of Maine
To non. Hubert Work,
Secretary of the Interior,
Washington, D.C.
Dup.
Philadelphia, Penna.,
March 17, 1924.
Honorable John A. Petera,
Ellsworth,
Maine.
Dear Judge Peters:-
I have your considerate and comprehensive letter,
together with the Geological Survey Map. Doubtless the plan
referred to in your letter will arrive in due course.
I am familiar with the road which is intended to
girdle the Sargent-Jordan mountain. It is a very fine piece
of engineering. It is wide enough for automobiles and, in
the finished parts, has an excellent parkway surface.
Its
curves, however, have apparently been planned so as to make
its use unsafe for motor use.
with regard to this girdling road, unavailable for
automobiles, unnecessarily large and formal for equestrian
use and uninteresting for pedestrians, I have always thought
(and still think) that it spoils the Park without benefitting
the public. The strongest argument for finishing it is that
so much harm has been done that a little more will make no
difference. I recognize the force of this argument and have
no intention of doing more thenurging upon the Secretary of
the Interior the appointment of some fairly representative
body of advisers to oheck up on Mr. Dorr's activities. The
whole development has been adroitly slipped through by him
without any such publicity as should characterize government
work.
I doubt if anybody higher in the scale of authority
ever made any study of the situation until the the thing had
gone too far to be dropped.
If such a group of advisers think the girdling road
should be finished, I shall not oppose it.
As to the automobile road, I think it is an inevitable
feature of Park development. As between a route along the
eastern base of Pemetic Mountain and a route along its western
base, I favor the latter. If this route is adopted it will
be upon the theory that Bubble Pond Valley should be left in
wilderness. If so, the westward swing of the road from the
Woodlawn Huseum 4460
COMMITTEE ON NAVAL AFFAIRS.
Judge Peters,
-2-
3/17/1924
eastern shore of Eagle Lake ought to occur far enough north
of Bubble Pond to make the Pond inaccessible from the north
except to pedestrians. I agree that the Boyd Road
is
unobjectionable; but if the new auto road is to touch the
north end of Bubble Pond before swinging westward, we shall
have destroyed the wilderness for campers, pedestrians and
swimmers.
As you know, the summer residents appearing before
the Secretary on the 26th will oppose the auto route which
you and I approve.
Upon the whole, my position is, and always has been,
as follows:-
1.
That the girdling system of roads is a grave
mistake.
2.
That some competent body should study the
situation and advise the Secretary whether the thing has
gone so far that it ought to be finished.
3.
That such a body ought in the future to have
jurisdiction to insure against one-man control of a public
trust.
4. That, on the whole, the Eagle Lake-Carry-Jordan
Pond route is the best for the auto road, provided it is not
so laid out as to spoil Bubble Pond en route.
As you know, Maine for thirty-five years has shared
my interest and affection with Pennsylvania. I know
all
parts of the State and have stumbled over every big stone on
Mt. Desert Island. I have gradually shifted the centre of
my personal interest over to the western shore of the Island,
between Pretty Marsh and Indian Point, so that my view of
the Park is a detached one, disassociated from personal con-
cern. What I want to do is to preserve the feature that makes
Mt. Desert unique - the neighborly 00-existence of wilderness
and civilization. If we keep mountain barriers between the
two, we shall be acting wisely. If we mix them up and try
to strike an average everywhere, we shall destroy the dis-
tinctive character of the Island and reduce the whole proposit-
ion to a dead level of mediocrity. I should be sorry to have
the whole thing degenerate into the Lafayette National Pionic
Park with tin cans and egg shells on the side.
Woodlewn 4 to
EDERION HALE, ME.
I
KEY PITTMAN, NEV.
HEISLER HALL, DEL.
THOMAS 4. WALSH MONT.
OROR WHARTON PEPPER, PA. PETER a. DERRY, R.I.
IKER L. ODDIE. NEV.
PARK TRAMMELL.FLA.
or COUZENS, MICH.
WILLIAM H. KING, UTAH
United States Senate,
COMMITTEE ON NAVAL AFFAIRS.
Judge Peters,
-3-
3/17/1984
Senator Hale had been kind enough to invite me to
address the Republican State Convention at Portland on April
3rd. I have, however, suggested to him that it would be
best to call this off, as the widespread misunderstanding of
my attitude on the road question would probably make my
presence embarrassing. Moreover, I shall be glad to be
relieved of this engagement, as I am working under very heavy
pressure and I do not want to be absent from Washington this
Spring.
With kind personal regards, I am
Yours sincerely,
Woodlawn A-60
congress of the United States
house of Representatives
Washington, D. C.
March 17,1924
Honorable John A. Peters
United States Courts
PORTLAND, Maine
Dear John:
Your letter of the 14th is just received.
I have read it and the enclosures with interest.
I will get into immediate touch with John Nelson,
and do anything and everything I can. Do you
know whether Fred Hale tried to do anything with
Pepper or not.
They are apparently on terms of
social intimacy. Either John OI I will advise
you what the present situation is as soon as I
can ascertain it, and what, if anything, we are
able to accomplish.
I have heard indirectly of the improvement in
Mrs. Peters' condition. It is a great delight to
us all. I know she will be interested to hear that
Mrs. White has been in Wheeling the last week with
our daughter, who gave us Saturday night, a grand-
daughter.
with personal regards, I am
Sincerely yours,
Ellsworth, Maine, March 17, 1924.
Mr. George L. Stebbins,
0/0 Duncan Candler,
753 Fifth Avenue,
New York City.
Dear Mr. Stebbins:-
I am home for this week. Was glad to get yours of the 15th.
I
became very actively interested in this Park matter a
couple of weeks ago. Bone of the boys down to Bar Harbor were getting
it on the wrong track and were getting into a row with Senator Hale
about it and took a very belligerent stand in other lines, especially
as to Pepper and his presiding at the State Convention April 3.
I Boothed them somewhat and got wiser and older heads at
work on them and in a way took charge of one line of activity which
was to see if we couldn't get both Hale and Pepper to co-operate with
us.
I took the atand with them, especially with Hale, that
there would be no question about their being with us if they unde: r-
stood the situation. I didn't even mention to Hale that I knew that
he had any other feeling. He responded to that treatment quickly and
presently wrote me that he would see Pepper and see if he couldn't
arrange everything satisfactorily.
The next thing was a letter from Pepper to Kimball, the
latter had written a fool letter to Pepper, which I didn't see, but
he evidently laid himself wide open by saying we wanted a road because
it would give employment while building it to local men.
Senator Pepper Bent me a copy of his letter to Kimball
because Hale had been to him with my letters to Hale, which, by the
way, were adapted for Pepper to read and I suspected that he might
see them. I at once wrote a letter to Pepper after consulting with
the others, ie, Deasy, Dorr, A. H. Lynam, Torrey and
others.
They
G. L. S. -2-
approved of my theory and this letter which was sent to Pepper from
Boston by me last Wednesday is the last thing heard by way of writing
and I am momentarily expecting an answer. This will give you a good
idea of our present position except for the following which has
occurred since the letter.
Being in Portland Friday last, Robert Hale, a son of Judge
Hale (retired United States Judge at Portland whom I succeeded) came
in to see me. He had just returned from Washington and H conference
with his uncle, Senator Hale, and Pepper. Senator Hale was all
stirred up about the situation here. Pepper had notified him that
he would not come and speak at our State Convention as planned. Hale
had induced him to re-consider until he could hear from me again. I
then showed Robert the letter I had written Pepper. Robert said that
he thought that would settle the matter; that as he understood Pepper's
attitude, he did not so seriously object to the completion of the
links of road in the weatern section, saying that they were BO far
along that it was use1eas to try to stop them, but that his principal
objection was to the possibility of more roads in the Bubble Pond
Valley. Of course I had covered this in my letter to some extent and
met his position and tried to agree with him in his letter to Kimball
but realizing after I talked with Robert that this was more important
than I supposed, I called a meeting yesterday here of Dorr, Densy,
A. H. Lynam and Torrey with a view to seeing just what we felt we
could Bay in regard to other roads in the Bubble Pond Valley not on
Government land but on Reservation land. I am enclosing you a plan
which goes with my letter to Pepper and with this letter so that you
and the lawyer who will go down to represent the Company (whose name
you did not make perfectly clear to me) may understand more fully.
I realize that Pepper will probably any that the agreement
to have no more roads in the Park in the Valley in of no account
because the land there 10 owned by Public Reservations and they may
build all the roads they want to and turn it over to the Park later
so to meet that we perhaps should say to him that 80 far as we can
control the actions of the Reservations people, three of us being
directors, we will undertake that no new roads shall be built by the
Bubble Pond Valley, it being understood that this will not prevent
the repair, completion and putting in good condition eventually of
the rough road now running through there, being the continuation of
the Boyd rond roughly put through by Morrell and Cuyler some years
ago to join the Martin Roberts road at the north. We regard this and
speak of it properly as an existing road which is a pretty good rodd
north of there and to some extent in the Boyd road but roughly put
through in the valley. Teams of horses have gone over there, however,
and we can properly speak of it as an existing rough road.
so L. S. -3-
We shall not Bay anything about this to Pepper until we
get his letter. If he makes the point we expect him to we are going
to suggest a compromise on the whole business, he to give up his
objection to the plan of Park roads and we to agree 30 far as we
have authority to that no more roads shall be built through the valley,
leaving this rough road to be used and repaired later on. This is
what Dorr says is all he needs and M11 Mr. R. would need in his opinion.
In fact, 1 € in just what is necessary and all that is necessary. It
does apparently eliminate the road shown on the plan enclosed which
skirte around the Bark land so far as it goes on Public Reservations
land, but that is only in a very small place, near the jog in the
eastern side of the Park south of Pemetic Mt. Most all that road to
the Bouth in all on private land and of course is entirely eliminated
from any negotiations. You may, however, think this is not much of a
compromise for Pepper. Of course really he inn't getting very much
but he may think he is because I imagine he has the idea that many more
roads are contemplated than really are and also I think he must be
willing to be let down easy in this matter because the opposition to
his B t and is tremendous.
You will observe in his letter to Kimball he now takes
the position that he is in favor of the automobile roads. That will
surprise some Of his adherers who went with him because they supposed
he was against automobile roads, but while They says he in shifty, I
think he tooclever to be obviously shifty and I think they have mis-
understood his position somewhat. However, I have nailed him on being
in favor of the automobile roads as you will see by me letter, which
ought to be the basis of the theory of the hearing. I am glad we got
his letter because it would have been a surprise if he had come into
the hearing and favored the automobile roads. Of course his attitude
is HB much opposed to the automobile roads as it would be if he direct-
ly fought them because if he continued to fight the other roads we
perhaps could not hope to get the automobile roads being SO generously
built by private subscriptions.
We are hopeful through what we know of Pepper's present
attitude that we can Bettle this matter or at least reduce his op-
position to a point where we can easily drive him out at the hearing.
We are waiting everything until we can hear from Pepper. If it is
favorable there won't have to be much of a meeting. I note what you
say about my going down. I don't know whether it will be possible or
not. Of course I shall do everything that I humanly can 1n the matter
appreciating as we do the great generosity of Mr. R, and the tremendous
benefit the whole public is getting from it and we would all sacrifice
most anything to help his plans in the matter but it is more or less in
the air until we hear from Pepper. I will keep you in touch with the
situation.
Yours very truly,
[John A. Peters,
4.
P. S. Thin letter should be strictly confidential except that
if you think it necessary you can show it to the lawyer who will
represent the Seal Harbor Realty Company at the hearing. The
reason I mention this is because Mr. Dorr, as you know, represents
the interests which are behind the large project which includes
these ronda and he is in active management of the whole al stuntion
and I should want him to bring 011 such matters to the attention of
his associates and principals in his own way, use this letter or
anything of the kind if he wants to and I should not want to do
anything to interfero with him. I think you will appreciate the
situation.
[.A. Peters]
Dear
9.13
13
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
LAFAYETTE NATIONAL PARK
BAR HARBOR, MAINE
OFFICE OF THE SUPERINTENDENT
March 18, 1924.
Dear President Eliot:
I have been working my hardest to get
away and be present at the great ceremony in your honor on
Thursday at Harvard, but organizing the committee to go on
from Maine to Washington to defend the Park construction
program at the hearing next Wednesday seems likely now to
make it impossible. If I do not come, I shall be
present in spirit.
Our friendship has been a pleasure,
an encouragement and an inspiration to me these last
twenty years, and one of my most valued and valuable
possessions.
With best greetings for the coming
anniversary and with true affection, I am
Sincerely yours,
ang B. Word
Copy in
Page 1 of 10.
C.W.Eliot Papers.
0.95 Harbad U. Archives
March 19, 1924.
Dear Mr. Cromell:
I enclose you some papers which I hope
you will take time to go over carefully -- making your
own commonts on them - before you como on to Washington.
Included in them are cuttings from the Island newspaper, the
Bar Harbor Times, two taken from the issues of March 5th and
12th, which represent the situation as I see it. A third
from the issue just published contains copy of a letter
which the Governor of the State, who has taken the matter
up warrily, has just forwarded to the Secretary of the
Interior, sending me copy. with this I had nothing to do,
only receiving copy of it myself yesterday morning and turning
it over, as I WEB authorized, to the editor to print. The
Governor is sending the Hon. Willis E. Parsons, State
Comissioner of Inland Fisheries and Grime, on to pepre ent
him officially at the hearing) he would have coms on himself
had 1t been possible. The President of the University of
Maine, Dr. Clarence C. Little, has taken the matter up
warnly,also, and, putting aside other engagonente, in going
to the henring end will spork at it, as will Mr. Persons.
Dr. Attle will represent the educational value of the
Woodlown Hoselen A-60
2. CoC.
work which we are doing and Mr. Parsons the importance of
our plan for the Park as sanctuary and for fire protection.
Dr. Phillips of Southwest Harbor, a member of the
State Legislature, is going to represent that town, and
Chauncey D. Joy, who is now working under me on the bridle
path and driving road within the Park, and for Mr. Rockefoller
on the connecting one outside, will go to represent the native
element in his district and tell about construction.
From Bar Harbor, Mr. Fred C. Lynnia, vice-pronident
of the Bar Harbor Village Improvement Society, who last
swamer - there being an interreganna in the presidency --
appointed Harold Peabody as chairman of the path committee,
after consulting me in rogard to it, neither of us droaming
from the position he then took of his antagonism to the
Park development. And Mr. Clarence E. Dow, who has been
chairman for three years of the Selection's Board of Ber
Harbor, until the last when he declined to rum again, and
who is now president of the Ber Harbor Board of Trade, is
going on to repre-ent the Board and Town. From Bangor,
Mr. Oliver L. Hall, a former resident of Bar Harbor and
editor and part owner of the Bangor Daily Commercial, who
Woodlawn A-60
S. L.C.
has taken the matter up with great interest, in going and
will speak on behalf of the Interest of the public, while
the Lowiston Journal is sending its chief city editor,
Mr. Sam Z. Conner, to represent the wider interest of the
State in the Park and in the plans for its development.
The women of the State will be represented by
lbs. Huddilston of Ozono, a recent past president of the
Maine Federation of Women's Clubs. Mrs. Raddilston having
visited the Park last summer when the State Federation held
its throc-day annual session hero RE guests of the Island
Federation, in deeply interested and feels strongly on the
subject. She will bear n letter from the Federation
president, Mrs. Florence Wough Denforth of Skowhegan, to be
read at the hearing. And there will be a few more,
representing the Maine Automobile Association and other
associations or public bodies - about n dozen besides
wyself in all. Some of these will thomsolven boar the
expense of the journey to Washington, out of their interest
in the matter! others will have their travelling expenses
paid out of 8 small but sufficient fund that I have reised
in subscription, the subscriptions ranging from five dollars
upward. No one is employed to represent 118.
Wood! dewn. A-60
4 LeC.
Senator Hole's affiliations with Senator Popper,
in whose old-guard, reactionary group he has Cound his
niche along with Senators Lodge and Smoot and others, and his
consequent reluctance to opposo him in what be believed was
a small matter from the political angle, has naturally brought
it into State Republican politics, and Judge Peters, who
is friendly to the Park but still noro interested in State
politics, has sought to bring no into it, to straighten
out the tangle they have made, but I have stendily refused
to be drawn in or take any hand in the political situation.
I have taken the matter up only from its importing ce to the
public and to conservation.
Mr. Loron E. Kimball who introducod himself
uninvited at a meeting held at Ellsworth at which Judge
Dessy, Judgo Petera and a number more were present, went
off and wrote to Sonator Pepper, though naked to keep out
of it, urging the continuence of the work on the wholly
Histaken ground of the benefit it was to working people
on the Island. This gave Senator Pepper, as Judge
Peters stated, in telling 230 about It, the opportunity
he wanted and he soised it to write the letter of which I
Woodlawn.A.60
5 Late
enclose
you copy. It is not private, since he forwarded 1t
to Judge Peters, with no request for privacy, as a statement
of his attitudo, and Judge Peters gave me copy.
In the commencement, as you will ace, he tekcas
high ground that no local considerations should enter into
consideration of plane for a nitional park's development.
This is quito right, if the two conflict, but equally it
cuts out, along with the working mon, the summer resident
whom personally I should wish to consider oven at some
sacrifico to e large/public -- as In the cast of camping
grounds, etceters.
As the letter goes on, Senator Pepper works
himself up apparently into an angry state and indirectly
threatons that the present feeling about oil, created by
the
Dohony-Fall- Sinclair investigations, rany be used as
a bose for attack on Mr. Rockefoller.
with regard to his attack on what he calls
a "network of roads", the "network" no far as it exists
lies wholly on Mr. Rockefoller's own land, being built
primarily for his own, for his children's and his friends'
and neighbors' 1100 at Seal Herber and Northeast Harbor, for
Waddawn. A-66
6 L.O.
riding and driving after the town roads had been made dangerous
by motors. All that we and the National Park Service have
planned is n single road encircling the combined 11888 of
Sargent, Jordan, Codar Swemp and Little Brown's Mountains,
without duplication at any point. with the exception of
n single section not three-quarter of a mile on length on the southern
front this driving road around the mountain, which has been
the point of Senator Pepper's real attack, is now, so for as
it lies on the National Park land, either completed OZ under
constructin.
In Senator Peppor's letter to Mr. Kimball,
confirmed by another to Judge Peters, he states, as you
will see, that there should be motor roads, though few,
and bridle paths, an well as foot paths for the development
of the Park. And, without melnowledgement, he adopts our
survey for the motor rond in toto, but would cut off the
funds obtained in contribution which are enabling us to
build the motor road by blocking construction of the
driving road which was associated with it in the Goverment's
approval and, Miah, relying on the good faith of the
Government in its approval, these contributions were secured.
Woodlawn A-60
7 L.C.
There the bridle paths should to 1.0 not where
we have planned, be does not state, but no other poute
than the one adopted can be devised that would give such
unity of control and exhibition to the Nati mal Pnak area.
The difference secres to reduce itself, recordingly,
to S questi 25 or whether this bridle path, whom existence
1st principle though not in route Senator Popper endorsen,
should be built wide enough for two light, horno-drewn
vehicles to pass or should be reduced to a nine foot
width, which is what I understand Secretary oric staten n
bridle path, if bridle path nlone, should be.
S nator Pepper's letter, though no privacy
was requested for st, in not a pleasant one in his
reference to Mr. Rockefoller and I have kept it from
ublication. In his attitude about motor roads, he has
charactoristically, as you will notice, Mirrow over without
hesitation the people associated with him in his first
attack, who wished to defent, or at least to divort, the
motor road.
Woodlan A-60
8 L.C.
(Lator)
Since I wrote this morning Judge Poters has
received, and telephoned to Mr. Lynan's office whoze a
stonographer tools 1 t down, a accond letter from Sonator
Popper, answoring one that Judge Peters wrote him, endosvor-
ing to smooth matters out and enclosing him as surveyor's
map showing exactly the National Park bounds in relation
to the work approved and unde : construction, and the
connections for Park approach and entrance now built
OF planned.
An ugly spirit shows 1tself again in this
letter, in which, however, the attack is riado on mo, as
Park suporIntendent, ruthor than on Mr. Rocksfollor
against whom, how ver, it really is directed.
Senator Pepper charges no with having "adroitly
slipped through", without or sultation or authority,
the work which I am doing. and with carrying out by
underhand and socret methods schemen I avoided statin,
openly.
200 answer to this liest (1) in the authority
for construction which I received in writing in July, 1922,
from the National Park Service and have nois on file, for
carrying out the work I have boon doing and an nou engaged
upon. Woodlawn. A-60
9 L.C.
(2) In the blueprint signed by both the Acting
Director of the National Park Service, Mr. Commerce, and
the Assistant Secretary of the Interior in charge of Parks,
Judge Finney, showing exactly what work and no other,
I was authorized to do, which han not been deviated from
at any point or exceeded by a single foot - as the approved
surveys which H have on record chow.
(3) In the report made by the Acting Director of
the National Park Service, Mr. Cummer, to the Director,
Mr. Mather, after a week's personal study of those surveys in
June, 1922, when he cause to Ber Harbor with Mr. Mather
for the purpose, and was commissioned by him to remin and
make a personal and detailed study of the euroyeys prepared.
(4) In the request from the Service that I
refrain from detailed discussion of the plan approved until
I had secured by gift the mdditional Blinds necessary to the
plan.
(5) In the authority given me to sock pledges for
construction costs front private SOUPOOS on the basis of the
plan authorized, and to expend the money so obtained,
there being no Federal appropriation for such work.
The ourvey authorized, shown on duplicate blue
Woodleun-1-60
10 L.C.
prints signed by Mr. Commerce, as Acting Director for the
National Park Service, and by hasistant See ethro of the
Interior Finney, for the Department of the Interior was
lodged In one copy in the National Park Service files, in
the other at Bar Harbor in the office of the super Intendent,
for his guidance; nor was authority for it Siven until the
National Park Service had received, in writing, approval of
it from the Hon. John E. Nelson, Representative from this
District and from Senator Halo and Senator Fornald,
representing the State at largo.
No alteration or deviation from that recorded plan
has been made at any time, and none is contemplated or
desired. The study which resulted in the plan was long
and thorough, lasting over 11 your with competent surveyors
in the field, and it was Intended to bo final.
On that plan the contributions made for construction
were given. The work it contemplated, on motor road and
driving road, is now largely done. To arrest it would
be to leave a wreckage of incomplete and fruitless work,
disfiguring the Pick and proso:ving indefinitely the memory
of the attack now made on the National Park Service road-
building program for the Park's development.
Wood lown A-60
Ellsworth, Maine, March 19, 1924.
Mr. George L. Stebbins,
753 Fifth Avenue,
New York City, N. Y.
Dear Mr. Stebbins:-
This morning an answer to my letter came from Pepper.
I telephoned it to Bar Harbor and they will send you a copy from
there on this mail. I am enclosing you a copy of my reply. I
fully understand the situation you speak of in regard to Mr. Dorr.
I have also talked it over with Judge Deany. It is not probable
that either of 118 will be able to go but we are doing everything
we gan in P. preliminary way. I hope to get the thing pretty well
straightened out with Fred Hale and to some extent with Pepper.
At any rate, we know his position and that is a whole lot. Of
course he is supposed to be the backbone of the opposition. I
shall suggest to Mr. DQrr end the others that Deasy and I each
write a letter to the Secretary to be used in a brief way instead
of our testimony; also I have suggested that we have a meeting
here this week of some of the Bar Harbor people, including Deasy
and myself and map out the situation in a way partly to take care
of this very matter of Mr. Dorr.
Fred Lynam is going as the head of the Delegation, Chair-
-3-
nan of the Committee, and he is a most excellent man. He has good
judgment and understands the situation and in able to present it.
We had thought of this before and Deasy and I had agreed that Fred
Lynam WBS the best man to EO. In a way, the fewer lawyers you have
in the matter the better, 60 it won' t look like a paid lawyers'
hearing. Nelson will conduct the case as a representative of this
district in Congress. Au a matter of fact, he is a very able
lawyer and will quickly catch onto all the necessary details.
I
have also written all the others in the Delegation and they are
actively interested. I do not refer specially in this to Senator
Hale who is not quite AO actively interested, but he in really
obliged to be on our side and I have no doubt will be.
We also feel that it is very fortunate that you are able
to be there and able to go to the hearing. I think you will be
fully as effective and perhaps more BO than Lynam because you are
sort of a mixture of non-resident and native and can understand
and present both points of view. I asked Harry Lynam this morning
what people would be there to oppose the automobile road which
Pepper now favors and he said that Harold Peabody would be there
with a few others but he ought to be squelched very easily. This
man, Pepper, is the only one we are afraid of because the Depart-
ment is so much afraid of him, as is evident from the fact that
he had this plan held up in this way.
3-
I suppose that everybody will have in mind the point
that the burden of proof in on the objectors to this thing. The
plan having been approved and partially executed it is held at
the request of people who object and they should be obliged to come
forward first and show their whole hand. Your lawyer will appreciate
this and you also. I think the thing is going pretty well. You
will see by my answer to Pepper's letter how I look at his suggestions
Will also send you a copy of my letter to the Secretary if it is
thought best to have it written.
Yours very truly,
[J.A. Peters]
Ellsworth, Maine, March 19, 1924.
Hon. John E. Nelson,
House of Representatives,
Washington, D. C.
Dear Nelson:-
There will be sent you in this mail from Bar
Harbor, a copy of Pepper's reply to my letter and I will
send in this, copy of my reply to him, so you will see the
situation.
The Delegation from this section will be in
Washington Monday so 8.13 to have plenty of time Tuesday to
get you in touch with the situation. I have told them that
a lawyer of your experience is able to take on information
rapidly and assimilate it for the purpose of a hearing. This
is one of the most important matters that has occurred in this
District Rince I entered Congress in 1913. There is more
interest in the matter by far than in anything else that has
touched our Washington Delegation. I think it is going along
all right but it would be a very serious thing if it should be
otherwise.
You will have very fine assistance. Fred C. Lynam,
head of the Banking & Trust Company of Bar Harbor, will be
there B.B Chairman of the Committee in this section. George L.
Stebbins, a voter in Seal Harbor and for twenty-five years has
been agent for the Seal Harbor Realty Company and in close touch
with all the Bunner residents there, he, himself, being a summer
resident who came down to manage the prope rty of Mr. Cookney
and others years alzo, will also be there. You oan count on these
two men to be able to present the matter intelligently and clear-
ly as witnesses and they are representative citizens. Stebbins
also represents the large ranss of non-residenta in his section.
Of course many other people will be there representing many
different interests but I want to call your special attention
to the fact that you can rely most on these two men for help.
sic
Mr.
Door
whose life is bound up in this work, knows
more about it than anybody else but he must be handled with care.
He is so earnest and rather discursive that if allowed free rein,
he would take 500 Long and go beyond the important sub jeot, but
of course he is invaluable for certain purposes. I am sorry I
cannot go on but it in impossible and Judge Densy can' t go either
-3-
because he has a consultation in Augusta Tuesday, but we will
both write letters if thought advisable.
You will find Harry Lynam (A. H. Lynam) very
servicable
and knows all about the details but you had better not use him
as a witness because he is the attorney for Mr. Rockefeller locally
and we want to keep that part of it out of sight so far as
possible.
Mr. Stebbins is going to bring down from New York with
him B. lawyer named Debevoise, who will be valuable for anything
you want and who will especially represent the Seal Harbor Realty
Company, which is is Company that I au intereated in both 8B
stockholder and director and which owns practically all the un-
improved land in Seal Harbor and vicinity, as well 88 several
large cottages and other improvements there situated. The Company
and its owners represent a pretty broad interest in that vicinity.
Mr. Rockefeller 18 one of the stockholders but not a director.
It might be well to bear in mind that other atockholders outside
of that locality are Merritt Ober, Town Treasurer of Mount Desert,
Dr. A. C. Hagerthy of Ellsworth, the estate of the late Judge
King of Ellsworth, myself, outside of the summer residente of the
southern part of the Island.
These are just points that occur to me at the present
writing for your use in connection with the other matters.
Yours very truly,
Dup. Copy in C.W.Eliot
Papers.B.9
H.U.A.
Elleworth, Maine, March 19, 1924.
Ron. George tharton Papper,
United States senate.
bachington, D. C.
Dear benctor Pupper:-
I am very much obliged to you for your letter of
the 17th. which, I think, helps clear up the situation. As
I said before. We have the some object in view, to rit, the
best interest of the public st large, and the only question
is is to we best way of achieving it.
3 2020 worry that you think the roed arount the
urgent-Jordan Mountain truet, a mistako. If 16 is a mintake
11 was made about two years AGO when the road were 1610 out un-
der the direct supervision of the National riski Service and
the work progressed too for and too muc): money has been
arent on 11. now, in ay opinion, to make it foundible to abandon
11 and 1 think What you will finally agree with 100 in that
proposition, especially in view of the tach, shiet I tries to
emphasize before, Wet this roudie com letion 1 is oo bound up
with tic completion or the automobile roade that we are 80
anxious for that we can't drop one without dropping both.
3 de not think at could be fousible, and certainly
not just to the people of Mine so greatly interested in 22118
matter, to DOW at this day leave the question all to whether
the purtly finished road should be completed to any outside body
appointed by the Secretary or otherwise.
The location of this Fond in the western acction was
examined and approved by the offácials of the Purk service who
case down here in person and went over the route. suggested some
oranges, and the road 78a built, or is being built, exactly as
1414 out by then. The Dian comprehending thene two road systems
was also approves and supportes in writing by Senator Hale and
Fernald and Representative Helson in 1988. I take 11 the only
object in referring it to another body would be to inform the
Secretary as to the dexirability or otherwise of completing the
road, which is just what this hearing next Eddresstry is to be
for and, es I understand it, there will be precent st the Hearing
everybody competent to advise the Secretary and supply him with
a complete source or information on every subject bearing
upon the matter. The Secretary ORD really get more information
from the people who will be present at that meeting than he
could possibly get from any commission he might appoint. Besides,
that, or course, 1t is highly important that the matter be settled
now.
-2-
3/19/24
Personally, however, I quite endorce your suggestion
that in the future un advisory body might be ereated to study 6-0
make in the mutter of any future course, although
the faut should not be lost sight of that the people in the Furk
Service are the ones provided for that purpose and the Secretary
of the Interior at any time can 0311 upon anybody at anytime for
advice or suggestions. I do think, however, UT L in the future
it Touli be wise to have full 00-operation ao is the possible by
all interested persons and I for one shall atrive to bring that
about. I Delieve I have Intely been trus g one of The illecture of
the Trustees of Public Reservations,
he to your integration about the Eugis
Fond route, you are already were that that road goos In Wis place
you desire 15, that in along the kestern biano or imatic Mountain,
I notice you suggest, horever, sb this automobile roya ought
not to touch Bubble Ponit anywhere, that it any be Infi STATE open
Sur the use of residents, pedestrians and swimmers".
The Butomobile road is Already built in that nection
uni does st one point, before it awarves off to the soutward,
very nearly touch this pond. This in necessary owing to the
surface of the earth in this locality. The road dould not have
been carried through any other course on mocount of 4 revine in
that vicinity: It 10 not desirable what this sead bit used for
the purposes you mention, in fact this purpose is prohibited
because that pund is is source of the vater supply for Bsr Barbar
running into Sagle Lake and both Laken we protected from compers,
swimmers, etc., by regul Liona authorized by in in this state.
the all appreciate the fact that there wri nome people,
faw in number, who are opposed to Chin autonobile 2010 nyb tom
and do not >gree with you and me that it in necessary, are e matter
of fact, practically expedient for the Des use or Like Park by
the public, and very likely DONE of those people may be at the
hearing, but their objections are entirely welfish. They don't
want automobiles in their immediate vicinity. That matter WAS
fought out and taken care of by the 10ginInture of this State
more than ten years ago ani you and 1 know the public will
come to this Varia in automobiles in great numbers and that in
about the only way they will adas and if they do not have these
automobile reada Where will be # riot, so that opposition really
cannot stand for a moment.
to here, knowing the value of your support and believing
that we munt to accomplish the name things, will appreciate it
highly if you would GO to the hearing next Tednesday and state
your position, being in favor of the automobile roade on planned
and, if I understand it correctly, that write you atill consider
that en error was made originally in planning the section of roud
in the western part, that it could be unwice not to finish it at
the present time, it having been DO nearly completed, and further
that in your opinion an advisory body should be arranged for in
the future to assist the authorities in the matter of any future
rosda
C.I.P.
-3-
3/19/24
There might be some difference of opinion about this latter
matter and other may not feel as I do, that there would he
no objection to such a body. That matter could be handled in
the future. The principal thing now is not to have this plan
of road building stopped. If it is stopped it would be a very
serious thing for us in this locality and will interfere and
perhaps kill the building of these roads which we both believe
are necessary.
Permit me to say that you must not for a moment con-
sider declining to come to the State Convention. The Republicans
are expecting you and count upon your being here. They have E
very high regard for you and there is not E. reason in the world
why a slight misunderstanding concerning this Park should change
your attitude or cause any embarrasement, It would be a good
deal more embarrassing if you did not come than if you came, There
is of course EL widespread interest in this road building plan for
the Park, especially in the automobile roads, which you favor 8.8
T/E all do. There was at first a misunderstanding about your
position but that is being corrected and by the time we have the
State Convention here, with this meeting next Wednesday behind us,
everything will be perfectly harmonious and I cannot urge you
too strongly not to disappoint us on that occasion.
With kind regards, I am
Very truly yours,
J.A.P.
[John A Peters]
Woodbren-A-6
copy
UNITED STATES COURTS,
Judge's Chambers.
Portland, Maine.
Ellsworth, Maine, March 20, 1924.
The Honorable Herbert Work,
Secretary of the Interior,
Washington, D. C.
Dear Mr. Secretary:- -
The land for Lafayette Park was given by public
spirited citizens for the use and benefit of the people. Legisla-
tion which I assisted in passing, when representing this section
of the state in Congress, was intended to insure forever the widest
use by the public, consistent with an intelligent management and
development of the Park property.
As the establishment of this great Park was due
almost wholly to the unequaled public spirit and tireless efforts of
George B. Dorr, the people here in close touch with the situation
regarded his designation by your Department as local director not
only a proper recognition of his activity and interest, but as a
guaranty that the purposes for which the Park was established would
be carried out in the broadest and most intelligent way.
The value and usefulness of this Park depend up-
on its accessibility. The mountains have been there a long time but
heretofore only a few favored with leisure, lungs and legs have been
able to enjoy their beauties.
In 1922, after careful study by your splendid
Park Bureau, a limited system of roads was laid out comprising a
horse and foot road in the western section, being substantially one
road around the mountains, and two automobile roads in the Green
Mountain, eastern section. The location and purpose of these roads
were well understood by the people here and when the plan received
the official approval of your Department and the endorsement of our
two Senators and our Representative in Congress, we felt that a
highly important and desirable step in the right direction had been
taken. Coincidentally with this action Mr. Dorr was authorized by
your Department to obtain, if possible, subscriptions from interested
citizens to carry out the plan. Substantial aid was obtained by him
and the work of building actively entered upon by your authority
and approval, and, during the last two years much of the work has
been completed in a highly satisfactory manner and is in a fair way
to be finished in the near future.
-2- 3/20-24.
It was something of a shock to the people of this
vicinity, a few months ago, to learn that notice had been
given of a hearing before you to consider the feasibility
of continuing the building program previously agreed upon.
Frankly, we consider that the good faith of the
Government is involved. No private individual could and no
Government should get money on the strength of representations
and plans and refuse to carry out the contract in its entirety.
The interest of the people who will be the greatest users of this
Park, whose attitude and wishes I well know, demand that nothing
be done to jeopardize the completion of these roads which are
built without expense to the Government.
It may be that the course or character of the roads
where not completed can be advantageously changed in details, al-
though I doubt it; but if anybody comes forward with such a
proposition the burden is on him to satisfy you that the change
is wise and that it can be financed.
I do not consider the possibility of your discontinuing
the whole plan, which would be a clear breach of faith with the
subscribers and with the public; but urge that any suggested
change should be considered by you not only on its merits but
with a view to its practical effect on the situation including
the present opportunity of having the Government plans carried
out at private expense.
It is also very important, in my opinion, that the con-
troversy,- - if it amounts to that when nearly everybody is on one
side, - should be settled now when every opportunity of obtaining
information and views will be available to you at the hearing, -
which I greatly regret public business will prevent my attending.
Yours very truly,
JOHN A. PETERS
ANPA Sawtelle call. 849 f a
THE NATIONAL PARKS ASSOCIATION
1512 H STREET NORTHWEST
WASHINGTON, D. C.
President
HERBERT HOOVER
Vice-Presidents
NICHOLAS MURRAY BUTLER
JOHN MASON CLARKE
March 20, 1924.
CHARLES LAWRENCE HUTCHINSON
WILLIAM KENT
JOHN BARTON PAYNE
Treasurer
Mr. William Otis Sawtelle,
CHARLES J. BELL
PRESIDENT OF THE AMERICAN SECURITY
University Club,
& TRUST COMPANY OF WASHINGTON
1510 Walnut Street,
Executive Secretary
Philadelphia, Penna.
ROBERT STERLING YARD
Dear Mr. Sawtelle:
Executive Committee
You are entered at the Cosmos Club for a rocam
HERBERT HOOVER
LEILA MECHLIN
on the 26th. At the station, take the Mt. Pleasant
JOHN BARTON PAYNE
CHARLES D. WALCOTT
car and get out at Vermont Avenue and H Sts., which
ROBERT STERLING YARD
stop is directly opposite the Club.
Trustees
THE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE AND
Sincerely yours,
TRUMAN ABBE
ARTHUR EUGENE BESTOR
GEORGE F. BOWERMAN
ROBERT S. BROOKINGS
Executive Secretary your
HENRY GRIER BRYANT
THOMAS BURKE
JOHN B. BURNHAM
WILLIAM E. COLBY
H. W. DE FOREST
LEONIDAS DENNIS
CHARLES W. ELIOT
FREDERIC ERNEST FARRINGTON
J. WALTER FEWKES
JOHN H. FINLEY
P.S.: A half dozen copies of the Lafayette report are
WILLIAM C. GREGG
being sent to you at Haverford.
GEORGE BIRD GRINNELL
GEORGE F. KUNZ
IRWIN LAUGHLIN
A. LAWRENCE LOWELL
HELEN NICOLAY
EDMUND SEYMOUR
CHARLES SHELDEN
MRS. JOHN DICKINSON SHERMAN
GEORGE SHIRAS, 3RD
HENRY BALDWIN WARD
The
History
TRUST
archive
Dea
only
Rec
Ennorth, Maine, March 20th 1934.
Hon. Herbert Work,
Hon
Baczetary of the Interior,
Washington, D. C.
Abd
My dear Hr. Secrotary:-
A court amailan will prevon's my attendence 10 the Pink
hearing March 26th. I eth deoply interested in the Lafsyette National
Park. From my birth my home and always been within with of ita hills.
1 - 2
Under Dr. Charles W. Eliot President, I an officer of the public
corporation that through many 11850, devines and purchasea searced title
to the Prink and presented is to the Federal Government. I was much
You
gratified when your the into Secretary Lane, visited and
inspected the Park and again leter when I BILL the plan of Pack roads
approved, nitor careful commission, by the Park Service. Thann offi-
einily approved rondo extund but a few miles through can thousand norea
Vie
of Durk land.
They are however admirably planned ao 80 to afford protection tto
the Park and to make none of itn beauties accessible to the great major-
1 ty of un who from nequasity or choice NIC not mountain climbers.
I 413.3 aspecially planned when George B. Dorr unu appointed
custolian of the Park and civen charge of ito ronda. In public apirit,
enthualmum, anethy and insugrity Mr. Dorr in ented by all who know him
at one hundred pe% cent.
Mr. Dorr will given explicit authority by the Park Service to
rnina money from privise courded, and to proceed with the road construd-
tion. This, without compensation or possibility of personal benefit, he
proceeded to do. From generous and public spirited citizens he secured
Large contributions and has curried on the work precisely, I believe,
in addressing wish the officially approved plan.
A obort time age I lonened with astonialment that share VITA
opposition 20 the continuance or the work on the rondo no officially
planned and from dolar sourden opposition to 11 Park rouds.
I believe shut BOND purs of all public parko should be middle
processible to the public. Thin the opposition any 10 sn erronoous
theory.
Objections from 80160 Bourges 8° only to details, Whether
in respect to detallo any monification would improve the plan should
of course be carefully considered, though to my wind no voilfication
that hns been succested 19 necessary or desirable.
I
are autu the opporition to the road building plan as a
whole 10 confined to a very, vary nishll fractions1 part of the persons
familier with, and intermed 1. the Park, and while minders in not in
the internat of the public.
M
Verry sincerely yours,
Cleans,
Luere B. Deasy to Hubert Work
Letter, March 20, 1924
Bar Harbor Village Improvement Association
https://historytrust.net/digitalarchive/find?query=Deasy&view=4
1/5
Ellsworth, Maine, March 20, 1924.
Hon. Frederick Hale,
United States Senate,
Washington, D. C.
Dear Fred:-
I this morning have youre of the 18th with Mahoney's
letter to you. Evidently he does not understand the situation
at all. I will see him this morning and straighten that out
with him.
There was a slight mnisunderstanding at the start
among Bone of the Bar Harbor people BUG to your attitude but I
thought I hiad fully taken care of that. You can point to the
records in the Interior Department, as I have been, where in
1922 you and Fernald and Nelson each endorsed and approved this
plan of road building and you have consistently helped every
Bince, end especially in helping take care of the objections of
Senator Pepper which were based partly on 8. misunderstanding.
You will, of course, be at the hearing before the
Interior Department Wednesday and continué to endorse the same
plan RB practically everybody now does and that hearing ought to
result in clearing 1233 the whole situation, if there is anythingt
to clear up. There 1a no doubt of course but what this plan
will be continued and the roads finished and when that is done
everybody will be happy and forget any temporary disagreement.
T yesterday sent you copies of Pepper's letter to me and my
reply. I will Bend you copies of my letter to the Secretary of
the Interior today or to-morrow. I can't be there so I am going
to visite him.
Just assoon as thin hearing is over and satisfactorily
ended the newspapers will be full of it and they will be full of
the fnot that you were present and assisted in carrying it through.
We will see to that down here. We will clean up everything.
Yours very truly,
[J.A. Peters]
Elloworth, Maine, Maroh 21, 1924.
Mr. George L. Stebbino,
753 Fifth Avenue,
c/o Duncan Candler,
New York City, N. Y.
Deas Mr. Stebbina:-
I have your letter of the 19th. I enclose you copy of
my letter to the Secretary of the Interior which I have Bent to
Harry Lynam to have 115 the hearing and also copy of letter from
Judge Denny to be the Baine way. I think you now have pretty
much everything in hand, 12.2.2 of which you can show to Mr. Debevoise.
By the way, Senator Fernald 1 13 up Alok and I have
written a lotter for 11.1m to Bign at his requent and I enclose
copy of that nloo.
I think the china to do now 1 " to Quil off the opposition
as
much na possible. I BIN very glad you have in a way taken onre
of Mr. Luquer.
I understand that Frank Rowell of Ber Harbor han Bome
notion of going down to Washington. He is an old friend of my
family and WBS assisted nome by them 111 college before he married
this righ women. I have wtttten him at 470 Park Avenue, New York,
to such tilotics nnd kepp away from Washington. I don't know
whether he will or not and I will also now that I know he is in
New York write 11110 so go and nee you and got some information
[ro] which will give you 13 chance, turn him off. I think he can be
turned off very easily, especially when no known that Senator
Pepper in in favor of the automobile rondo.
Yourn truly,
[John A. Peters]
Woodlawn A-60
most
Cambridge, Mass.,
Clary.
22 March 1924
Dear Mr. Secretary:
Your kind reply dated February 4th to my letter to
you of February 1, 1924, encourages no to write to you again
about the Hearing you are to give next Wednesday to the persons
intorested in the development of the Lafayette National Park
among whom you have horotofore supposed that divergent opinions
concerning the management of the Park and of the construction of
roads therein are strongly held.
At this Hearing I am sure
you will find that the different parties are not "so far apart
in their conclusions as appears from ex parte statements of each"
a statement which I quote from your letter to ne of February 4th.
There is one matter, however, closely connected with
the subjects which will be discussed at that Hearing concerning
which I want to tettify now before the Hearing, namely, the qual-
ity and character of George B. Dorr, the present Superintendent
of the Park. of course I do not know whether you propose or do
not propose to ask Mr. Dorr to testify at the Hearing; but I do
know that he will avoid speaking at the Hearing if he can properly
do so, partly because he dislikes very much to talk even in private
about his own qualities and achievements, and partly because he
has been from his boyhood afflicted with a stammer which was orig-
inally very pronounced and conspicuous, and still is, although he
has acquired remarkable control over it. This stammer provents
him from uttering a word for an appreciable time.
2
[1
have known him well for many years and his father
and mother before him, and on the subject of the right develop-
ment of the beauties of the Island of Mount Desert he and I have
been in intimate relations for at loast thirty years. In the
first place, Mr. Dorr is a man of extraordinary publie spirit.
lle has spent nearly the whole of the considerable property which
he inherited from his father and mother in efforts to obtain and
hold parcels of land on the Island which he felt ought to be
secured for public uses.
He has given his tine and strength to
undertakings for preserving the natural beauties of the Island as
respects landscape combining mountains, forests, and sea and the
vegetable and animal life native to the spot or imported and don-
iciled there by man.
He knows the Island itself and its present
population as nobody else knows then. His plans for the future
include not only the conservation of its ancient beauties in
shrubs, flowers, and trees, but the addition of all forms of
vegetable and animal life which can thrive on its various soils
and its sub-arctic clinate. Finally Mr. Dorr is a man of the
highest probity and the koenest sense of honor. He is incapable
of any disloyalty to friend, employer, or official superior, or
any disingenuousness towards critica or opponents.
You are doubtless aware that the Superintendent of
the Lafayette National Park has been working for two years past
under the immediate direction of the Secretary of the Interior
and the Director of the National Park Service, and that he has
conformed absolutely to the directions and plans given him by
them.
If any suggestion is made at the Hearing next Wednesday
that a new suporvising body over the work dono by the Suporintend-
ent 05 the Park be created, I very much hope that you will state
3
that in your judgment the supervision now exercised over the
work going on in the Lafayette National Park is adequate to
secure the development of the Park in accordance with the
needs of the people of Maine and the nation at large.
I am, with high regard,
Sincerely yours
[c. W.Eliot]
Non. Hubert work
470 Park Avenue,
New York City,
March 24, 1924.
Hon. John A. Peters,
Ellsworth, Maine.
Dear Mr. Peters :
It was good of you to take 80 much thought in mak-
ing plain to me the situation about the proposed roads on the island.
Your explanation is reassuring and I have the comfort of feeling that
we could discuss the whole business dispassionately.
When the park was created, I rather distinctly understood that
it would be a reservation for preserving the wild nature there; that it
would be, as I think Mr. Dorr said, a " sanctuary ". It was on that
basis that I was glad to buy land and build my house. The lumberman
had been driven away and any form or commercial exploitation seemed un-
likely.
This later idea of a park as a playground to which all the
rest of the country is invited has been disquieting. I have not de-
sired exclusiveness for the sake of exclusiveness, but I have thought
that the beauty that we sought to protect could not possibly survive
the coming of large numbers and especially of the undisciplined kind.
While that has been my personal opinion and even my prefer-
ence, I have not for a moment felt that I should have my small pleasure
while the larger number refrained from enjoying itself from an equally
reasonable, though different, point of view.
This issue of the roads has brought us to a definition of
policies that was inevitable and that in the end will be helpful all
round.
I only regret if it has stirred up certain hostilities be-
tween the year-round folk and the summer residents that always Beem
only too ready to break out, when the extremists on both sides make
all the rest of UB olf-conscious and unhappy.
Three weeks ago, when the road-building was explained to me,
I agreed with the people for whom Senator Pepper Was said to be spokes-
man. I signed a certain petition putting our protest in form and I
even sent out to New York people who are property holders in Bar Har-
bor a letter explaining that position and asking for their support if
they agreed.
I may say, in the first place, that the plan of roade that I
saw and which was the basis of my letter does not agree with the plan
showed me to-day by Mr. Stebbins; but my plan was supposed to be the
copy of one in existence but not made generally public.
In the last three weeks, the whole matter seems to have taken
on a different phase and I think that there has been a good deal of
discussion at cross purposes. For myself, I have about concluded
that, since we have the park, every policy must be considered from that
Woodlawn Museum- A+60.
2
fact; that the sanctuary idea must be abandoned and the park for all-
comera be accepted.] There may be less injury to the hills and woods
on this basis than from private privilege which might at any time per-
petrate something intolerable.
I also find that, in DO far as have had responses to my
circular, one-fifth agree with the point of view therein expressed and
the majority is for the roads. In this majority are Mrs. Kennedy and
her sister, one of Mrs. Kennedy's nieces, and persons like Mrs. Max
Farrand.
My seeing Mr. Stebbine this morning has also put a different
aspect upon the matter, and the telegram from Mr. Pepper seems to me to
take the ground from the opposition anyway. If Senator Pepper says that
he misunderstood, all of us have misunderstood.
I am not expecting to go to Washington.
I do want to put in a plea that every effort be made to save
the roads and the 1eland from any commercialization.
I
have
seen
the
Mohawk Trail runbned by signe and gasoline stations, and finally by a
cheap plaster oating place where once was the climax of the view.
I
have seen signs increase on the road from Bangor to Bar Harbor. May
there be some absolute restrictions to this sort of thing on the is-
land ! Let uo have such roads as are deemed necessary, but let ue
confine them to a nature that 18 strictly unadorned.
Always with warm regards,
Sincerely yours,
Form 1204
CLASS OF SERVICE
SYMBOL
WESTERN UNION
CLASS OF SERVICE
SYMBOL
Telegram
Telegram
Day Letter
Blue
WESTERN
Day Letter
Blue
Night Message
Nite
Night Message
Nite
Night Letter
NL
Night Letter
NL
If none of these three symbols
appears after the check (number of
TEL
RAM
If none of these Ihree symbols
appears after the check (number of
words) this is a telogram. Other-
words) this is a telegram. Other-
wise its character In indicated by the
symbol appearing after the check
NEWCOMB CARLTON. PRESIDENT
GEORGE W. E. ATKINS, FIRST VICE-PRESIDENT
wise its character is Indicated by the
symbol appearing after the check.
RECEIVED AT BLLSWORTH,
13RZ A 11
BN NEW YORK NY 1106PM MAR 24 1924
JOHN A PETERS
MSELLSWORTH ME
SAW ROWILL HE WITHDRAWSO INJECTION AND WILL NOT GO TO HEARING
G L STEBBINS
Woodlawn. A-60
135P
To the Banatora entit luponintatives from Meine in the
Congress:-
We, citizens of Handoox County, this day nt
Elleworth, conpectfully represent
That the Interior Department how approved this building
of certain rondo to open Lofoyotto Park to the publio; this one
of thene ronda in under construction and one on effort 10 being
mivin to induce the so forbit its completion.
It 11 perhups not mitorial this anybody or, indeed, that
nourly everybody, wanta the road completed. The material question
in whether dit 10 a wine public improvement.
Those conn1orntiona cana so anow that 11 1s B decirable
public improvement:
It linia been approved often exemination by reaponaible
officiale of the Department repronenting the Government. Thoma
opposed to it, though persona of higheat charactor, apark only
for their own internate, opiniona ndi donires.
About a hundred por cons of the peoplo whose homel nzo
nest 1 t and who know MOUS about 19, believe that the rond is
ponential for the bent 1100 of the Park.
A very mma minority only of STrouiionto nro Builing
That the rond be abandoned
Without the road she soonio besution of the Perlia in-
torior are naceaoible only so the unril musber who 12.70 inclined to
and rible to walk through and glish over 1t. Thene benuting should
be middle available to ell.
Woodlaun A-bo
When *11 the motito propoued and
there will La only one uil. of HONA for every thouning morell
of Park.
These roada unreadable text hearaday so parateos plan Park
from the of
The perioda through whome public spirit
and densted without to she Nation ballevo slout this
road in necessary to 4120 Park's nonfulness.
We prey shan you #121 uno your boat entervers to have
the prement work which An bring onzrico on without to the
- Go yo rnmons, continued and not abusioned.
February 18, 1984.
Bar Harbor,
Is. 1. Donny
(Judge Suprive Court)
Itc. II. Whiting (County Assorney)
Ellaworth,
Southwoot Herbor,
14. 11. Arey
(County commissioner)
Southweat Harbor,
J. D. Phillipo (Physician, Member of Logislature
Northenas Horbor,
L. IE. Kimball
(Hotel proprietor)
Southwest Harbor,
L. E. Holmon
B. H. Young
(Poat Heatery Bur Harbor)
Bar Harbor,
Southwoot Barbor,
J. E. Wnon
(Bardine prohus)
Bar Barbor,
Guy IT. Torrey (Insurance)
Best Herber,
Irwing o. Cleant (Fich United
B. II. Candage
centractor)
Deal Berber,
L. To. Holison
(mo rohent)
Southwast Harbor,
I. F. Unhoney
(Clerk County)
Ellsworth,
John A. Potera
(Judge 13. B. Cours)
Eilworth,
Drvid D. Rodick (Limyor)
Bar Harbor,
Harry L. Crabtruc (Judge Municipal Court)
Elleworth,
Stonington,
Frod A. Terrey (Operator Stone Quarry)
Stonington,
Peroy T. Glerie (Laryor,member LoginInture)
Brooklin,
A. IC. Farmeorth (Formar pastbur Governor's
Council)
Bedgwich,
Pozey Bargont, (Gense SonsSez)
BAR HARBOR GIRLS
PARK HEARING AT
LEGION
MEN
GATHER
MORE
THA
PLAYED FAST BALL
WASHINGTON TODAY
FOR BIG SMOKER
PUPI
Season Closes With Record of Six
Matters of Vital Importance Under
Nearly
100
Enjoy Informal Social
Games Out of Eight: Miss Mayo
Discussion There Upon Which
Evening
With
Bright
Program
Honor Roll for G
Was Fine Coach Capt. Eve-
and Banquet
Fine One: Desp
National Park Road Develop-
rize
and Storms R
lyn Stalford's Team All
ment May Depend
Stars,
At big smoker at George Edwin Kirk
Work Is
Post, American Legion, held on Friday
As the TIMES goes to press, March
With a record of winning six games
evening one of the most successful
Schools in town e
26th, there is taking place in Washing-
out of eight and with one of the two de-
social gatherings of Legion men for a
on March 21st and
ton before the Secretary of the Depart-
feats a loss by one point only, the Girls
long time was enjoyed by more than
absent and not tar
ment of the Interior, Dr. Hubert|
Basketball team of Bar Harbor/High has
90 men.
months is of interes
a hearing relative to the matter of con-
class
made a splendid season's record. The
Everything was informal. Vice
Com-
Registration figu
tinuance of road development in Lafay-
then
five girls coached by Miss Mona Mayo,
mander Albion F. Sherman made a few
Clara West, Grade
ette National Park.
in the
Girls' Work Secretary of the Y. W. .A.
remarks. John A and Norman Shaw
Liscomb, Grades
ves to
and with Evelyn Stalford as captain have
For the plan, which was approved in
were there with some songs and some
Linda Leland, Gra
places.
been at work since the early autumn
1922 and on which work has been done
dancing and they need no description.
Miss Mabel Chase
eaders,
when they organized and went into train-
in the road development since and is
Moore's orchestra played, as always,
119. In the Em
d also
ing. They have established a fine record
still continuing to be done, a host of
delightfully. Dr. Ells did some magic
grades are: Mrs. A
this year, one which may be used to
Maine proponents will appear.
and amusing slight of hand Clarence
IV, 29; Miss Pauli
fficult,
establish a fine precedent one in which as
Among them will be Fred C. Lynam
Hodgkins danced, as always, making
and IV, 25; Mrs
ssible.
the seasons pass it is hoped the commun-
of Bar Harbor, vice-president of the
an addition to the interest of the pro-
Grade V, 24; Mrs
lity is
ity will take increasing interest. The
Bar Harbor Village Improvement So-
gram. The boys themselves sang all
VI, 29; Miss Sue
of the
team this year was: Evelyn Stalford,
ciety; President C. E. Dow of the Bar
the new songs and some of the old ones,
and VII, 28; Miss
udges,
Capt,; Marie Anderson, Manager; Lyda
Harbor Board of Trade, Dr. J. D.
singing them with heartiness whichbe-
VII, 25; Mrs. G.
ogram,
Pettigrew, Helen Suminsby, Dorothy
Phillips of Southwest Harbor, a state
tokened both musical ability and real
VIII, 27 Miss
cher of
Bracey, Gertrude Emery.
senator; Chauncey D. Joy of Northeast
enjoyment. Dr. Morrison regaled
VIII, 26; total, 21
those
The schedule follows:
Harbor, prominent in all community
the group with his usual ability at story-
The attendance
were
December 14 at Bar Harbor-Franklin
matters; Oliver L. Hall of Bangor, editor
telling
not absent in Mi
earers.
High School, score 50 to 2 in Bar Har-
and part owner of the Bangor Commer-
The evening may be said to have
room: Charles H
Evelyn
bor's favor.
cial, who knows Mount Desert as few
centered in the table whereon was spread
Donald Harris, P
much:
January 18 at astine-Castine Nor-
newspaper men can; Sam E. Conner city
a most delicious "Feed." Mrs. John
Lyon, Marguerite
nd be-
mal School, score 19 to 16 in favor of Bar
editor of the Lewiston Journal, who last
Casey is too close to the hearts of all
McLean, Alonzo M
ing to
Harbor.
year wrote one of the best feature stories
Legion men and their friends to need any
Lionel Stewart, M
fter 15
January 25 at Ellsworth-Ellsworth
of Lafayette National Park after several
more laurels but she received them
Webber: not tar
he dis-
High School, 47 to 3 for Bar Harbor.
days exploring it; David O. Rodick, who
Friday night. The table was a delight-
Lawrence Grant,
lie" to
February 8 at Bar Harbor-Castine
has been actively interested in Park
ful picture with a Statue of Liberty for
Sylvia Grey, C
er, the
Normal School 28 to 3 for Bar Harbor.
matters since its beginning; Albion F.
centrepiece and with attractive dishes
Hamor, Donald
:he sta-
February 15 at Bar Harbor-Lee|.
Sherman of the Bar Harbor TIMES, who
and silver and all the delicious attributes
Lean, Alonzo Mit
ecision
emy, 43 to 14/for Bar Harbor
has handled much publicity for Island
of banquet in their places, while a deli-
Gerald Mosley, I
e else-
February 22 at Augusta-Cony
High
and Park.
cious clam stew was served.
Paine, Margaret
sion for
School, 44 to 20 in favor of Cony.
And in addition to the local men and
worth.
;talford
February 23 at Bangor-Bangor High
the newspaper men, there are present
Y. W. C. A. CLUB TO
Mrs. Cunningha
is:
The
School, 20 to 16 for Bar Harbor.
at Washington, besides Supt. George B.
GIVE THREE NEW PLAYS
Frances Ahlblad,
ersona-
March 14 at Bar Harbor-Bangor
Dorr, his assistant, A. H. Lynam and
Bertrelle Gower, 1
letter
High School, 21 to 20 for Bangor.
his chief ranger, B, L. Hadley, Maine
The Y. W. C. A. Dramatic Club has
iel McQuinn, Ha
y word
men who represent great interests.
decided upon Friday evening, April 4th
beth Moore, Albe:
use and
TWO TOURNAMENTS
James Q. Gulnac, whose name is syn-
as the date of the presentation of the
bur: not tarly
corner
START AT Y. M. C. A.
onymous with every forward movement
three one-act plays they have been pre-
Brewer, Ailene
went to
in Maine; Manager A. L. T. Cummings
paring. These plays are varied in their
Bertelle Gower
which
Milton Fogg finished in first place with
of the State Chamber of Commerce and
style and plot. "The Maker of Dreams'
ick leach. Mur
ey have
an average of 104 per string Thursday
Industrial League; D. W. Hoegg, city
is a fanciful tale in which Pierrot and
Rodick, Elizabeth
night at the Y. M. C. A., Frank Nason
editor of the Portland Express who has
Pierrette, in their love quest, discover
ton. Herbert
st, Bel-
rolled second with 96 3-5 average, Web
put out some of the finest publicity for
the real maker of dreams who weaves
Elizabeth Moore
all time
ber third with 95 average. Fogg also
the Park and Island.
the very best dreams for them. The
Miss Yeaton's
laide V.
made the high single string of 132. Other
One woman will be present and she is
Manufacturer of Dreams is Miss Myra
land Crouch
h would
high strings were Anthony 113, Graham
one of the most fortunate choices, Mrs.
Fowle, Pierrot is Miss Pauline Collins
reader.
109, Burton 106, Nason 104, MacLeod
Roselle Huddilston, a past president of
and Pierrette, Miss Gertrude Yeaton
licurge Mean
104 Loring 103, Gordon 102, Searls 10b.
the Malne Federation or women's Clubs,
Joint. in Spain in spite of its
worthy Alice
Crabire Martin
home to
Shaw 100. Final standing in match:
a member of the board of directors of the
imaginativi title, has its scene laid in is
Pinkham Jennie
ittle and
Fogg 523, Nason 483, Webber 475, Gor
national federation, president of the
very matter-of-fact place a poor-house
of Mrs.
don 466, Loring 458, Graham 455, Shaw
where two old ladies after many differ-
Walls, Every
Maine League of Women Voters.
Miss Laura
hristmas
452, Searls 451, Dyer 449. Anthony
ences, finally make an agreement by
Governor Percival P. Baxter, unable
sent Gladys
vell have
445,
Burton 435, MacLeod 433.
which they are able to live together in
to be present personally, sent Hon. Willis
Sheldon legalls
Two new bowling tournaments started
peace and harmony. The characters
terpreta-
E. Parsons of Dover, who, being Com-
Webber: not
this week.
are: Mrs. Blair, Alice Williams : Mrs
missioner of Inland Fisheries and Game,
Gladys H
Four games were rolled to date, on the
Mitchell, Frances Burke: Miss Dyer.
has been in close touch with Supt. I)orr
Garlant Ray J.
Pauline Niekerson.
and his rangers in matters concerning
Adelaide Larkin
Neighbors, by Zona Gale, depicts a
fish and game.
Mair. Clarme
scune in little village and shows real
small town sympathy when practically
men's tournament which began last
the whole community responds to the
Bar Harbor
Monday, high strings were made by
call to help one of the women who has
Webber 125-109, Grindle 110, Clark
an unexpected problem to face in the
of
an
orphaned
boy
In this homely
IRA G. HERSEY, M.C.
HOME ADDRESS
4TH DISTRICT MAINE
HOULTON, MAINE
COMMITTEE ON THE JUDICIARY
FRANK C. MERRITT
CONGRESS OF THE UNITED STATES
SECRETARY
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
WASHINGTON, D.C.
March 27, 1924.
Hon. John A. Peters,
U. S. District Court.
Portland, Maine.
Dear John:
We had a hearing yesterday on the Lafayette Park matter.
There were quite an interesting lot of witnesses in favor of the
road system as laid out by Dorr and others and approved by the
Department. There was very little real opposition. [Senator
Pepper expressed about the same ideas as he had in his letter
to
you and one Peabody of Boston led some others from that section
and presented some letters and petitions that the park should not
be out up by roads and trails but left in its natural primitive
state, etc.]
The hearing was handled very finely by Representative
Nelson and 1 should gather that your views in the matter will be
adopted as that of the Department. At the close of the hearing
secretary Work announced that it was" the desire of the Department
to make Lafayette National Park a real national park in the true
sense and not a local park for Bar Harbor, or of some individuals
and that the policy that has been pursued in the improving, main-
tenance and making of national parks would be pursued, in his
opinion, in the matter of Lafayette Park by linking up all the
parks."
Now your experience in the House has been similar to mine
no doubt, that the appropriations for national parks go largely to
the opening up of new roads and traits and making the parks access
-
ible to automobiles so that visitors can be attracted and have an
opportunity to visit the park in automobiles as but few can walk
thru the park and over the mountains, nor do they have the time.
Good roads in national parks draw every year more and more visitors
and the slogan "See America First" is one stressed by the Interior
Department in their advertising of the parks to the public. I think
good roads in Lafayette park will greatly increase its popularity
and hring increasing thousands to Maine every summer when they find
they can drive through the heart of the park with their auto. I
think you need have no fear but what the objections of your opnosi-
tion in the matter will not meet with any favor from the Department.
Very sincerely yours,
Ira G Hersey_
Wordlawn
Smpt
Note:
the
5th
Panke
referring
New York City
1924
April 10, 1924.
Dear Mr. Rockefeller:
I asked Mr. Gumbel to have copied for you these papers,
which I brought from Washington and whose originals were left with
Mr. Cammerer. They tell in part the story of our hearing, whose
stenographic report I have not yet received.
The included lists show who attended the hearing, and
what they represented. The letters are a part only of those written,
some, including one from President Eliot to the Secretary, not being
given out. I S ought no letters, myself, from summer residents or
others excepting where, as in Judge Deasy's case, they stood for
something more than personal interest; but a few came in.
Fewer people than I had anticipated appeared in opposition,
some as I have learned, withdrawing at the last on hearing of our
strong support. And fewer wrote letters or signed the petition in
remonstrance. These last I have grouped for Mr. Cammerer, showing
family relationships and with a word of comment.
The chief arguments in opposition rested on keeping certain
areas wild and secluded and on the avoidance of constructional features.
The hearing, as Mr. Debevoise will have told you, passed
without attack on a basis, at least, of outward courtesy. This is
not to be interpreted as due to change of heart, but mainly to
Mr. Rockefel ller ---2
April 10, 1924.
recognition of the strong backing which the State had given us, ex-
pressed in newspaper editorials and enforced on Senator Hale. The
latter came to my room at the club to find me the evening before the
hearing and was clearly anxious as to what course Senator Pepper, wi th
whom he had just conferred, might take at the hearing, and asked con-
cessions of me which I could not make. Representative Nelson, who
conducted the hearing for us, Mr. Lynam and a number of others were
present at this meeting.
The political situation was plainly a controlling factor
on our side, with the State Republican Convention and its keynote
speech immediately ahead. Three Maine newspapers and the Boston
Herald were represented personally at the hearing; the Governor was
represented; the Confederated Women's Clubs; and, personally or by
letter, organizations and public bodies covering the whole state from
Portland to Calais.
Mr. Cammerer opened the hearing at the Secretary's re
quest with a brief statement in which he squarely assumed for himself
and the service responsibility for the adopted plans, and met the charge
that I had acted, in any least thing, without authority and express
instruction. A large wall-ma] which I had had prepared was shown, and
Mr. Cammerer made clear by it the National Park bounds, showing that
the area where the bridges were which they had charged were being built
by me without authority was outside the existing boundaries of the Park.
These two things, together with Senator Pepper's lining
himself up with us upon the subject of the motor road and his acceptance
of the encircling horseroad to the west of Jordan Pond and north of
Mr. Rockefeller---3
April 10, 1924.
Sargent Mountwin as too far advanced for opposition, cut the ground
from under the feet of our other opponents, though not changing, of
course, their attitude or opposition.
The Secretary has issued no statement since the hear
ing; and plans to issue none beyond authorizing, as he has done, con-
struction to proceed but has stated his intention to come with Hr.
Cammerer in early June and become acquainted with the Park and its
problems at first hand. This Mr. Cammerer told me confidentially
before the hearing that the Secretary had planned in our interest
lest, if he should turn the opposition down abruptly, following the
hearing, it might lead, after the Maine State Convention, to an attack
such as Senator Pepper had earlier threatened, of which threat he
knew, whereas if he made no announcement but of intention to visit
the Park himself in June the session of Congress will by then have
ended, and before it meets again the essential features of our plan
will be advanced beyond discussion. I thought this wisely planned,
letting the winter's opposition and attack pass into the background
without giving opportunity for it to renew itself until its force is
spent. And I felt grateful to him for it.
Yours sincerely,
[G.BDORR
Mr. John D. Rockefeller, Jr.
26 Broadway, New York
PK
May 8, 1924.
Dear Dr. Burphy:
I have just returned from a few days' visit to Seal
Harbor.
While there I saw Mr. Dorr, and heard from him more
in detail about the hearing recently held in Washington by the
Secretary of the Interior in regard to the road construction
work in Lafayette National Park
You are doubtless more or
less familier with the situation.
Mr. Derr tells me that as Curator of the Park he felt
Faalled upon to leave no atone anturned in preparing fully to
present the case of the Park at the hearing, and that this in-
volved bringing a number of people to Washington, having mape and
other literature prepared, and many incidental expenses, the
total of which amounts to $3,288.04. A member of people have
contributed to this fund, but nearly $1,000. still remains to be
raised.
Having worked so strenously for the past two or three
months in preparation for the hearing and in connection with
the matters which led up to it, Mr. Dorr finds himself quite worn
and weary. I therefore told him that I would mention to one or
two of my Seal Harbor neighbors the situation of which he told me,
and I felt confident tha other subscriptions would be forthcoming
If you feel that you can contribute $200. or whatever
_amount you see fit, toward this fund, I know it would be a great
help to Mr. Dorr. Mr. A.H.Lynan of Bar Harbor is the Treasurer,
to whom checks should be sent.
Very sincerely,
Dr. J.B.Murphy,
Rookefeller Ins
tute,
New York City.
Historic American Buildings Survey/Historic American Engineering Record
Page 1 of 2
AMERICAN MEMORY
LIBRARY or CONGRESS
Historic American Buildings Survey/Historic American Engineering Record
(If noted, names of
historians, or other
compilers, and date are
drawings
data pages
photo caption pages
color transparencies noted in the data pages.)
Rockefeller Carriage Roads, Throughout Acadia National Park,Mt. Desert Island, BAR HARBOR VICINITY, Hancock
County, ME
Data page 1 of 140
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ROCKETELLER CARRIAGE ROADS
HAER NO. X6-13
(Acadia Carriage Bonds)
Acadia National Park Roads & Bridgen
Bar Harbor Vicinity
Haneock County
HAER
Haine
ME
5-BAHA.V,
14-
WRITTEN HISTORICAL AND RESCRIPTIVE DATA
PHOTOCRAPES
MEASURED AND INTERPRETIVE DRAWSINGS
XEROGRAPHIC COFIES OF COLOR TRANSPARENCIES
Richard Juin
NPS Historam
1996-97.
HISTORIC AMERICAN ENCTWEERING RECORD
Naciosal Park Service
Department of the Interior
P.O. Box 37127
Washington, D.C. 20013-7127
http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/ampage?collId=hhdatapage&fileName=me/me0200/me0237/data/hhdatapage.d..:5/29/2002
Historic American Buildings Survey/Historic American Engineering Record
Page 1 of 2
AMERICAN MEMORY
LIBRARY of CONGRESS
Historic American Buildings Survey/Historic American Engineering Record
(If noted, names of
historians, or other
compilers, and date are
drawings
data pages
photo caption pages
color transparencies
noted in the data pages.)
Rockefeller Carriage Roads, Throughout Acadia National Park,Mt. Desert Island, BAR HARBOR VICINITY, Hancock
County, ME
Data page 2 of 140
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HAER
ME
HISTORIC AMERICAN ENGINEERING RECORD
5- BAHA.V,
ROCKEFELLER CARRIAGE ROADS
14-
HAER No. M3-13
I. INTRODUCTION
LOCATION:
Various locations on eachera half of
Kount Desert Island, Hancock County,
Maine. Approximately 47 miles of road
are located in Acadia National Park, and
the remaining 11 on Rockefeller land
near Seal Harbor.
Quada: Bar Harbor, Maine
Hulls Cove, Maine
Salisbury Cove, Maine
Seal Harbor, Maine
DATES OF CONSTROCTION:
1917-35
ENGINEES
Charles W: Simpson
Paul D. Simpson
STRUCTURE TYPE:
Broken stone carriage roads
ORIGINAL ONNERS:
John D. Rockefeller, Jr.
Acadia National Park, National Park
Service
PRESENT OWNERS:
Acadia National Park, National Park
Service
David Rockefeller
SIGNIFICANCE:
Built by industrialist and philanthro-
piec John D. Rockefeller, Jr., the
carriage road system on Maine' B Mount
Desert Island has become of the
principal attractions of Acadia National
Park. Rockefeller, who had an avid
personal interest in carriage driving
and landscape design, built the roads to
indulge his favorite pastime, but made
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Historic American Buildings Survey/Historic American Engineering Record
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AMERICAN MEMORY
of
CONGRESS
Historic American Buildings Survey/Historic American Engineering Record
(If noted, names of
historians, or other
compilers, and date are
drawings
data pages
photo caption pages
color transparencies
noted in the data pages.)
Rockefeller Carriage Roads, Throughout Acadia National Park,Mt. Desert Island, BAR HARBOR VICINITY, Hancock
County, ME
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ROCKEFELLER CARRIACE ROADS
HAER No. ME-13
(Page 2)
the system available to the public for
their use and enjoyment. The roads
provide access to mony of the island's
favorite scenic attractions and include
lakeside circuits, climbo to mountain
shoulders and a summit, and rouzes
through dense forent groves. The
carriage road system is significant as a
reminder of the early Ewencieth century
interest in carriage driving as a
leisure activity. for its careful
attention to landscape design, and for
its engineering structures, notably
eighteen large scone-faced bridges. The
Rocksfeller carriage roads are the best-
preserved and probably the largest
surviving intact system of developed
Importance of
horse roada, in the United States.
carrioge roads.
PROJECT INFORMATION
Documentation of the Rockefeller
Carriage Roads is part of the Acadia
National Park Roads and Bridges
Recording Project, conducted in 1994-95
by the Historic American Engineering
Record. This is one in a series of
reports prepared for the project. HAER
No. ME-11, ACADIA NATIONAL PARK ROADS
AND BRIDGES, contains an overview
history of the park road systems.
Richard . Quin, Historian, 1994-97
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Historic American Buildings Survey/Historic American Engineering Record
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AMERICAN MEMORY
of CONGRESS
Historic American Buildings Survey/Historic American Engineering Record
and
(If noted, names of historians,
or other compilers, and date
are noted in the data pages.)
data pages
photo caption pages
color transparencies
Acadia National Park Motor Roads, Acadia National Park, BAR HARBOR VICINITY, Hancock County, ME
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ACADIA NATIONAL PARK MOTOR ROADS
NAER NO. ME-II
(Tark Loop Road)
Acadin Kational Park Reade & Bridges
Bar Karboc Vicinicy
tancock County
HAER
Xaine
ME
BAHAY,
2-
WITTEN HISTORICAL AND DISCRIPTIVE DATA
PHOTOGRAPHS
%EROGRAPHIC COPIES OF COLOR TRANSPARENCIES
neil Moher
HISTORIC AMERICAN ESGINEERING RECORD
National Park Service
Department of the Interior
P.O. Box 37127
Washington, D.C. 30013-7127
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AMERICAN MEMORY
LIBRARY of CONGRESS
Historic American Buildings Survey/Historic American Engineering Record
(If noted, names of
historians, or other
compilers, and date are
drawings
data pages
photo caption pages
color transparencies
noted in the data pages.)
Rockefeller Carriage Roads, Throughout Acadia National Park,Mt. Desert Island, BAR HARBOR VICINITY, Hancock
County, ME
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ROCKSFELLER CARRIAGE ROADS
HAER NO. ME-13
(page 26)
the work
66
The "donations" were of course Rockefoller funds. Under the
rond-building policy, the work within the park boundaries would
technically be carried out by the park. The new connecting road
between Bagle Lake and Jordan Fond, proposed by Dorr and
incorporated into the road propocal, was ostensibly a government
project, but Rockefeller provided the funding, his engineer
oversaw the work, and his contractors--Clement and Joy--did the
work. Rockefeller even drew up the contracting papers for Dorr's
signature. This practice was followed for most of the subsequent
(
construction over park lande,
The work was underway that
season,
To the west, Rockefellor was simultaneously building the West
Sergent Mountain Road, now the western segment of the "Around the
Mountain" loop. The new road would leave the Brown Mountain area
and run north, climbing to an elevation of more than 700* on the
shoulder of Sargent Mountain, the highest point reached by the
carriage roads. From this point, the road would offer stuming
viewo of the ioland's western mountains and Frenchman and Blue
Hill bays. Welles Bosworth designed two grand stone bridges,
Hemlock and Waterfall, for this section. The two spans, located
less than a hundred yards apart near the junction of the Hadlock
and Haple Spring streams, were both built by B. H. Candage and
son. Waterfall Bridge overlooks a lovely cascade: the Hadlock
Brook trail passes under the span and frames the hiker's view of
the waterfall in its round arch. Hemlock Bridge is a gothic-
archad structure, its pointed arch probably chosen as appropriate
for its setting in & dark hemlock grove, reflecting the pointy
tips of the majestic trees. Majestic bridges of this nature
became hallmarks or the carriage road system.
Pepper
now
Senator-
As the work proceeded, Rockefeller's nemesic, George Wharton
Pepper, now U.S. Sanator from Pennsylvania, opposed the latest
undertakings and attempted to use his new Boaition to block the
"Rockefellers nemests"
work. In January 1924, Senator Pepper, with two other Bumber
residence, Harold Peabody and Mrs. Eliot Wadsworth, mot with
Secretary of the Interior Hubert Work to protest the continuing
road construction. Pepper stated that while he had great respect
for both Rocketeller and Dorr, he felt they were keeping the
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Historic American Buildings Survey/Historic American Engineering Record
Page 1 of 2
AMERICAN MEMORY
CONGRESS
Historic American Buildings Survey/Historic American Engineering Record
(If noted, names of
historians, or other
compilers, and date are
drawings
data pages
photo caption pages
color transparencies
noted in the data pages.)
Rockefeller Carriage Roads, Throughout Acadia National Park,Mt Desert Island, BAR HARBOR VICINITY, Hancock
County, ME
Data page 28 of 140
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ROCKEPELLER CARRIAGE ROADS
HAER No. NE-13
(page 27)
planned work secret BO that the construction could be carried out
without arousing protests from the GUMMER residents. The three
complainants were generally opposed to all road work in the park,
including the proposed motor road from Jordan Pond to Bagle Lake
and the Cadillac Mountain Road. They were especially critical OF
the "road trails" or carriage reade, stating that the areas they
would traverse were already served by foot trails, and that there
was no assurance they ultimately would not become motor roads.
They also strongly criticized Rockefoller's stone bridges as more
appropriate for Central Park than for the national park. Urged
by them to hold a hearing over the matter, the Secretary agreed
to call one in March. In the meantime, he told them he would
ir
order the road work suspended."
On hearing about the decision from Cammerer, Dorr wrote back
immediately, protesting that a suspension would throw many men
out of work. Only one carriage road was under construction on
parl land, the route on the west side of Jordan Pend. The
difficult "Tumbledown" rockslide had already been passed, and no
bridge work was underway. He asked Cannerer to ensure that
representatives from the various village improvement associations
and the Trustees of Public Reservations be invited to participate
in the bearing. A few days later, Cammerer cabled back that work
could continue on the Mountain Road motor road and the carriage
road west of the pend, but no new construction should be
started
Dorr then sent a longer letter to clarify the sicuation. No
carriage road work was proceeding "on government londs" except
for the road vest of Jordan Pond. Dorr stated that this road was
less than a rod in widch and would be visible only where it
crossed *the Tumbledown." Here, great care was being taken that
only weathered stone would show and the road would be
inconspicuous. Dorr insisted that the road was essential for
patrol purposes and that, had donated funds not become available,
he would have asked fox an appropriation to construct it, as it
would provide the first access between the northern and southern
sections of the park west of 3agle Lake
Dorr pointed out that Pepper and his supporters had failed to
realize that the road-building that was the chief object of their
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Roads-1924 Hearing Before Interior Secretary
Details
1924