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

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Seal Harbor-Origins
Sealtharbors Origins
the
1
Address of That Edward S. Dana
To
Hug not 12.1931
SHVIS
Our honored friend, who has been our resident for the past year,
has asked some of us to tell what we know of the history of our Summer
Colony in Seal Harbor or Seal Cove as it was called on the early
steamboat maps.
It is a gratification to have a share in this work for one who
alone can claim that this Earthly Paradise has been his home for thirty-
geven consecutive summers. In years, however, he takes off his hat to
our esteemed citizen, Captain Charles Clemont, now approaching eighty-
nine. It was his ancestor, John Clement, who established the first home
here in 1809. This notable fact was commemorated by our Society when
the Village Fountain was dedicated one hundred years after.
My part in this historical ensemble is much of it personal and has
to do chiefly with the development which we owe to Mr. George B. Cooksey
who first came here in 1891. He was attracted to Seal Harbor by what he
then miss many our
had heard of its charms from his sister-in-law, Mrs. Edward Dunham who
spent the Summer here in 1890.
Mr. Cooksey's appreciation of the beauty of Seal Harbor and the
ossibilities of its future was immediate. His first step was to buy
from the Clements, at whose then very medest hotel he was stopping,
the rocky point and adjacent land at the opening of the harbor. This
point had till then been called Clements Point and a line of rock cairns,
along the hillside now dotted with cottages, guided the occasional
summer visitor to it.
On this land Mr. Cooksey soon built a charming cottage which stood
there till the property was bought by Mr. Dang in 1910. It is worthwhile
adding that the money paid by Mr. Cooksey was wisely expended by the
Clement brothers, Amos and James, in building the
attractive hotel
which we now enjoy.
2
My coming with my family to Seal Harbor dates from July 1895. I had
long known that this Island was the only place where it was possible to
escape from the oppressively humid heat of the southern Now England summer
when, as a College boy, in the 1860's, 1 was fishing for tro in the
Rangeley Lakes of western Maine, Cousins were at Bar Harbor and they brough
home enticing tales of the beauty, intense and invigorating air of Mt. Dese
rt,
also of the saleratus bread and cod or haddock they daily enjoyed.
A college professor at Yale, Professor Sumner, who, with others, gav e
the Glencove Hotel the reputation of being the home of the intellectuals,
urged me in 1895 to take a cottage. To my reply that the expense on Lt.
Desert Island was too great for a College Professor, he replied that an
enterprising gentleman, Mr. Griswold, had acquired some small lots of land
the taxes of which had been long unpaid, and had built simple cottages on
them. I promptly obtained the list and chose the most expensive the Asq
u
$450 for the season and in this cottage we lived through the summer of
189
5.
Here I must digress, for the benefit of those who know Seal Harbor
only in very recent years, by explaning that the Glencove Hotel stood in
what is now our Village Green. The hotel was not beautiful, without or wit
h-
in, consisting of two square wooden buildings connected across the present
ravine by a long high bridge. This led to its being called the
-
Mr. Rockefeller, whose many and important gifts to our community are
too well known to need mention, bought the Glencove in 1920, he had it pul
ed down and gave the land to the town for a Village Green. It has receive d
constant care ever since the beginning, trees and shrubs have been added,
and this development, which makes it our joy and pride today we largely ow
e
to Mrs. Dunham. Across the road to the south is also the beautiful terrace
enclosed by rose bushes. As a matter of history it may be added that in
1895 there as a small building in this spot where soft drinks were served.
3
A thirsty pedestrian today might request its disappearance as proving that
the world sometimes progresses backwards.
Connective digression takes us up Barr Hill to where Mr. Rockefeller'
fine house now stands. Its predecessor was so homely that the gentleman W
who built it was grieved to have his brother-in-law, who lived on the hill
directly opposite, say, "You may call it the Kyrie, 1 call it the Eyesore"
Later abandoned by its owner it was damaged by lightning. Perhaps
because of this condemnation a year or two later it W.S rented to Mr.
Gherickee, the then Conductor of the Boston Symphony Orchestra. A clever
gentlemen, full of humor and loved by us all, exclaimed at once, "how
fortunate to have conductor provided for so dangerous a spot".
Apoligizing for these digressions -though you will grant the history
is nothing if not complete. I resume my narrative:
A few days after my arrival in early July 1895, I met Mr. Cooksey,
a friend of fifteen years back. He asked me to take a walk with him and
learn of his plans for the development of his property. we walked along
our eastern hillside, sat down on the rocks at one of the many view points
and he told me of his larger purchases of land in Seal Harbor. The most
important of these were the 800 acres extending from where we were along
the ocean fromt to a point beyond Little Hunter's Beach. The place where
we sat he said ne hoped to divide into saml1 lots, especially for the summ
mer-
College Professors. His plan unfolded, he asked me "will you tak
a lot
now?" 1 replied, "1 surely will"- this was after a residence of le
SS
than a week in Seal Harbor.
Professor Rowland of Baltimore, who had already occupied a Griswold
Cottage for a year or two joined me; and a little later my brother-in-law
Mr. Bristol, also
.
Matters moved forward at first without delay. Expecting a rapid
development,
Cooksey had brought his architect here and in a few days
4
weeks the plan of the three cottages on the land chosen were practi ally
complete. Mr. Cooksey's health had been seriously impaired at the time
of the silver panic or 1893. His intense interest in the Seal Harbor
development also taxed him. The climax, a tragic one not to be forgotten
came with the formal meeting at the Seaside Casino in late August. The
hall was crowded with those interested, presidents Eliot and Gilman and o
others spoke warmly of the development plans, but dear Mr. Cooksey took
no part, sitting on a front seat with his head bowed in nis nands. A charmin
luncheon followed a the Cooksey house, all were merry except thos e who
knew the situation. That night Mr. and hrs. Cooksey left for new York and
the next day, or the day after , a teleg am announced that Mr. Cooksey's
health had completely broken down and the ne, Mrs. Cooksey, and a physician
had left for a y ar's absence. 1 will only add that Mr. Cooksey finally
recovered in great measure. He was able to occupy his cottage again in
1902 and later made occasional visits to Seal Harbor until he died in 1922
The break down of the one who had made plans so wise, broad, and
generous was a critical event in the development of Seal Harbor and par- -
ticularly for us three. However, the situation was promptly saved by the
arrival from New York 01 Mr. Cooksey's business partner. He dropped every-
thing, came here at once and then and for many subsequent summers devoted
himself to the many problems involved in the carrying our of Mr. Cooksey's
plans and ever with rare energy and good judgment as will be shown in part
later.
Rowland, Bristol, and myself had special reason for gratitude to
Mr. Stebbins. Although the plans for our cottages were complete, we had
no legal hold on the land selected when Mr. Cooksey left us so suddenly.
This difficulty, however, was adjusted and the building of our cottages
went forward and they were completed in the winter of 1895-96.
5
In june 1896, as the boat carried me and my family along Suttons
Island, we looked up to the hillside and saw our house finished. Also, all
the furniture was in place 9 as directed, and the fire was burning in the
kitchen stove. You smile at these details bu : they simply express the
care and thoughtful from that time everyone who has settled here
received from Mr. Stebbins as long as he was in charge, in fact, for know
in how many ways he helps us even today. His official responsibilities,
however, ceased when Mr. Rockefeller, in 1926, bought all the property, land
and houses, of the Cooksey Realty Company,
One minor incident, connected with the building of our three cottages
is worth recording as showing the instinctive bravery of the Maine sailor.
On December 6, 1895 the vessel from the mills at Bangor, carrying the cypress
trim for the three houses, arrived one evening in the harbor, That night
a violent wind from the north sprang up, the vessel dragged, or slipped her
anchor and started for the open ocean. The two sailora sleeping below were
awakened with the scraping against the Cooksey rocks, and remembering that
the first duty of the sailor is to save life they sprang off to the shore and
and were saved for their families but the Sea Pigeon flew on and she and he
cargo were never heard from again. A duplicate order at Bangor was put
here
through at once and reached just before the river was closed by ice.
A cherished plan of Mr. Cooksey's was also the building of the needed
roads. The first on to be grappled with was the Sea Cliff Drive, long call
ed the Cooksey Drive. At a point near the beginning of this a tablet in the
rock at the side tells today of Mr. Cocksey and his work for as. The com-
pletion of this road was promised for August 1, 1895 and on that date Mr.
Cooksey did in fact drive over it with a horse and a pair of wheels, an im-
provised sulky.
building
Mr. Stebbins carried on the road here and at other points, with the
6
situation as it is today.
Seal Harbor is justly proud of the fact that it alone of the settlement
on the "Island of the Desert Mountains" has the open ocean and the ragged
cliffs above close at hand. TO these cliffs access has been secured to the
general public for all time and not to be disturbed even if future cottages
perch on the heights above. The path which most of you know, or should know,
leads u and down the rocks, and across bridges when called for. It starts
into the woods from a pointopposite the end of the Rowland Road, reaches the
ingraham rocks and goes on to Hunter's Beach, a distance of a mile and a half
This priceless privilege was secured when Lir. Stebbins obtained from some
number of the then property owners the payment of three hundred do lars each
Mr. Stebbins was as active, wise. and considerate in his dealing with
the permanent residents as with the summer visitors. This was shown in man
cases. One important step accomplished was the grouping of their homes, early
scattered, near the beginning of the Jordan Pond Road. The community also
o es to him the present location of the village cemetry, retired and most
attractive. Its existence is hardly suspected by the many who whirl by on
the Jordan Pond Road. The cemetery has been well laid out, planted with shrubs
and flowers, and is well cared for. The world has few spots of this kind SO
satisfying to all, and especially to those who have a personal interest in
I
should like to enlarge on what has been done for Seal Harbor by Nr.
McIntire, who asto began his work here in the notable year of 1895. Every- -
one knows what the Jordan Pond House is today and what it offers to the guest,
but few have followed its wisely planned development year by year from the
small building with a single scanty plazza on the west side to what it is t
today. Mr. McIntire has shown from the start a rare appreciation of the needs
of the summer visitors. He ministers their wants in more ways than with the
ur society also one
always excellent broiled lobsters.
U
owes much to him for the
7
work he has done in laying out and keeping in order the paths and trails
through the woods and up the hills.
In conclusion, you will allow me to boast a little about Seal Harbor--
knowing fairly well the only other , existing nations that may be considered
similar in character, namelyvthe coast of Norway and British Columbia, I feel
justified in claiming that no where elso in the country can be found a home
so beautiful and inspiring in the variety of its scenery, the ocean, forest,
hills, and lakes, so invigorating and health giving in its air, and offering
so many forms or personal enjoyment on land and sea, as Seal Harbor.
The
most beautiful single out look out upon the ocean on our Atlantic coast is that
from the point
where the Champlain Monument stands. 1 hope that each of you may
from Seal Harbor the game degree of pleasure and health that it nas given to
one so favored as 1 have been.
NO
NO.2384
Of Seal Harbor
Int
The Times Pays Honor To
A Community Of Charm,
Beauty, Romantic History
The June sun slid brightly off
Continuing a custom of
the wave parting smoothly before
four years, the printers of
the prow of a large open boat
the Bar Harbor Times Pub-
which turned about a finger of
lishing company will have
rock and headed into a quiet cove.
their annual vacations at
In this year of 1809 the pink
one time - September 4
granite shores were walled by
through 13.
blue-green spruce filled with dark
Consequently, there will be
shadows. To the south the little
no Times published Thurs.
harbor opened toward a group of
day. September 10.
islands already called the Cran-
The office will remain
berries, and at the north was a
open during the vacation
broad sandy beach scored near
period.
the center by a brook tumbling
down from the hills.
The boat moved slowly, for it
Hosp. Aux. Gains
WH heavily loaded. In it were a
man and woman, their three sons,
and all their possessions. No doubt
$2,500 From
the boys jumped over the prow
as it grated onto the sand of the
beach, closely followed by the
Auction, Sale
father, eager to claim this spot of
which they had dreamed all win-
ter. The woman may have hesit-
Nearly $2,500 represented net
Camp
by the village green. Seaside
receipt. of the MDI hospital auc-
in rated
Inn is in the left back-
tion and sale held at Southwest
All of the research, wri-
recopied
ground.
Harbor last month. according to
ting and securing of pictures
a report of the committee which
for the three pages in this
issue honoring the 150th
Line' Art Exhibit
stated that the auxiliary gained
exactly $2,482.32 from the affair
anniversary of Seal Harbor's
The money will be used for the
founding was done by the
benefit of the local hospital and
Times feature writer LaRue
re Green, Bar Hbr
for nursing scholarships.
Spiker.
The committee expressed thanks
to those who contributed time and
ated in the boat a few moments,
Tues., Wednesday
funds to make the auction and
not yet ready to commit herself
sale II success.
completely to this land which
would be home for the rest of
Nearly 50 art exhibitors - and
her years.
lothing
others are invited - will present
Liscomb Tourney
Whether the man and boys, in-
their paintings and sketches at
tent on the task ahead, began
the "clothes line" art exhibition
immediately to unload their
east
to be held on the Bar Harbor
To Be Held At
goods, or whether they stood for
Village Green Monday, Tuesday
a while listening to the wilderness
quidated
and Wednesday.
and the wash of the waves, we do
The first time that it has been
Kebo, Weekend
not know. It is hard now to mea-
attempted in Bar Harbor, the out
sure the feeling of the early set-
and William
of-door art exhibition will attract
tlers toward the wilderness and
Harbor an-
thousands where the works of
In memory of their devoted
the sea which offered freedom
they were
service to the Kebo Valley Golf
amateur and professional artists
and new life on the one hand and
of 1. Vilia
wish the first annual Shirley
handahin and possibly death on
2
Page Ten
BAR HARBOR TIMESATHURS
The Story Of A Century And A Half In Seal
(Continued From Page 1)
to Ellsworth, reaching there at
(eenth century other families had
P. Campbell bullt th.
an early hour. He promptly on.
moved into the neighborhood
Hotel. The first summ
was Clement. The father was
tered his claim, and, as he came
George N. Jordan and J. R.
appeared that same
John and his wife was Deborah
down the steps of the title office.
his brother. who had been lum.
In a recent hist
Burns Clement. They had three
no doubt with R triumphant
beeing up by Jordan Pond were
written by Mrs. Lye
sons James, Jacob, and Amos.
gleam in his eye, he met neighbor
burned out. and George built
We get a final pieto
In 1642 John's father had
Bracy going up the steps with the
home on the east shore of Bracy
Jimmy. triumphant o
come from England and helped
same thing in mind.
Cove between the present aite
perity of the comm
to settle Haverhill, Massachusetts.
After John's death the three
of the Harbor Club and the home
helped to cut from th
In the late 1700's they came to
boys abandoned the cooperage
of Mim Ina Jordan, his grandman
in that year the no
Maine and eventually landed near
business. Amos eventually went
ghter. Other names, still familiar,
whart was complete
Bucksport. When he reached man-
to California in search as gold
which were early entered in the
Jimmy celebrated th
hood, John became a cooper and
and wound up his days making
Seal Harbor rostar were x T.
Ing of the Steam
was employed by Capt. Samuel
sorghum in Kansas. The porgy
Lynam, Daniel Brower, John
Desert in August by
Hadlock on the Cranberry Islands.
business was flourishing at that
Smallidge Abner Southard. and
(las on the whare a:
(This Sam Hadlock, apparently a
time, and James and Jacob took
others
the following verse:
stable and prospering citizen, was
to fishing. Jacob died in his early
By the late 1860's MDI was be
the father of the dashing young
forties having had two children
coming known in other parte of
This is a fine who
wanderer of GOD'S POCKET
The Clements in Seal Harbor to
the country 14 became increas
It stands in a (In
fame by Rachel Field.)
day are all the descendents of
Ingly obvious that there was more
God blem the 1
Seal Harbor is easily visible
James, who became known in
money in rusticators than in
And all they have
from Little Cranberry, and, while
later years as "Uncle Jimmy
porry. and the character of the
working there, John had a good
Edward ( Clement and his
village began to change
11 hears a fine I'
many times cast a covetous eye
Charles Henry 11. Are fifth and
An oxtra story was achial to
And alamy in (ro
in the direction of the sheltered
sixth generation Clements to live
Uncle Jinnmy' homestead al the
The Steamers wi
little cove cutting into the south
in the village Edward in descend
head of the harbor People from
With their halma
shore of the great island hump-
ed through Uncle Jimmy's mon
Now York Histon and Philadel
ing up in the northern horizon.
Amos, named for Uncle Jimmy's
phia, Icea adventurous parhape
When he returned to Bucks
The may
son, Charles Henry and his Krand
than the early colliere but no lease
port in the fall of 1808, he sug-
Uncle Jimmy' imm
son, Irving. Mrs. Louise Gray is
appreciative of the little herbor's
gested to his wife that they move
meet, but he dues
the daughter of Uncle Jimmy's
ditractiveness began to vial' tur
to the cove on Mount Desert Is-
distinction all way
son, Amon, named for Uncle
Ing the summer
land and establish a home on its
readly earned a pla
Jimmy's brother who went west
In 18:5 the Clemen's build
shores. She agreed, and he spent
.. a pioneer 111.1 44
in search of gold
what 13 now the west wing of the know
the winter building a large open
.
good
part
Toward the middle of the mine
boat to move them down Blue
Sramile Inn and 111 144: one
Hill Bay.
If John paused to absorb the
feel of the place the day they
landed, he didn't waste much time
doing so, for he soon had a bark
tent built to serve as a temporary
shelter while the log cabin was
building. They selected a site near
the east end of the beach for the
cabin which is said to be about
on the place the "Haven" was to
be built by R. E. Campbell a
good many years later. Nearby
John built a large cooper shop.
where he and the boys would
carry on their trade of barrel
making.
According to Street's history of
MDI: "The hoops were made from
the yellow birch sprouts which
sprung up quickly wherever the
original growth of forest trees
was cut away. Sometimes the
father and one or another of the
boys would make trips along the
The stone fountain (rar
village's
founding
The
shore in the boat collecting the
lier known as the Watering
plaque on the
sprouts, going as far as the head
Tub") which today forms
the
montament
of Frenchman's Bay."
the hub of the village. was
One autumn. the cabin burned
placed and dedicated in
and with it almost the whole of
1909 in celebration of the
their winter supplies. They mana-
100th anniversary the
by
ged to find adequate shelter in
the cooperage, but eating must
have been more than 8 little alim
History Of The Summer Colony
is ed
ged to find adequate shelter in
M
3
the cooperage, but eating must
History Of The Summer Colony
Lamilel
later
taine
have been more than a little glim
Will
at times that year. Later they
Although the summer at
Latin phress4 I., these years the
ter,
built a clap board house on the
Seal Harbor now has is own
guart list the Inn tend
Non
eastern hill above the place where
the town dock now stands.
particular flavor and haracter
be drawis from among the
Munter M
its development over the course
wealthy in the business 1.1
in
Now
By the time James had reach-
of year has followed much the
The first summer
as
ed manhood other families had
same pattern as that her
pearcal
in
1441
Alimical
moved into the area. John Bracy
the
1s
chesid
Ja.
built a home at Bracy's Cove just
summer
with
&
land
a
to the west. Gideon Dodge, a SCR
captain, built a home on the south-
In his history of M........ Please
Island George H. Street makro
The
by
Not
both
western point of the cove. His
home
home, which is probably the old-
very interesting
were
est house in Seal Harbor today,
He mys
alily in
is now known as Meadow Cottage.
The development
summer resorts on the New Kng
the
All of the land upon which
The
these people seitled was A part
land coart has followed
, I
the
eastern
ally
of the Bingham estate. William
ly uniform law Some beautiful
the
Harbor
began
Bingham, you will remember, was
place on the rugged shore
has
when
George
11
an English gentleman who was the
first been discovered by article in
Y
can
hro
the
last big landholder on the eastern
search of the picturesque or in
outlerm
Point
oil
part of the Island. He had obtain-
spiring, or by adventurous sports
from of James Clement
people in
ed his rights over the lands which
mon or camper OF college all
who once sheep there
were originally a part of the
dents
The invelopment of
In 1801 Mr Cooksay and a Dr
personal
French grant to the deGregoires
the summer resort then begins by
Penrose if Philadelphia
some farmer or fisherman taking
Neveral
by a complicated series of con-
ed and cave to the town the rued
veyances, mortgages, and sales.
these wanderers into his house to
along the caolorn shore of the
He did not, however, repeat the
board
He find that the
Merber and he new year Mr
Island
mistake of the deGregoires by
venture in highly profitable. and
Cookney included the Cookary
and active
tion
trying to make a home on the
after A low seasons of very mo
Drive Thereafter collage huibi
new land himself. Evidently pre-
doest and somewhat reluctant on
ing the castarn side of the
ferring the comforts and safety
tertainment he begins to discover
a' rapid pain
of an established society, he TO
the possibilities of the Inveinees
Mr.
The became the
tired to England where he died
In A low years the farmer or
the firal
home the many wholere and
in 1804.
fisherman grows into the proprie
professional that the name
His will was probated in Phila-
tor of a summor hotel
This
might well been change, to
delphia some years before the (No.
stage of development usually las's
This
Arademy Haven had not the all
ment family landed at Seal Har-
for several years
(and ia)
.
been
2111
410
atrone
bor; and his heirs were therefore
brought to a close by the appea
Amount the wholes who
the legal owners of this part of
rance of the collager
holding
lical rasillance
the Island. Since the hoirs too
basis for
The first written reference we
were James Nowland Anyall Pres.
were separated from their hold-
Anailie
have been abin in find to the
of Yalo University (: M Overell
ings by several thousand miles of
the Triest
possibilities of the Seal Harbor
Professor of Philosophy at Har
ocean, the people on the scene
color of
area as a BUTTINGT resort was
who needed to earn a living seem-
varil. Merbort Wair Amytha. Pro
different
that of Charles Eliot in IMHU
leasor of 11 brow at Harvard Kit
ed to have rights which super-
who actyland his father. Dr
ward 11 Dana. Proleen of Gave
In his
seded those recorded on a bit of
Charles W. Ellot, than President
logy at Yale and others no loan
the comm
paper in a distant city.
-The first step was to move in
of Harvard university. to find a
omineal.
Very n
site for A summer home some
and build a house. In the books
Among the writers who early
mails to
where along the coast between
this possession is called "squat-
came to the community were Dr.
years 101
ters' rights" a misnomer since
"our camp ground on Somes
Monry Van Dyko Winston
at Seal
Sound and Soal Harbor." Young
the settlers seldom had time to
Churchill (or THE CREDIT not
liquire a
Eliot had been camping that sum.
squat and, when the push came to
blood, sweat and toars), and
Rx-hard y
the ahove, had no inviolable
mor on the Sound with a party of
James Fund Rhodes. the historian
than. Dr
Harvard students.
rights.
Other artiate have included Frita.
Christian
Almost as soon as the Seal
However, the area must have
Kreialer, Leupoki Atabowaki.
Stabbine,
Harbor area became crowded
been known to a good many sum
Carlon
site. equil
enough that you could see the
mer people prior to that, for the
Two physicians, Dr Chalatian
of over
smoke of your neighbor's chim-
sons of Uncle Jimmy Clement
Morter and Dr. Edward X. Dun
by i bani
ney (if you climbed a tall tree),
had built what is now the weat
ham, had laboratories at their
the boom
anxiety began to arise concerning
wing of the Seaside Inn in 1875.
collages and became not only
the treas *
boundaries and legal title.
and Lynam P. Campbell bullt the
prominent members of the
Mr. Door
John Bracy had thoughtfully
Glen Cove Hotel In 1833. Both of
mar dolany but contributed con-
over to b
secured title to two hundred
these Inns offered facilities for
siderably to the health of the
the
dope
acres, and rumor went out that
good many guests.
entire community by checking the Mountas
be also wanted a title to the area
In the beginning these two
sanitation of the milk and water and
made
where the Clements were living.
hotels seem to have attracted
leas
of
~
He probably would have got it
somewhat different groupe of
had
a
two if son James had been a slo-
clientele. Glen
Cove
full
wer traveler.
have been the
of
James rowed himself up the
sionals
and
intellectuals
Sound to Someeville where he ob
Its
roster
of
guests
sometimes
tained a horse and rode the wind numbered
such
n
large
portion
of
were
a
Dane,
trail
to
the
Narrows.
There
be
scholars
that
it
is
said
that
the
of
arried
across
and
bied
himself
bell
hope
were
wont
to
construe
John
D.
Jr.
who
:09."
A
therefore bought the water sy-
purchased the Eyrie from Dr.
Samuel Clarke, a physicist, and
y
later enlarged it; Edward D. Bod-
man, grain merchant of New York
rs the
City; Richard Hoe, produce bro-
tend-
ker of New York; Charles and D.
g the
Hunter MacAlpin, hotel owners
rld.
in New York City; Walter K.
es ap-
Shaw, a cotton manufacturer of
wnin-
Concord, Massachusetts; Roscoe
from
B. Jackson, car manufacturer of
ottage
Detroit; Edsel Ford, same place
rage."
and industry; and many others,
Nel-
both in the early years and since.
Soon
Summer colonies vary conside-
were
rably in character and in their
d the
relation to the local community.
or.
The one at Seal Harbor tradition-
istern
ally maintained an interest not
began
only in developing facilities for
e B.
its own use but in the welfare of
1 bro-
the local community by organiz-
Edward C. Clement and
Point
ed cooperation with the local
Champlain Monument in Seal Harbor which commen
son Charles Henry II, fifth
ment,
people through the Village Im-
discovery and naming of Mount Desert Island by Samuel
and sixth generation of
there.
provement Society and by their
Clements at Seal Harbor -
plain in 1604. The original site of the Champlain Monumer
a Dr.
personal relations.
Descendants of the town's
in 1904, was on Cooksey drive near Seal Harbor severa
truct-
road
Several of the summer residents
founder.
yards south of its present location on State route 3. The
f the
contributed to the welfare of the
acres of land on which it stood was the first acreage dona
stem and franchise from Lynam
Mr.
Island as a whole by their early
Hancock county Trustees of Public Reservations whose hole
oksey
and active interest in the preserva-
P. Campbell, who had built the
led to the establishment of the Acadia National Park. Th
tion of MDI's natural beauty.
Glen Cove Hotel. He had a sur-
build-
the stone reads: "In honor of Samuel de Champlain born
f the
George Stebbins, early summer
vey made for the purpose of con-
resident who was a partner of
demnation at the outlet of Jor-
1567, died at Quebec 1635. A Soldier, Sailor, Explorer an
pace.
Mr. Cooksey in New York, was
dan Pond where the present dam
strator who gave this Island its name."
the
the first Treasurer of the Han-
is located. This seemed to be the
Pond and began digging a trench
the Pond.
8 and
cock County Trustees of Public
only practical point for taking
for laying it forthwith.
The contest won, Mr
name
Reservations organized in 1901.
water from the /pond, and Mr.
The pipe was so old and inade-
who might have served
red to
This was the citizens' organization
Cooksey's lawyer, John A. Peters,
quate that there was no chance of
try well in the diplom
le old
set up to encourage the donation
began condemnation proceedings
its carrying water, but "pipe is
approached the rival
trong.
and to otherwise acquire the land
in Ellsworth.
lected
pipe," they declared.
assured them that be
holdings which later became the
Such proceedings could of
In the meantime, the fog had
tentions of depriving
dence
basis for the establishment of the
course not go unmarked in a small
cleared to some extent, and Mr.
munity of adequate
Pres.
Acadia National Park. Without
community, and there probably
verett
Cooksey's pipe was on its way.
rangements satisfacto
the Trustees the face and char-
seemed no need for secrecy any-
were made, and over
Har-
Having no doubt kept a weather
acter of the Island might be very
way. However, the news did create
eye out for the arrival of the
happily over after.
Pro-
different than it is today.
a stir in certain quarters.
i: Ed-
schooner from his home on the
Geo-
In his unpublished history of
Whether Mr. Cooksey got wind
point, he saw her approach the
o less
the community Stebbins notes:
of the fact that he might have
Harbor and went down on the
"Very notable additions were
some competition we do not
rocks hoping to be of assistance
early
made to the reservations in the
know. He seems to have been any-
in her landing.
re Dr.
years 1910 and 1911when a group
thing but timid in his conception
He shouted something but his
inston
at Seal Harbor, composed of
of projects anyway, and he pro-
words were lost, and Captain Cox,
3, not
George B. Oooksey, Tracy Dows,
cooded unperturbed with his own
whose ears were intent on the
and
Richard M. Hoe, Edward D. Bod-
plans. He ordered the necessary
sound of the waves on the rock,
torian.
man, Dr. Edward K. Dunham, Dr.
pipe from Boston, exhausting the
did not recognize him.
Fritz,
Christian Herter, and George L.
supply available in that busy city,
"Shut up, you damned fool," the
owski,
Stebbins, discovering that a good
and had it shipped to the Mount
Captain yelled and turned back to
title could be obtained to a tract
Desert Ferry by fast freight. He
his own calculations.
ristian
of over 3600 acres once owned
had chartered a steamboat with
His ear for surf on rocks must
Dun-
by a bankrupt land company of
Captain William Cox on board to
have been a good one, for the
their
the boom days of 1887, bought
supervise the navigation for
pipe -landed safely and trans-
only
the tract and arrangement with
transport on the last leg of the
ported to the outlet of the Pond
sum-
Mr. Dorr of Harbor, turned
journey to Seal Harbor. However,
with a gang of workmen, where
d con-
over to him some 1600 acres on
another summer) visitor to the Is'
the rival company was already
of
the
the slopes of Green (Cadillac)
land, dense fog, delayed the final
hard at it.
ing
the
Mountan in (the Town of Eden
arrival of the pipe.
Therewith began a real dirty
water
and
the
reservat-
This delay, acting as a sort of
war of attrition. The dirt flow
ions of Pemetic Mountain and the
deus ex machina in the drama,
up and the dirt flew down, one
had
In
the
précipitated the climax of the
gang of men shoveling it back
(John
confider which was developing
into the trench fast as the of
had out concern-
hers' could throw it out Before
Mr.
Cooksey's
plans,
any
casualties
occurred
word
in and near Northeast
ved
from
Elisworth
that
Mr.
A
1927
Harbor. who also held franchise
Cooksey's condemnation suit bad
Wood,
well
tracts
for taking water from Jordan
been completed, leaving no doubt
Pond,
decided
the
office
of
Bartlaibor TimesJuly12, 1956 C. 1: Seal Harbar
colliled
Page Six
BAR
Sermon By Rev. Henry Wilder Foote Honors One
Of Mt. Desert Island's Early Summer Residents
From a sermon preached by
father's sloop, reaching Somes
school. he preached his first ser-
Rev. Henry Wilder Foote, D. D.
Sound, and set up their camp at
mons in some of the churches of
-hurch of Northeast
Wasgatt's Cove, inside Manches-
this region. He was the first sec.
ter's Point, so happily and succes-
retary of the Union Church assoc-
ARCHIVAL
July 8 at the
unveiling of a tablet
sfully that the Champlain Society
iation and its earliest records are
Francis G. Peahody
of Dr. Samuel Atkins
continued there for several sum-
in his handw. ting. He took part
Eliot and his wife, Frances Hop-
mers. The immediate result for
in the dedication service in 1889,
kinson Eliot by their sons Samuel
the Eliots was that Charles advis-
and was the sole survivor of those
uncle of
A. Eliot, Jr. and Charles W. Eliot.
ed his father to purchase land and
who had part in it, when. in 1939,
Rev. Samuel A. Eliot
build a summer home on the
he gave the fiftieth anniversary
The subject of the sermon was
"A Desert Place Apart".
shore between Northeast Harbor
address. He followed his father
On this island, and along the
and Seal Harbor He did so, and
and his uncle. Prof. Francis G.
coast to the east and west, small
in the summer of 1881 first occup-
Peabody of beloved memory, in
1881
communities whose folk lived by
ied the house on Asticou Foreside
the happy task of inviting disting-
fishing and farming had been
in which he died in 1926. It was
uished preachers to speak from
well established before the earliest
one of the two or three earliest
this pulpit on summer Sundays,
residences here
and he himself preached her. in
summer visitors put in an appear-
Northeast Harbor was then a
almost every summer of his .ong
ance, about one hundred years
ago. Those visitors, when they
very small community. There was
professional career
came, were seeking a quiet place
no village street lined with shops,
This is not the occasion re-
apart where they could rest
only a road through the woods
count his outstanding services to
awhile from the noise and tumult
from the head of the harbor to
religion and to the nation which
of the great cities and the press-
Squire Kimball's boarding house.
marked his career elsewhere. He
ings burdens of their busy lives.
The mailman drove to Somesville
was a persuasive and eloquent
Their story is well illustrated in
twice a week to fetch and carry
preacher: one of the committee
the record of a single family which
mail, or one could drive an all-
which prepared the hymn-book we
has been for many years closely
day round trip over rough roads
are using here today; a very cap-
associated with this place and this
to Bar Harbor to mail a letter, or
able administrator of church bus-
Eliot
church.
send a telegram. or consult a doc-
iness at the head of his denomina-
Dr.
I recall vividly Dr. Charles W.
tor. In those days Mount Desert
tion, yet always concerned to pro-
Eliot's account of his first exped-
was accessible only by boat, and
mote interdenominational cooper-
ition to these shores It must have
the voyage from Rockland throu-
ation as exemplified in the sum,
been in the summer of 1857 when
gh the channels among the islands
mer services of this Union Church
he, a young man not long out of
was a beautiful way of reaching
and in the Mount Desert Larger
1857
college, and his friend Moorfield
it. It was indeed "8 quiet place
Parish. He was a promoter of pri-
Storey, and probably two or three
apart" for those who came to find
son reform and was the friend and
others, travelled to Rockland
relief from "the madding crowds'
helper of the American Indians
where they chartered a small fish-
ignoble strife."
who, in many parts of our country
ing schooner which they were able
Before 1883 there seem to have
have suffered much at our hands.
to handle themselves. They scud-
been no regular religious services
Today I must limit myself to re-
Elist
ded across Penobscot Bay before
in Northeast Harbor and the near-
minding you of how much he did
a strong west wind, one man steer-
est church, at Southwest Harbor,
for this church and this commun-
Family
ing, another holding the then very
was accessible by boat in fair wea-
ity so dear to his own and to his
inadequate chart, trying to loc-
ther. But in 1883 summer services
wife's heart. She too had spent
ate reefs ahead and the channel
were begun in the village's one-
her summers here since 1883
between the islands There were
room schoolhouse. This led to the
when, in her girlhood, her par-
very few lighthouses and almost
organization in 1886 of the Union
ents, Mr. and Mrs. John Hopkin-
no navigation marks, but they
church association on an interden-
son, had first boarded at Squire
came through safely, and had
ominational basis, with member-
Kimball's. They built their sum-
their first sight of these hills and
ship open to summer visitors as
mer cottage, and entered into the
harbours.
well as to permanent residents.
life of this church. In her writ-
In the early 1870's Dr. Eliot, by
Samuel N. Gilpatrick gave the
ing and in painting Mrs. Eliot has
that time the youthful president
land on which this church stands.
recorded some of the charm of
of Harvard, came again, this
The building committee consisted
this island. It had for them both a
time
to
camp
for
a
few
weeks
in
of
Dr
Eliot
and
Messrs
Danforth
sacred quality, as a quiet place
several
successive
summers
on
and
Ansel
Manchester:
and
a
apart, where men and women
Calf Island, in Frenchman's Bay money-raising campaign was start- wearied with the stress and strain
opposite Bar Harbor, then in its ed to erect the structure in which
of life elsewhere, could come and
early
days as a summer resort. It we meet today. The building was
rest awhile, refreshed by the sil-
was their early acquaintance with completed and dedicated in the
ence of these steadfast granite
this region which, in 1880, led Dr. summer of 1889.
hills, and by the cool sea-winds
Eliot's two sons, the elder one, President Eliot and his wife are
which drive the surf upon our
Charles aged 20, a sophomore in Frightly commemorated in a tab-
rocky shores It was a place not
college, the younger one Sam, let here.
only for fun and amusement, but
then 17, to organize a group of
It was thus that Dr. Eliot's
also for quiet meditation on the
college friends into what they
younger son, Samuel Atkins Eliot
deeper problems of the human
called the "Champlain Society"
grew so familiar with this island
spirit, that those who came to stay
to camp out on Mount Desert and and it became a greatly beloved
for a few weeks might return to
study the hitherto unexamined
second home to him. In the sum-
their tasks elsewhere with fresh
natural history of the island. They
mer of 1888. when he was still a
strength and courage, faith. and
sailed
from
;Boston
in
their
student in the Harvard Divinity
hope. And their love for this
place has been transmitted to the
third generation of their child-
Henri Hairdresser
ren.
That is why our service today
culminates in the dedication of a
Northeast Harbor is Now Open for the Season
E
tablet in this church in memory of
Samuel Atkins Eliot as "a leader
Featuring the newest in permanent waving
of this Union Church" and of this
"BODY WAVE"
wife, Frances Hopkinson Eliot, as
"a vivid portrayer of times past"
Miss Elise and Mr. Henri Jr.
who together for more than "sev-
enty summers rejoiced in God's
have joined our staff this season
goodness on this Island". Such
memorials bid us
Telephone BRowning 6-3659
"call to remembrance the
great and good,
Those who were leaders of
the people by their judge-
ment,
1938
974.1(c)
10
c. 2
RANDOM NOTES ON THE TARLY HISTORY AND DEVELOPMENT AS A
SUMMER RESORT OF MOUNT DESERT ISLAND
..NN particularly SEAL HARBOR
BY GEORGE L. STEBBINS -- LUGUST 1938
Note: See B.H.TIMES (8/26/59)for historical essay
on Seal Harbor-on its 150th anniversary.
1
Random notes on the early history and development as a summer
resort of Mount Desert Island and particularly Seal Harbor.
By George L. Stebbins August 1938
The discovery of Mount Desert Island by Samuel de Champlain
in 1604 and the various attempts at settlement in those early
times are so well known through the accounts of Francis Parkman
and others that I shall not deseribe them but commence with the
first permanent settlers who established themselves about the
year 1768. The Somes Family and others at Somerville, now
Somesville, John Hamor, Captain Samuel Hull and others at Hulls
Cove and the Manchesters, Clements and others at Northeast Harbor
and Seal Harbor. The Town of Mount Desert was incorporated in the
year 1789 and included all of the Island, Bear Island, the Cran-
berry Isles, and other small islands. The Town of Eden, now Bar
Harbor was set off in the year 1796, the Cranberry Isles in 1830,
and the Town of Tremont, now Southwest Harbor and Tremont, in 1848.
In the year 1840 when the town included Southwest Harbor and Tremont
as well as the town of Mount Desert, the taxable valuation of the
town was as follows:
Real Estate
$109,290.
Personal
59,801.
Total
$169,091.
and it is interesting to note that of the Personal Estate,
$37, 850, was represented by shipping, indicating that almost all
of the inhabitants got their living by following the sea. The
total valuation of the present Town of Mount Desert for the year
1930 was $3,787,000.
In 1840 there were in the town:
213 Oxen
Now 0
382 cows
" 71
52 horses
"42
19 pleasure carriages
From about 1797 to 1807 the land in the vicinity of Seal
Harbor and Northeast Harbor was surveyed by John Peters of
Bluehill who had moved from Massachusetts to Bluehill, Manne,
and had been engaged in "running out" settlers' lots in various
parts of Hancock County under the authority of the General Court
of Massachusetts.
It may be interesting to note that this John Peters became
the ancestor of many men later prominent in the affairs of Maine,
including two chief justices of the Supreme Court of Maine, the
present Judge of the United States district court and the donor
to the Trustees of Public Reservations of the Black Mansion and its
contents at Ellsworth.
John Peters and a son James ran an east and west line starting
on Asticou Hill and running eastward to a point on Day
Mountain, crossing th Long Pond Meadows north of Long Pond and the
Jordan Pond road near the house now owned by James McDrae. North
and south lines from this back line to the shore divided the land
into settler lots, but when Peters
1
Random notes on the early history and development as a summer
resort of Mo nt Desert Island and particularly Seal Harbor.
By George I.. Stebbins august 1938
The discovery of Mount Desert Island by Samuel de Champlain
in 1604 and the various attempts at settlement in those early
times are so well known through the accounts of Francis Parkman
and others that I shall not describe them but CO mence with the
first permanent settlers who established thenselves about the
year 1768. The Somes Family and others at Somerville, now
Somesville, John Hamor, Captain Samu 1 Hull und others at Hulls
Cove and the Menchesters, Clements and others at Northeast Harbor
and Seal Harbor. The Town of Mount esert was incorporated in the
year 1789 and included all of the Island, Bear Island, the Cran-
berry Isles, and other smil islands. The Town of Eden, now Bar
Harbor was set off in the year 1796, the Crenberry Isles in 1830,
and the Town of Tremont, ow Southwest Harbor and Tremont, in 1848.
In the year 1840 when the town included Southwest Harbor and Tremont
as well as the town of Mo nt Desert, the taxable valuation of the
town was as follows:
Real Estate
109,290.
Personal
59,801.
Total
169,091.
and it is interesting to note that of the Personal Estate,
37,850. was represented by shipping, indicating that almost all
of the inhabitants got their living by following the sea. The
total valuation of the present Town o Mount Desert for the year
1930 was 3,787,000.
In 1840 there were in the town:
213 Oxen
Now o
383 COWS
11 71
52 horses
"42
19 pleasure carriages
From about 1797 to 1807 the land in the vicinity of Seal
Tarbor and Northeast Harbor was surveyed by John Peters of
Bluehill who had moved from Nassachusetts to Bluehill, Mafne,
and had been engaged in "running out" settlews' lots in various
parts of lancock County under the authority of the General Court
of Massachusetts.
It may be interesting to note that this John Peters became
the oncestor of many men later prominent in the affairs of Maine,
including two chief justices of the Supreme Court or Maine, the
present Judge of the United `tates district court and the donor
to the Trustees of Public Reservations o the Black Mansion and its
contents at Ellsworth.
John Peters and a son James run an cast and west line starting
on Asticou ill and running eastward to point on Day
Countain, crossing th Long Pond headows north or Long Fond and the
Jordan ond ro d near she house now owned by Jumes cCrue. North
and south lines from this back line to the store divided the land
into settler lots, us when Peters came to u point on the cust side
of Seal Harbor just back o the present residence of rthur Clement,
2
he stopped and made a note in his book that the land east of that
point was not worth surveying, "that it was lazy land". That worth-
less land now comprises the sites of the Dane, Dunham, Hoe, Ford,
and other houses.
About 1866 or 1867 a large tract of this land was owned by
a man named Porter Brewer who said he wanted to sell it. There
were two buyers, James Clement, son of the founder of Seal Harbor,
and John Bracy, and Brewer said that he would sell it to the high-
est bidder so they sat on the ledge and commenced to bid against
each other, starting at 10c an acre and bidding up tuntil finally
Clement bid 31.00 an acre and Bracy told him he could have it, it
was not worth that. When I made this statement at the Village
Improvement Society Meeting at the Seaside Inn, August 12th, 1931,
Mr. Charles H. Clement, the son of James Clement said that he re-
membered the incident and was there at the time. Mr. Clement died
in 1932 at the age of 91.
The town assessors recently told me that the square half mile
included in this tract is now the most valuable square half mile
in the town, including, of course, the buildings on it. When this
sale at $1.00 an acre was made, the land was surveyed by Eben Hamor
of Town Hill and I was told by my friend, Judge Peters that the
next time Hamor came to survey land in that vicinity, it had sold for
$2000. an acre, this of course was many years after.
The Town of Eden, now Bar Harbor, was set off from the Town of
Mount Desert in 1796 and the first town meeting was held at the
residence of Captain Samuel Hull of Derby, Connecticut who settled
at Hulls Cove prior to 1789 and in this connection it is possible
that I may claim to belong to one of the oldest families of the
Island for my great, great grand-father was Captain Samuel Hull of
Derby, Conn. At first I thought this Captain Hull might be my
ancestor but upon consulting "uncle" Eben Hamor who was the sage
of the Island at the time I arrived and knew all of the families,
I found they were not the same person but probably my ancestor was
an uncle of the settler of Hulls Cove. The records show that John
Manchester settled in Northeast Harbor in 1775 while the first
settler at Seal Harbor was John Clement who came in 1809.
In 1796 William Bingham of Philadelphia purchased most of
the eastern half of the Island (it being a part of the tract owned
by de Gregoire family up to 1792).
Mr. Bingham died in England leaving this property in trust
for his childre two of his daughters marrying members of the
Baring family, and this trust has continued until the present
day most of the titles running back to that ownership.
At first the early settlers were only squatters but as they
became established, they went over to Ellsworth and got deeds for
their lots from the Trustees of the Bingham estate paying a few
dollars for the titles. The deeds described the conveyances as
when
to the shore which was considered sufficient until a eew years ago
some lawyers searching titles raised the point that they did
not convey to low water mark o the sea and we were therefore ob-
liged to get deeds from the Bingham Trustees for the property be-
tween low and high water mark which were given for a nominal con-
sideration. In lookin at the old maps, one of which I have dated
3
1868, it is interesting to note the shift in population from the
west to the east side of the Island, at that time the most populous
location being around Pretty Marsh, Center, Seal Cove and Bass Harbor
which now is the most sparsely settled part of the Island.
The Island was brought to the attention of the eastern city
dwellers by artists who cruised this way before the Civil War,
but very few people came until after that was over, when the
residents of Bar Harbor commenced to take boarders, and the first
summer cottage, which still stands near the Newport Hotel, now in
process of demolition, was built in 1867 by Alphous Hardy of Boston
who was followed the next year by Mr. Dorr, father of George B. Dorr,
who has done so much for the Island.
The attractions of the climate and scenery soon became known
to the fashionable world and gradually the boarding houses were re-
placed by large, barnlike hotels which of ered very little in the
way of conveniences but were mot popular, particularly with the
young people. The heyday of hotel life at Bar Harbor was from 1875
to 1885 when the Rodick House was the center of social life, It
was situated in the main street extending with its grounds from
Higgin's Grocery store down to Cottage Street, the tennis courts
being on the low end of the lot. While life was very simple,
Bar Harbor was a very fashionable resort and it was consider d quite
the thing for a debutante of Boston, New York or Philadelphia, to
spend at least part of the summer there. Sproul's restaurant catered
to the fashionables and the races of the Kebo Valley Club were gala
affairs. When the hotel dwellers commenced to build cottages there
was very rapid development and there was an active and rising real
estate market from the middle 70's up to the boom year of 1887.
The first cottage builders took up the shore property but later the
possibilities of the hillsides were seen and farseeing men from the
cities planned their development. Charl S T. How of Boston, was
the leader of those and did more than anyone else to promote the
best development of Bar Harbor, buying large tracts of land and
building the Highbrook, Cleftstone and other roads on the hillside.
Although the first residents landed at Southwest Harbor, that
being the largest village, the development of the west side of the
Island came later, and that of Northeast Harbor dates from the year
1880 when President Eliot of Harvard Unitersi bought land and
built his cottage and Bisho Doane of Albany stopped at Squire
Kimball's boarding house situated on the site of the present Kimball
House and also bought land. It is stated that Deacon Kimball was
very much puzzled b his new boarder and stated to a friend that he
did not know what to call him because he had registered in the style
of an English Bilho as William of Albany". It was almost an
accident that President Eliot did not settle where Sorrento no v is
for his son told me that in 1877 or 1878 he cruised down this way
with his tow sons then in collage and made an offer to the Widow
Bean for her farm comprising the point at forrento, quite a large
4
tract of land. It was a good offer for that time but was re-
fused because the widow thought it so high that there might be
some hidden value that she did not know about. It seems that a
short time previous silver ore had been discovered at Sullivan
Falls and the widow thought that this college professor who was
a scientific man had discovered silver ore on her property and
that was why he made such a high offer. Dr. Semuel Eliot also
tells me that he and his brother camped at Northeast Harbor in
1880 and advised their father to buy land there for a summer home,
whereupon he drove along the shore front from Manchester's Point
to Seal Harbor and selected the point where the house now stands
as the best there was. The development of Northeast Harbor as a
hotel and cottage colony was very rapid for the next 12 years and
has continued steadily up to the present day.
The first settler in Seal Harbor was John Clement who came
in 1809 and set up a bark tent until a log cabin could be built.
lie was a cooper and made barrels for the Hadlocks of Cranberry
Isles. During the next year he settled on the east side of the
harbor on land of the Bingham Land Purchase. His sons took to
fishing and went to the Magdalen Islands in the springs for
herring to smoke for the Boston Market. They succeeded in this
business and accumulated enough money to buy some real estate
where the Seaside Inn now stands. One of the brothers, James
Clement built what is now known as the Homestead Cottage which
still stands and in 1869 they sold all interest in the fish busin-
ess and commenced to rebuild the old house into a summer hotel
which was a success from the start although for a number of years
in a small way.
In 1884 the Glen Cove Hotel was built on the site of the
present Village Green and later an annex was built to this hotel
connected with the main buildin by a passage way known as the
"Hyphen".
In its early days Seal Harbor was noted for the number of
literary and scientific men and college professors who made their
homes there either at the hotels or in cottages. Among them
being Professors Rowland of John Hopkins, Dana and Summer of Yale,
Toy and Theyer of Harvard, besides Doctors Edward K. Dunham,
Christian A. Herter and Simon Flexner, the authors James Ford
Rhodes, Hamilton W. Mabie, Winston Churchill, Dr. Henry van Dyke
and others. In fact at the old Glen Cove Hotel the scholarly
atmosphere was such that the bell boys were sometimes wont to
construe latin prose with the guests.
Up to the year 1894 there was very little cottage develop-
ment at Seal Harbor, the principal summer residence being that
built in 1891 by Mr. and Mrs. George B. Cooksey on the point at
the east side of the harbor now occupied by the residence of Mr.
and Mrs. Ernest B. Dane. Previous to this Admiral Crowninshield,
Mr. R. R. Thomas and Messrs. Boggs and Barr had bought on the
west side of the harbor but there was not road to enable people to
get to the shore front beyond the Cooksey point and the real develop-
ment of the place commenced when the Cookseys bought 800 acres
of land with the shore front from their point to beyond Little
Hunter's Beach, a distance of about two miles and Mr. Cooksey in
5
1895 built the Sea Cliff Drive and provided an adequate water
supply for the place from Jordan Pond. Development followed
rapidly and summer cottages were built by Professors Rowland
and Dana besides Messrs. Hoe and Bodman and others, and also
Doctors Edward K. Dunham and Christian A. Herter who had besides,
well equipped laboratories and took and active interest in the
sanitary conditions of the place, the milk and water being regul-
arly inspected commencing with the year 1902.
After the death of Dr. Herter, work in his laboratory
was continued by Dr. Henry D. Dakin developer with Dr. Carrell
of the Dakin solution which saved many lives during the World
War and in 1921 the place was bought by Dr. James B. Murphy of
the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research making a contin-
uous line of scientific men in the same location interested in
the welfare of the place.
Speaking of these laboratories, there is rather an
amusing story in connection with Dr. Herter's. Dr. Herter had a
number of monkeys for his spinal meningitis experiments and one
day the laboratory attendant was careless and left the door of
the cage open, whereupon the monkeys escaped and sought their
home in the woods of Mount Desert Island. But finding its
natural food scarce, one of them was tempted by the smell of
cooking from a cottage occupied by an old gentleman whose cook
was broiling a steak for his noonday meal. She wasza good cook
and had been in his employ for a long time but unfortunately
was inclined to indulge a little too much in the cup that cheers
and also inebriates. The kitchen window was open and the monkey
seeing and smelling the food, jumped through it onto the shoulder
of the cook, who, not knowing what had happened to her, rushed
into her master who was equally surprised but soon recovered his
composure and drove out the animal.
When I came to Seal Harbor in the year 1892 for a visit
to my cousin, Mrs. George B. Cooksey, who had recently built her
house on the point where the Dane house now stands, there was
not a house on the Jordan Pond Road. There were two hotels and
only five cottages which had been built for summer residents,
although there were a few other houses owned by the permanent
residents, which were rented in the summer time.
The water supply was from a dam in the brook about half
way up the Jordan Pond Road, and was very fitful
Mr. Cooksey soon saw that a better supply was needed and
he bought the plant and franchise of the water company from Mr.
Campbell of the Glen Cove Hotel and planned to bring the water
from Jordan Pond down the Jordan Brook valley to the foot of
Long Pond. He thereupon had a survey made for condemnation
purposes at the outlet of Jordan Pond where the present dam now
is, the only point where a water supply could be taken from the
pond, had his lawyer, John A. Peters now Judge Peters of Ellsworth,
commence condemnation proceedings at Ellsworth, went to Boston,
and ordered the necessary pipe, the order bein so large that it
took all the available pipe there was in Boston, had it shipped by
6
fast freight to Mount Desert Ferry and chartered a steamboat with
Captain William Cox of Seal Harbor, an experienced navigator, on
board to transport it from there to Seal Harbor. At this point
the officers of the Northeast Harbor Water Company and the resi-
dents along the Asticou Road got wind of the proceedings and con-
cluded that they would like to have control of the supply of water
from Jordan Pond.
They had possession of another charter whi was outstanding
and which contained the right to take water from Jordan Pond and
under the impressi on that the first company that laid pipe from the
pond would have the prior right, telegraphed to Boston for pipe
and received word back that there was not pipe in Boston. In the
meantime, Mr. Cooksey's pipe had reached Mount Desert Ferry but its
arrival at Seal Harbor was delayed because of a dense fog, so they
thought of some old rusty discarded pipe which they had in stock
and rushed it up to Jordan Pond with a gang of men to dig a trench
and put their pipe in it, although there was not possibility of its
carrying any water. Mr. Cooksey's men with their pipe arrived soon
after and there was then some trouble up by the outlet of the pond.
one gang throwing dirt out of the trench and the other throwing it
in. But soon Mr. Gardner of the Northeast Harbor Water Company got
word from Ellsworth that Mr. Cooksey's condemnation proceedings were
completed and that he had therefore the prior right.
As soon as Mr. Cooksey had won the contest, he, with his usual
liberality, approached Mr. Gardiner and his associates, told them
that he wished to give them an adequate supply or water and made
arrangements which were perfectly satisfactory to them.
I was not here at that time but I got this account from
Judge Peters, who attended to the legal matters, from Mr. Gardiner,
who in his usual humorous way expressed it by saying, "I was like
Davy Crockett's coon who said "don't shoot, I will come down", and
from Mr. Alanson Clement who, although a close friend of Mr.
Cooksey, was President of the comp ny sponsored by the Northeast
Harbor people.
An amusing side light occurred when the schooner arrived
off Cookseys (now Danes) point.
Mr. Cooksey whishing to help went out on the point and
shouted and Captain Cox wishing to hear the waves on the rocks
and not recognizing the voice, shouted back, "Shut up you damned
fool".
The four inch water main down the Jordan Brook Valley served
the place for a few years but the growth was so rapid that in 1901
Mr. Cooksey's company laid a ten inch main below frost down the
Jordan Pond Road to the Village, this, giving a winter supply of
water, created a rapid growth along the Jordan Pond Road which had
continued until this day.
7
An important element in the development of these villages
was the establishment of the Village Improvement Societies,
the Northeast Harbor Society being founded in the year 1898
and the Seal Harbor Society in 1900, the basic reason for their
establishment being the system of Town Government characteristic
of New England. The towns comprise large areas outside of the
villages and there are no local villagegovernments to take care of
immediate and local wants such as the sprinkling of street, removal
of garbage, etc. and in these early days, the town finances did not
admit of their being taken over by the town, therefore for a number
of
years at Northeast Harbor and Seal Harbor the sprinkling of the
streets and the removal of the garbage and refuse and the raking of
the village streets were done by those societies, the funds being
provided by voluntary contribution or entertainments gotten up
by the summer people. Later as the towns grew larger and the jobs
became too big to be handled by the societies, they were taken
over by the town.
The most important development in the history of the island
was the establishment of the Hancock County Trustees of Public
Reservations. This was organized by President Eliot in 1901 on
the model of the Massachusetts organization of which he had been
an officer for a long time. The officers were: President -
Charles W. Eliot, Vice-president - George B. Dorr, Secretary -
L. B. Deasy, Treasurer - George L. Stebbins. This organization
was empowered to receive lands to be held for the public benefit
but no lands were rec ived until the year 1908 when my associate,
Mr. Cooksey, suggested that we might start things by presenting,
the trustees with a very small bit of land on which the Champlain
Monument had been erected in 1904 and the first dood recorded by
the trustees was June 5th, 1908 of this little bit of land compris-
ing a few square yards.
The first substantial gift however, was from Mrs. Homans
of Bar Harbor, by deed dated prior, but recorded subsequent
to the Cooksey deed of a considerable tract of land on the Bee
Hive Mountain back of Schooner Head.
Very notable additions were made to the reservations in
the years 1910 and 1911 when a group at Seal Harbor, composed
of George B. Cooksey, Tracy Dows, Richard M. Hoe, EdwardC.
Bodman, Dr. Edward K. Dunham, Dr. Christian Herter, and George
L. Stebbins, discovering that a good title could be obtained
to a tract of over 3600 acres once owned by a bankrupt land
company of the boom days of 1887, bought the tract and by
arrangement with Mr. Dorr of Bar Harbor, turned over to him
some 1600 aores on the slopes of Green Mountain in the Town of
Eden and made a gift to the reservations of Pemetic Mountain
and the Triads, some 1000 acres. Soon after that the Charles
T. How property, comprising about 1700 acros, including Jordan
and Sargent Mountains and most of the Bubbles, came on the
market and was bought and presented to the reservation by a
8
group from Northeast Harbor headed by Pres. Eliot and assisted
by contributions from the Seal Harbor and Northeast Harbor Water
Companies. At that time other purchases were made in the Bar
Harbor district largely through the generosity of the late John
S. Kennedy, resulting in a tract of 5000 acres being held in the
reservations more than half of which came from the Town of Mount
Desert.
In the late summer of 1910, Mr. Rockefeller who had rented
a cottage in Seal Harbor that and the previous season, bought
and made large additions to his present residence, The Eyrie,
built in the winter of 1900-1901 by Professor Samuel F. Clarke
of Williamstown, Massachusetts and immediately became interested
in the reservations, and later the National Park, rescuing large
tracts of land from the lumbermen.
Few people realize, except those immediately concerned,
that these acquisitions were made just in time to save our
forests from being devastated by the wood cutters.
In the old days the deep woods were safe because it cost
too much to transport the logs to the sawmills, which were 10-
cated at the outlets of the ponds, but soon after the beginning
of this century, the portable gasoline sawmill came into general
use and that, together with a great increase in the price of
lumber, made it profitable to cut any of the soft wood growths
on the island.
In acquiring these tracts for the reservations, thus
saving the forests, we in some cases got ahead of the speculators
and lumbermen by a few hours only
One of the lively episodes of what are now old times was
the fight to keep automobiles from the roads of Mount Desert
Island. In the year 1903 a Bar Harbor lawyer got a bill through
the Maine State Legislature permitting towns on Mount Desert
Island to prohibit the use of automobiles on their roads and all
of the towns immediately voted for that prohibition. Conditions
remained very satisfactory until about the year 1911 when a
strong sentiment in favor of admitting automobiles grew up part-
icularly among the permanent residents of the town of Bar Harbor,
resulting in that town voting in July 1913 to admit the automobiles.
This was soon followed by Southwest Harbor, but the Town of Mt.
Desert held out with a solid opposition to the admission of auto-
mobiles, expressed by the summer residents and backed up by an
over-whelming vote in August 1913 by the voters of the town and
it was not until action was taken by the State Legislature in the
winter of 1914-18 that the automobiles were admitted.
Th next event of great importance in the development of
Seal Harbor, was the presentation by Mr. Rockefeller in the
year 1920 of the property comprising about six acres on which
the old Glen Cove Hotel, which had been closed for years stood,
to the town for use as a Village Green and public park. The
buildings which housed th Whitmore store and Billings market
9
were moved northward, giving the open space which we now see
and which adds SO much to the beauty of the village and to
the pleasure of its inhabitants.
The Mountain Road and other developments by Mr. Rocke-
feller, which are of so much benefit to Seal Harbor and
Mount Desert Island, are matters of recent and not old times
and, therefore, I shall do no more than to refer to them.
As the place grew, various activities for the benefit
of the winter as well as the summer residents developed, the
Seal Harbor Library being built in the year 1900 on land donated
by George B. Cooksey and Mrs. Charles H. Clement, a summer and
a winter resident. In 1906 the Harbor Cliffs Tennis Club was
established on the high land east of the harbor and continued
its activities with tournaments every summer until 1927 when it
was superceded by the new Harbor Club. The Seal Harbor Neigh-
borhood Hall was built in 1914 principally for the benefit of
the permanent residents of the place and from subscriptions made
very generally from both the permanent and summer residents. This
hall was burned to the ground in 1919 and replaced by the present
building from the proceeds of the insurance with additional
subscriptions, and fills a very important part in the social life
of the place, particularly during the winter months. The Seal
Harbor Yacht Club was organized in 1923, its first Commodore
being Mr. Roscoe B. Jackson of Detroit, who served until his
death in 1929, he was succeeded by Mr. Edsel B. Ford, and in 1935
by Mr. Edward K. Dunham, Jr. The Club affords landing to visit-
ing yachts and holds an annual Regatta each year in cooperation
with the Northeast Harbor Fleet, which organization sponsors the
July and August series of races participated in by the racing
members of the Seal Harbor Club.
In 1910 Mr. and Mrs. Ernest B. Dane bought the Cooksey
point on the east side of the harbor and built their present
house on the site of the old one and Mrs. Marcus A. Hanna occup-
ied her new house built on the point adjoining it on the east.
In 1925 Mr. Edsel B. Ford who had been coming to Seal Harbor
for stays of longer or shorter duration for many years bought 75
acres on Ox Hill at the vast of the harbor and the next year
occupied his present residence. In that year also Mr. Roscoe B.
Jackson bought the Penrose property on the east side of the
harbor just above the Yacht Club and built the residence which
now stands there.
In the year 1926 Mr. Rockefeller, Mr. Ford, the late Mr.
Jackson and the late Dr. D. Hunter McAlpin, seeing the desirab-
ility of a swimming as well as a tennis club, bought property
bordering on Bracy Cove and built the present Harbor Club with
its Club House, swimming pool, and tennis courts, the old tennis
club being given up in that year.
An account of Seal Harbor would hardly be complete without
mention of two otheritems. First the Jordan Pond Hous which
has played a large part in the life of the summer residents and
has been donducted since the year 1895 by Mr. McIntire who built
it up from a very small beginning to its present attractive con-
dition. The other is the network of woodland paths radiating from
10
this spot, for, as stated by Baedecker in his guide-book of the
United States, "it is for its convenience as a center for walkers
that Seal Harbor is very favored". These trails, laid out and
mapped mostly in the years 1895 and 1896 by the late Waldron
Bates of Bar Harbor with assistance from our side of the Island,
are kept up by the Village Improvement Society and can offer a variety
of seashore, mountain and valley walks such as can be had in f ew
places.
In speaking of old times, I recall various incidents which
perhaps are not familiar to the present generation. When I
attended my first Town Meeting in March 1896, the seat of the
town government was at Somesville, and we all drove there to the
meeting. It often happened that there was good sleighing and a :
old time custom still prevailed of the men from the other villages
as soon as the meeting was over, to hitch up their horses and race
home, making it sort of a local Derby day, and I remember a week
or two before the meeting seeing various men ou: at dusk with
their fastest horses, getting them into condition for the race,
but when one spoke to them about it, they always allowed that
they were not going to race this year because their horses were
not in good "ruddin" condition.
During the years in which I spent a great part of the year
at Seal Harbor, I made many close friends among the pe manent
residents and I well remember a drive to Somesville with the late
James Clement, when, in his relation of old time stories regard-
ing the residents along the road, he displayed his keen sense of
humor. As we came to one place he said a man named Richardson
once lived there who had three sons not noted for their industrial
habits. Once day he undertook a journey to Ellsworth and before
leaving, gave each son a hoe and told them to hoe the corn patch
during his absence; but when he return he found the three sons
leaning on the handles of their hoes, gossiping, with very little
of the patch hoed. A few days after, he again went to Ellsworth
but before going he took a saw and sawed the hoe handles half
way down to the blade so that they could not lean upon them but
upon returning a little early, he found the three sons with the
hoes reversed, sitting on the bludes and talking.
At another house, he said an old fool lived there who had a
rooster that crowed very early in the morning, thereby disturbing
the next door neighbor, whose house was near the barn. The
neighbor conceived a plot to rid himself of this nuisance and
went and told the man that it was very bad luck to have a rooster
that crowed at midnight, and that night he got up at midnight and
went into his neighbor's barn ith a lantern and waked the rooster
up so that it crowed. The next day the owner of the rooster told
his neighbor that he was much alarmed, that the rooster had crowed
at midnight and he was assured that it was a very bad sign. The
next night the neighbor repeated in trick which resulted in the
rooster being killed the next day.
LIBRARY
Historer
PARK
END
NATURAL ACADIA
BAR
Edward K. Dunham (August 1980)
Early Years of the Seal Harbor Village Improvement Society
It is fitting as we go forward from one decade into another to look back. I
am going to look back briefly with you at the first fifty years of our Society.
Why the first fifty years and not the whole eighty? A practical reason is that I
have in my study all the annual reports of the first fifty years which my father,
a great collector of such documents, had kept together. For the years since his
death in 1951 I have only a few scattered reports. But there is a less trivial
reason. Many of our Society's activities in its early years were quite different
from its activities today, while for the last thirty years its work has remained
pretty much the same. A look back at the early days will remind us that the
Society was not always mainly concerned with the upkeep of the beach, the Village
Green, and the trails and may encourage us to conceive new ideas for our Society's
future.
The recorded story begins with a meeting of "citizens and residents" of Seal
Harbor held on the 30th of June in the year 1900. The meeting may well have been
at the office of George L. Stebbins, for whose vision in developing Seal Harbor as
a summer resort we may all feel much gratitude, and who served our Society
tirelessly as an officer and a director for more than fifty years. The Society
was incorporated on the 23rd of July the same year. Its first Board of Directors
consisted of C. F. Batchelder, C. C. Bogart (Secretary), E. S. Bristol, the
Reverend W. A. Brown, R. E. Campbell, S. F. Clarke (Vice President), Amos Clement,
Edward S. Dana (Vice President), Edward K. Dunham (Vice President), Theodore
Dunham, Richard M. Hoe (President), F. H. Macomber, the Reverend J. S. Penman,
George L. Stebbins (Treasurer), Mrs. E. V. Douglas, Mrs. Edward K. Dunham, and
Miss Emma Tilge. That is the order in which the directors were listed in the
printed report: the ladies come last in their own alphabetical order after the
gentlemen. The By-Laws specifically provided that half of the Directors might be
women--but no more than half! The first summer was marked by a "Grand
Kindersymphonie Concert" for the Society's benefit conducted by Mr. Frank
Damrosch.
The original By-Laws provided for six standing committees: Finance,
Entertainment, Sanitary, Roads and Paths, Trees and Planting, and an executive
committee. Rather than following a single chronological path in my account and
skipping back and forth from one committee to another, I am going to look at the
work of various committees one by one.
The original concerns which the Society was intended to address are well
defined in the duties which the By-Laws assign to the several committees.
The
Sanitary Committee's charge was as follows:
It shall be the duty of this committee to examine into the condition of
the water supply, water front, sewer, drains, and localities generally
likely to become sources of injury or contagion and report to the Board
of Directors, and if necessary to consult with the town officers. It
shall be the duty of this committee to propose some plan for the removal
of garbage (collection and disposal) and to act thereon as instructed by
the Board of Directors.
This committee originally consisted of Dr. Theodore Dunham, William Cox, Edward
S. Dana, and George L. Stebbins. The Society's membership always afforded one or
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two physicians able to guide the efforts of the Sanitary Committee, including
Dr. Donald Clement, Dr. Christian A. Herter, Dr. D. Hunter McAlpin, Dr. James
B. Murphy, and Dr. Edward K. Dunham. Its first interest was the construction of a
sewer, which was built by the Town in the fall of 1901 for five thousand dollars.
The work of garbage removal was also begun in 1901, the householders being charged
for its cost, and was continued by the Society until it was taken up by the Town
in
1927. The water supply was subjected to careful chemical and bacteriological
analysis and was found to meet the highest standards. In 1903 the committee began
the work of periodic bacteriological examination of the milk and inspection of the
then several dairies on the island. This work was continued into the 1930's.
Campaigns against flies were begun in 1911 and continued in succeeding years. In
1920 the sorting of garbage into three classes--one for feeding to pigs, one to be
burnt, and one to be buried--was instituted and found to ameliorate the fly
problem considerably.
2.
The 1900 By-Laws charge the Committee on Roads and Paths as follows:
It shall be the duty of this committee to improve, so far as the funds
permit, the condition of the roads, paths, sidewalks and signposts, and
to attend to the preservation of trees and plants.
In fact, the Society's first act, on the 16th of July in 1900, was the purchase of
a six hundred gallon Studebaker sprinkler for sprinkling the roads, which were
then unpaved. Our Society cooperated with its counterpart in Northeast Harbor and
with the residents on the road between the two villages to have the whole of that
road sprinkled. This work accounted for the greater part of the Society's budget
in those days, and in 1905 the Town of Mount Desert began to make an annual
contribution toward the cost of this service. With the introduction of
automobiles onto the island, road conditions were markedly changed, and in 1917
the two Village Improvement Societies thought it best to turn this work over to
the Town and to that end gave the Town their sprinkling wagons.
The introduction of the automobile is a story in itself. In 1907 Mr.
Stebbins, as Chairman on the Executive Committee, reported with satisfaction the
1907
passage by the Maine Legislature of a law giving the Town authority to so restrict
the use of automobiles as to protect us from all danger from them. This was
accomplished in co-operation with the Northeast Harbor Village Improvement
Society, special committees being appointed who attended the hearing on the bill
at Augusta on January 24th when incidentally the thermometer registered 40 degrees
below zero. The best efforts of the two Societies, which are chronicled in a po em
reprinted in this year's town report, were however insufficient to prevent repeal
of that law less than a decade later. The Society continued to concern itself
with the menace of the automobile, however, and in 1924 it and the Northeast
Harbor society presented the Town with a motorcycle for use by the police to curb
speeding.
The Committee on Roads and Paths in those days expended very considerable
personal work by its members in the laying-out and clearing of paths and trails.
The trails they constructed included not only those nearby ones still under the
Society's care but many of those farther afield and now in the national park.
Henry Stebbins, who with his brother Ledyard carried out much of this work, could
tell you about it first-hand. An extensive path guide, running to fifty-odd
pages, was published by the Village Improvement Societies of Bar Harbor, Seal
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Harbor, Northeast Harbor, and Southwest Harbor in 1915.
In January of 1906, an alarming number of nests of the Brown Tail Moth had
been detected. The Northeast Harbor Board of Trade enlisted the advice of the
State Entomologist and the support of the several Village Improvement Societies.
The matter was explained to the children in the schools, and they were offered a
ten-cent bonus for each nest brought in, funded by a Town appropriation. After
the children had done their work, the Society sent out men to make a thorough and
systematic search, and Mr. Stebbins traveled to Seal Harbor in March to make sure
that the work was properly carried out before the caterpillars left their nests in
the spring. In 1912 the appearance of vast numbers of the spruce-bud moth Tortrix
fumiferana led the Society to bring the Chief Entomologist of the Maine
Agricultural Experiment Station to Seal Harbor to give a public address on the
parasite and the best measures available for its control. What these measures
were is not recorded, but if the pest is the same as the spruce budworm which is
at the bottom of so much controversy today I imagine that they were less than
fully effective. Also in 1912 it is recorded that
An interesting experiment was made for the extermination of rats by the
use of Danyz Virus which resulted in ridding our Village of these pests
which had become very numerous.
What that virus is I do not know, but perhaps our Society was an early
practitioner of the biological methods of pest control which are thought to hold
SO much promise today. In 1933 the Society began annual campaigns to eradicate
ragweed from the island.
3.
I have not talked about the Committee on Trees and Plantings because they
reported little activity in the early years. We had no village green in those
days. What is now the Village Green was the site of the Glen Cove Hotel, where my
grandmother had stayed when she first visited Seal Harbor in 1890. The hotel
burned after the First World War--I am not sure of the exact year--and in 1920
Mr. John D. Rockefeller, Jr., who had acquired the site, deeded it to the Town to
be used as a village green, its care to be exercised by our Society. Of course
all who live on Mount Desert Island have much to be grateful to Mr. Rockefeller
for. But as an increasing number of members will not remember him, I want to
record that he, like Mr. Stebbins, was a prime mover of the Society for more than
fifty years. I don't want anyone to think that his contributions were chiefly of
money. He had a very clear vision of what Seal Harbor and the island ought to be
and worked unceasingly to fulfill it. He was an imaginative problem solver and
gave freely of his wisdom and his efforts in furtherance of the Society's work.
Like the laying out of the trails, the creation of the Village Green was
a
work in which the members of the responsible committee invested very considerable
personal thought and effort. Besides Mr. Rockefeller and Mr. Stebbins,
Mrs. Edward C. Bodman, Mr. Samuel W. Candage, Miss Emma Whitmore, and Mrs. Edward
K. Dunham were particularly active in landscaping the green and subsequently in
having the Comfort Station built.
Many of our Society's early functions were subsequently taken over by
government. To some it may seem anomalous for a private group like ours, rather
than the Town, to have charge of the beach and Village Green. But I am proud that
our predecessors eighty years ago identified the community needs they did and set
about to supply them by their own efforts rather than passively assuming them to
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be the responsibility of government.
Our Society has always enjoyed the most
cordial cooperation of the Selectmen of the Town of Mount Desert, who indeed for a
number of years sat as ex officio members of our Board of Directors, and for more
than 30 years the Town has annually appropriated a sum in support of our work at
the beach and Village Green. This kind of cooperation between government and a
voluntary organization of citizens has yielded much that is good in our village
and I think is an example worthy of emulation.
Edward K. Dunham
20 August 1980
9/23/2020
Home :: Seal Harbor Village Improvement Society
A SEAL HARBOR LEGACY
Summer and year-round residents founded the Seal Harbor Village Improvement Society in
1900 to ensure a healthy, pleasurable, high quality of life for their community. In 1919, John
D. Rockefeller Jr. and the SHVIS saw the need to have a public park for visitors and residents
alike. Rockefeller purchased the Glen Cove Inn with its five acres of land, tore down the inn,
razed or relocated other buildings, and then donated the space to the town. Beatrix Farrand,
the first woman named to the American Association of Landscape Architects, worked with
the VIS on a new community space. They replaced the inn with a sweeping lawn-framed by
shade trees-that afforded panoramic views of the harbor. Across the street, Farrand created
a small park encircled with beach roses in memory of Dr. Edward K. Dunham, one of the
founders of the VIS. Through the dedication and contributions of generations of VIS
members, the work of the visionary founders remains for all of us to enjoy: eight miles of
paths through scenic woodlands, a pristine beach, and the Village Green.
The Seal Harbor Village Improvement Society is organized as a public charity under 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue
Code and is qualified to receive tax deductible bequests, devises, transfers or gifts under section 2055, 2106, or 2522 of
the Internal Revenue Code.
https://www.sealharborvis.org
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SEAL HARBOR
MOUNT DESERT ISLAND
MAINE
GEORGE L. STEBBINS
REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE
ADDRESS
November First to May First
May First to November First
102 PRODUCE EXCHANGE
SEAL HARBOR
NEW YORK
MAINE
SEAL HARBOR
SITUATION-Seal Harbor is on the South side of Mount Desert Island, nine
miles from Bar Harbor and four miles from Northeast Harbor.
ACCESS-It is reached by through trains from New York and Boston, the
Maine Central Railroad Ferry steamers connecting to and from Seal
Harbor, and by the Eastern Steamship Company's night boat from
Boston.
HOTELS-The two hotels, the Seaside Inn and the Glen Cove, are noted
for their good cheer, homelike accommodations, and refined and pleasant
social life. They are supplied with electric lights, call bells and baths,
and have unusually good tennis courts.
WATER SUPPLY-The water supply is from Jordan Pond, a beautiful lake
set in the hills two miles away from the village, at an elevation of 270
feet above the sea, which furnishes an abundance of pure, clear and
soft water. It is analyzed by the State Chemist regularly every three
months and he reports it "one of the best supplies in the State."
SANITATION-The - drainage system is complete and modern, having been
doors. A favorite walk is through the woods over a particularly
installed in 1901 under competent engineering advice and supervision.
beautiful and well kept path to Jordan Pond, with luncheon, tea, or
In caring for the general sanitary welfare of the place the local
dinner, at the Jordan Pond House, noted for its good fare. Another is
board of health gladly avails itself of the assistance and advice of the
along the rocky shore to Hunter's Beach and its headland, often with
trained experts on the Sanitary Committee of the Village Improvement
fine effects of dashing surf; or at low tide, interesting treasures of sea
Society who have at their disposal the facilities of well equipped
life in the pools, anemones, sea-urchins, starfish, or perhaps a live
laboratories in the place. Under the auspices of this Committee the
sponge clinging to the rock.
principal milk supplies are subject to frequent bacteriological examina-
tions, and sanitary conditions in general are kept under observation.
BOATING-The opportunities for rowing and sailing are unusually good,
not only the harbor but the channels between the islands, which lie
DIVERSIONS-Tho chief diversions are driving, walking, mountain climbing,
between it and the sea, being as little dangerous as salt water can be.
rowing, sailing and tennis
The accessibility to the open sea is especially appreciated by persons
fond of deep sea fishing. Many interesting excursions may be taken to
DRIVES - The village streets, and the roads to and beyond Northeast Harbor
the neighboring islands. Boats are rented at moderate prices.
and to Jordan Pond are sprinkled, giving a twelve mile drive along the
shores of the ocean and Somes Sound, and back, free from dust. The
TENNIS-In addition to the courts at the hotels, there is a tennis club with
Sea Cliff Drive, two miles long, built by private enterprise is considered
five good courts well kept up; where during the season, tournaments
as fine as any on the Island, and the roads to Jordan and Bubble ponds
and team matches with the neighboring places are held.
afford beautiful bits of woodland scenery.
BEACH-At the head of the cove of Seal Harbor is a sand beach, the play
WALKS-It is, however, as remarked by Bacdecker in his latest, "United
ground of the children. It and the village streets, and the paths, are
States," for its convenience as a center for walkers, that Seal Harbor is
cared for and kept clean by a well organized Village Improvement
best favored. The trains from Sargent, Jordan, Pemetic, Green and
Society supported by the people of the place, both permanent and
Dry mountains, The Triads and The Bubbles, converge almost at its
summer residents.
TTAGES-Scal Harbor possesses a good number of large and handsome
summer residences, and attractive and well furnished cottages may be
had for rent.
OPS-The shops and markets are stocked to supply all household needs,
and there is telephone exchange at moderate rates.
URCHES-There are three churches, the Protestant Episcopal, the
Congregational, and the Roman Catholic.
BRARY-The library, open daily during the summer, is attractively
situated, overlooking the harbor, and has an increasing stock of well
selected volumes and the leading periodicals.
VILLAGE OF SEAL HARBOR
JORDAN POND
Description of Panorama of
West Side of Seal Harbor
FROM LEFT TO RIGHT
ON the point is the Crowninshield place
"The Anchorage." The next group
near the shore comprises "Oversea,"
"Meadow" and "Winsor" cottages.
Over the black launch is the Douglas
cottage "Firwood" and the next group over
the last small sloop shows the location of
"Fieldwood," "Sylvanora" and "Bracy"
cottages. The Seaside Inn with its cottages
stands at the head of the harbor, and on
the slopes of Barr Hill above it are "The
Eyric," Prof. Allen's two cottages and
Prof. Sedgwick's cottage. At the extreme
right is seen the Glen Cove Hotel and the
village.
WEST SIDE OF SEAL HARBOR
3
"The Binnacle
Seaside Inn
Glen Cove Hotel
"Lookout'
"Wayside"
"Wallover
"Asqu"
"Hillside'
"Graywood'
"Birchcroft"
"McIntire"
Henshaw
"McIntire"
"Henshaw"
"Everett"
"The Haven"
"A. M. Clement"
Windybrow"
"Bay Ridge"
"Hillcrest"
"Cliff"
"The Perch"
("Wabenaki" and
"Upland" over the
hill here)
Description of Panorama of
East Side of Seal Harbor
FROM RIGHT TO LEFT
ON
the point is the Dane residence
'Glengariff." To the north of the
wharf, over the sailing boat, are "The
Perch" and Cliff Cottage, and on the
crest of the hill above them are "Hillcrest,"
"Bay Ridge," "Wabenaki," and "Windy-
brow" (over the second sailing boat.)
North of this come the two Clement cot-
tages, Stebbins Office and Campbell cottage
and still farther North and half way up the
hill are the Henshaw and Everett cottages
with the long white Clement homestead
below.
At the head of the harbor is the Glen Cove
Hotel (main house and annex) with Gray-
wood, Birchcroft and McIntire cottages
near by. Still farther North are seen Hill-
side, Asqu, Wallover, Wayside and Lookout.
LONG POND
HUNTER'S BEACH HEAD
OFFICE OF G.L. STEBBINS
'WABENAKI"
OR
"WAYSIDE"
VIEW FROM "WAYSIDE" COTTAGE
TRAIN AND BOAT SERVICE
PREVAILING SUMMER SCHEDULE
SUBJECT TO CHANGE
FROM NEW YORK-Through - Express
FROM BOSTON-Through - Expresses
Leaves New York
-
8.00 p. m.
Leave Boston
-
8.00 a.m.
Arrives Bar Harbor
10 00 p. m.
-
1.00 p.m.
Arrives Bar Harbor
5.45 p.m.
Seal Harbor
7.40 a. m.
-
1.50 p. m.
Seal Harbor
6.35 p.m.
8.30 a.m
The Maine Central R. R. Ferry Steamers connect
to and from Seal Harbor with all through trains
EASTERN STEAMSHIP CO.
Leaves Boston 5 p.m. daily
Arrives Seal Harbor 10 a.m.
"HILLSIDE"
[Compiled by Lance Funderburk, 2014]
Page of 17.
Index of Photos on the Seal Harbor Library Web Site
(Print dimensions are given in parentheses, height X width, in inches)
WS001/P022 S.S. Mount Desert (7.2x9.2)
WS002/P001 Jordan Homestead on Road to Northeast Harbor; Bracy's Cove
(5.8x8.1)
WS003/P002 Site of Jordan Pond House (8.0x9.9)
WS004/P003 Beach Path to Seaside Inn (7.4x9.1)
WS005/P004 Rowland Road (7.5x9.2)
WS006/P005 "Confusion Corners"-Cooksey Drive and Upland Road (7.3x9.2)
WS007/P006 Cooksey Drive, Old Site of Champlain Monument (7.3x9.3)
WS008/P007 Schooner, Possibly That of Captain Clarence Lynum (6.9x8.6)
WS009P008 Simon Pinkham Dock; Seal Harbor (7.9x9.9)
WS010/P009 Wildwood Farm of E.B. Dane Estate (5.4x9.7)
WS011/P010 Old Callahan House, Long Pond (7.2x9.1)
WS012/P011 Ingraham Rocks from "Ravenscleft" (8x10)
WS013/P012 Seal Harbor, Rocky Shore (6x8)
WS014/P013 Jordan Pond, About 1900 (7x9)
WS015/P014 Seaside Inn and Cottages from Ox Ledge (7.2x9.1)
WS016/P015 Jordan Pond Road and Bar Harbor Road about 1890 (5.7sx7.7)
WS017/P016 The McKay Smith House-Wildcliff - (7.1x9.8)
WS018/P017 Sutton Island East to Dane Point (7.2x9.0)
WS019/P018 Duck Islands from Great Cranberry (5.9x7.7)
WS020/P019 Glencove Hotel and Seaside Inn (7.2x9.2)
WS021/P020 George L. Stebbins and Water Company (7.2x9.1)
WS022/P021 "Glengariff"-E.B. Dane Estate 7.2x9.5)
WS023/P023 Rowland Road 7.2x9.2)
WS024/P024 View From East Side of Harbor Toward Sutton (8x9.9)
WS025/P025 Sunrise, Blue Hill Bay 5.8x7.6)
WS026/P026 Seal Harbor, Approaching Storm (7.2x9.3)
WS027P027 Seal Harbor From the Beach (7.2x9.3)
WS028/P028 Sutton Island, North Side, Near West End (9.9x8)
WS029/P029 View Across To Mansett and Southwest Harbor From The Roland
Porch (8x9.8)
WS030/P030 View From ? Area of Northeast Harbor? Charles Jarvis Boat Shed,
Isleford? (7.1x9)
WS031/P031 Ravenscleft (7.3x9)
WS032/P032 Sutton Island? (8x9.8)
WS033/P033 Young Boy--David Rowland? (5.9x8.3)
2
WS034/P034 Seal Harbor Store (7.7x5.8)
WS035/P035 Seal Harbor Fountain, 1909 (8x10)
WS036/P036 Road At Foot of Jordan Pond (7.3x9)
WS037/P037 Upland Road? (7.2x9)
WS038/P038 From Ravenscleft, looking west (6.9x9)
WS039/P039 Seal Cove, about 1900 (7.3x9.2)
WS040/P040 Mount Desert from Great Cranberry (9.1x7.3)
WS041/P041 Islesford from Ravenscleft (9x7.3)
WS042/P042 On Cooksey Drive (8x10)
WS043/P043 Unidentified (5.9x8.1)
WS044/P044 S.S. Mt. Desert from Dane's Point (7.2x9)
WS045/P045 NW Corner of Sutton Island (7.7x5.9)
WS046/P046 J.B. Burke service station (4.4x6.4)
WS047/P047 Cave, Day Mountain; in the park (7.2x9)
WS048/P048 Jordan Pond; in the park (5.3x7.9)
WS049/P049 Unidentified (5.8x8.1)
WS050/P050 Stone and Pebble Beach, Great Cranberry Island
Near Dead Man's Point? (5.7x7.6)
WS051/P051 Great Cranberry, looking east toward Baker Island (5.8x8.1)
WS052/P052 Old Bear Island Light (5.7x7.8)
WS053/P053 Great Cranberry Looking Toward Baker Island (5.8x7.7)
WS054/P054 "The Ovens", North Shore of Sutton (5.9x7.7)
WS055/P055 Beach on Somes Sound looking toward Sargent Mountain?
Beach near Otter Creek looking toward Cadillac Mountain? (6x8)
WS056/P056 Sutton Island, North Shore (5.6x7.7)
WS057/P057 Deep Cove? Long Cove? Western Side of MDI? (7.2x9.3)
WS058/P058 Unidentified (7.1x9.2)
WS059/P059 Unidentified (7.3x9.2)
WS060/P060 Pemetic and the Triad from Day Mountain; in the park (7.3x9.1)
WS061/P061 Sargent from Day Mountain; in the park (7.1x9.2)
WS062/P062 Sutton Island, North Shore (5.8x7.7)
WS063/P063 Unidentified (5.8x8.1)
WS064/P064 Unidentified (5.8x7.7)
WS065/P065 Seal Harbor, Rocky Shore (Hunter's Beach?) (6x7.7)
WS066/P066 Northeast Harbor from Sutton (7.3x9)
WS067/P067 Seal Harbor, Rocky Shore (7.4x9)
WS068/P068 "The Ovens", Sutton Island (5.8x7.6)
WS069/P069 From Ox Hill (7.2x9)
WS070/P070 Seal Harbor, 1894 (9.2x6.4)
WS071/P071 View from Seaside Inn meadow (7.3x9.1)
3
WS072/P072 Schooner "Clinton", Maypole Point, Islesford (7.2x9.1)
WS073/P073 Seal Harbor from Sutton Island (6.9x9)
WS074/P074 Jordan Pond; in the park (8x10)
WS075/P075 Baker's Island from Great Cranberry (6.4x9)
WS076/P094 Baker Island Light (6.4x8)
WS077/P096 Eastern Steamship Line pier, ca. 1920 (6.3x8.4)
WS078/P106 Baker Island from Great Cranberry Island (6.9x9)
WS079/P107 Rocky Coast, Seal Harbor (7.7x9.1)
WS080/P108 Unidentified (5.6x8)
WS081/P109 Unidentified (6.4x9.5)
WS082/P110 Unidentified (4.8x6.8)
WS083/P111 Unidentified (9x7.4)
WS084/P200 View from east end of beach, 4 3/8 X 5/8, from Terry Johnson
(4.4x7.7)
WS085/P201 View from east end of beach, 65/8x911/4, from Terry Johnson
(6.6x9.3)
WS086/P202 Way Back Ball, donated by Jackie Davidson (4.4x7.7)
WS087/P204 Seal Harbor Livery, donated by Mrs. Jane Smith (6.8x9.8)
WS088/N054.Bubbles, Jordan Pond, horse and wagon
WS089/N055.Long Pond, doctor in foreground
WS090/N056.Seal Harbor, looking east
WS091/N057.Somes Sound, looking south from head of Sound
WS092/N058.Long Pond, looking north, showing the Bubbles and a boy fishing
WS093/N059.Long Pond and farm from Barr Hill, looking west
WS094/N060.Seal Harbor, looking east from Dodge Landing. Showing an old
Pinkey boat
WS095/N061. Golf links and Meenaga Ledge from Bracey's Cove
WS096/N062. Seal Harbor from Dodge Landing, showing the Thrumcap and
lobster pots
WS097/N063.Seal Harbor from Ox Hill
WS098/N064.Jordan Pond and Bubbles
WS099/N065.Seal Harbor and Cranberry Islands, from Ox Hill
WS100/N066.Seaside Inn from new road to Bar Harbor
WS101/N067.Seal Harbor from Crowninshield Point
WS102/N068.Store, Northeast Harbor, now a clothing store
WS103/N069.Seal Harbor, the Dodge yacht
WS104/N070.From Barr Hill, looking west
WS105/N071.From Barr Hill, looking east
WS106/N072.From Barr Hill, looking east toward the Cleft
WS107/N073.From Barr Hill, looking west
4
WS108/N074.From Barr Hill, looking north, showing the Bubbles
WS109/N075.From Barr Hill, looking northwest, Sargent Mt.
WS110/N076.From Barr Hill, looking southeast
WS111/N077.From Barr Hill, Long Pond and Sargent Mt.
WS112/N078.From Barr Hill, looking south
WS113/N079.From Barr Hill, looking northwest
WS114/N080.From Barr Hill, looking north
WS115/N081. From Barr Hill, looking northeast, showing Pemetic Mt. and
Wildwood Farm
WS116/N082. Devil's Arch, looking east
WS117/N083. Cooksey Road near Blue Head
WS118/N084.Rocks near Blue Head, Hunters Beach Head in distance
WS119/N085.Rocks near Blue Head
WS120/N086.Meenaga Rock
WS121/N087.Looking west from Meenaga Ledge across Bracey's Cove
WS122/N088.Barnacl-covered rock near Blue Head
WS123/N089.Mr Boggs and Chipmunk
WS124/N090. Wildwood farm house
WS125/N091.Shore near Blue Head, man fishing
WS126/N092.Meenaga Ledge from Crowninshield Cottage
WS127N093. Seal Harbor, looking out from Seaside Inn
WS128/N094.Somes Sound
WS129/N095.Somes Sound, showing narrows
WS130/N096.Road to Meenaga Lodge
WS131/N098. View west from the golf links. Fish house and old house
WS132/N099. Old house and fish house, Bracey's Cove, near golf links
WS133/N100.Rocks on trail from Jordan Pond to Wildwood Farm
WS134/N101.Seal Harbor from Seaside Inn piazza
WS135/N102. Cooksey Road near old road
WS136/N103.Seal Harbor from hotel piazza
WS137/N104.Jordan Pond Road and Old Bar Harbor Road Intersection
WS138/N105.Bridge on Hunters Beach Brook
WS139/N106. Cooksey Road, old birch tree
WS140/N107.Mr. Boggs and chipmunks
WS141/N108.Seal Harbor, looking south, showing Thrumcap
WS142/N109. The Bubbles
WS143/N110. View from Ox Hill, looking northwest
WS144/N111. View from Barr Hill, looking southeast
WS145/N003 Seal Harbor from Ox Hill
WS146/N004 Seal Harbor from Ox Hill
5
WS147/N005 Seal Harbor from Ox Hill
WS148/N007 Seal Harbor from Ox Hill
WS149/N008 Seal Harbor from Ox Hill
WS150/N010 Seal Harbor from Crowninshield Point
WS151/N011 Seal Harbor from Crowninshield Point
WS152/N012 Little Long Pond from Route 3
WS153/N013 Little Long Pond from Route 3
WS154/N014 Little Long Pond from Route 3
WS155/N015 Little Long Pond from Route 3
WS156/N016 Little Long Pond from Route 3
WS157/N017 Jordan Pond and the Bubbles
WS158/N019 Seaside Inn from Seal Harbor Beach
WS159/N020 Seal Harbor and the Seaside Inn from Ox Hill
WS160/N021 Seaside Inn from Seal Harbor Beach
WS161/N022 Seaside Inn from Danes Point
WS162/N023 Seal Harbor and Seaside Inn from Ox Hill
WS163/N024 Seaside Inn from Seal Harbor Beach
WS164/N025 Baby Carriage on ? Road
WS165/N026 Somes Sound from Greening Island
WS166/N027 Unidentified
WS167/N028 Unidentified
WS168/N029 Unidentified
WS169/N030 Unidentified
WS170/N031 MDI from Great Cranberry Island
WS171/N032 Unidentified
WS172/N034 Baker Island from Great Cranberry Island
WS173/N035 Cooksie Drive at Ravenscleft
WS174/N037 Unidentified
WS175/P079 Seaside Inn from the Beach, with two children
WS176/N040 Unidentified
WS177/N042 Somes Sound from Greening Island
WS178/N047 Unidentified
WS179/N048 Some Sound from Greening Island
WS180/N049 Seal Harbor and the Pinkham Pier
WS181/N051 Unidentified
WS182/P076 Seal Harbor Village Green (4.4x6.4)
WS183/P077 Seal Harbor Village Green, Curb (4.4x6.4)
WS184/P078 Unidentified quarry (4.4x6.4)
WS185/P080 Village green and fountain (4.2x2.6)
WS186/P081 Harbor Club (3.6x5.3)
WS187/P082 Glencove Hotel (3.5x4.5)
WS188/P083 The Eyrie (3.3x5.1)
WS189/P084 Unidentified (3.1x4.2)
WS190/P085 Unidentified (3.1x5.2)
WS191/P086 Glengariff (3.1x5.1)
6
WS192/P087 Glengariff (3.7x4.8)
WS193/P088 Pruning trees on the village green (3.3x5.5)
WS194/P089 Unidentified (4x6)
WS195/P090 Unidentified (4.2x6.1)
WS196/P091 Glencove Hotel and path along beach (3.5x5.5)
WS197/P092 Boy on beach; Glencove Hotel in background (4.8x6.8)
WS198/P093 John Burke service station (4.3x6.7)
WS199/P095 John Burke service station (4.8x7.1)
WS200/P097 Seaside Inn (3x4.3)
WS201/P098 The Eyrie (3.5x5.5)
WS202/P099 Little Long Pond (3.4x5.6)
WS203/P100 Ravenscleft (3.4x5.3)
WS204/P101 Seaside Inn from village green (3.6x6.5)
WS205/P102 Harbor and Seaside Inn; Fish House Pier? (3.5x5.5)
WS206P103 Main Street, early 20th century (3.6x5.5)
WS207P104 Harbor from Steamboat Wharf; Seaside Inn and Glencove Hotel in
background (3.6x5.5)
WS208P105 John Burke service station and employees (4.5x6.4)
WS209/P112 Unidentified (3.2x5.2)
WS210/P113 Wreck of the J.T Morse (2.7x3.8)
WS211/P114 Jordan Pond from South Bubble (3.3x5.3)
WS212/P115 Steamship at the wharf (3.4x5.4)
WS213/P116 Little Long Pond from Redfield Hill carriage road (?) (3.4x5.4)
WS214/P117 Sargent Drive looking north (3.9x5.4)
WS215/P118 Jordan Pond and the Bubbles (3x5)
WS216/P119 Wreck of the J.T. Morse (3x5)
WS217/P120 Unidentified (3x5)
WS218/P121 The J.T. Morse (3.3x5.4)
WS219/P122 Seal Harbor from west side of beach (3.2x5.4)
WS220/P123 Seal Harbor Neighborhood House (3.2x4.8)
WS221/P124 Seal Harbor and Sea Side Inn (3.7x5.4)
WS222/P125 View from a building overlooking the Village Green and Harbor
(4.1x2.4)
WS223/P126 Fountain and village green in snow (3.2x5.1)
WS224/P127 Seal Harbor from the steamboat wharf (3.6x5.6)
WS225/P128 Little Long Pond (3.5x3.5)
WS226/P129 Sargent Drive (3.3x5.4)
WS227/P130 The Old Mill (3.4x5.4)
WS228/P131 Little Long Pond 3.4x5.3)
WS229/P132 Jordan Pond and the Bubbles (3.3x5.4)
7
WS230/P133 Sand Beach from Ocean Drive (3.4x5.3)
WS231/P134 Seal Harbor from the yacht club (3.3x5.3)
WS232/P135 Landscaping the "Village Green" before buildings were removed
(3x5.2)
WS233/P136 Landscaping the "Village Green" before buildings were removed
(3x5.2)
WS234/P137 Landscaping the "Village Green" before buildings were removed
(3x5.2)
WS235/P138 Landscaping the "Village Green" before buildings were removed
(3x5.2)
WS236/P139 Landscaping the "Village Green" before buildings were removed
(3x5.2)
WS237/P140 Landscaping the "Village Green" before buildings were removed
(3x5.2)
WS238/P141 Landscaping the "Village Green" before buildings were removed
(3x5.2)
WS239/P142 Landscaping the "Village Green" before buildings were removed
(3x5.2)
WS240/P143 Landscaping the "Village Green" before buildings were removed
(3x5.2)
WS241/P144 Landscaping the "Village Green" before buildings were removed
(3x5.2)
WS242/P145 Sign on Village Green (3x5.2)
WS243/P146 Landscaping the "Village Green" before buildings were removed
(3x5.2)
WS244/P147 Landscaping the "Village Green" before buildings were removed
(3x5.2)
WS245/P148 Landscaping the "Village Green" before buildings were removed
(3x5.2)
WS246/P149 Landscaping the "Village Green" before buildings were removed
(3x5.2)
WS247/P150 Landscaping the "Village Green" before buildings were removed
(3x5.2)
WS248/P151 Landscaping the "Village Green" before buildings were removed
(3x5.2)
WS249/P152 Landscaping the "Village Green" before buildings were removed
(3x5.2)
WS250/P153 Building the bridge on the beach path (3x5.2)
WS251/P154 Building the bridge on the beach path (3x5.2)
8
WS252/P155 Landscaping the "Village Green" before buildings were removed
(3x5.2)
WS253/P156 Landscaping Dunham Park (3x5.2)
WS254/P157 Landscaping Dunham Park (3x5.2)
WS255/P158 Landscaping the beach path (3x5.2)
WS256P159 Dunham Park (3x5.2)
WS257/P160 Watering Dunham Park (3x5.2)
WS258/P161 Seaside Inn 3.1x5.5
WS259/P162 Seal Harbor looking northwest from Ox Hill (3.3x5.8)
WS260/P163 Seaside Inn from the harbor (3.3x4.3)
WS261/P164 Unidentified (3.9x5.9)
WS262/P165 Seal Harbor from west side of harbor (3.8x5.8)
WS263/P166 The J.T. Morse at the steamboat wharf (3.4x5.7)
WS264/P167 Planting the Dunham Tree (3.4x5.3)
WS265/P168 Planting the Dunham Tree (3.4x5.3)
WS266/P169 Planting the Dunham Tree (3.4x5.3)
WS267/P170 Planting the Dunham Tree (3.4x5.3)
WS268/P171 Planting the Dunham Tree (3.4x5.3)
WS269/P172 Planting the Dunham Tree (3.4x5.3)
WS270/P173 Planting the Dunham Tree (3.4x5.3)
WS271/P174 Building the beach parking lot (3x5.1)
WS272/P175 Building the beach parking lot (3x5.1)
WS273/P176 Building the beach parking lot (3x5.1)
WS274/P177 Building the beach parking lot (3x5.1)
WS275/P178 The Comfort Station (3.3x5.1)
WS276/P179 Schooner in Seal Harbor (3.4x5)
WS277/P180 The J.T. Morse in Seal Harbor, 1928 (3.1x4.7)
WS278/P181 Large yacht in Seal Harbor (3x4)
WS279/P182 Workers on a ? vehicle (2.4x4.1)
WS280/P183 Landscaping in winter (2.4x4.1)
WS281/P184 Landscaping in winter (2.4x4.1)
WS282/P185 Fire truck by Upper Hadlock Pond (2.4x4.1)
WS283/P186 Workers and ? vehicles (2.4x4.1)
WS284/P187 Testing a fire truck on Upper Hadlock Pond (2.4x4.1)
WS285/P188 Testing a fire truck on Upper Hadlock Pond (2.4x4.1)
WS286/P189 Unidentified garden (3x4)
WS287/P190 Testing a fire truck on Upper Hadlock Pond (2.4x4.1)
WS288/P191 Two Ladies (2x3.1)
WS289/P192 Winter scene, Seal Harbor (2.1x3.1)
WS290/P193 Eastern Steamship Lines wharf (2.1x3.5)
9
WS291/P194 Man and woman in winter (3x2)
WS292/P195 Man and woman in winter (3x2)
WS293/P196 Children, Dunham School (2.9x4.5)
WS294/P197 Building, east side of main street (4.2x7.1)
WS295/P198aDedication of the Seal Harbor community tree (3.3x6.7)
WS296/P198bInvitation to dedication of community tree (3.3x6.7)
WS297/P199 ? on Library steps (5.8x4)
WS298/P203 Seal Harbor Library, scanned from a Postcard from Peggy
Simpson's collection (3.4x5.3)
WS299/P205 Mrs. Rosko P. Jackson/J. J. Obrien in The Dunham Garden (3.2x5.4)
WS300/P206 Mrs.Jackson/O'Brien's Chauffeur in The Dunham Garden (3.2x5.4)
WS301/P207 The Dunham Garden (3.2x5.4)
WS302/P208 The Dunham Garden (3.2x5.4)
WS303/P209 The Dunham Garden (3.2x5.4)
WS304/P210 Way Back Ball, Seal Harbor Neighborhood House
WS305/P210 bNames of people in WS304/P210
WS306/P211 The Eyrie
WS307/P212 The Eyrie
WS308/P213 Seal Harbor basketball team
WS309/P213bNames of people in WS309/P213
WS310/P214 The Candage Homestead
WS311/P215 The Candage Homestead
WS312/P216 The Candage Homestead
WS313/P217 The Bracy Reed House
WS314/P218 The Bracy Reed House
WS315/P219 Smallidges
WS316/P220 Unidentified
WS317/P221 Unidentified
WS318/P222 Seal Harbor village green
WS319/P223 Keewaydin (Dunham Cottage)
WS320/P224 Seaside Inn from beach parking lot
WS321/P225 Dunham Garden
WS322/P226 Unidentified
WS323/P227 Unidentified
WS324/P228 Beach path and Captain Berry's house
WS325/P229 "The Anchorage"
WS326/P230 "The Anchorage"
WS327/P231 "The Anchorage"
WS328/P232 "The Anchorage"
WS329/P233 "The Anchorage"
10
WS330/P234 "The Anchorage"
WS331/P235 "The Anchorage"
WS332/P236 "The Anchorage"
WS333/P237 "The Anchorage"
WS334/P238 "The Anchorage"
WS335/P239 "The Anchorage"
WS336/P240 "The Anchorage"
WS337/P241 "The Anchorage"
WS338/P242 "The Anchorage"
WS339/P243 "The Anchorage"
WS340/P244 "The Anchorage"
WS341/P245 "The Anchorage"
WS342/P246 "The Anchorage"
WS343/P247 "The Anchorage"
WS344/P248 "The Anchorage"
WS345/P249 "The Anchorage"
WS346/P250 "The Anchorage"
WS347P251 "The Anchorage"
WS348/P252 "The Anchorage"
WS349/P253
"The Anchorage"
WS350/P254
"The Anchorage"
WS351/P255 "The Anchorage"
WS352/P256 "The Anchorage"
WS353/P257 "The Anchorage"
WS354/P258 "The Anchorage"
WS355/P259 "The Anchorage"
WS356/P260 Ludders 16 race
WS357/P260aNotes on back of photo WS356/P260
WS358/P261 Zephyr, Steamboat owned by Dr. Henry Stebbins, 1963
WS359/P261aNotes from back of photo WS358P261
WS360/P262 Steam Boat "J. T. Morse"
WS361/Dunham001 View from Keewaydin about 1906
WS362/Dunham002 View from Keewaydin about 1906
WS363/Dunham003 Keewaydin from Glengariff Driveway
WS364/Dunham004 Dr. Edward K. Dunham's Laboratory
WS365/Dunham005 Keewaydin Livingroom
WS366/Dunham006
WS367/Dunham007
WS368/Dunham008
WS369/Dunham009
WS370/Dunham010
11
WS371/Dunham011 Tracy Dows and Dr. E. K. Dunham
WS372/Dunham012 Ledyard, Henry and Marcia Stebbins
WS373/Dunham013
WS374/Dunham014 Theo, Tito and Edward
WS375/Dunham015 Theo and Edward
WS376/Dunham016
WS377Dunham017
WS378/Dunham018
WS379/Dunham019 Sea Cliff Drive
WS380/Dunham020 View from Keewaydin, Northwest
WS381/Dunham021 View from Kitchen Rocks, Keewaydin
WS382/Dunham022 Theo Dunham on "King", Maskell on Topsy
WS383/Dunham023 View of Seal Harbor
WS384/Dunham024 Kitchen Rocks, Keewaydin
WS385/Dunham025 Dan Dana's "Ingomar"
WS386/Dunham026 Looking North from Throm Cap
WS387/Dunham027 View Looking East from Crowningshield Point
WS388/Dunham028 Sea Cliff Drive
WS389/Dunham029 Sea Cliff Drive Looking Toward Hunter's Beach Head
WS390/Dunham030 Ravenscleft
WS391/Dunham031 Sea Cliff Drive
WS392/Dunham032 Long Pond
WS393/Dunham033 Long Pond
WS394/Dunham034 Mary Dows Dunham
WS395/Dunham035 Keewaydin Garden
WS396/Dunham036 Keewaydin Garden
WS397/Dunham037 Edward K. Dunham, Jr.; Tito; Mary Dows Dunham
WS398/Dunham038 Aileen Tone, Edward K. Dunham, Violet Wetscott
WS399/Dunham039 Keewaydin Garden
WS400/Dunham040 Edward K.Dunham, Jr.
WS401/Dunham041 Aileen Tone and Mary Dows Dunham
WS402/Dunham042 Aileen Tone and Dr. Edward K. Dunham
WS403/Dunham043 Edward K. Dunham, Jr.
WS404/Dunham044 Dr. Edward K. Dunham, Aileen Tone and the J. T. Morse, Seal
Harbor
WS405/Dunham045
"
"
WS406/Dunham046 Edward K. Dunham, Jr.
WS407/Dunham047 Dr. Edward K. Dunham and Aileen Tone
WS408/Dunham048
"
WS409/Dunham049 Theo Dunham and "Rama"
WS410/Dunham050 Violet Westcott on "Topsy"
WS411/Dunham051
"
"
WS412/Dunham052 Violet Westcott and Aileen Tone at Bubble Pond
WS413/Dunham053 Edward K. Dunham, Jr. at Bubble Pond
WS414/Dunham054
"
"
12
WS415/Dunham055 Sue Herter, Peggy Hoe, Theo Dunham, Edward K. Dunham, Jr.;
at Bubble Pond
WS416/Dunham056
"
WS417/Dunham057
"
WS418/Dunham058
"
WS419/Dunham059 Violet Westcott, Aileen Tone and Edward K. Dunham, Jr.
WS420/Dunham060 Sue Herter, Theo Dunham, Dr. E. K. Dunham, Christian Herter,
Mr. Hall, E.K. Dunham, Jr., Peggy Hoe, Violet Westcott
WS421/Dunham061 Aileen Tone, Mary Dows Dunham, Dr. E. K. Dunham and ?
WS422/Dunham062 Aileen Tone, Dr. E.K. Dunham and ?
WS423/Dunham063 Frank Damrosh, Mrs. R. M. Hoe, Fred Strauss, Mrs. Davis Dows,
Eunice
WS424/Dunham064 Dane, George Stebbins, Aileen Tone, Richard M. Hoe, Hetty
Damrosh at Jordan Pond House
WS425/Dunham065
Sitting: Eunice and Charlton Cooksey, Kitty & ? Herter, Phylis Da
Kay
WS426/Dunham066 Charlton Cooksey, Christine Herter, Violet Westcott, Betty
Cooksey, Dr. H. D. Da Kin, Edith Stebbins
WS427/Dunham067 "Suzatta", Dr. Herter's Sloop
WS428/Dunham068 View from Miradero
WS429/Dunham069 Miradero, Built by Dr. and Mrs. Christian Herter
WS430/Dunham070 Miradero
WS431/Dunham071 View from Miradero
WS432/Dunham072 "Neith", sloop owned by Dr. E. K. Dunham and Mr. R.M. Hoe
WS433/Dunham073 Theo and "Rama"
WS434/Dunham074 Peggy Hoe, Theo and "King"
WS435/Dunham075 Theo and ?
WS436/Dunham076 Theo, Mary Dows Dunham, "Noqie"
WS437/Dunham077 Theo and "Noqie"
WS438/Dunham078 Theo and Edward
WS439/Dunham079 ?
WS440/Dunham080 Dr. E. K. Dunham
WS441/Dunham081 Edward K. Dunham Jr.
WS442/Dunham082 Edward K. Dunham, Jr. and cats
WS443/Dunham083
"
WS444/Dunham084 Edward K. Dunham, Jr., Theo and cats
WS445/Dunham085
"
WS446/Dunham086 Theo and Edward
WS447/Dunham087 "Kruskin" and "Calamel"
WS448/Dunham088 ?
WS449/Dunham089 Theo, "Buckner" and "Rama"
WS450/Dunham090 Edward Jr.
WS451/Dunham091 Theo, "Buckner" and "Rama"
WS542/Dunham092 Edward Jr.
WS453/Dunham093 Peggy Hoe, Sue Herter, Theo Dunham
WS454/Dunham094 Peggy, Sue, Edward and Theo
13
WS455/Dunham095 Sue, Edward, Theo
WS456/Dunham096 Sue, Edward, Theo
WS457/Dunham097
WS458/Dunham098
WS459/Dunham099
WS460/Dunham100 Kitty Herter, Miss Melville, Sue, Peggy, Polly Herter, Theo
WS461/Dunham101 Mary Dows Dunham, Sam Chapin at Stanley's Farm, Otter Creek
WS462/Dunham102
"
WS463/Dunham103
"
WS464/Dunham104
"
WS465/Dunham10
"
WS466/Dunham10
"
WS467/Dunham107 Theo and Sue
WS468/Dunham108
"
WS469/Dunham109
"
WS470/Dunham110
"
WS471/Dunham111 Theo Dunham, Sue Herter and Peggy Hoe
WS472/Dunham112
"
WS473/Dunham113
"
WS474/Dunham114 Sue Herter with "Beauty", Peggy Hoe, Edward, with Shetland
Pony, "Andrew Mac", Theo
WS475/Dunham115 Peggy Hoe
WS476/Dunham116
WS477/Dunham117 Edward
WS478/Dunham118 Katherine Hoe, 2 Suecamoka's (?), Sue Herter, Edward, Theo,
Helen Lambert
WS479/Dunham119 Christian Herter, Dave Milton, Theodore Dunham Jr.
WS480/Dunham120 Christian A. Herter
WS481/Dunham121 Aileen Tone, Theo, Mary Dows Dunham; Otter Cliffs
WS482/Dunham122
"
WS483/Dunham123 Theo, "Nogie", Aileen Tone
WS484/Dunham124 Aileen Tone and Joseph B. Warner
WS485/Dunham125 Dr. Sam W. Lambert and Dr. Edward K. Dunham
WS486/Dunham126 Dr. Edward K. Dunham
WS487/Dunham127 Peggy Hoe and Theo
WS488/Dunham128 Sue Herter with "Tony", "Shamy", "Dooley", "Nogie", "Pedro"
WS489/Dunham129 Theo on "Robinetta" and Edward on "Brighteyes"
WS490/Dunham130 Patrick on "Black Bess", Theo on "Brighteyes", Dr. E. K. Dunham
on "Topsey"
WS491/Dunham131 Theo on "Topsey"
WS492/Dunham132 Theo and Edward
WS493/Dunham133 Helen Dane, Mary Dows Dunham, Mary Phelps, Beatrice Dunham
WS494/Dunham134 Ernest B. Dane on the "Cone"
WS495/Dunham135 Ernest Dane and Dr. Edward K. Dunham
WS496/Dunham136 Dan Hanna's "Ingomar"
WS497/Dunham137 Mrs. Marcus A Hanna, Mary Phelps and Ed Dodge
14
WS498/Dunham138 Mrs. Hanna
WS499/Dunham139 Mrs. Hanna and Miss Phelps
WS500/Dunham140 Christening of "Marcana" (1908)
WS501/Dunham141 Sam Chapin, Prof. Toy, Richard Hoe, Dr. E. K. Dunham on "Neith"
WS502/Dunham142 "Marcana"?
WS503/Dunham143 Dr. E. K. Dunham and Mrs. Christian Herter
WS504/Dunham144 Theo, Mary Dows Dunham, Dr. E. K. Dunham, Peggy hoe, on
"Neith"
WS505/Dunham145 Edward K. Dunham, Jr
WS506/Dunham146 Theo, ?, ?, "Andrew Mac"
WS507/Dunham147 Peggy Hoe, Theo, Margaret Penman, Edward, Edith Penman
WS508/Dunham148 Edward, George L. Stebbins, Marcia Stebbins
WS509/Dunham149 Edward
WS510/Dunham150 George L. Stebbins as Chantecler
WS511/Dunham151 Chantecler at Cedar Cliff
WS512/Dunham152 Edith Stebbins
WS513/Dunham153 Chantecler, Edith Stebbins, ?
WS514/Dunham154 Mrs. Marcus A. Hanna's House
WS515/Dunham155
"
WS516/Dunham156
"
WS517/Dunham157
"
WS518/Dunham158
"
WS519/Dunham159
"
WS520/Dunham160
"
WS521/Dunham161
"
WS522/Dunham162
"
WS523/Dunham163
"
WS524/Dunham164 Mrs. Hanna
WS525/Dunham165 View from Mrs. Hanna's House
WS526/Dunham166 "Neith", "Sugatta", "Vision"
WS527/Dunham167 Tracy Dows off fishing
WS528/Dunham168 "Cone"
WS529/Dunham169 ?
WS530/Dunham170
?
WS531/Dunham171 ?
WS532/Dunham172 Margaret Baker, Katherine Arnell, Theo, Duncan Fuller, "Roy"
WS533/Dunham173 Alice Dows, Margaret Baker, Edward, K. Arnold, Theo, Duncan,
Margaret Dows
WS534/Dunham174 Duncan, Mary Dows Dunham, Will Marcus, Alice Margaret Dows
WS535/Dunham175 Olin Dows
WS536/Dunham176 Margaret, Alice, Olin Dows
WS537/Dunham177 Livermore girl, Alice Dows, Theo, K. Arnold, Duncan Fuller, Olin
Dows
WS538/Dunham178
?
WS539/Dunham179
?
WS540/Dunham180 Livermore girl, ?, Margaret Dows, ?
15
WS541/Dunham181 Margaret Dows
WS542/Dunham182 Duncan Fuller, Olin Dows, Edward
WS543/Dunham183
"
WS544/Dunham184 Edward and Olin Dows
WS545/Dunham185 ?
WS546/Dunham186 ?, Margaret Dows, ?
WS547/Dunham187 Margaret Dows
WS548/Dunham188 ?, ?, ?, Edward, Duncan, ?
WS549/Dunham189 Priscilla Bartlett, Theo, Mary Tweed, Edward, Louise Herrick,
Duncan
WS550/Dunham190 Priscilla Bartlett, Mary Tweed, Louise Herrick, Edward, Duncan
Fuller
WS551/Dunham191 Duncan, Priscilla Bartlett, Theo, Louise Herrick, Mary Tweed,
Edward
WS552/Dunham192 The Burton Harrison children
WS553/Dunham193
"
WS554/Dunham194 "
WS555/Dunham195 "
WS556/Dunham196 Theo
WS557/Dunham197 Tracy Dows, Duncan Fuller, Edward, Margaret and Alice Dows,
Olin
WS558/Dunham198 Sylvia Hyde
WS559/Dunham199 Mary Dows Dunham, Pretty Marsh
WS560/Dunham200 Edward, Dr. Edward K. Dunham, Theo
WS561/Dunham201 Theo, Edward
WS562/Dunham202 Dr. Edward K. Dunham, Mary Dows Dunham
WS563/Dunham203 Duncan Fuller and Edward
WS564/Dunham204 Dr. Edward K. Duham
WS565/Dunham205 Duncan Fuller
WS566/Dunham206 Duncan Fuller and Edward, on the Keewaydin terrace
WS567/Dunham207 Edward, Theo, Mary Dows Dunham, Dr. E. K. Dunham
WS568/Dunham208 Duncan Fuller, ?
WS569/Dunham209 Theo, Duncan, Dr. E.K. Dunham, Edward
WS570/Dunham210 Theo, Duncan, Dr. E. K. Dunham, Edward
WS571/Dunham211 Theo, Mary Dows Dunham, Dr. Edward K. Dunham, Edward
WS572/Dunham212 Theo and Duncan
WS573/Dunham213 Theo, Dr. E. K. Dunham, Edward, Duncan
WS574/Dunham214 Alice Dows
WS575/Dunham215 Alice Dows and Dr. E. K. Dunham
WS576/Dunham216 Seal Harbor Yacht Club
WS577/Dunham217 Mrs. Marcus A. Hanna and Dr. E. K. Dunham
WS578/Dunham218 Alice Dows on the Shore Path
WS579/Dunham219
"
WS580/Dunham220 South Porch of "Eastholme"
WS581/Dunham221 Olin Dows, Mr. & Mrs. Olin Dows, Alice and Margaret Dows,
Duncan Fuller, Mary Dows Dunham, Edward
16
WS582/Dunham222 Dr. E. K. Dunham
WS583/Dunham223 Wm. Jay Schieffelin, Jr. and young brother, Ashville, Maine
WS584/Dunham224 Margaret Dows
WS585/Dunham225 Duncan Fuller
WS586/Dunham226 Edward
WS587/Dunham227 Keewaydin
WS588/Dunham228 "
WS589/Dunham229 "
WS590/Dunham230 "
WS591/Dunham231 View of Seal Harbor from driveway
WS592/Dunham232 Keewaydin
WS593/Dunham233 View of side porch
WS594/Dunham234 Keewaydin
WS595/Dunham235 "
WS596/Dunham236 "
WS597/Dunham237
"
WS598/Dunham238
"
WS599/Dunham239
"
WS600/Dunham240
"
WS601/Dunham241
"
WS602/Dunham242
"
WS603/Dunham243
"
WS604/Dunham244
"
WS605/Dunham245
"
WS606/Dunham246
"
WS607/Dunham247
"
WS608/Dunham248
"
WS609/Dunham249
"
WS610/Dunham250
"
WS611/Dunham251
"
WS612/Dunham252
"
WS613/Dunham253
"
WS614/Dunham254
"
WS615/Dunham255
"
WS616/Dunham256
"
WS617/Dunham257
"
WS618/Dunham258
"
WS619/Dunham259
"
WS620/Dunham260
"
WS621/Dunham261
"
WS622/Dunham262
"
WS623/Dunham263
"
WS624/Dunham264
"
WS625/Dunham265
"
WS626/Dunham266
"
WS627/Dunham267
"
17
WS628/Dunham268
"
WS629/Dunham269
"
WS630/Dunham270
"
WS631/Dunham271
"
WS632/Dunham272
"
WS633/Dunham273
"
WS634/Dunham274
"
WS635/Dunham275
"
WS636/Dunham276
"
WS637/Dunham277
"
WS638/Dunham278
"
WS639/Dunham279
"
WS640/Dunham280
WS641/Dunham281
WS642/Dunham282
WS643/Dunham283
WS644/Dunham284
WS645/Dunham285
WS646/Dunham286
WS647/Dunham287
WS648/Dunham288
WS649/Dunham289
WS650/Dunham290
WS651/Dunham291
WS652/Dunham292
WS653/Dunham293
WS654/Dunham294
WS655/Dunham295
WS656/Dunham296
WS657/Dunham297
WS658/Dunham298
WS659/Dunham299
WS660/Dunham300
WS661/Dunham301
WS662/Dunham302
WS663/Dunham303
WS664/Dunham304
WS665/Dunham305
WS666/Dunham306
WS667/Dunham307
WS668/Dunham308
11/20/06
F.L.Omsted card file.
Sources needed by Ron Epp for November 20th appointment [at the Rockefeller Archive Center]
9.20.1929 Seal Harbor
National Park-Dorr envelope box 85 f 839,840
9.18.1929 Seal Harbor file-Auto road 1929 env. boxio9 110
9.30.1929 Seal Harbor Auto Road 1929
10.14.1929 Seal Harbor Auto Road 1929 +10/2/29 Hubbard lette.
10.21.1929 Seal Harbor National Park-Dorr envelope
11.14.1929 Report & plans for Seal Harbor roads. See S.H. Auto Road,
1929 env. Maps are in cabinet #6 - S.H.O.
12.13.1929 1929 auto road file-S.H.
12.23.1929 Seal Harbor Roads-Olmsted envelope - box119
2.24.1930 Seal Harbor Roads-Olmsted env.
3/4/16/1930
3.18-22,.1930 Seal Harbor-Olmsted corr.- Roads
3.19.1930 See fd. - Maine Biological Laboratory - box 75 couldit (reta
sep.
6.2.1930 See S.H. roads - Olmsted env.
6.20.1930 See S.H. roads - Olmsted env.
6.19.1930 See 1930 envelope in S.H. Roads - HE 0
6.14.1930 See Seal Harbor Olmsted env. Roads - sep. fd.
8.27.1930 See S.H. 1930 prop. - box90 couldn't locate
7.11 & 14. 1930. S.H. Roads - Olmsted env.
Dec. 1930 See Olmsted Bros. env. S.H. Roads
5.21.1931 S.H. Surveys - Hill env. - box1270
5.12.1933 S.H. Roads - Olmsted.
0
6. 7 & 11.1934 S.H. Roads - Olmsted
758385 90 109 110 113 119123127
8.11.1934 Seal Harbor Otter Cliff Road box 119
9.12.1934 S.H. Otter Cliff Road
9.26.1934 S.H. Otter Creek Road
7.3.1935 S.H. Auto Road - 1935 - sep. - fd. - 110?
7.3.1935 Seal Harbor - Olmsted
7.8.1935 S.H. - Roads - - Olmsted
10.17.1935 S.H. Auto Road - 1935 Gov.
- box 113 or(114?) Not relwat
10.23.1935 S.H. Auto Road 1935
2.26.1936 S.H. Olmsted Roads
2.24.1937 S.H. Otter Creek Bridge- box123 Not here!
5.4 & 13.1937 Seal Harbor - - 1937 -box83?
9.15.1939 S.H. Roads - Otter Creek Road
Ron
Epp
Manky W 20 pla
AND BAR
VOLUME IV
$1.50 A YEAR
BAR HARBOR MAI
APPALACHIAN CLUB
WILL OF LATE R. B. BOWLER
HOTELS OPEN FOR SEASON
FILED FOR PROBATE
GOL
AT SEAL HARBOR
The will of the late Robert Pendleton
Many Early Arrivals at Bar Harbor
This Year-Hotels Rapidly
Bowler has been filed for probate at
Filling
PO
Ellsworth. With if is the request of all
Mountain Club Spending
interested as heirs and next of kin that
With the opening of the Malvern on
it be allowed and proved.
Saturday the Bar Harbor hotels are
New
Week at Seaside Inn
Mr. Bowler gave legacies to his secre-
ready for the summer season. With a
tary and to Edward Harris of Bar Har-
good number registered at the present
bor, who is described an the will as "My
PARTY OF FIFTY HERE
time the bookings for the balance of the
faithful friend and worker on my estate
season point to a large attendance at
MAN
at Bar Harbor.
the resort for the summer. The reser-
Wonders of New National Park a
The will provides that the estate be
vations for the coming week will double
Golfer
Revelation- Grandeur Un-
kept together for a time if needed for
the number of guests now registered.
surpassed," Says Mr. Perkins
the protection of iron mines in Cuba
Among the guests registered to date
in which he was interested.
at the St. Sauveur are: Llewellyn
Fifty members of the Appalachian
After legacies to various relatives the
Barry, Philadelphia; Mrs. R. W. Gaw,
Ther
Mountain Club arrived from Boston at
residue of the estate goes to an aunt,
Miss Gaw, H. L. Gaw, Philadelphia;
at the
the Seaside Inn, Seal Harbor, Saturday
Mrs. Alice B. Bowler, and to a cousin,
Mrs. Eads Hazard, New York; Miss
has bees
morning. The members of this party
Mrs. Jane Bowler Gilman.
Elizabeth Randolph, Savannah, Ga.:
It seer
have spent their time thus far in tramp-
Mrs. C. Vanderbilt Cross, Mrs. Joseph
popula
ing through the many wonderful moun-
around Bar Harbor. While here they
W. Burden, Miss Leila Burden, Mrs.
so ma
tain trails of Mount Desert Island.
were the guests of Mr. George B. Dorr
George Thatcher, New York; Mrs.
numbe
They will remain here until Saturday of
The party arrived on the J. T. Morse
Emma Grima, New Orlea ns.
the K
this week and will continue their climbs
at noon from Seal Harbor where they
Among those expected at the St.
to offer
and tramps through the Lafayette
are making their headquarters.
Sauveur in the next week are: Dr. and
Desert
National Park. This is the first ex-
At the wharf they were met with auto-
Mrs. Harold Williams and Miss Williams
course
cursion that this well-known club has
mobiles and took a short trip around the
of Boston; Mrs. Melville Post, Phila-
On eve
made to Mount Desert Island, but it
town, going out to the Building of Arts.
delphia; Miss DuBois, DuBois, Penn.;
able CO
will by no means be the last, for the
They stopped at the National Park
Mrs. Rhett, New York; Mr. and Mrs.
of the
members of the club are exceedingly
office to see the fine photographs of the
A. M. Coates, Providence, R. I.; Col.
natura
mthusiastie over the beauties of the
park on exhibition there and then went
and Mrs. DeWitt C. Falls, Mr. and Mrs.
The ne
new National Park and without doubt-
to Old Farm, Mr. Dorr's residence.
Courtland S. Van Rensselaer, Miss
have be
they will return from year to year in
The next stop was at the Sieur de
Wynne Pyle, New York.
as goo
increased numbers.
Monts Spring where lunch was eaten,
The early arrivals at the Malvern for
certain
Mr. Frederick H. Perkins of Boston,
preparatory to the trip to Seal Harbor
the season are Mr. and Mrs. Henry
may b.
who is chairman of the committee on
over the mountains The party went
C. Emmet, New York at Kebo Cottage;
ciated
arrangements, said to the TIMES man,
over Dry Mountain down into Green
Albert Eugene Gallatin, New York,
play o
"This trip has been a revelation to many
Mountain Gorge and then over Green
Richardson Cottage; L. Edward Frith,
The
of us who had not heretofore realized
Mountain to the Boyd Road where the
New York, Kebo Cottage; Mrs. B. C.
will be
the unsurpassed grandeur, the wonderful
party was met by autos to take them
Tilghman, Philadelphia, Cornersmeet;
compet
beauty of scenery and the wonders of
to Seal Harbor.
Miss M. F. Mellon and Miss M. Mellon,
bers,
this Lafayette National Park. There
The party was enthusiastic over the
Washington, Geranium Cottage; An-
tickets,
is nothing to compare with it on the
scenery of the new national park and
toine Lefebure, Amsterdam, Holland;
out Ju.
Atlantic coast. The members of our
were very grateful to Mr. Dorr for his
Mrs. Clinton Ogilvie, New York; Mrs.
as foll
club are most enthusiastic in regard to
kindness to them.
Mason Campbell, Philadelphia, Talley-
bogey,
the beauties of this island park. We
The Appalachian Club has a mem-
rand Cottage; Mrs. George W. Forsythe,
score,
cannot say enough good things about it.
bership of 2100 from all over the world
New York.
winner
Its beauties are beyond words." Mr.
Parties are arranged to visit all the well
Among those expected during the
points
Perkins' enthusiasm is no greater than
known mountain regions of this country
week are: Mr. and Mrs. Charles Scrib-
Season
that of the average member of the club.
as well as Europe. Several trips have
ner, Mr. and Mrs. John Sloane, Mrs.
a prize
Without exception they are delighted
been made to the Alps. Needless to
Benjamin Nicoll, Miss Eleanor de Graff
least m
with their trip and plan to return another
say, the membership includes some of
Cuyler, Mr. W. MacNeal Rodewald,
have tli
year.
the best mountain climbers in the coun-
Mr. Chandler Robbins, Miss Marion
player
The party is stopping at the Seaside
try. A party of 100 has recently re-
C. Bourne, Mrs. Albert Flake, Miss
have C
Inn, from. which point all trips are made.
turned to Boston from the mountains
Helen Flake, Mrs. Flake-Manning, Mr.
least.
Among the trails covered and the points
of North Carolina. Another party of
and Mrs. William A. Burnham and
The
of interest visited are: Beech Cliff,
100 will leave soon for the Moosehead
Mrs. Charles G. Peters of New York;
Men
Cadillac Mountain, Otter Cliffs, Jordan
region. The Appalachian Club has
Mrs. Eben Sutton, Baltimore; Mrs.
morning
Pond, Pemetic Mountain, The Bubbles,
done as much as if not more than any
J. P. Richardson, New Orleans; and
Kebo
Champlain Mountain, Cranberry Isles,
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 8)
Mr. James McCosh Magie.
Handica
Somes Sound, Sargent Mountain, Brown's
Among the guests at the Newport
Waldron
Mountain and Bakers Island. The
Why is the
House are: Mrs. Persifor Frazer, Phila-
nesday,
itinerary for the remainder of the week
delphia; Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Gerndt,
includes many other points of interest
Harmon Piano Co.
only; A
New York; Mrs. H. L. Horton, Boston;
tition
in the National Park and about the
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 8)
prize, S
island.
doing the most of the business of Hancock County?
The members of the club spent Tues-
"There's a Reason"
day afternoon in seeing the country
Honest Pianoa. Honest Treatment. Honest Prices
EDWARD B. MEARS
A. STROUD RODICK
Jordan Pond
EDWARD B. MEARS & CO.
Seal Harbor, M:
2
WEDNESDAY.
JULY
2,
1919
Walter
APPALACHIAN CLUB
OPENING BA
Mnc:PheipaHarryHoward,
AT SEAL HARBOR
MrtKR-Howard,George
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE I)
Newball Dr. Coshman, Mr. and
other organization in America for the
Mr. Moore, Mms Mary Ostrander,
preservation of the mountain forests.
WOODLAND
G.
H. Milliken, Allen Forbes, Miss
The dub really had no conception of
Alida Livingston and H. L Bradley
what Mount Desert Island has to offer
Out Door Dancing Pa
until this trip was made. It is highly
probable that in the future the trip to
FRIDAY EVENING,
BATTING AVERAGES
the Lafayette National Park will be
RADIO-BALL CLUB
made an annual event.
Music by Ladies' Orch
The excursions are planned and carried
GENTS 55 CENTS
The following is a complete list of
LA
the Radio Station baseball club's batting
out in a most interesting manner. The
Refreshments
trip is always in the hands of a com-
average for one or the whole six games
they have paken part in.
mittee that makes all arrangements for
Dancing Tuesday. and Friday
The Radio team has won three and
hotels, baggage, itinerary, etc. It is run
Throughout the Seaso
lost three games this season. They
almost as a Cook's Tour. The days
are spent in tramping and the evenings
LEWIS LELAND, Manager
took both games of the series from Seal
Harbor defeating them 32 to 12 in the
are spent at the Inn. Whist and danc-
first contest and 13 to 10 last Saturday.
ing are always in order during the even-
They have won one and lost one with
ings. About two thirds of this party
B. S. HIGGINS CO.
$250.
are women but they are no less enthu-
21 foot plea
Ell.worth. Ellsworth won the first
siastic than are their husbands and
Dealers in
gratings. sea
game 15 to 13, in which game catcher
Sturtevant of Ellsworth broke his left
brothers, and the ladies of the Appala-
engine. all
chian Club never fall behind in the long
painted.
arm. The Radio team captured the
hikes over the mountains.
Groceries and Provisions
next game at Ellsworth 15 to 7. The
$150 f
Bar Harbor town team has scalped the
The entire party enjoyed one of those
excellent Jordan Pond House chicken
Rad boys twice, the never-to-be-
forgotten Memorial Day game, when the
dinners Monday evening. The excel-
South Go
town team won in the last half of the
lent dinner at the picturesque Jordan
P. E. Sharpless and Vermont
phone W
ninth 14 to 13. Again the town team
Pond House, followed by dancing, was
Butter
with Twombley in the box won 11 to 3.
one of the features of the outing that
S. L. K
This game will be remembered for the
will be long remembered. The party
Imported and Domestic Canned
Bar
will also have a Fourth of July celebra-
Goods and Condiments
strikeouts Twombley had. No less
than 22 fanned the air during the contest.
tion on the lawn of the Seaside Inn. A
French
II
huge bonfire will be built. An orchestra
has been engaged. There will be one
MARKET
The
Radio batting average:
F
Name
Games At Runs Hits Per
or two suitable addresses and many
other features in the way of entertain-
Beef, Lamb, Veal, Poultry, Game,
Played Bat
THOROU
ctg
Siegel,
p, 2b, of
13
10
9
ment and amusement. They will also
Fruits, Vegetables, Eggs,
4
692
weighs nine
Berry, rf
1
5
1
3 600
give an entertainment during the week
Cheese, etc.
1
2
for the benefit of the Fatherless Children
weighs sever
Murphy, se
1
1 500
of France Fund.
pies are ten
Larberg, 1b
6
33
12
12
363
Mr. Perkins stated to the TIMES man
PROPRIETORS OF
Marshall, 2b, of
4
16
4
5 312
ready to ship
Ragan, 3b, 2b
5
25
7
7 280
that the entire party was very much
Bar Harbor Hardware Store
6
28
9
7 250
pleased with the hospitality of the
MRS. G
Enie, If
Gibson, rg
1
2
management of the Seaside Inn and with
4
1 250
131, 133. 135 Main St.
10 Park
the cordial treatment received. He
Brunner, 2b, ss, 3b
6
33
12
7 213
Agatstein, 2b, rf
2
10
3
2 200
said that the people of Seal Harbor had
There is more Colarch in this section
Storer, 38, rf
6
35
7
7 200
made them feel very welcome and very
of the country than an other diseases
Kent, e
1
much at home and everything possible
put together. are for years 11 was sup-
RC
2
10
2 200
posed to be accurable Doctors prescribe!
Glasser, p
3
11
5
2 181
had been done to make the trip most
local remedies. and by constantly failing
Ope
Steelen, If
3
12
5
2 167
enjoyable. The general air of refine-
to cure with kcal treatment prosounced
it incurable Catarra is a local cream
Bannister, c
4
12
4
2 167
ment found on Mount Desert Island is
greatly influenced by constitutional coc-
Greeley He
Davis, c
14
5
2
in pleasing contrast to that found in
ditions and therefore requires constito-
5
143
tional treatment Hall's Catarro Mech-
many resort centers. The members
3
7
0
1
cine. manufactured by F. J. Cheses &
Under ne
Miller, P
.143
Co. Toledo, Ohio. is a constitutional
Shrouse, p
1
1
0
0
000
of the Appalachian Club are thoroughly
enjoying their trip to Mount Desert
remedy. is taken internally and acts
base hits: Enie 5, Siegel 5,
thru the Blood on the Mccoos Surfaces
Clean, com
Two
3, Brunner 3, Larberg 2, Mur-
Island. The people of the Island are
of the System One Hundred Dollars re-
Ragan
reasona
delighted to have them here and to
ward is offered for any case that Hairs
hy 1,
Marshall 1. Three base hits:
Catarrh Medicine fails to cure Send for
day
know that the members of the club have
circulars and testimonials
arberg 1, Storer 1, Gibson 1.
been so favorably impressed with all
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Tokedo. Ohia
Sold by Druggists. ic.
MRS. NEL
have seen
Hall's Family Pills for constipation