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

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Travel-1895 Trip to Moosehead Lake & Maine Rivers
TRAVEL. 1895 trip to
Moogehead Lake Maine Rivers
October I5, 1895.
Back this morning from a fort-
night's canoeing and camping trip made with Sam Warren and his
wife through the north-Maine wilderess from Moosehead Lake to
the St Johns at Connors, therellroad terminus.
We left Moosehead Jake on Saturday, September
by
the
was
North-east Carry, which takes one across from its
northern bay to the West Branch of the Penobscot river, flowing,
already a river of size , but a mile or so away, a low,
risemp of wooded landMand dividing ohen
alone
slight barren, thinly
The
Moosehead Lake is the great gathering basin
of the Kennebec waters whose real origin , however, is the
chain
eastward-flowing Moose River, with its far stretching
of
lesser lakes, along whose border the railroad now passes on
Canada-ward.
Moose River flows into the lake near the
center of its western shore, and a dozen miles or so
with
southward the Kennebec flows out, with a south-westerly, course_
west
thing
The Penobscut's
branch,
to
the north of use Moose River, like it, eastward until
well past the northern end of Moosehead Lake, then north-
ward and eastward to the head of the great Chesuncook lake
2
through which, and far beyond, its waters flow southerly and
easterly, passing by the western foot of the mountains of the
Katahdin rangeto whose north and east the Penobscot's Fast
Branch finds rise and course, the mountain with its slopes and
lesser peaks lying like a great islandwithin their all but en-
circling flow.
A dozen or more miles to the north of
lake
Chesuncook is another, Chamberlain , similar in in
general shape and trend and not greatly less in size, whose
waters flow out naturally northward through the Allegash river
into the St Johns but which, being raised by a low dam,are now
used in springtime to drive logs down the Penobscot through
this eastern branch, so close do the head waters of the two
also
though
rivers come.
These two
less in size than Moose-
headlest seem to me, with their and more miles of length, their
yet
Sens
comparative that nowhere lets the shore be too far off
narrowness
for interest, and their grand view to the southward of Maine's
one great mountain mass, to be the pick and flower of all her
lakes
I would gladly see these again and go no
its
further, these and the Katahdin range with woods and
lessen
Buynd
was
was
Moosehead Lake is a splendid
I fon i t it
question,
sheet of water but less picturesque and interesting in its
sheet
scenery than I had imagined. I had thought of it askins in by
bold and mountainous shores
of
but though the land about it in
thought
mith
wild and wooded
the
shores are for the most part low, and only here and there is there
3
is there aught mountainous even in the more distant view.
One mountain there is, Mt Kineo, at whose base the only con-
siderable hotel upon the lake stands , a bold mass of rock some
few hundred feet in height with a grand cliff upon its southern
side, which juts out peninsula fashion into the narrow middle
water of the lake. Nearly opposite, upon the western side, is
the mouth of of the lake's main feeder, Moose River, and by it,
on the southern side, rise other hills, those of the Blue Ridge.
which
Avain
other
To the north lies the great North Bay states. has extent without the
than
interest save that of novelty and of the monotonous woods upon its
real
In
Themselves
shores.
And woods, even if they be fine was, are monotonous
one Sun them
-
mg
when they stretch- on. unbroken by cultivation, unrelieved by open
homelines.
reject which
ground or any sign of
human
the
If the woods be open, one should walk in un
to realize From Their beau
them under and among the individual treesto
Use see them as they fronder laf 2 Some passule-land or shream
or
or
make
anament
Hada
their
when one look at it h inclusion
him
mass
gives
color
A
into form
Marion or Size, Character
that Color only unit little fines term
landscafe it it service day for light & shadow any Swallour
while the address from of largely the
n in that unholem fa of maked follage
4
The greater part of the way from the North-east Carry to
Chesuncook Lake down the West Branch the river flows through
a
a vast bog-land covered by alder and other
also
low swamp-growth.
There had been a sparse growth of hacma-
tack, the American larch , in these low lands but some in-
sect disease swept through the country few some years ago and
their
only dead remained.
Where the land was somewhat higher the
graw se
thing
but
elms
hemlock I did
3
not see then, nor in great quantity at any time
it is
hid, labit
evidently more local
less generally abundant throughout
Aroun,
the state than I have supposed;
pines
along
but only Singly
the banks
the finest of them had all been felled
long 40013 ago by the lumbermen. earlen
Canue birch and poplargrew abundantly save in the marsh lands;
fir was abundant too, and there were occasional spruce mingled
Outfor f r 1fth dge,
with it's afterward found the spruce growing
the
most
above
dont
all
the
forces
has
As we got
Like
further down toward Chesuncook lease slate rock showed itself) and
slight,
made picturesque rapids
Yes Story "It's
Along this part the Mountain Ash grew u on the river banks
in great number, seeming to like the low, wet yet never stagnant
she
situation; the trees were full of
the see
clusters of berries which gave a bright note of color to
this
A mountain tree with us the Mee is not, in spite of
its
name:
it
the
sea-share,
the
banks
of
doesnot
lakes and streams, by the roadsides
it like
(Ore)
5.
highertont Drik Character
of the when it
Whenew it Can get open they good tool,
only
y Moislum within / stagnation upon
The member and grout II the shream,
after the bank
because it fride these a break in the good Had
Thoreau Wabanaki Trail - Book and Exhibit
Page 1 of 1
Thoreau Wabanaku
is
Trail
THOREAL-WABANAKI TRAIL
Hoberin History Presenter before
TRAIL OVERVIEW TRAIL MAP THOREAU IN MAINE WABANAKI IN MAINE THE BOOK THE EXHIBIT PARTNERS
NEWS AND EVENTS
SUPPORT OUR WORK
contact us home
1853: Moosehead Lake to
Chesuncook Lake Roundtrip.
Named Mspame by the Indians
(most likely a phonetic attempt at
the Penobscot word for 'lake'.
which is mehkwasrpem),
Moosehead Lake is the largest lake
in New England. This is where
Thoreau began his canoe
expeditions in 1853 and 1857. In
1853, he took a steamer all the
way from Greenville to the
Northeast Carry, where he, George
Thatcher, and Penobscot Guide
Joe Attean then descended the
West Branch of the Penobscot to
Chesuncook Lake. They spent a
night at the home of Ansel Smith,
a man who made his living by lodging and feeding the lumberers. From Smith's. Thoreau. Thatcher,
and Attean turned around and retraced their steps. traveling back up the West Branch to Northeast
Carry and caught the steamer back to Greenville.
Read more
"Nature will bear the closest inspection. She invites NS to lav our eve level with her smallest leaf
and take all insect view of its plain.^
Heary David Theredu
http://www.thoreauwabanakitrail.org/overview-03.html
1/13/2008
Thoreau-Wabanaki
8
Trail
1853, REFLECTING ON HIS TRIP:
1846, CLIMBING KATAHDIN:
"Why should not we have our
"There it was, the State of Maine,
national reserves, where no villages
which we had seen on the map,
need be destroyed, in which the
but not much like that,
bear and panther. may still exist,
Eagle Lake
-immeasurable forest for the sun to
and not be civilized off the face of
shine on, that eastern stuff we bear of
the earth,--our forests to bold
in Massachusetts. No clearing, no
and preserve the lord of creation,
house.
Countless lakes and
not for idle sport or food, but for
July 28, 1857
mountains, also, whose names, for the
inspiration and our own true
Chamberlain Lake
July 29, 1857
most part, are known only to Indians."
recreation? or shall we, like the
July 27, 1857
villians, grub them all up, poaching
on our own national domains?".
July 30, 1857
July 26, 1857
Sepr. 18, 1853
Chesuncook Lake
Ktaten
Sept. 17
Kcl-sakok
Large Mountain
Sept. 16
At the big outlet
Katahdin
Chesuncook Lake
Sept. 19, 1853
July 25, 1857
September
July 31, 1857
September 6
Abol Stream
Wahsehtak
Stream of Light
Baxter
East Branch
September 8
State Park
Penobscot River
July 24, 1857
3.
Mt. Kinco
Moosehead Lake
Sept. 5
Mosatopakam
Sept. 3-4
Moose Head
Molunkus
Sept. 9
1857 by canoe
Moosehead Lake
River
August, 1857
1853 by steamer
Mattawamkeag
MAINE
September 2, 1846
July 23, 1857
Greenville
August 2, 1857
In 1853 and 1857, Thoreau took a
stagecoach to Greenville using the
Sept. 15 and
Monson
dirt roads that connected villages.
Sept. 20. 1853
Most, but not all, of this route
follows public roads today.
Enfield
September 1, 1846
Dover-Foxcroft
Passadumkeag
Guilford
1846 Passadumkeag-Katahdin Arrived in
Alanape manahan
Bangor August 31; left September 10, 1846.
The Peoples Island
East Corinth
1853: Monson-Chesuncook. Arrived in Bangor
Indian Island
September 14; left September 25, 1853.
Exeter Corners
Indian Island
1857: Full loop from Bangor: arrived July 21,
Kenduskeag
August 3, 1857
left August 6, 1857.
Levant
1846 Route and campsites
1853 Route and campsites
10 mi
MAP AREA
Bangor
10 km
1857 Route and campsites
Design by Michael Hernann
Thoreau's Maine Woods
Page 1 of 3
Thoreau's
Chesuncook
NAHE
"Strange that 80 few ever come to the woods to see hate the pine
lives and grows and spires, lifting its evergreen arma to the
WOODS
light - to see its perfect success. but most are content to behold
it in the shape of many broad boards brought to market, and
deem that its true success!"
Houlland Press Arrald
NEWSCHANNEL
WOME-TV PORTLAND
We begin our search for
Henry David Thoreau,
retracing his route through
the Maine woods 150 years
later. What we see initially
MLLADASIF
&
gives us little confidence we
RASTERMINI
will find any trace of it. The
Mount Kineo juts up from the
shoreline of Moosehead Lake.
town of Greenville, then
barely a clearing along the shore of New England's
largest lake, is brimming with tourists, and SO is the
Therean the
lake itself. In Chesuncook, however, we pick up
WRITER
Thoreau's scent
Thoreab
The Chesuncook stories:
Searching for Thoreau
Henry David Thoreau came
to Maine in search of a
deeper wilderness. He found
it. But 150 years later, what
A group of five loons make their
way along the shoreline of
Therent
remains of his beloved
Chesuncook Lake. Staff photos
A INSTORY
frontier?
by John Ewing.
Thoreau: Inspired writer, profound thinker
The
His essay 'Civil Disobedience' influenced Gandhi and
in PUDTOS
Kennedy, but his nature writings remain his most
important works.
'Maine Woods' inspires many to retrace route
Thoreau's observations and the prospect of discovering
an unchanged wilderness create a powerful pull.
Separating pitch pine from scrub pine: Thoreau the
botanist
By 1853, he was among the most knowledgeable
botanists in the country.
Pongokw
Chamberlain
Lake
http://www.destinationmaine.com/thoreau/chesun.htm
1/13/2008
Thoreau's Maine Woods
Page 2 of 3
1 - Mount Kineo - Thoreau stopped at the landing on the
peninsula twice in 1853, but did not climb the mountain until
1857. Today, the blue-blazed Indian Trail approximates the
author's route to the top. The mountain is composed of
homstone, which Penobscot Indians fashioned into
arrowheads, hatchets and chisels.
2 - Ragmuff Stream - Thoreau stopped here each time he
passed by: for dinner, fishing, bathing and botanizing. Today,
there is a pretty campsite on the point where Ragmuff and the
West Branch meet, and good-sized trout still are caught in the
stream.
3 - Pine Stream Falls - Thoreau twice portaged this stretch of
rugged whitewater between Pine Stream and Chesuncook
Lake. Today, there is no sign of the falls, as Chesuncook Dam,
built in 1903, raised the water level.
4 - Chesuncook - The American Indian definition of
Chesuncook is "a place where many streams emptied in," and
that's what this place was when Thoreau passed through.
Today, dams have changed the landscape, creating the state's
third-largest lake.
Original content in
Home The Allagash and East Branch | Ktaadn
Thoreau as
this site by Lori
Writer | Thoreau as Conservationist Thoreau as Philosopher
Haugen, graphics by
Thoreau as Outdoorsman | Thoreau in History | Photo Journey
Kathy Jungjohann,
Blethen Maine New
Background: Excerpt from Thoreau's Journal, June 25th,
Media.
1853, C The Pierpont Morgan Library, New York, MA
Questions or
1302.29.
http://www.destinationmaine.com/thoreau/chesun.htm
1/13/2008
Thoreau's Maine Woods
Page 1 of 3
Thoreau's
Chesuncook
DAHE
"Strange that so few ever come to the woods to see how the pine
lives and grows and spires, lifting its evergreen arms to the
WOODS
light - to see its perfect success. but most are content to behold
it in the shape of many broad boards brought to market, and
deem that its true success!"
Worlland (Dress Arrald
NEWSCHANNEL
WOME.TV PORTLAND
'Maine Woods' inspires many to retrace route
More "Chesuncook" stories
By Mark Shanahan
Staff Writer
ALLABASI
Copyright 1997 Blethen Maine Newspapers Inc.
RAST BRANKI
So provocative are many of the images in "The Maine
RHADAY
Woods" that people who read the book often take to the
northern forest to see for themselves what Henry David
Thereau us
Thoreau saw.
WRITER
Inspired by his words and by
Theremon
the prospect of discovering an
PILLOSOPIER
unchanged wilderness, they
resolve to do some or all of
Therember
Thoreau's three trips in a week
or over the course of several
Thereau
months or years.
Thoreau climbed Moosehead
UNTODORSOLLY
Lake's Mount Kineo in 1857.
The dean of this group is J.
Therean
Today, the grandeur of Kineo is
Parker Huber, a former college
tempered by the buzz of
A INSTORY
professor who figures he has
motorboats, water scooters and
paddled some or all of
floatplanes. "This is not really a
The journey
Thoreau's route 16 or 17 times
wilderness experience anymore,"
says Toni Blake of the local
RUL PIDTOS
since his first trip here in 1974.
chamber of commerce. Staff photo
by John Ewing
Huber's book based on those
trips, "The Wildest Country: A Guide to Thoreau's Maine," is
the definitive text on Thoreau's Maine experience - where he
went and what he saw.
For several summers, Huber, then an associate professor of
history at Eastern Connecticut State College, taught a seminar
on Thoreau in which he and a dozen students retraced 330
miles of Thoreau's journeys.
"It was an opportunity to experience the text and to create our
own journal. It was a wonderful and rich learning experience,"
said Huber, 57, who now works as a teacher and counselor in
http://www.destinationmaine.com/thoreau/tour.htm
3/15/2008
Thoreau's Maine Woods
Page 2 of 3
Vermont.
Since leaving academia in 1986, Huber's visits here have been
less frequent, though he did guide British watercolorist Tony
Foster on a tour of Moosehead Lake and the West Branch of
the Penobscot, and also joined Thoreau scholar Ronald Hoag
on his sojourn to Maine.
So what are Huber's favorite spots? Mount Katahdin, of
course. But also Moosehead Lake, the view south from Mount
Kineo, Lobster Stream, the view from the front porch of the
Chesuncook Lake House, Eagle Lake and Webster Stream.
The list goes on and on.
"In 1976, there was a tropical storm - three days solid of rain,"
recalls Huber. "I was never SO happy to see the sun rise as that
morning on Chamberlain Lake. It was like experiencing it for
the first time. Life is definitely simplified when you're out
there."
Most people who make the pilgrimage to Thoreau's Maine
woods do not have the time to do the whole route. Some, like
Butch Phillips, a Penobscot Indian, have hit just the highlights,
comparing the landscape then and now.
``I've stood in many of the same places and tried to visualize
what it looked like," said Phillips, who lives in Milford and has
a camp on Grand Lake Matagamon. ``In some places, like
Chesuncook, it looks very different today. Before the dam on
Ripogenus, that was all meadow."
Many who come looking for Thoreau start at Katahdin,
wanting to see the place described in "The Maine Woods" as
a
"cloud factory," its table land as a "short highway where a
demigod might be let down to take a turn or two in an
afternoon to settle his dinner."
Burton Chandler, a 63-year-old attorney from Worcester,
Mass., who as a boy spent summers in Ogunquit, has climbed
Katahdin every year since 1953. And each year, he reads the
"Ktaadn" essay in "The Maine Woods."
"It's an annual outing. I went every year through college and
law school, and then I went back with my son," Chandler said.
"In Thoreau's notes, from which he wrote the essay, he
indicates that he made it to the table land. His description of
that place is one of the most amazing and perceptive things
you'll ever read."
Stefanie Matteson, a writer and former editor of the weekly
http://www.destinationmaine.com/thoreau/tour.htm
3/15/2008
Thoreau's Maine Woods
Page 3 of 3
Penobscot Times in Old Town, is SO fond of Thoreau and
Katahdin that she wrote a book called "Murder on High," a
mystery about a former Hollywood screenwriter and Thoreau
fan who is found dead on the Knife Edge.
The victim, Iris Richards, is killed while on her annual
pilgrimage to Katahdin, shot with a fishing cross bow.
"Thoreau's description of the mountain just insinuates itself
into your unconscious. He's right: It stands alone, rising from
the plain," Matteson said. "The mountain is symbolic of a great
spirit. The Indians knew that, and Thoreau knew that."
The documentary filmmaker Huey has been similarly affected
by Katahdin and its connection to Thoreau. After several trips
to the top over the past 15 years, Huey has begun work on a
film about the mountain, in which the author of "The Maine
Woods" is likely to play a starring role.
"Climbing Katahdin was a defining moment for Thoreau. He
saw what real wilderness is. And that's in part why people
want to go there," said Huey. "What he wrote is as relevant
today as it was 150 years ago. He's right - you see nature there
in its full aspect, and it's overwhelmingly beautiful."
Original content and
Home | Chesuncook The Allagash and East Branch Ktaadn
graphics
Thoreau as Writer Thoreau as Conservationist Thoreau as
in this site by Lori
Philosopher | Thoreau as Outdoorsman Thoreau in History
Haugen and
Photo Journey
Kathy Jungjohann,
Guy Gannett New
Background: Excerpt from Thoreau's Journal, June 25th,
Media.
1853, © The Pierpont Morgan Library, New York, MA
Questions or
1302.29.
comments? E-mail us!
© 1997 Blethen Maine Newspapers Inc.
http://www.destinationmaine.com/thoreau/tour.htm
3/15/2008
A GUIDE TO THE
Page 1 of 23
RailWorks
Railroad stations
RAILPACE
Track construct, maintenance, rehab Call for Look for railroad stations in our local Boston
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a bid or info-866-905-7245
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A GUIDE TO THE
BOSTON & MAINE RAILROAD HISTORICAL SOCIETY
ARCHIVES
UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS, LOWELL
CENTER FOR LOWELL HISTORY
PATRICK MOGAN CULTURAL CENTER
40 FRENCH STREET
LOWELL, MASSACHUSETTS
http://www.trainweb.org/bmrrhs/guide.html,
3/15/2008
A GUIDE TO THE
Page 4 of 23
CONTENTS
About the Society 3
1. The Collection 5
2. Types of Materials to be Found in the Archives 6
3. Finding Materials 13
4. How New Materials are Processed 15
5. Reproduction Policy. How to Make or Obtain Copies 16
6. For More Information 18
7. Boston and Maine Railroad Reading List 18
About the Society
The Boston & Maine Railroad Historical Society, Inc., is a non profit historical organization formed in
1971 to preserve and publish information and photographs pertaining to the history and operations
of the B&M Railroad and its predecessors. The Society fulfills its educational mission through
publication of a quarterly historical magazine called the B&M Bulletin and a bimonthly Newsletter.
The Society has also published three books on Boston and Maine Railroad subjects. Monthly
meetings are held in Lowell, Massachusetts and elsewhere. At present the Society has about 1100
members. Basic membership costs $30.00 per year. Applications for membership are available at
the Archives or from the Membership Secretary, B&MRRHS, P.O. Box 469, Derry, NH 03038. Back
issues of the B&M Bulletin may be ordered from the same address.
To establish a repository for documents pertaining to the Boston and Maine Railroad and the
history of railroads in New England was one of the Society's initial objectives. The Society has
maintained an archival collection since the beginning. At first, all materials were stored in
members' attics and basements, and centralized access was not possible. Later, a small amount
of material was stored at Merrimack College in North Andover, Mass., but space at this location
was quite limited. In June 1978, a formal agreement was made between the Society and the
University of Lowell providing for the establishment of the Society's Archives in the Special
Collections Department at the University's Alumni Lydon Library. This permitted the consolidation of
material that had previously been stored in a number of temporary locations and enabled
cataloging of the collection to begin.
In December 1988, the B&MRRHS Archives, along with the entire University Special Collections
Department, moved into the Center for Lowell History in the new Patrick Mogan Cultural Center at
40 French Street in downtown Lowell. The building was constructed by the Lowell Historic
Preservation Commission with funding from the National Park Service. The University of Lowell
entered into a long-term lease for space in the building. This building provides an area of about
900 square feet of space for the B&MRRHS Archives. In the Fall of 1991, the University of Lowell
became the University of Massachusetts at Lowell. The University provides space, security, and
access to the collection, but processing of materials is done by volunteer members of the
Society's Archives Committee.
http://www.trainweb.org/bmrrhs/guide.html
3/15/2008
A GUIDE TO THE
Page 5 of 23
Material in the B&MRRHS Archives is carefully stored using proper archival procedures. For
example, photographs and paper items are stored in acid free folders in metal file cabinets. Large
drawings are opened up and stored in flat files, also in acid free folders.
All B&MRRHS Archives material in the Center for Lowell History is the property of the Society. The
collection is accessible to anyone, whether they are members of the Society or not, during hours
when the Center for Lowell History is open. The Head Librarian, Martha Mayo, can assist you in
finding what you are looking for. More specific requests for information or guidance may be
directed to B&MRRHS Archives Committee members or to others whose addresses appear at the
end of this guide.
All Archives materials must be used within the Center for Lowell History. Only designated officers of
the Society and certain Archives Committee members and publications staff members are
authorized to borrow materials from the collection.
The Archives Committee is a corps of volunteer members of the B&MRRHS. Work sessions are
usually held one Saturday a month, when new acquisitions are sorted, preserved, cataloged, and
added to the collection. New volunteers, visitors, and researchers are welcome to visit at such
times. Members of the Archives Committee will be available to answer questions about the
collection. To be notified of the next meeting, contact the Archives Committee Chairman (see
below).
Articles on the Society's Archives have appeared in the B&M Bulletin, Fall 1978, p.6; Fall 1981, pp.
9; and Vol. XVI No. 3 p. 3. "From the Archives" articles appear in the Society's Newsletter.
The first three editions of this guide were prepared by R. Richard Conard. Subsequent editions were
edited by Frederick N. Nowell, III.
PART I. THE COLLECTION
A. Scope of the Collection.
We focus on books, documents, and photographs about the Boston and Maine Railroad, its
predecessor roads, and the other railroads and electric railways of New England. We also collect
general material that puts into context the history and operation of New England railroads.
The strongest areas of our collection are annual reports, photographs, mechanical and track
drawings, time tables, and operating documents.
B. Sources of Materials in the Collection.
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Boston & Maine Railroad Historical Society: B&M Terminus, St. Johns at Connors
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Ronald Epp
B&M Terminus, St. Johns at
Connors
March 15 2008 at 8:33 AM
No score for this post
In researching the life of Acadia National Park founder, George Bucknam Dorr, I
have discovered in the Park archives an account of a canoeing and camping trip
that he made through the north Maine wilderness in October 1895 "from
Moosehead Lake to the St. Johns at Connors, the railroad terminus."
I've done some unsuccessful searches on the Internet and would appreciate
anyone contacting me at my email address who might be able to point me in the
direction of additional information on this railroute, especially the opportunity for
Dorr to return via Bangor to his summer residence in Bar Harbor.
Thanks!
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DORR IN MAINE
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Hello Ronald,
Ron Archives (26)
According to the 1893 issue of the Travelers' Official Guide to the Railway
and Steam Navigation Lines in the United States and Canada, Connors, in
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New Brunswick, was at that time the terminus of the Temiscouata Railway,
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which ran from there through Edmundston, where it connected with the
Canadian Pacific Railway, and Clair, where it made connection with a ferry to
My Attachments
Fort Kent, Maine, and ultimately to Riviere du Loup, Quebec, where it
connected with the Intercolonial Railway. There was one train out of Connors
each day, except Sunday, leaving Connors at 7:15 am and arriving at Riviere
du Loup at 2:30 pm.
Thus, Dorr had several options for returning to Bangor. Of course, if he
returned via Bangor, it would be a straight shot from Bangor to the Mt Desert
Ferry landing in Hancock on the Maine Central Railroad and then ferry to Bar
Harbor.
I hope this is helpful. Feel free to contact me with any questions, I do have
quite a bit of railroad historical material in my library.
Regards,
Paul Moccia
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Subject: Connors station at St. John River
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Horseshoe Pond
The accompanying 1899 map may be of some assistance to you.
Connors station is located just west of Fort Kent, Maine (the northerly terminus of US Route 1) but on the Canadian side of the
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border.
Ron Archives (26)
Hope this map is helpful. Good luck.
Bob
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Map of the railroads of the state of Maine accompanying the report of the railroad commissioners.
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1899.
To change view, select desired zoom level and window size from the options below the Zoom View window and then clic
on the image. The display will be centered where you click. To move up, down, left, or right within a zoom level, click
near the edge of the image in the Zoom View or select an area in the Navigator View. The red box on the Navigator View
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XX
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Green/Rive
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XVIII
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RESTATION
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256
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Initial (298 X 334)
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Date:
Sun, 16 Mar 2008 14:30:27 -0400
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Subject: TRAVEL TIME, CONNORS - BAR HARBOR, 1893
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Horseshoe Pond
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Ron,
Ron Archives (26)
From the 1893 Official Guide
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Lv Connors 7:15 am
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81 miles
Arrive Edmundston maybe in time to catch the connecting train; if not,
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stay overnight. No schedule given for arrival in Edmundston.
Lv Edmundston 11 am, probably next day
164 miles
Ar McAdam Junction 11:40 pm, stay overnight again - slow train,
makes seventeen stops in 12 hrs 40 mins
Change trains to the Halifax - Boston express
Lv McAdam Jct next morning 9:22 am
6 miles + customs checks
Ar Vanceboro ME 10:00 am
114 miles
Ar Bangor 1:20 pm
Change trains again to the Boston - Bar Harbor express
Lv Bangor 2:00 pm
43 miles
Ar Mt Desert Ferry 3:55 pm
As I mentioned in my earlier e-mail, I think this is Dorr's most likely
route, taking the better part of three days. Boston - Bangor -
Vanceboro -McAdam - St. John or Halifax was the principal rail route
from Boston to the Maritimes in the 1890s, although there were still
coastal packet steamships operating at this time.
Best wishes on the speedy completion of the draft.
Regards,
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Sun, 16 Mar 2008 12:14:27 -0400
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Hello again Ron,
Ron Archives (26)
Sorry if I wasn't clear - what I meant was that Dorr could have returned
via Edmundston, Clair, or Riviere du Loup by rail or he could have taken
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the ferry at Fort Kent and returned overland to the nearest southbound
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railroad in Maine (which was no closer than Katahdin Iron Works) thus
he had four options. There were no other railroads into Connors. The
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Bangor and Aroostook did not reach Fort Kent until 1902, so we know
that option didn't exist. If he were tired of bushwhacking by this time,
thus foregoing the Ft. Kent option, he may have traveled by rail to
Fredericton or St. John, N.B. and back to Bar Harbor via Bangor.
With some assumptions, we can of course simply refer to the published
schedules. I think his most likely route would have been: Temiscouata
Railway to Edmundston, Canadian Pacific to Fredericton (Junction)
where he would have changed for the train to Bangor, via the Maine
Central Railroad. It will take a little longer to calculate the travel time, I'll
send another e-mail with the details.
Regards,
Paul
From: ELIZABETH and RONALD EPP [mailto:eppster2@verizon.net]
Sent: Sunday, March 16, 2008 11:14 AM
To: Paul Moccia
Subject: Re: DORR IN MAINE (Again)
Dear Paul,
You made my day ! Thank you very much for this information. It helps
me reconstruct Dorr's return route from Connors. Several questions
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Page 2 of 8
5
come to mind. Were there any other train lines from Connors at that
time headed east to Ft. Kent? You mention that once in Ft. Kent, Dorr
had several options for returning to Bangor. What would these have
been? The Bangor and Aroostook RR? Is it possible to calculate the
time involved for the return trip from Connors?
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Bangor and Aroostook Railroad - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Page 2 of 18
6.
potato loadings declined. The remote port facilities
at Searsport were a preferred loading point for
ammunition during World War II; and BAR
transported heating coal and aircraft fuel to Loring
AFB for Strategic Air Command bombers through
the Cold War. BAR painted 2,500 box cars in the
red, white and blue colors of the US flag during the
1950's. A less expensive oxide red paint scheme
with large white reporting marks was adopted during
the Vietnam War.
The line from
Brownville
Junction to
Katahdin Iron
EMD GP38Q BAR 357
Works was
switches a potato packing
plant in Ucon, Idaho, 2002.
abandoned in 1922;
but the rails
remained in place
until 1933. BAR passenger train service ended in
SCATAQUI
1961. The Greenville branch was dismantled from
1962 to 1964. Several Aroostook County segments
were abandoned when potato traffic disappeared in
the 1970's. In 1995, the BAR was acquired by Iron
Road Railways. In 2002, the company was declared
bankrupt, and in 2003 its lines were sold to Rail
World, Inc., which incorporated them into the
newly-formed Montreal, Maine and Atlantic
Railway.
Steam Locomotives
Routes of the Bangor&Aroostook Railroad
magenta = Route in service (2006)
red = Abandoned route
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bangor_and_Aroostook Railroad
3/16/2008
Page 1 of +
7.
1803-1
TEMISCOUATA RAILWAY.
TEMISCONATA PAILWAYS
WINTER
Rio. du Loup, P.Q.
LOCAL TIME TABLE.
SEASON
TAKES EFFECT SEPTEMBER 18TH, 1893.
TIME TABLE.
Edmundston
20.46 SOUTH
GOING NORTH
EASTERN STANDARD TIME.
to
Connors, N.B.
PASSENGER
TIME TABLE,
TAKING EFFECT
The New Short Line
N SEPT. 101
QUEBEC
GENERAL officer
RIV. DU LOUP. P.Q.
Nontero New Brunswick
LINDSAY T CHOCKETT,
MAINE.
http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/obj/h30/f1/nlc003051-v6.jpg
3/16/2008
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