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

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Memoirs of G.B. Dorr 1930-1944
Nemoirs of G.B.DORR
1930-1944
Continuation of the Mountain-to-Oceanfront Road
through Bear Brook Valley
In the late summer of 1935 Mr. John D. Rockefeller,
Jr. drove over from his home at Seal Harbor to talk with
me concerning the continuation of the Park road then
building over Great Pond Hill and round the Great Meadow,
on its northern and eastern sides, for which an allotment
of $350,000 had recently been made and for which surveys
were in process. The matter he wished to discuss with
me was that of taking the continuation of the road past
the northern base of Champlain Mountain instead of
through the Gorge as originally planned. I told him
he might count upon my cooperation but I did not take
up with him, nor he with me, the question of upon what
terms or conditions the Government might acquire the
necessary lands.
Mr. Rockefeller then asked, referring to my state-
ment that I would cooperate:
"How about your executors?"
Upon this I laughed and said:
"You think it then so immediate?"
He replied that he closed up his affairs every night;
and I asked, humourously, whether he did not really think
that once a week would do.
2.
From speaking of my land he passed on, after
looking around to make sure that no one was within
hearing as we sat on my porch together in the late
summer sunshine, to talk of the difficulties he was
encountering in regard to the Livingston and Palmer
lands beyond my Bear Brook quarry. I told him I
Arthers
thought he might get help on this from my neighbor,
Mr. Arthur Train, who had lately spoken to me of the
Train
matter.
Mr. Rockefeller had no knowledge, I found, of
what I had already given; it was his road only that
he
was
interested
in.
He did, however, bring up
the question of whether I had not lost my control of
the situation by permitting the Government to build
across my land the present road connecting that which
I had given the Government previously to give the public
access to the Champlain Mountain trails, with the land
which I had obtained for it from the Morrell estate,
where it had built its campground. I told him the
information given him in regard to this was wrong; that
though left open to the public I had built the road at
my own expense and, lest the question should at any time
come up, had kept my cancelled checks in record.
3.
Mr. Rockefeller left soon after, having an engage-
ment to keep at home. I understood at the time that
he would come over again to talk further on the matter,
but he never did so, though coming more than once, I
later learned from Mr. Train, to talk with him, on my
suggestion, concerning the further continuation of the
road through the Livingston and Potter Palmer properties.
I made a study of the matter myself, however, as
to how the necessary crossing -- at other than surface
grade -- of the County highway through the Gorge might
be made, without objection from the Town, and obtained
its consent at its next annual meeting to make the
crossing, it being the only way in which it could be
done without injury to the highway.
Long Field
The Long Field I rember walking out to one
Sunday afternoon in the summer of 1379, when our
Oldfarm house was building and we were boarding at
the DesIsles House in the village.
Colonel John
Markoe and Mrs. Markoe were spending the summer in
a house nearby which they rented from one George
Douglas, of whom there is incidentally a talo to tell,
and it was with them and a gay group of younger folks
who were staying with them that I was walking.
Tall spruces of the native wood that had covered
it had just been out and the ground was being cleared
of roots, the soil sold and hauled away to make the
lawns of summer homes along the Bar Harbor shore. There
was then no town road that led to it, nor to the Great
Meadow beyond, which remained hidden from any view from
any public road until twenty years later, when I planned
and the read connecting the County road to Otter
the Down way to Hardon Farm.
Entrance to
obbalmod only by a haul-way around the northern
02 Strewborry Hill, avoiding the brook which swept
the narrow gorge below from side to side.
2.
Some sections of this early way still remain,
for few things are more enduring than a roadway once
established, however crude.
The Great Meadow basin was then completely locked
away, shut in by woods, no road approaching it. A
single farm, called after its owner 'Harden Farm, I
reached down to it on the northwest, at the foot of the
Kebo range, and a right-of-way road lod to it from
Cromwell Harbor road to give it entrance.
Climbing one looked down on the Meadow from its
encirclement of mountains; else, near as it was to
Bar
Harbor, it remained -- when life was at its fullest
in the big hotel days and early period of summer home
construction -- unvisited and unseen.
But an old
Indian trail, leading through the Gorge from the
northern shore to Otter Creek, ran past it on the west,
around the mountain base, along whose line I later
built the beautiful Hemlook Road past Sieur de Monts Spring.
3
In 1899, to obtain for my mother and our friends
and neighbors on the Eastern Shore a short and pleasant
drive, not leading through the Twon but connecting with
its western side, I made the Town & favorable offer to
obtain the right-of-way and build E, road around the
Western side of Strawberry Hill, connecting the
Otter Creek county road with the Town's right-of-way
road to Harden Farm, limiting the Town's expense to
$2,500, an estimated one-half of what the road would
cost, making myself responsible for the rest. The
Town accepted, the road was built for me by the Mount
Desert Nurseries and opened to use in the Spring of 1900.
This road, opening up for the first time the
Great Meadow basin made & beautiful quiet drive for
use with horses.
The meadow, its drainage blocked
by the silting up of the brookbed, was a bog, with
wild cranberries growing anid swamp grass on its eastern
side, which turned to beautiful color in the later season,
while on its western side, and embayed by the extension
of the forest onto it grew the swamp-loving rhodora,
mingled with Labredor pea and similar wild plants of
the mosthenn DOGS. and forming brilliant sheets of color
creey springe
4.
Road construction requirements were simple in
those horse-driving days, I drained the road-bed
well and graded it, using such material as I found along
the way and the Town has never had occasion since to
make expenditure upon it, other than on surfacing it
for motor use.
Fifteen years later, when motor cars had come in
use, I built, owning then the land, a road around the
Meadow's southern end, continuing my e arlier road, so
that people coming from Seal Earbor or beyond might
take this shorter, better routs to reach the Building
of Arts for concerts, flower shows and the like, XYP/
the Kebo Valley Golf Club, with its nine-hole course,
or summer residencesodn Bar Herbor's western side.
5.
When, in 1930, Mr. RockefeAler, having acquired the
land on the Island's ocean front, from Sand Beach to
Hunter's Brook, asked the Town if it would surrender
to the Government its Ocean Drive that he might
build,for the Park, replacing it, a motor road along
this whole magnificent stretch of shore, bridging the
Creek, and the Town agreed, he included in his offer
the construction of a road connecting the Cadillao
Mountain road where it rises over Great Pond hill with
this ocean drive.
His offer accepted, he brought
surveyers down from New York to study this connection,
who worked the whole following summer through, consulting
also, in regard to it, eminent landscape architects,
before giving the route publicity.
But the result
was not a happy one, limited as the study was to lands
the Park already owned. And ultimately Mr. Rockefeller,
giving the lands he had acquired for carrying out the
plan, withdrew from his offor, leaving it to the Govern-
ment to continue with it,placing it for execution with
the Federal Bureau of Roads for further study.
In this,
familiar with the the territory as I was, I was able
to helpe
6
The road originally surveyed was laid out over the
Great Meadow's boggy bottom, where construction would be
costly and no compensating view could be obtained.
at high level
The road I had aid out and built/ around the Meadow basin
was clearly the place where the roi should go. In this, once
stafted, all agreed, but none had thought it possible
the Town would d yield the road to the Government.
I thought it would, if given good p rmanent connection with
the road when turned over to the Park and thi 8 connecti
Iwas in position to make possible through my ownership of
the Long Field, the one tract still left to me of the land
I had originally secured for my Wild Gardens project.
This I gave. The Tonw, the matter being laid
before it at its next annual meeting, agreed, and my road of
thirty odd years before round the Meadow's northern YX
end and eastern side, was taken for the
new Park road, leaving free from road construction the lake-
like moadow bottom and inoidentally saving the Government
a full half its estimated oost.
In making my gift to the Government of the land
down the Long Field, which alone made it possible to obtain
the Town's consent to the relinquishment to the Government
of its road around the Great Meadowm I asked in return one
thing:
The construction, planting and maintenance of 8
path over it and across the Great Meadow beyond, connecting
the Town with Sieur de Monts Spring and the mountain trails
which rise from it.
This path, long since planned and partly built,
lies wholly in its course over land of my giving and recalls,
being full of association for me, my Wald Gandene plen which
led on to the Park's creation.
To this, referred to Washington, the Government,
represented by the National Park Service, agreeed, as it
did also to my having the plants intended for it grown
in advance Eron under my direction by the Mount Desert Nurseries
Dictaphon - January 15, 1941.
Two things I am anxious for in Acadia National
Park, the one that it should stand permanently for
something more, much more, than a mere recreational
national park area and summer travel goal for travel-
lers and tourists; the second is that it should play
war
its part not alone in the present/emergency but permanent-
ly as an important area in America's and the world's
defense against aggression from abroad. Both these
it
things/can be made to serve uniquely and importantly,
placed as it is upon our country's eastern border at
the northernmost point where direct communication with
Europe and the British Isles can be häd by sea and air.
Bordering the ocean as it does, where the Arctic current
descending from the north and the Gulf Stream flowing
like a great oceanic river from equatorial seas meet
and part, it has an extraordinarily rich field of study
to offer the naturalist for the study of life in its
original home of development, a field unmarred by
human occupation unlike the great populous coastal
region to the south. On land it is a region also
where the temperate and sub-arctic floras and faunas
meet and mingle. It should be a home for naturalists
in every field and all possible should be done to malte
it so.
Acadia National Park
By George B. Dorr
Acadia, has been for the past ten years the only park in the
National system' east of the Missippippi, in the territory of the
original thirteen States. It is the only one based upon the coast,
lying along the ocean highway that gave rise to the first settlement
of the country. And as yet it is the only National Park exhibiting,
in any part, the flora and fauna of the East. It lies on the islanded,
embayed, and harbored coast of eastern Maine, in territory that was
once a part of the French province of Acadia, then passed to England
as the spoils of battle on the battlefields of Europe and presently to
Massachusetts, the parent state of Maine.
The territory in which it lies, rich in old historical association,
is the most beautiful on the North Atlantic shore, and the only one
to the St. Lawrence Gulf where mountainous formations reach the sea.
Until now the Park has been restricted to the limits of Mount
Desert Island, with its dominating landscape feature that island Is
mountain chain. Now, by a recent act, Congress has granted it authority
to overstep that bound and include, in the discretion of the Secretary
of the Interior, whatever tracts in that widely sea-invaded region may
be offered for its increase and found desirable. And with this wider
vision for the Park's development, Congress changed its name from
Lafayette, with memory of a great but passing moment, to Acadia; with
its deeply rooted historical significance and descriptive value.
The Park sprang from the conservational effort of a little group
of early Summer residents on Mount Desert Island, of whom President
Eliot of Harvard WAS one, the writer another, to preserve in openness
Origins
to the public and freedom from commercial exploitation such portions
of that splendid scenery as private generosity and public spirit might
make possible.
In 1914, half a dozen years after the first gift of land had been
received, enough had been secured to make its permanent conservations
under the protection of the National Government seem important. Two
years later, in the summer of 1916, on the advice of Secretary Lane,
President Wilson proclaimed the tract a National Monument, named for
the founder of Acadia, the Sieur de Monts.
When the war was over and Congress voted the Monument its first
appropriation, the Appropriations Committee of the House advised that
it be made a National Park, upon which a bill to make it so was passed
and signed by the President on February 26, 1919 during the period of
his return from Paris.
In one respect, besides contact with the ocean on a beautiful
and historic coast and its eastern situation near by land and water to
great city populations, Acadia is unique in that it has been formed by
gift--gift to the illimitable, fast-increasing public of the future
through the National Government as trustee--and sets a precedent that
may be widely followed.
The question is in debate among those in authority and others who
have the best development of the National Parks at heart as to what,
primarily, is the purpose of a National Park, whether its true function
be conservational, recreational, or educational, or in what degree
combined. In the case of Acadia, conservation--the conservation of
of inspiring quality and the safeguarding of the free access of those to it
beauty public--was the impelling motive, both on accepted. part
who by the and on that of those in authority who whether
visited
it
gave Like a great work of art or be famous preserved ruin, in its unique many and inspiring
or beauty few, and such spiritual a landscape significance should for the enrichment of the workd and
its influence on the minds of men.
features:
its
To. recreation Acadia National ever-changing Park offers two vision great of the sea, and
many miles of mountain the ocean trail where with an archipelago of islands sheltered on a sub-
merged coast with access to the open sea, once traversed boat from ocean-
its contact with yields many hundred miles of picturesque by and the Indians
waterways in their bark canoes and open now to every form of
going Educationally, yachts to tiny Acadia sailing National craft. Park occupies a unique and position, fauna of
representing natural province lying between the Massachusetts field the world's
singly among the National Parks the flora coastal zone
most and the various and crowded zone of life, the sea beach, rock pools, and
a great Canadian, and including in its biological
shallow coastal waters.
educational aspect the Park is a museum filled with living, fashion
self-perpetuating ecological relations, their reactions to uniquely Much has been
In its forms and exhibiting in singularly instructive various physical
their within a limited and readily traversed area. anywhere, it
conditions studied and recorded on these lines, and here, if and its
already should be possible to awaken people to the interest of nature
processes. Placed at the crowning point of beauty on a coast whose whole in
length, and the Maritime Provinces beyond, Acadia National as is
from Portland east, is a resort, with splendid highways Park
widely the making visited from the country over, and must be so increasingly and the number
the of those who, inland or city dwelling, seek sight of receive or will
population of the interior grows, airways develop, contact
grows the sea upon their summer holiday. Impressions they nature
with travel widely and be a leaven working through the land for all its
conservation and the preservation of landscape beauty in many
types and forms.
1917
Nutritic
1.
June 11
with the signing by President Wilson of the
Aot changing Sieur de Monta National Monument into the
present Acadia National Park, the first stage in the attainment
of my goal was reached; a place in the sun had been won
for our mountains by the sea, whose rugged heights, outlined
against the western sky, had been a land-mark to the early
voyageurs sailing out from Europe and the first welcome
sight of land within out national bounds to greet the
Puritans and other colonists of that early time on their
long journey out.
But this was a beginning only; much yet remained to
do before the larger vision that had como to me should be
transmuted into fact. A seaooast park, the sea-waves
rolling in and breaking on its granite coast, (the first
as yet within outpnational bounds : east of west) it had
no actual contact with the sea, save where, as though
guarding on the west the narrow entrance to Somes Sound,
mountains purchases by a group of Northeast Harbor summor
residents for the magnificent blimbs they afforded descend
precipitously to the water's edge. Again, the first
land acquired for the future Park had been the broad,
level summit of Cadillao Mountain, the highest not only
in our Mount Desert Island chain but on the whole eastern
coast of the United States in the vicinity of the sea.
2. June 11
But the old road, steep and rough built over half a
contury before by native enterprise when summer visitors
first began to come in numbers to the Island, had now been
almost wholly washed away by storms and the melting snows
of early spring, leaving the mountain top, with its wonderful
ocean ocean views, inaccessible to all but active
alimbers.
of those and other laoks I was acutely consoious
but could only let them wait and bide their time, which,
now the Park wa.8 established, I felt sure would o cme.
But now a now factor entered in which was eventually
to have a wide boaring on the Park's development though im-
mediately to make it the subject of no slight controversy.
Mr. John D. Rockefeller, Jr., had proceeded quietly
along in the construction of the horse-road system which,
planned to be built partly on land he would a quire for the
also
purpose but which extended # necessarily, over land
bolonging to the Government, which had been authorized by
Secretary Lane when he came to say with me at Oldfarm in 1917,
the Amphitheater Road 80 -called
and had completed all but its last unit, on which kex con-
struction was just commencing, when, in June, 1920, he drovo
over to 300 em with a letter in hand fromMr. Goorge Wharton
Popper, a loading summer resident of bNorthoast Harbor, which
he asked mo to read. Mr. Pepper began by commending the roads
that Mr. Rockefeller had already built, which had furnished
so safe and pleasant a retreat from the public ways - now
open to motor cars - for those who still retained their
stables, but ended with requesting him to build no more.
At this, Mr. Rockefeller, who regarded his Amphitheater Road
as the olimax of his whole endeavor, was much perturbed but
said that should it prove that Mr. Pepper's attitude was
widely shared among his Northeast Harbor and Soal Harbor
neighbors and friends, he would not wish to continue
construction even though authority for it had been given
him by the Government. And in the end he gave it up.
To ascertain the feeling among the Northeast Harbor
summer residents whom these roads particularly concerned, Mr
Lincoln Cromwell of New York, president of the Northeast Harbor
Village Improvement Association, offered to call a meeting
of the Association for a frank discussion of the question
and a vote upon it. Pending this, he invited a group of a
to
dozon
or
so
to his house in Northeast Harbor/talk
the matter over informally and Iwas asked, as the Government's
representative, to come.
Mr. Pepper was present and, answering some remark he
made concerning the disfigurements resulting from such roads,
I took issue with him, saying that rightly planned roads of
such a oharacter need result in no disfigurement and spoke
of the pleasantness and beauty of a bicyole path of wood-road
4.
character which I had built myself twenty years before on
our own land beneath Champlain Mountain where, oiroling a
peaty, glaoial pool, it took its way onward through primoval
woods of biroh and homlook; and, describing the scene in
autumn when the leaves were falling, quoted some lines from
Milton that came to me as I spokes
"Thick as autumnal leaves that strow the brooks
In Vallambrosa, where th' Eturian shades
High over-arch'd imbower."
Later I got a letter from Mr. Pepper in which, referring
to this, he said:
"When you quoted Milton, I know my o ause was lost
But lost it wa.8 not, for as the result of Mr. Pepper's
opposition in which others joined, Mr. Rockefeller oeased
construction.
I had need at that time, with no roads of any kind nor
even trails traversing the north and south-trending valleys
of the Park of some way of simple wood-road character tp
connooting the woodlands at the mountains' base on either
side for ranger use and fire protection. And seeing Mr.
Rockefeller's interest in similar construction, I asked him
if he would not like to undertake one along the western side
of Jordan Pond and through the valley beyond it at whose
further end the watershed was formed between it and that of
5.
The territory, though in his neighborhood, was new
to him, not given, as I, to climbing for its own sake, and,
accompanied by his surveyor, he took his time to explore it.
The following summer, that of 1921, Mr. Rockefeller came to
me with a carefully studied plan for a horse-road system some
seven or eight miles in length, encircling at high level
the whole broad mass of Jordan, Sargent and Parkman Moun-
upon 1 to course, north and south,
tains and commanding wide-sweeping views of lakes and
mountains and far horizons,upen-bt
a system which would
connoot to the east of Uppe Hadlook Pond with the what he
had already built under Secretary Lane's permission. Along
with this he offered, bearing in mind the motorists and their
needs as if to compensate for their exolusion from the horse-
roads, to contribute $150,000 for the building of a Park
motor road, from the Bar Harbor-Somesville Road at Great
Pond Hill to the foot of Jordan Pond, where it would find
connection, through a town-road spur, with the county highway
along the shore to Northeast Harbor.
This joint offer
I a coepted so far as with me lay and transmitted it in due
course to Washington. In the meantime, word of Mr. Rooke-
feller's offer spreading, bitter opposition to its acceptance
sprang up among groups of the younger summer resident element
at Northeast Harbor and Bar Harbor, who, vL th no experience
of the disastrous effects of private ownership and apeculation
6,
which I recalled 80 we 11 during the Bar Harbor boom-time
a score of years before, resented road development of
any kind within the Government lands as an intrusion upon Nature
and invasion of their rights.
Vut ours was not a wilderness area nor was it for any
special group or class that the Government was taking over
the great seenio portions of the Island to preserve for the
people for all time their intrinsic beauty and freedom. It
was no question now of whether this should be done but of
how best to do it. And to this, with a long background
of observation elsewhere, in other beautiful portions of the
world I gave my own best thought and energies.
My ohief preocupation was to do nothing that the future
could not alter if better ways were found, and next to that
to leave the way open as widely as possible for changes of
such sort.
Some Thoughts Concerning Acadia National Park,
Planning for its Future.
George B. Dorr
December 10, 1940.
Omitting studies in detail, my desire is to do what
I may, while the opportunity yet remains, to create certain
central points of interest in the eastern portion of the
Park, whence it originated and where its planning and
directive activities have always lain.
The first of these concerns itself with the Park
Office whose site I chose even before the thought of a
National Park had clearly taken shape in my mind, and
which was suggested by opportunities that had come my
way for laying it out on the broad scale and striking
setting it now occupies.
Along with this, I wish to convey to the Park, as
a central feature in it and giving it contact with the
sea upon a harbored shore, my own inherited home at
Compass Harbor on Frenchmans Bay, where my dream of the
future Park first came into being and which was one of
2.
the first summer homes built upon Mount Desert Island
and rich for me with long, personal association.
The third point I look upon as central is that of
Seal Harbor where some of the earliest reservations,
making possible the Park upon a broad and national
scale, were obtained, and where so much has since been
accomplished both on the shore and inland to make it
the central landscape feature of the Park and Island,
with its dominating mountains either side of the most
beautiful lake basin upon Mount Desert Island.
The Park Office site came to me in its entirety
and including the Town Athletic Field it looks out upon,
southward and toward the mountains, as the result of a
combination of circumstances whose bearing upon my plan
I recognized and, aided by others, took from the start
full advantage of. That plan has as yet been only
carried out in part, but it still lies in my power
3.
to complete it in its original intention and make it
permanent through the Government's ownership, which I
now wish to do. This involves the inclusion in the
Park of the land lying west of the Athletic Field
where, as the maps accompanying this will show, the
separate road system and path system of the Park shall
take their start, commencing off Park Street, the road
laid out by me for the Park offices to front upon.
The land required for this, reserved for the pur-
pose, lies in my power to give, freely and without con-
sideration, and this I now propose to do. But certain
modifications of the present Town road system will be
required to give it full effect, and to obtain these
some few early house sites of the town remain to be
acquired. The whole plan for this, also, is clearly
shown upon the accompanying maps.
In planning for Park Street, my thought was to
take the road across the whole breadth of the plain
the Town of Bar Harbor is situated on, from the summer
residences on the shore to the east, making use for this
4.
of a road already built, named for Mr. Johnston
Livingston of New York whose lands it bordered,
to Glen Mary Park upon the west. The portion of
this road frontage opposite the Athletic Field, some
five hundred and twenty feet in length from Main Street
to School Street, is what I am now offering to the
Government in its entirety for its administration
buildings, for which it forms a dignified and
spacious site.
On the corner of Main Street, where Park Street
commences, I built, in anticipation of the Government's
acceptance of the lands I offered, the present Park
Office building, planning it most carefully with the
help of a competent local architect, and rented it
to the Government when the Park was created, so that
from the first that site has been associated with the
Government's administration of the Park.
This office, ample for earlier needs, suits ad-
mirably the need for information, suggestion and ad-
vice to the great stream of visitors who come now
5.
seasonally to see and explore what the Park has to offer.
But this need, grown great beyond all anticipation, re-
quires practically the whole building and the work of
the Park administration now absolutely needs a separate
building where the office of the Superintendent and his
assistants may be placed spaciously in a dignified, at-
tractive setting. The want of such a building, long
felt, is provided for in the present plan, the site
selected, after careful study, being opposite the
center of the Athletic Field, with most attractive
plantings of trees and flowering shrubs on either side
long since set out, with all due care, and growing well.
The only request I wish to make in connection with this
building is that it be designed, since it will represent
the Government to all who now come in such numbers from
the whole country over, in a style characteristic of the
best old-time New England architecture.
The land west of School Street, fronting upon Park
Street, has now been accepted by the Town of Bar Harbor
6.
for its office and administrative needs, for which it
forms a most excellent site, looking out upon the lands
offered to the Government and tying up together in the
happiest way the Town and Park administrations to the
gain of both, the whole forming the most attractive
road frontage in the Town.
Along with this broad development of the Park
Office site and the secure and permanent possession of
it by the Government which it provides for, I offer, in
connection with it, my old family home, Oldfarm, upon
the shore of Frenchmans Bay with which the whole develop-
ment of the National Park has been, from its inception
on, most intimately associated. This, one of the
earliest and best-situated summer homes upon Mount
Desert Island, was for many years the scene of generous
hospitality, till those who made it so, my father and my
mother, had passed on, leaving to me the spirit of that
hospitality, to which, extended to a wider, national field,
Acadia National Park, in its origin, is due.
7.
Chinform
The site occupied by this home is that of one of
the earliest cultivated farmlands on the Mount Desert
coast, settled by migration from Cape Cod. This farm-
land, with the woodlands and wild lands associated with
it, is, owing to the bold, rocky character of the coast
beyond, the last tract of farmland character capable of
being cultivated upon the western coast of Frenchmans
Bay or the coast beyond until Seal Harbor and the island-
sheltered entrance to Somes Sound is reached. It also
fronts directly upon the last good harbor for small
vessels along that whole stretch of coast, lying closely
outside the extensive sheltered basin of Upper Frenchmans
Bay created by the breakwater extended by the Government,
at great expense, from Round Porcupine westward toward
the Bar Harbor shore, with passage-way left open between
for smaller craft.
The original Oldfarm grant acquired by my father
extended back from the Compass Harbor shore and the
Storm Beach point beyond for a measured mile, ending
on the all but precipitous slope of Champlain Mountain,
8.
the easternmost mountain in the Liount Desert Island
chain, which, with Bear Brook and Beaver Dam Pool at
its base, was one of the earliest gifts of land, made
by myself, which now constitute Acadia National Park.
This Oldfarm tract, which, in its entirety, I.
inherited from my father, is one of extraordinary in-
terest and variety, with its harbored shore, its cul-
tivated farmland, its bold granite heights above the
cottage that I now occupy, its tiny lake, Compass Harbor
pond, and the stream that winds its way down from it to
the harbor. And along with these the tract across the
public way, the Schooner Head Road, which I gave early
to form part of the group of public reservations that
presently became the National Park.
Wide extended as the Park now is, it has, even yet,
no frontage upon any harbored shore until Somes Sound is
reached, midway of Mount Desert Island. The Oldfarm tract
I now offer will fill this want, and in the most complete
and satisfactory way.
9.
The house itself, Oldfarm, built by day labor
under my father's, my mother's and my own direction
in consultation with the architect and the builder,
is, owing to the care taken of it, in as good. con-
dition now as it was when it was finished, sixty years
ago, and no repair to it is needed, within or without.
It occupies a magnificent situation above the shore and
harbor and is completely furnished, having been rented
to friends of mine at intervals throughout the years.
This furniture is included in my offer. Private roads,
avenues and foot-paths connect the house widely and
directly with the lands now already included in the
National Park, and it seems more natural and right to
have the Park extended across the public way to Compass
Harbor and contact with the sea and to the house that was
my own.
O
Oldfarm, the house, was built by the day, and most
extraordinarily well. Our architect was Henry Richards
of Gardiner, Maine, a recent graduate of the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, who took the keenest interest-in
his work and followed it closely, consulting constantly
with my mother, my father and myself as the work went on,
unhampered by any contract. Whatever changes suggested
themselves as the work progressed, adding to the comfort
and convenience of the house, were promptly made, for we
planned for the future and an enduring home.
The lower story of the house was built of granite,
using, for effect's sake, the old oxidized surface from
a new quarry in the Gorge opened for the purpose; cut
stone was only used for the window frames and doors and
the effect was excellent. The rest of the house was
splendidly framed in wood, the best Maine could supply,
with strong and heavy beams that made the structure of
this portion as enduring as could be built in wood. The
upper stories and the roof were shingled with California
Redwood, imported for the purpose. The Redwoods all possess
some quality that prevents decay -- they never rot, though
they may wear thin and crack with time. This was a suggestion
14
of our architect, who used them for their warm, reddish
tone, fitting well with that of the granite used in the
lower floor.
The house was built sixty years ago the present
year - 1940 - and no renewal or repair even of these
shingles has ever been required, save for those upon
the roof which ultimately wore thin and cracked and
which I had replaced, as better fitted to the climate
and exposure, with the best native cedar shingles pro-
duced in Maine:
We planned the house spaciously, that we might
have our friends come to stay with us freely, and it
became at once, with the rare gift for entertaining
that my mother had, a social center of the pleasantest
sort. It is the recollection of those days and the
good times we had that makes me desirous now of making
our old home serve the Government in recreation and in
rest, if it so might be, for those who shape, at Wash-
ington, the policies of the National Government.
c. 19442
X
authorize
It is desirable to me in the thought and feeling
that has prompted my offer of Oldfarm to the Government
that it be understood that I make it as a gift, carry-
ing with it all the sentiment and feeling attached to
it as a home, rich in traditions of hospitality and
intimate to my own and my mother's and my father's
lives. These are things one cannot buy and sell and
they enter importantly, too, into relation with others'
gifts of places precious to them in memory, to which my
own gift, I hope, may lead the way.
There is, however, much land attaching to Oldfarm
in my offer to the Government that carries with it no
such intimate and personal association and which may
very well be used in replacement of the Park Office
and headquarters site as a. basis of the payment I
asked of the Government in return for the loss of rental
payments to me involved in the Government's becoming owner
in fee simple of the office and headquarters site, which
I propose. The corporate form in which I had placed the
ownership of the site makes it simpler, I am told, and
should take the form of a gift and not of a sale and
2.
purchase, by substituting other lands essential to
the Government, retaining the headquarters site and
accepting the associated gift of Oldfarm and the
land connected with it, bringing the Parklands to
the sea.
The first of these is the land west of the
Athletic Field, fully described elsewhere in
my letter to Washington of July 26th, 1941 and
the fairly estimated value given. The second would
be the property west of oldfarm, on the Compass Har-
bor shore, surveyed out for me years ago as a separate
property intended at that time for sale, when sale of
it seemed desirable.
This property, in the beauty of the view it offers
across the Bay, in the delightful beach it possesses and
frontage on a harbored shore, I have held, and hold,
scarce less valuable in itself that the site we built
upon at Oldfarm, while it is, in all that it carries
with it of orchard and other lands, much more extensive
tlian our Oldfarm home itself.
3.
This property has upon it at the present time
the old farmhouse of the original land grant purchased
beside
by my father in 1868, the first year that purchases of
land for summer residences on Mount Desert Island were
made. It is a picturesque building of the olden time
which has served for many years as the comfortable
home of the successive managers of the Nt. Desert
Nurseries; and, in the Park's possession, may serve,
being in excellent condition, some similar purpose of
a most attractive area from the public point of view,
which will need in the future, on the Government's
taking possession, responsible guardianship and pro-
tection.
The property has, besides, the headquarters build-
direct
ing of oldfarm, viewed as a farmland of the olden time,
stripped
with grasslands, orchards and vegetable gardens which
my father built, in order that the character of the
place, denoted by the Oldfarm name, might be continued
into the future under his ownership and that to follow.
4.
The cost of this building, in whose planning and
construction my father took great interest and which
is still as sound and adapted to this use as at the
beginning, was undervalued in the estimate obtained
by Mr. Rodick and sent on to Washington, to an extent
explicable only on the &round that the real estate
agent whom Mr. Rodick consulted looked at the matter
from the point of view, not of the usefulness and good
condition of the building but of finding a purchaser
in the present condition of the market for a building
of such character. I took pains myself to have this
building thoroughly examined by one of the leading
expert builders in this region who reported to me,
after thorough examination, that it was substantially
as good as when first built by my father and had a
replacement value, should it chance to be destroyed,
of not less than $9,000, at present prices, while Mr.
Rodick's real estate agent put it in the statement
forwarded to Washington at only $2,000, or less than
one-fourth of its true value for anyone seeking to
continue, as I feel should still be done under the
Government's ownership, the simple, old-time character
of the tract, of which the name Oldfarm, taken over by
the Government, must henceforth always tell.
5.
Altogether, there is ample in the lands including
those I have just spoken of and those giving connection
with the existing parklands beyond the Schooner Head
Road and the extensive, wooded hill-lands east of the
Nurseries, independently of Oldfarm itself, to more
than justify -- its irreplaceable value to the Park
apart -- the purchase by the Government which will
relieve it of all future rental charges and establish
it permanently in the place it has occupied from the
foundation of the Park on.
for
STATANDA
v concertion
from this
Weither
other
that dravatto
bround Court pass creation
of great
the and
original stringing UR with
adidas not narration
inter rut Both Sprang from the
area and fundamentalo
The one the drive that is inevi
ably coming percention Pust to the origi
motivor of the Landscape exhibita for the 10
great works of are If other
education 19 brought Lorward 100 phrelled and cufficia it
cound ground wh be transport establishment in every Statesend
rettion alotho country
2
Monal parks alone daysupply the imaginativo appeal that
LD pada The older Dando works of artified mino and old
this tosto dishociation
think the pair waston should be barred on
reasorvation to the future the undeparded in torest
and appeal of representative Arean exhibits of the
mode Landscapes of countr-7 And that recreation, in the popular
monpay and
Maint the sports A Instruction enterial should
be kept
to and not thrustrinto front place.
Crade too. the parks people not dram by
13 mr Can the open associated with
DO Leading by this stromphore 2t creates to
the
the parkal position among thoughtful
bazoro the Nation.
aboutdoba clearly defined
and world propol Community expease wild as It helps
to
understanding
of the natural history of the party Ata past story,
The parka undertake the work of Universities
in general history though over facility should
be provide that Contress for that use as natural muscums
by T
those
nd
DO
them for research OTA plana instruction.
They
constitute
the
in point of Sace natural history succures of the
and should justify largo annual expenditures
by the
to since they not only exhibit but connerve and purpotuate
thing then and show it in its natural ecological environ-
dainy the intalltrantly.com such pulposes, thoughts
demovically for and sistlar
$ 6 each opparato beeting of the
with-loss expenses
not Suportant or beaching, nor are the
associated universal but
whore
of Canor preparentlods protected
Ling dach climatic sone
biotory research
valuable too for concern tion.
bird contugos are a stop toward think Such it national group
not mode parks or intended for
selected for they shelter
phyalook conditions affective and dostmed to cover
without DRIVER States, would forman wonderful
singing
Lung whether for redearch or teaching,
start could-ba GIM the parks oloan, which would
however unito inkit and could box auth extension of Lta acope be placed
under the management of the National Park Service. Nor roud the
additional administrativo experied be relatively streat.
Printendent
castorn member of
Cross Bill In old French-londled corritocy
upon shop 0. cantorn Disney
III foot,
bumbay our that the on our
her been for two the
the real grantful upporture the eculpsured forms
and war oroston frest and weathering,
a was the mountaine! bare
read HILL
Smet the westorn which
2ed that continuent in the
Bay of WOOD our Date boundary now commences at
St. Crotz-to the den-Monta deporte's, the
Ioland or and VIA and Bolitary position
Originally the meztin granitey intruded under terrific
prossure free-unknown depths below into the yet older Cambrian
overley SU then OF Total surround 16 formed's
sincle-mail (be length of the prepant Island cost and went.
democation of unmeasured agos,
the repent Sodenbeeth thousands of foot in thickness and bear
Note Driger 242 identical to "What Dollational Porks StandFor?"
2
Sparks and supply the Imprinative appeal that
L made 1. by and works Ket by relas and old
HOTALIO associational
DO Think The pational park water should be based on
predervation to the future La interect
and
of exceptional or representation areas aditing the
Assupes the Country And reareation in the popular
patter the party as instructic white should
both be Lept to EXIC and
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Memoirs of G.B. Dorr 1930-1944
Details
1930 - 1944