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

Page 1

Page 2

Page 3

Page 4

Page 5

Page 6

Page 7

Page 8

Page 9

Page 10

Page 11

Page 12

Page 13

Page 14

Page 15

Page 16

Page 17

Page 18

Page 19

Page 20
Search
results in pages
Metadata
Creating Acadia N.P. -2013 Friends of Acadia and contract
Creats ng acadic N.P. - 2013
Proposal
and "Contract","
June 18, 2013
Dear David,
I intend that this communication inform and provide a framework for our walk and talk on
June 28th. My major theme for that engagement will be to explore the possibility that
Friends of Acadia publish The Making of Acadia National Park, the working title of the
manuscript written by Ron Epp based on twelve years of research on George B. Dorr.
Ron's book is the seminal biography of Dorr - and more. To give you a time-efficient
preview of Ron's manuscript, I attach the current Table of Contents.
Let me be clear from the beginning: I advocate that FOA publish the book and I am in
fraternal dialogue with Ron about this possibility. I have wrestled with the angels of my
better nature and determined that my advocacy is compatible with my responsibilities as
a member of the FOA board. As will become clear below, I believe that publication of
the book would be consistent with our FOA mission and past and projected FOA
practice. I think that The Making of Acadia National Park will contribute historical
foundation to each of our FOA strategic pillars and be a brand-enhancing FOA offering
to the celebration of the Acadia Centennial.
Some background may clarify my positioning in this prospect. I met Ron in the course of
our mutual commitment to island and Acadian history. We were good friends by email
and phone before we ever met. Ron introduced me to Judy Goldstein; I introduced him
to Bill Horner and Bill's many leading roles in service to local history. Ron is a good
friend and a respected colleague.
In 2011, when I was preparing my Acadia Senior College three-course History of MDI,
Ron graciously provided me with the full electronic file of his manuscript. (Judy and I
may be the only MDI folks who have read the full manuscript.) I have been a "Friend of
Ron's Book" since then. Knowing my stand, Ron has asked me to represent him
through four roles as we explore FOA publication - accepting that I will do so consistent
with my FOA board responsibilities.
This letter is an important step in my service to the book - and, I hope, to FOA. In what
follows, I provide:
1) My best assessment of the status, virtues and limitations of the manuscript;
2) A summary of Ron's proposal to FOA -- as reviewed by him;
3) My view of how the book fits within FOA's mission, practice, strategic focus and
Acadia Centennial plans;
4) A high-level summary of the roles Ron has asked me to play; and
5) A list of the near next steps I envision if you, as FOA CEO, wish to explore the possibility.
You and I have worked together long enough now so that you know my deep confidence
in your leadership and my solidarity with your vision. I hope that this possibility can draw
from that well and advance the growing roster of our good works. But I also know that I
can never see all the challenges you must compose. If this prospect would be disruptive
or stressful to important dimensions of FOA development in the next four years, I will
accept any explanation you provide and will help Ron explore other possibilities.
The Making of Acadia National Park: Status, Virtues, Limitations
Status. Ron Epp has invested more than a decade of research and writing to generate
his mature manuscript on the life of George B. Dorr and the making of Acadia National
Park through 1944. He has achieved a text that he considers complete and ready for
publication. Like many others in the last decade, he has found the trade and academic
press inhospitable to texts with a tight focus on themes seen as narrow by publishers
who must work on a commercial-return-on-investment basis. In my judgment, he has
tested the appropriate commercial and academic windows, benefitted from some
editorial feedback from them, and decided to move on. (He has also opened what would
be a very long and perhaps problematic discussion with Eastern National, but shelved
that while he explores his possibilities with FOA.) He is prepared to make a proposal to
FOA that maximizes final work by him and offers significant financial support from him.
Virtues. Ron manuscript makes an important contribution to the history of Acadia
National Park and our knowledge and understanding of Acadia's iconic champion,
George B. Dorr. His account is vigorously researched and clearly expressed. As the
seminal biography of the essential actor in the realization and development of Acadia,
Ron's book will help readers understand the challenges of conservation and stewardship
and the perseverance required to sustain a vision over four decades. Dorr's complex
relationships with Charles W. Eliot and John D. Rockefeller Jr. are sensitively drawn.
The genius of Dorr as a lobbyist is finally given robust appreciation. Ron shows Dorr's
deep emotional commitment to the MDI communities surrounding Acadia and his close
work with local leaders. Especially gratifying to me is Ron's account of Dorr's brilliant
engagement with FDR's New Deal and the contribution of poor boys from Maine to the
development of Acadia National Park. Ron is especially strong in his poignant account
of Dorr's final years and his quest to pass Oldfarm safely to Acadia. Ron Epp has
written a worthy contribution to the history of our park and region. His book will be
valued by subsequent generations of writers who, I predict, will change many of the
ways we understand our past.
In Ron's account of Dorr and Dorr's relationships with Eliot and Rockefeller, we see a
man whose devotion to place had national consequences. Eliot conceived the Hancock
Count Trustees as an application of the approach his late son had pioneered in
Massachusetts. In Dorr's hands, this trust became a model for private philanthropy in
service to conservation for the public. Ron also argues that establishing what became
Acadia as the first national park entity east of the Mississippi had a salutary impact on
the standing of the new National Park Service. All would agree that the sense of
purpose and satisfaction JDR Jr. realized in service to Acadia had national and even
international impact through his wide-ranging conservation philanthropy.
For the prospect we consider, an additional virtue of the book is the regional standing of
its author. Ron has made many presentations here on Dorr and Acadia and published
several articles. He has been of good service to FOA and ANP and is appreciated
widely for his contributions.
Limitations. Ron is neither a life-long historian nor an academic buttressed by the
resources of a university-based researcher. What he has done has been entirely on his
own. His pen is clear and careful, but he is not a stylist who writes at the National Book
Award level. He gives us a good story inherently interesting to those who love Acadia.
As he would be the first to affirm, he has made a catalytic contribution to Acadia
historiography. In the fullness of time there will be other biographies of Dorr. His work
creates future possibilities rather than making a definitive statement.
Ron Epp Proposal to Friends of Acadia
Knowing life is fragile and finite, Ron is eager to have his work published and participate
in its reception. He accepts that his subject is seen as too focused for publication by the
trade or academic press. He now seeks a specialty publisher with a strong natural
interest in his subject and favors Friends of Acadia. He is prepared to make an offer that
seems to me both generous and forthcoming - one that may eliminate any financial
concerns FOA might have and reduce to an essential minimum the demand on FOA staff.
Ron judges his manuscript as mature and ready for publication. He does not invite
additional editorial dialogue nor expect that service from a publisher. (He is, of course,
open to editorial suggestions that correct facts or eliminate confusion.) At least four
important steps remain to make the manuscript "publication ready."
1) Illustration. Ron has accumulated hundreds of photographs and other
FOR
graphic materials. He would welcome dialogue with a publisher to select the
most appropriate, disciplined by anticipated cost;
2) Proof Reading. Ron has had discussions with a professional he respects;
3)
Composition and Design. Ron has candidates in mind. He also recognizes
FOR
that this important step will involve brand-investment by a publisher and is
open to dialogue or trialogue;
4)
Permissions. Because Ron developed hundreds of relationships as he
conducted his research, he believes that he is the best anchor for the robust
communications required to conclude this essential step.
Thus Ron is prepared to do the work and pay the bills for all of the remaining "prep" work
on the path to publication. He estimates the cost of this work at no less than $5,000.
Ron envisions publication in paperback (only) with an initial printing of perhaps 1,000.
Once we have agreed on a plan and assessed costs, Ron is also prepared to make a
significant contribution to the cost of publication. I also believe that there are several
"Friends of Ron's Book" who would be prepared to contribute to its publication, especially
if stimulated by some matching arrangement. I certainly count myself among them and
would be prepared to quarterback such an effort, if appropriate. Finally, Ron wishes all
proceeds from the sale of his book to go to Friends of Acadia, first to recover any
remaining costs of publication and modest marketing and then to support FOA.
In my judgment, Ron Epp is prepared to make a generous proposal to Friends of Acadia,
one that will significantly constrain the funds and staff time FOA would need to invest in
the project.
The Making of Acadia National Park and the Mission, Practice, Strategic Focus and
Acadia Centennial Plans of Friends of Acadia
History matters. We cannot conceive and realize the preferred future for Acadia unless we
know and use her past. Our park and our organization are the present expression of that
past. Publication of The Making of Acadia National Park would help educate our FOA
community and support our FOA strategy. Mindful that some might view publication of
Ron's book as a deviation from the focus deemed so essential to FOA progress, I make
the counter-point with vigor.
FOA publication of The Making of Acadia National Park would enhance our brand and
provide welcome historical footing for our mission, strategic intent, and plans for the
Acadia Centennial.
FOA Mission. Knowing better how the founders of Acadia National Park
preserved, protected and promoted the stewardship of our park will help us carry
forth that mission. The distinctive cultural resources of the surrounding
communities were expressed through their cooperation with George B. Dorr over
four decades. Ron's book helps tell that story. More of us should know it - and
we should make it easier for many more to appreciate this history;
Balanced Use Strategic Pillar. The vision of the Hancock County Trustees for
Public Reservations and then the unique partnership of Dorr and Rockefeller
defined and exemplified balanced use. Together they anticipated, guided and
delimited the presence of the automobile in Acadia. Against serious opposition,
they carried forth the carriage road program over more than two decades and
created our most beloved heritage - the iconic expression of balanced use that
FOA now proudly extends. Ron's book gives new dimension to this Acadian story;
Resource Preservation Strategic Pillar. The Resource Protection Committee
has begun to focus on the challenge of climate change in Acadia and envisioned
the importance of citizen science and education in expressing the strategic intent of
this FOA pillar. George B. Dorr helped to pioneer both science and strong science
journalism in the national parks system and played an essential role in basing both
the Jackson Memorial and MDI Biological Laboratories on MDI with links to ANP.
Knowing this history should energize the common work of FOA and the Schoodic
Institute in science-based resource protection;
Generational Stewardship and Youth Strategic Pillar. The most substantial and
compelling instantiation of youth education and stewardship in Acadia was the
nine-year contribution of the Civilian Conservation Corps. This story is told well in
Ron's book. More than 3,000 poor boys from Maine found new purpose in and
made a huge contribution to the balanced conservation of Acadia. Our youth and
those to come deserve to know this history. Ron's book provides one good way;
Carriage Roads and Hiking Trails Strategic Commitment. These iconic Acadia
assets that FOA proudly preserves and extends would not exist without the vision
and diplomacy of George B. Dorr. Our FOA community and our FOA board could
know the history of the trails and carriage road better than they currently do. Ron's
book provides an important path to that deeper understanding; and
Acadia Centennial Celebration Commitment. More than any other individual,
George B. Dorr brought Acadia to consummation as a National Monument in
1916, secured her status as a national park in 1919, and guided her though her
first three decades of conservation and growth. Our 2016 Centennial celebration
will look forward to inspire continuing stewardship, but we will also look back to
the magnificent achievements of those who worked before us. None stands
taller than George B. Dorr. Ron Epp has written the book that will inspire deeper
appreciation of the history of which FOA is one custodian.
Jack Russell Roles in the Exploration of FOA Publication
As mentioned above, Ron has asked me to perform a few roles as we all explore the
possibility of FOA publication of his book. We have talked through his request and
reached current comfort on four roles:
1) To advocate for Friends of Acadia (FOA) publication of The Making of Acadia
National Park within a framework of good judgment and his responsibilities as a
member of the FOA board of directors;
2) To coordinate the distribution to appropriate parties, as determined through his
judgment, those elements of The Making of Acadia National Park that will
advance its publication;
3) To be the local representative of Ron Epp, communicating to local prospective
partners in the project as long as this is not at odds with the FOA mission; and
4) To advise Ron Epp regarding any local concerns about unclear, ill-defined, or
under-performed areas of publication responsibility.
Jack Russell will assume and perform these roles to the best of his ability as long as
they do not conflict with his obligations as a member of the FOA board and his
responsibilities as the chair of the FOA Advocacy Committee and the Co-chair of the
FOA ANP Centennial Task Force.
I hope that you, David, are also comfortable with me serving in these roles. These may
evolve, of course, if and as exploration of publication proceeds.
Possible Near Next Steps
Having taken some time to make my case, my clear vision extends forward only until
June 28th, when we'll have a chance to discuss the prospect and I'll learn your initial
response. If exploration extends beyond then, I assume some of the following will be
2013 milestones:
1) I communicate with Ron based on our 6/28 discussion. Obviously you may wish
to as well;
2) I provide you and perhaps other FOA staff with as much of the manuscript as you
wish to read;
3) If there is interest, the parties may then collaborate to make a rough determination
of the full costs of the project and the division of labor and financial responsibility
between the parties. If we get to this point, I expect that Ron would here declare
what he is prepared to contribute financially to the publication effort;
4) If you are prepared to recommend publication, you will determine the level and
timeline of board oversight of this prospect; and
5) Again, if we get there, and the board in some form approves, some document to
express an agreement (Letter of Intent? Contract?) will presumably become
necessary.
Thank you, Friend David, for marching to the end of this long letter. I look forward to your
perspectives on the 28th.
Fraternally,
Jack
6 July 2013
Mr. David R. MacDonald
Friends of Acadia
43 Cottage Street
P.O. Box 45
Bar Harbor, ME 04609
Dear David MacDonald:
As a long-standing friend of Acadia, I encourage your consideration of a collaborative project to
publish a seminal biography of the "Father of Acadia," George Bucknam Dorr.
Beginning with my first visit to Mount Desert more than a quarter century ago, I have
passionately desired to understand what motivated and sustained Mr. Dorr and his colleagues to
create, develop, and situate privately donated property within the federal government. Through
repeated visits to Mount Desert I discovered that the picturesque landscapes, salt air, trails,
villages, and rocky shoreline and summits--so imbued with the culture and history of Maine--
awakened in me a need to understand how and why this preserved landscape became the first
national park east of the Mississippi. As a professor of philosophy I asked residents historical
questions about the park that more often than not went unanswered. With rare exceptions, I
found it most striking that little was known-or thought worthy of knowing--about the first four
decades of Dorr's life before the establishment of the Hancock County Trustees.
Drawing upon my experience as scholarly journal managing editor and academic library
administrator, I spent years researching primary sources contained in the NPS historical
collections in the National Archives, state and local historical society collections, and the vast
collections at Harvard University, Mr. Dorr's alma mater. Information from dozens of interviews
were also integrated in a dozen published articles and presentations that resulted from these
investigations. Friendships with Jack Russell, Bill Horner, park and FOA staff nourished the
lengthy process of writing The Making of Acadia National Park. The manuscript has been read
and edited by several hands and is ready for the pre-publication process.
My central argument is that in developing Acadia, Mr.Dorr pioneered and embodied essential
characteristics of the New England land conservation movement: an emphasis on self-
determination, innovation, leadership by example, civic engagement, and an ethical commitment
to land stewardship (an outline of this case is contained in the attached Table of Contents).
Mount Desert became the setting wherein Dorr and Harvard president Charles W. Eliot applied
both the accomplishments of landscape architect Charles Eliot, president Eliot's late son, and the
practical lessons of the best of Boston Brahmin philanthropy.
I have benefited from dialogue with the university presses that I approached about publishing my
manuscript. In recent months I've come to realize, however, that since the Friends of Acadia
clearly share my passion for and commitment to the Acadian legacy, a publishing arrangement
with you would provided the best fit. Clearly, The Making of Acadia supports the pillars of the
FOA strategic mission, helping your organization to realize its mission and provide the scholarly
underpinnings for the history of land conservation that Friends of Acadia extends into the 21st
century.
I am prepared to make a significant financial contribution to the realization of this goal. These
funds would underwrite the selection, digitization, and placement of appropriate illustrations;
composition and design of content, scholarly apparatus, illustrations, and cover. Given my
experience as an editorial officer with the Association of College and Research Libraries, I
would outsource at my expense page proofing and indexing responsibilities to a Massachusetts
editorial agency. Because of the relationships I've developed during my research, I will secure
the necessary permissions. To that end, I have contacted my attorney about developing a
disclaimer freeing FOA of any infringement concerns. I would forego royalties, making all
income a gift to Friends of Acadia. As for marketing and distribution of the publication, I would
suggest offering it on Amazon.com and the FOA web pages.
An initial print run of one thousand-preferably in more affordable paperback--we find a
receptive audience at the park concession outlets at the visitor center and Jordan Pond, not to
mention island bookstores and their outlets. I would also suggest that several dozen gratis copies
be directed to the media. Personal invitations to review the publication might yield endorsements
in regional print and online newspaper and serial publications (e.g., Downeast, Yankee
Magazine,). Acquisition by Maine public libraries, academic libraries (collecting in
environmental conservation, philanthropy, biography, and American public policy), and the
public would likely follow. Securing placement on the shelves of the L.L.Bean anchor store in
Freeport would likely be a boon to sales.
As a longstanding friend of Acadia please be assured that I will continue to be sensitive to the
mission of FOA and the diverse responsibilities of FOA staff. I am excited at the opportunity that
Jack Russell has put before you. But in the weeks ahead I will be limited in my ability to keep to
my customary schedules since I am having my right knee replaced on July 26th. I do hope to
travel to Mount Desert, however, before the first snow flies.
From the early stages of my investigations, I have been driven by the desire to tell the fascinating
story of Mr. Dorr and other park founders, relate them to the broader conservation movement,
and publish a work worthy of being placed on the shelves of libraries, bookstores, historical
societies, and private residences where the American conservation movement is represented.
Acadia National Park is a living memorial to the vision and persistence of a man whose full life
has yet to be told. I hope that we can partner in the telling this story.
Most cordially,
Ronald H. Epp, P.D.
532 Sassafras Dr.
Lebanon, PA 17042
717-272-0801
Eppster2@comcast.net
TABLE OF CONTENTS
The Making of Acadia National Park
Ronald H. Epp, Ph.D.
1.
FIRST IMPRESSIONS
Shortly after the end of the Civil War, the family discovers the bold landscape of Maine's Mount Desert
Island where they acquire more than a hundred acres of Frenchman Bay shoreline to build a summer
residence. The cultural, social, and family ancestry of George B. Dorr is set against his birth in Jamaica Pond,
MA.
2. DR. ELIOT SAILS INTO FRENCHMAN BAY.
Dorr's childhood in the rural summer landscapes of Canton and Lenox provide a rugged environment
that contrasts with the urban culture of an upper-class Brahmin family. Prior to the outbreak of the Civil War,
the Dorr's move to the Park Street, Boston home of George's maternal grandfather.
3. THE MOST IMPRESSIONABLE YEARS
The Ward family relationships with Ralph Waldo Emerson, literary titan George Ticknor, educator
Margaret Fuller, and social reformer Julia Ward Howe provide the backdrop for Dorr's entrance into the
Harvard College preparatory school. The Ward and Dorr families become founding residents of
Commonwealth Avenue.
Dorr's entrance into Harvard College takes place in the second year of Charles W. Eliot's presidency.
Concentrating his studies in history and foreign languages, Dorr's education is threatened by episodic
blindness and recurring stuttering which plagued him since childhood. He is awarded his B.A. in 1874.
4.
THE LONG ROAD TO MOUNT DESERT
The Dorr family embarks on what will be a four-year odyssey around the British Isles and the
Continent. Dorr's brother, trained as a legal assistant in New York City, is fatally struck down by typhoid
fever. The family finds consolation in the hospitality offered at Naworth Castle by George and Rosalind
Howard, the future Earl and Countess of Carlisle. Julia Ward Howe, the childhood friend of Dorr's mother
whose son-in-law was later selected to design their Mount Desert residence, often travels with the family.
President Eliot's eldest son, landscape architect Charles Eliot, guided fellow Harvard classmates on several
summer natural history research studies on Mount Desert Island
5.
RESTLESS INDECISION
Charles Eliot recommends to his father (in 1881) the acquisition of a one hundred twenty acre site for
their summer residence in Northeast Harbor. Several miles distant, the Dorr family showcases the splendid
landscape from their "Oldfarm" estate. Despite George Dorr's continuing indecision about a career, he
cultivates abiding friendships with professors Josiah Royce and William James. Following the death of his
father, George Dorr enters the world of commerce. He launches his own business, the Mount Desert
Nurseries, inspired by the horticultural exhibits of the Columbia World Exposition
6.
NEW WANDERINGS
Landscape architect Charles Eliot completes three landmark essays for Charles Sargent's Garden and
Forest. These precede Eliot's founding of the Massachusetts Trustees of Public Reservations, the first state-
wide land trust-six years before his death in 1897. His father publishes an essay on "The Forgotten
Millions" that demonstrates-contrary to the prevailing social norm-that Mount Desert is organized in ways
that reflect "the basal American society." In Cambridge, Dorr is selected by the Overseers to participate in
2
evaluating the quality of Harvard's philosophy department. Later, he leads the effort to erect a new facility in
the Harvard Yard that would bear the name of a family friend--Emerson.
7.
IN THE FOOTSTEPS OF PERFECTION
Dorr retraces Henry David Thoreau's route into the northern Maine wilderness. Unlike the author of
Walden, Dorr's daily hikes on Mount Desert Island follow the principle that "the Earth led the path.," and in
turn he contributes to an Acadian style of trail architecture. After President Eliot familiarizes himself with the
posthumous papers of his son, he realizes that the concept of a land trust must be applied to Mount Desert
Island.
8. FIN DU SIECLE
Charles Eliot Norton speaks of the death of Dorr's mother in 1901 as the loss of "almost the only one
who had many familiar memories in common with me." Julia Ward Howe correctly interprets Mary Dorr's
death as a new beginning for her son, George. As the sole surviving bachelor son, Dorr embraces this
challenge.
9. The BIRTH OF THE TRUSTEES, THE ENTICEMENTS OF THE NATIONAL PARKS
Under Eliot's leadership, the Hancock County Trustees of Public Reservations is formed to hold
coastal Maine landscape for the perpetual use of the public. In Cambridge, Dorr's Emerson Hall fund raising
is complicated by his alliance with Francis Appleton, Edward and Cameron Forbes to raise funds for a New
Yard for Harvard. Dr. Eliot publishes his Right development of Mount Desert, providing a template for the
conservation of Mount Desert landscapes. After offering horticultural advice to Edith Wharton in Lenox and
another forestry consultation to George W. Vanderbilt at the Biltmore Estate, Dorr spends weeks on
horseback in the western U.S. He experiences the landscapes of Yosemite, Bryce, Zion, Grand Canyon,
Yellowstone, Kings Canyon, and Sequoia directly.
10. PROMOTERS OF MOUNT DESERT CULTURE
Edward Waldo Emerson reminds all present at the December 1905 Emerson Hall dedication that his
father was "a teacher-at-large for
life [committed to] the theory and practice of Philosophy for the People."
Behind the scenes, philosophy department chairman Hugo Munsterberg feuds with William James and only
President Eliot's mediation wards off an academic calamity. On Mount Desert, Dorr persuades George W.
Vanderbilt to contribute to the City Beautiful Movement by joining him and others in funding the
construction of Guy Lowell's Building for the Arts. At the request of William James, Dorr becomes Vice
President of the Society for Psychical Research and Dorr's interviews with medium Leonora Piper at Oldfarm
are integrated into articles James published prior to his death in 1910.
11. TRUSTEE FIRST STEPS
American Civic Association President J. Horace McFarland comes to the national forefront by
publicizing the absence of a federal managerial agency overseeing national park expansion and development.
A series of superb property donations to the Maine Trustees presents them with similar organizational issues.
These seem to resolve when the State of Maine took the unprecedented step of agreeing with Dorr's
arguments to grant the Hancock County Trustees the power of eminent domain. As the importance of
creating a national park bureau gained attention, Charles W. Eliot and Dorr become increasingly concerned
about the vulnerability of Trustee holdings to ever-changing political currents in Augusta.
12. MR. DORR GOES TO WASHINGTON
Arriving in Washington on the heels of President Wilson's inauguration, Dorr champions federal
protection as the only stable land protection solution. As houseguest of Gifford Pinchot, former head of the
U.S. Forest Service, Dorr meets key leaders of the new government, including Interior Secretary Franklin
Lane and Assistant Interior Secretary Stephen Mather. The paramount objective of Mather is the
establishment of a national park bureau. Dorr's proposal offers an unprecedented challenge since historically
3
all national parks had been carved out of federal property. There is great political suspicion about any offer of
public-inspired gifts. Several years of astute political maneuvering will be necessary for Dorr to establish a
new federal precedent.
13. MONUMENTAL ACHIEVEMENT
Passage of the 1906 Antiquities Act enables national monuments to be created by Presidential
executive order. As Dorr publicizes the merits of establishing Maine's national monument as a stepping
stone
to national park status, Mather and his allies build the necessary political support for the establishment of the
National Park Service (NPS). Their efforts join and Mount Desert Island becomes the site of a national
monument one month before the July 1916 establishment of the NPS. Frederick Law Olmsted Jr. drafts its
fundamental statement of purpose: conservation of the scenery, historic objects, and wildlife therein without
impairment for future generations.
14. THE FIRST NATIONAL PARK WITHIN THE ORIGINAL UNITED STATES
At a time when no national park exists East of the Mississippi River, the new custodian of the national
monument in Maine-who else but Mr. Dorr--spends much of the year in Washington lobbying Congress for
national park status. As Dorr secures additional land donations and the legal justifications for national park
status, the NPS faces its first crisis. In the midst of World War I, Mather suffers a nervous breakdown and his
assistant, Horace M. Albright, assumes responsibility for the fledgling service for nearly two years. As the
nation mourned the death of Theodore Roosevelt, Dorr's goal is realized with the establishment of Lafayette
National Park (renamed Acadia in 1929). He becomes its first superintendent, a role that will span a quarter-
century.
15. THE PRINCE OF ALTRUISTS
The initial absence of automobiles on Mount Desert factored heavily into John D. Rockefeller Jr.'s
attraction to the Island. The pro-automobile policy of the NPS presents a new challenge to Dorr: how to
encourage automobile based park visitation while protecting the privacy of Rockefeller's expanding carriage
road system. Dorr and Mr. Rockefeller develop a deep relationship that results in a shared vision for park
development. Because this national park is more thoroughly integrated with established population centers,
local criticism appears in the press. Maine's national park is portrayed as being developed for the benefit of
wealthy summer residents.
16. ATTACK MAY COME
Local suspicions arise concerning Dorr's motives. These are articulated most forcefully by U.S.
Senator George Pepper, a summer Mount Desert resident. He represents an enclave who argue against road
development as destructive of the wilderness experience. They suggest that Dorr is an organizational rogue
operating outside the constraints of the federal government. The road development issue escalates and in 1924
a public hearing-on the relationship between public access and the private agenda of Mr. Rockefeller's
philanthropy--is scheduled in Washington before Interior Secretary Hubert Work. Dorr is awarded an
honorary Master of Arts degree from his alma mater. This tribute may reflect the Harvard-bred independence
of spirit that his friend William James characterized two decades earlier when he affirmed that "our
undisciplinables are our greatest product."
17. BEGINNINGS AND ENDINGS
A favorable 1924 road development decision permits Dorr to shift his energies to research initiatives on
Mount Desert. The discovery of native American stone implements by physician Robert Abbe inspires the
creation of the Lafayette National Park Museum of Stone Age Antiquities, where Dorr takes on the yeoman's
responsibilities. He also donates land and provides civic leadership for the development of the Jackson
Laboratories and the Mount Desert Island Biological Laboratories. On the tenth anniversary of the formal
celebration of the establishment of Maine's national monument, the most senior member of the Dorr-Eliot-
Rockefeller triumvirate-Charles W. Eliot--dies in his Northeast Harbor home.
4
18.. DRIVING TO THE CADILLAC SUMMIT
Dorr adopts a more intense form of land stewardship-anticipating F.D. Roosevelt's principle, "Action
and action now!"-as he negotiates, buys, and transfers to Mr. Rockefeller several hundred properties which
fit their shared vision for the Park. Less than a week after passage of the 1929 Acadia National Park Act
(which expanded its boundaries and altered its name), the superintendent attends the funeral of NPS Director
Mather. Horace M. Albright accepts the position and immediately travels for the first time to Acadia National
Park. He is one of the first to ascend the nearly completed government funded motor road to the summit of
Cadillac Mountain.
19. THE ELONGATED SHADOW OF A MAN
Park growth is paralleled by an expansion of the NPS bureaucracy. No year rivals 1932 for the
frequency of visitation by NPS officials, culminating in the dedication of the Cadillac Summit road. U.S.
Congressman John E. Nelson likens Dorr to the former-NPS director: what Mather had been to the NPS, Dorr
is to Acadia National Park. On the heels of this celebration, the first one hundred days of the Franklin
Roosevelt administration commences. Nearing eighty years of age, Acadia's superintendent is on hand in
Washington and immediately seizes the opportunity to make the case for several Civilian Conservation Corps
camps on the Island.
20. THE MATHER ERA CLOSES
The 1933 resignation of Horace M. Albright brings closure to the Mather era. From then until 1941,
a
steady supply of federally sponsored Works Progress Administration and Civilian Conservation Corps human
resources enables park staff to achieve conservation goals that the superintendent had thought were beyond
their means. The rapidly expanded NPS landscape department prepares detailed project drawings that provide
Mr. Rockefeller and Dorr with heightened aesthetic coherence throughout the Park. Much of this work is
delegated to the man who would become Dorr's successor, Benjamin Hadley. Dorr's interests center on his
magnum opus: convincing the federal government to accept his most cherished possession-his Oldfarm
estate. Further debilitated by encroaching blindness, Dorr avoids public gatherings, including the
Tercentenary of Harvard College, though his cousin Thomas Wren Ward was an honored guest.
21.. A FULL AND USEFUL LIFE
As the United States ramps up for war, Dorr feels increased urgency to finalize the transfer of Oldfarm
to the federal government. Former director Horace Albright repeatedly provides wise counsel, advocating for
Mr. Dorr's interests. Described by a fellow superintendent as the patriarch of the NPS, Dorr finalizes
the
complex negotiations with Washington a week before his eighty-eighth birthday. Much relieved, the sightless
superintendent turns his attention to updating his posthumously published Story of Acadia National Park. In
early August 1944, Dorr dies of heart failure at Oldfarm and his ashes are scattered at the park's Beaver Pool.
EPILOGUE
The executors of Dorr's estate are presented with a daunting task, which became known in 2008 when the
archives of his executor, Judge John A. Peters, were discovered. A legal morass challenges Dorr's trustees
since many of his properties intended for addition to the Park are still mortgaged. Ultimately, the NPS takes
the position to honor the conditions of Dorr's will related to the development of Oldfarm-yet to this day
most legal requirements have not been realized. Tragically, many of his family, personal, and professional
papers are disposed of in the Bar Harbor land fill. His trustees salvage artifacts and personal papers that were
subsequently donated to historical and literary societies. Judge Peters champions the erection of a memorial at
the park Sieur de Monts Spring beneath the Mount Desert mountain that now bears Dorr's name.
2011
The Making of Acadia National Park [Retitled C.A.N.P.]
A Prospectus by Ronald Harry Epp, Ph.D.
532 Sassafras Dr., Lebanon, PA 17042. 717-272-0801
eppster2@comcast.net
The Making of Acadia National Park focuses on the life and times of conservationist George Bucknam
Dorr (1853-1944). Celebrated as the founder of the first national park east of the Mississippi River, Dorr's
seminal contributions to the American environmental movement have gone largely unacknowledged.
Even in the present day, those who live on-or travel to-Maine's Mount Desert Island do not fully
comprehend the scope of his achievements. This biography is the story of Dorr's pioneering role in the
evolution of the land trust concept. In its Victorian Downeast Maine iteration, the landscape preservation
idea--when rooted in the democratic principle of public accessibility--is inseparable from the life of
George Bucknam Dorr.
My own interest in the origin and early development of Acadia National Park results from experiencing
Mount Desert over three decades and integrating that experience into my careers in university teaching,
scholarly publishing, and academic library administration. Interviews and archival research at repositories
from Maine to California yielded findings reported in a dozen published articles and presentations. The
Making of Acadia National Park is directed at general readers, including the two million visitors who
experience Acadia National Park annually as well as viewers of the recent Ken Burns PBS documentary
on America's Best Idea, the National Park. As we approach the 1916 centennial of the establishment of
the National Park Service and Acadia, interest in the origins of the land trust movement will grow. Park
staff are developing strategies to promote Dorr's Oldfarm residence in Bar Harbor as the centerpiece of
park celebrations.
2
The central argument is that in developing Acadia National Park, Dorr embodied key characteristics of
the New England land conservation movement: an emphasis on self-determination, innovation, personal
leadership, civic engagement, and an ethical commitment to landscape stewardship. Mount Desert Island
became the setting for Dorr to apply the practical lessons of Brahmin philanthropy that tracked back to his
maternal grandfather, banker and Harvard College Treasurer Thomas Wren Ward. On his grandfather's
knee, Dorr learned of the tension between classes, the struggle between private and public interests, and
the importance of philanthropy.
Like the poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and the novelist Nathaniel Hawthorne, Dorr was born into a
cosmopolitan community adjacent to the sea. Indeed, for more than six decades he lived adjacent to the
Boston Public Garden and on Park Street at the foot of the Massachusetts State House. Some of Dorr's
favorite haunts-the Boston Common, Beacon Hill, and Commonwealth Avenue-were close to the
ocean. He never grew weary of revisiting these, nor of the mountain charms of the Berkshires where in
the two decades before the Civil War, both sides of the Dorr family had been among the pioneering
cottagers of Lenox.
A bachelor preoccupied with "historical associations," Dorr desired to amplify the positive elements of
his Brahmin inheritance. His decision in middle age to use a small island in Maine as a model to instruct
subsequent generations about the importance of natural sanctuaries stamps Dorr's distinctiveness. For
more than four decades, Dorr's physical energy, intellectual focus, and spiritual aspirations were directed
at "this historic, mountainous and timeworn landscape" against the Atlantic coast. Dorr's success was
achieved despite two lifelong disabilities: a visual impairment that would eventually rob him of his sight
and a chronic speech impediment, the disfluency of the stammerer.
3
The few who seriously studied Dorr's life consulted only regional newspapers, Acadia National Park
archives, and popular anecdotal lore for information. As a result, the secondary literature perpetuates
misunderstandings of the man and his time. The archival record has been largely ignored and there has
been no comprehensive account of his entire life. Significantly, Dorr's relationship with Harvard
University, which this study contends is central to a full understanding of his motivations, has not been
addressed. The influence of the Dorr family on the intellectual development of Harvard philosophy
professors Josiah Royce and William James have gone unrecognized. Additionally, Harvard president
Charles William Eliot tasked Dorr with securing the requisite funds to erect the first college campus
building (i.e., Emerson Hall) devoted to American philosophy. Unfortunately, Mount Desert residents
remain as uninformed about the role of Harvard in their history as those at Harvard about their influence
on this Maine coastal island.
Not content to remain idling in the realms of speculative philosophy, Dorr seized upon the challenges
presented by Mount Desert Island in much the same way as Charles W. Eliot had accepted the daunting
task of reforming Harvard when he accepted the mantle of its presidency (1869-1909). Just as Harvard's
William James labored to marry philosophical doctrines to practical outcomes, Dorr sought to wed
private philanthropy with the need to protect land as a public resource. During this effort and other alumni
projects he developed the vital donor solicitation skills needed to assemble the hundreds of parcels of land
donated for the establishment and growth of Acadia National Park
The new movement in Maine to conserve nature was joined with the existing machinery of philanthropy
when the Hancock County Trustees of Public Reservations was established in 1901, loosely modeled on
the Massachusetts Trustees of Public Reservations which was created a decade earlier by the elder son of
Charles W. Eliot. The better known conservation advocates during the first two decades of the twentieth-
century were George B. Dorr, Charles W. Eliot, and John D. Rockefeller, Jr. Yet this new movement was
4
not dependent on summer residents "from away." Largely unrecognized are the contributions of Maine
natives like John A. Peters, Leure B. Deasy, and A.H. Lynam, attorneys who advocated to state and
federal authorities the unorthodox idea of donating land--for public use--to state and federal authorities.
Yet it is the day-by-day personal relationships of the Dorr-Eliot-Rockefeller triumvirate that provide the
substance of The Making of Acadia National Park.
As the first land trust in Maine, Dorr was its chief executive who directed his energies and assets away
from his horticultural business and towards the acquisition of contiguous island properties of exceptional
natural character. Despite the hostility of Congressmen at that time to the idea that a sane citizen would
freely give something of national value to the federal government, federal officials were finally persuaded
to accept 5,000 acres of donated land as a public resource. Advice from a future Director of the National
Park Service, Horace M. Albright, was crucial to Dorr's success in achieving National Monument status
on the eve of the 1916 establishment of the National Park Service.
Dorr's unpublished correspondence with John D. Rockefeller, Jr. (1874-1960) and his less restrained
letters to and from Harvard president C.W. Eliot (1834-1926) provide the key manuscript resources for
this study. Other important administrative documents-including monthly reports to the National Park
Service-are contained in the Sawtelle Research Center at Acadia National Park and National Archives
and Records Administration facilities. Collections of Dorr manuscripts are preserved at the Bar Harbor
Historical Society, the New England Historic and Genealogical Society, and the Massachusetts Historical
Society; within the last two years, the Ellsworth archival collection of Judge Peters as well as the Bar
Harbor archives of attorneys Deasy and Lynam have been uncovered and researched. To better
appreciate Dorr's historic context, dozens of interviews were completed with Rockefeller, Eliot, Dorr, and
Ward family members as well as others whose thoughts bear on the themes of this biography.
5
In appraising the full range of Dorr's published work and thousands of pages of manuscript material,
Dorr's published work was primarily descriptive. It covered the inception, development, and growth of
the Park and emphasized the chronology of events-interpretation and evaluation was incidental. By
contrast, The Making of Acadia National Park is attributive. It traces how he applied certain birthright
attributes and shaped them to his own ends. This work further examines the development of Dorr's
unique leadership skills from the behavioral models he observed and embraced as a descendant of
powerful Brahmin families.
Dorr's quest had four primary motivations: (1) a desire to set aside exceptionally scenic areas for
unmediated aesthetic appreciation; (2) a concern to secure places for recreational use as a tonic to the
increasing pressures of living in an industrialized society; (3) a wish to provide places of natural
distinctiveness where research scientists could investigate (what we now term) ecosystems; (4) a hope to
redefine the Brahmin philanthropy of the prior generation through the creation of an enduring natural
legacy.
His leadership style enabled him to successfully advance his conservation agenda in the halls of Congress
and to be regarded as the most distinguished of the first generation of National Park Service
superintendents. Dorr also wisely stood outside the constraints of the new National Park Service when his
efforts to collaborate effectively with the private philanthropic ambitions of John D. Rockefeller, Jr. were
thwarted by this new branch of the Department of the Interior.
Dorr found in the landscape of Mount Desert Island his particular medium; a medium with which he
could recapture the flavor of his childhood. As a boy, he had been content with a passive invitation to
enjoyment generated by the salty ocean tang that had blown inland from Boston's wharfs. As an adult,
6
Dorr pursued the therapeutic power of that same ocean with active daily immersions (throughout all four
seasons) in the waters of Frenchman Bay. When we think of Dorr-and of the men and women who
established Acadia National Park-we must remain mindful that the landscape they sought to preserve
was not limited to the island itself. Their vision of preservation extended to the islands peripheral waters,
to its unique climate, and to the biological diversity and interplay that SO few understood a century ago.
And like the sea itself, their legacy extends to us and our heirs.
FRIENDS OF ACADIA
43 COTTAGE STREET
P.O. BOX 45
BAR HARBOR
MAINE 04609
207 288 3340
207 288 8938 fax
friendsofacadia.org
Memorandum of Understanding
On January 29, 2014 Friends of Acadia ("FOA"), represented by President David R. MacDonald, hereby
agrees to publish the tentatively titled The Making of Acadia National Park: A biography of founder George
B. Dorr ("MANP").
Authored by historian Ronald H. Epp ("the author"), this title will be published in 2016 as part of a series
of Mount Desert Island events celebrating the centennial of the National Park Service and the creation of
Acadia National Park.
This publishing partnership is funded in part by the author's charitable contributions, to be received in
full prior to publication. The budget for MANP is under development; in good faith, the first five-
thousand dollar ($5,000) donation from the author was received by FOA on November 17, 2013. The
author will forego royalties; all revenue from this publication will be a charitable gift to FOA.
These donations will underwrite in part the selection, digitization, composition and design of narrative
content, scholarly apparatus, illustrations, book cover, printing, and distribution. The FOA
Communications and Outreach Coordinator will manage this project with final decision-making resting
with the publisher.
The initial copyediting of the MANP manuscript will be outsourced at the author's expense to Last Look
Editorial Services in Stoneham, MA ("Last Look") The author will provide an initial copyedited draft of
the manuscript to FOA by September 1, 2014, after which final copyediting will be done "in-house" by the
FOA Communications and Outreach Coordinator. A final version of the manuscript will be approved by
both FOA and the author by April 30, 2015. Proofreading and indexing of page proofs will be outsourced
to Last Look or another mutually-agreed-upon editorial professional. The author will secure the necessary
permissions for content and illustrations under copyright protection; a disclaimer freeing FOA of
infringement concerns has been drafted by the author's attorneys and been accepted by FOA.
FRIENDS OF ACADIA
43 COTTAGE STREET
P.O. BOX 45
BAR HARBOR
MAINE 04609
207 288 3340
207 288 8938 fax
friendsofacadia.org
Both FOA and the author will manage the timely completion of this project. It is the intent of both parties
that MANP shall be published no later than April 2016. It is also recognized that there are unforeseen
circumstances. To that end, prior to publication the author has changed the primary beneficiary of a ten
thousand dollar MetLife insurance policy to Friends of Acadia; this should cover copyediting, indexing,
and permissions costs that are his responsibility.
In good faith we attach our signatures to this dated document.
foundH.Epp Ronald H. Epp Dain David R. MacDonald
Viewer Controls
Toggle Page Navigator
P
Toggle Hotspots
H
Toggle Readerview
V
Toggle Search Bar
S
Toggle Viewer Info
I
Toggle Metadata
M
Zoom-In
+
Zoom-Out
-
Re-Center Document
Previous Page
←
Next Page
→
Creating Acadia N.P. -2013 Friends of Acadia and contract
Details
2013