Centennial of the first celebration of Acadia GB Dorr's Address Saint Saviour Episcopal Church Aug 22, 2016 Bar Harbor ME
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From collection Creating Acadia National Park: The George B. Dorr Research Archive of Ronald H. Epp

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Centennial of the first celebration of Acadia GB Dorr's Address Saint Saviour Episcopal Church Aug 22, 2016 Bar Harbor ME
"Centennial of the First Celebration of Acadia:
G.B. Dorr's Address." Saint Saviour's Episcopal Church.
August 22, 2016. Bar Harbor. ME R-Epp
AD
NATIONAL
1916
2016
TM
CENTENNIAL
CENTENNIAL OF THE FIRST CELEBRATION OF ACADIA
AUGUST 22, 2016, 1:45 - 4:00 P.M.
SAINT SAVIOUR'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH
41 MT. DESERT STREET, BAR HARBOR
1:45-2:00 PREPROGRAM
Airs of the Era by Andrea Horner, Great-granddaughter of Luere Babson Deasy
Images from the Early Conservation Years (repeating slide show at rear of church)
WELCOME TO ST. SAVIOUR'S
Rev. Timothy Fleck
2:00-2:10 HONOR TO SPECIAL GUESTS
2:10-3:00 SPEECHES FROM THE FIRST CELEBRATION OF ACADIA
Jack Russell, Historical Guide
Dr. Chares Eliot Pierce Jr., Speech of President Charles W. Eliot
Rev. Timothy Fleck, Speech of Bishop William Lawrence
Dr. Ronald Epp, Speech of George B. Dorr
Dr. Steve Katona, Speech of Alfred G. Mayer
Dr. William Horner, Speech of Luere Babson Deasy
3:00-3:15 THE GIFT OF ACADIA: CONSUMMATION OF A CENTURY
Joshua Torrance, Executive Director of the Hancock County Trustees of Public Reservations,
presents the deed of their final gift of land to Acadia National Park Superintendent Kevin Schneider
3:15-3:20 THE ACADIA WALTZ
The Kelly Farm Five
3:20-4:00 RECEPTION IN THE CHURCH GARDEN
EVENTS > CENTENNIAL OF FIRST ACADIA CELEBRATION
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CENTENNIAL OF FIRST ACADIA CELEBRATION
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Date: Monday Aug 22, 2016
Time: 2:00 PM - 4:00 PM
Description:
The first big community celebration of the conservation of Acadia was convened on 8/22/1916 at
the elegant Building of the Arts near the Kebo Golf Course. The program featured historic speeches
by President Eliot, George B. Dorr, and eminent islander Luere Babson Deasy. On 8/22/2016, St.
Saviour's Episcopal Church and Friends of Acadia we will reprise this celebration on its 100th
anniversary. The historic speeches will be reoffered by direct descendants of Eliot and Deasy and
Mr. Dorr's biographer.
Location: St. Saviour's Episcopal Church, Mount Desert Street, Bar Harbor
Contact Name: Diane Ingalls Zito
Contact Phone #: (207) 669-8256
Event Sponsor(s): St. Saviour's Episcopal Church
This is a free event.
See all events
This website is a project of the
ACADIA CENTENNIAL TASK FORCE
c/o Friends of Acadia
43 Cottage Street, P.O. Box 45, Bar Harbor, Maine 04609
(207) 288-3340 toll-free: (800) 625-0321
www.friendsofacadia.org I
www.nps.gov/acad
Contact Friends of Acadia
I
Contact Acadia National Park
© 2016 Copyright Acadia Centennial Task Force
E
ST. SAVIOUR'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH
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ST. SAVIOUR'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH
ST SAVIOUR'S
EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
General Description
St. Saviour's Episcopal Church has been striving to be a lively spiritual resource for the entire Bar
Harbor community since 1876. We welcome all to join us in loving our neighbors through service
and sharing, and loving God through word, song, prayer and sacrament. We are blessed with an
historic building in the center of Bar Harbor, where we are able to host a wide variety of musical
performances and community functions.
Centennial Plans
On August 22, 1916, the communities that had worked to create what would become Acadia
expressed their pride and pleasure at a grand celebration at the Building of the Arts in Bar Harbor.
Among the celebrants and speakers that day in 1916 were Charles W. Eliot, George B. Dorr, and
Luere Babson Deasy. On August 22, 2016, exactly one hundred years later, St. Saviour's Church will
host an afternoon celebration and reenactment to honor the vision of these three founders of
Acadia National Park. Direct descendants of Charles Eliot and Luere Deasy, and a worthy
representative of Mr. Dorr, will deliver their original speeches and recreate the atmosphere of that
celebration. The speeches given a century ago still resonate with Acadia lovers today. This event,
which is free and open to the public, will also include music appropriate to the occasion and a 1916
style lemonade social.
St. Saviour's is also proud to host other events to honor the Centennial, including concerts of the
Acadia Choral Society on May 7th and 8th, and of the Mount Desert Summer Chorale on August
5th and 6th. Details of those concerts may be found on by following the links above for those
organizations.
Contact
41 Mount Desert Street
Bar Harbor, Maine 04609
acp@mdi-episcopal.org
(207)288-4215
http://www.stsaviours.me
CENTENNIAL EVENTS
Centennial of First Acadia Celebration
Monday August 22, 2016
This website is a project of the
ACADIA CENTENNIAL TASK FORCE
c/o Friends of Acadia
43 Cottage Street, P.O. Box 45, Bar Harbor, Maine 04609
(207) 288-3340 toll-free: (800) 625-0321
www.friendsofacadia.org
I
www.nps.gov/acad
Contact Friends of Acadia
I
Contact Acadia National Park
© 2016 Copyright Acadia Centennial Task Force
Page 1 of 1
Anne Funderburk
From:
"Jack Russell"
Date:
Monday, July 25, 2016 4:03 PM
To:
"Diana Paine" ; "Anne Funderburk" ; "Bill Horner"
Subject:
Luncheon and Celebration of August 22nd
7/25/2016
Dear Diana, Anne, and Bill,
I write your esteemed selves as living direct descendants of original members of the Hancock County Trustees of
Public Reservations.
As I hope I have communicated clearly in conversations with each of you, Monday, August 22nd looms as an
important milestone in our Acadia Centennial celebration. On that date, from roughly 2:00-4:00 PM, at St. Saviour's
in Bar Harbor, we will do our best to reprise, with respect, the first celebration of Acadian conservation, the event
hosted by the original Trustees at the Building of the Arts to celebrate the conservation of Sieur de Monts National
Monument. The core of our offering will be the speeches made that day by Eliot, Dorr and Deasey - offered
respectively at our event by Diana, Ron Epp, and Bill.
The program will also include the formal, ceremonial passage of the final gift of land from the HCTPR to Acadia,
when Joshua Torrance, Executive Director of the current HCTPR, presents ANP Superintendent Kevin Schneider with
the formal deed to a two-acre plot of in-holding land near Sewall.
If we can get ourselves organized, we may also make some announcements to bang the drum for our Acadia
Bicentennial Time Capsule.
But at midday on the 22nd before this public show, our friends on the current board of the HCTPR request the honor
or your company, with companions, at a private luncheon they wish to host for as many living direct descendants of
the original HCTPR as we can identify and enlist. This luncheon will be in the Community Gallery at the Abbe
Museum, conveniently close to St. Saviour's. This luncheon will be from Noon until 1:45.
Joshua and his board would welcome brief remarks from each of your about your esteemed forebear - only a few
informal minutes to honor their distinctive contribution to the work of the Trustees.
My practical task is to ask your help to indentifying any other such living direct descendants known to you. Through
Diana's gracious hospitality, I have met her uncle C. W. Eliot Paine, namesake of the President, so I do hope to engage
him and his bride with Diana's guidance. Do other come to mind? I hope to close on our list of invitees this week so
that we can give folks decent notice.
I will call soon to follow up on this adventure.
With Appreciation,
Jack
7/29/2016
page 1 oF 3
GEORGE B. DORR
Narrator: R.H.Epp
St.Saviour's 8/22 /2016.
Mr. Chairman:
My thought turns forward, rather, to the great opportunity that springs from what
is now achieved, than back toward the past, save for the memory of those I
would were here to be glad with us at this first stage attained. It is an opportunity
of singular interest, so to develop and preserve the wild charm and beauty of a
spot thus honored by the Nation that that future generations may rejoice in them yet
more than we ; and so to conserve, and where there is need.restore, the wild life
willfind
whose native haunt it is that all may find delight in it, and men of science a
uniquely interesting field for study.
For both purposes we need more land, as anyone may see by studying the Park
and Reservation bounds on Dr. Abbe's wonderfully illuminating relief map. We
have begun an important work; we have succeeded until the Nation itself
has taken cognizance of it and joined with us for its advancement; let us not stop
short of its fulfillment in essential points. Adequate approaches to the National
Monument, which men and women from the country over will henceforth come to
see, should be secured. The areas adjoining it that are fertile in wild life exceptional
forest tracts, wild orchid meadows and natural wild-flower areas of other type, the
pools haunted by water-loving birds, and the deep, well-wooded and well-watered
valleys that lie between the mountains are necessary to include in order to make
the Park what it should be, a sanctuary and protecting home for the whole region's
plant and animal life, and for the birds that ask its hospitality upon their long
migrations. Make it this, and naturalists will seek it from the whole world over, and
from it other men will learn similarly to cherish wild life in other places.
The influence of such work, beneficent in every aspect, travels far; and many,
beholding it, will go hence as missionaries to extend it. We have a wonderful
landscape, to deepen the impression, and, now that the Government has set its
seal of high approval on it, wide publicity will be given to all that we accomplish.
page 2 of3
By taking the opportunity given us by the richly varied topography of the Island,
by its situation on the border between land and sea, by the magnificent beginning
made, and the Government's co-operation, we can do something now whose
influence will be widely felt. And here I wish to say a word which falls in singularly
well with the thought of the far-reaching influence this work may have.
Charles Eliot, Dr. Eliot's older son, was a landscape architect of rare ability and
enthusiasm. Moved by a public spirit that he derived alike from his own nature
and the home influences that helped to form him, he initiated in Massachusetts
the system of Public Reservations on which our own was modeled. To him Mt.
Desert owes that debt of leadership, while he, in turn, might never have been
awakened to the value and importance of such work had it not been for the
inspiration, the love of nature and the quickened consciousness of beauty, drawn
from boyhood summers passed upon it. During the early summer, when I was at
Washington working on this matter of the Park's establishment and was
plunged for weeks together in its oppressive heat, it struck me what a splendid
and useful thing it would be if we could provide down here, in a spot so full of
biologic interest and unsolved biologic problems, so rich in various beauty and
locked around by a cool northern sea, a summer camp some simple summer
home for men of science working in the Government bureaus, in the museums
and universities. They would come down to work, as Henry Chapman and
Charles Sedgwick Minot used to do, on a fresh field of life, bird or plant or animal,
and then go back invigorated, ready to do more valuable work the whole winter
through in consequence of this climatic boon and stimulating change.
This is one opportunity. Another, which is urgent, is to secure now, while it may
be done, tracts of special biologic interest not yet secured, irreplaceable if lost in
private ownership or through destruction of their natural conditions, as well as
adequate approaches to the National Park, convenient and scenically worthy of
the national possession to which they lead. Both of these are essentially
page 3 of: 3
important at this time. No one who has not made the study of it which I have can
realize how truly wonderful the opportunities are which the creation of this Park
has opened, alike in wild life ways and splendid scenery. To lose by want of
action now what will be so precious to the future, whether for the delight of men
or as a means to study, would be no less than tragic.
Do not, therefore, look on what has been accomplished as other than a first step
attained upon a longer way, which should be followed only the more keenly for
the national co-operation that has been secured, the national recognition won.
852 Words
10/1/2016
XFINITY Connect
XFINITY Connect
eppster2@comcast.net
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Re: Merci
From : RWH
Tue, Aug 23, 2016 09:02 AM
Subject : Re: Merci
To : Ronald Epp
Ron,
Simply elegant! So gracefully expressed. It's wonderful to see you and your work garner such deserving tributes. All of us are proud for you. Enjoy! I look forward to our de-briefing. Carry on,
chum!
R
On Aug 22, 2016, at 10:54 PM, Ronald Epp wrote:
From: "Jack Russell"
To: "Ron Epp"
Sent: Monday, August 22, 2016 10:31:00 PM
Subject: Merci
Dear Ron,
Well done and thank you. Mindful that you have worn the Blue Hill/MDI track bare this month, I thank you for lending your skill and
profile to our re-creation today. You were dead-on right to encourage me to add the speeches of Mayer and Bishop Lawrence and
graceful in your rendering of the GBD speech.
I
allow myself the thought that George might have been pleased by our effort to honor this place and the deepening tradition for
service he and his associates did so much to inspire.
With Fraternity,
Jack
https://web.mail.comcast.net/zimbra/h/printmessage?id=385546&tz=America/New_York&xim=1
1/1
7/25/2016
Sieur de Monts national monument: addresses upon its opening, August 22, 1916 : Free Download & Streaming : Internet Archive
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SIEUR DE MONTS PUBLICATIONS
11
Sieur de Monts
National Monument
ADDRESSES
UPON ITS
OPENING
AUGUST 22
1916
Sieur de Monts national monument: addresses upon
its opening, August 22, 1916
Published 1916
Topics Sieur de Monts national monument. [from old catalog]
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Volume 1
https://archive.org/details/sieurdemontsnati01barh
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Centennial of the first celebration of Acadia GB Dorr's Address Saint Saviour Episcopal Church Aug 22, 2016 Bar Harbor ME
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08/22/2016