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You searched for: Creator: is exactly 'Neal - George Arthur Neal (1872-1939)'✖Contributor: Southwest Harbor Public Library✖Subject: Vessels✖Subject: Ship✖Subject: Sailing Ship✖Type: Image✖Type: Photograph✖
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Fleet of Offshore Fishing Schooners - Mackerel Fleet Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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| Fleet of Offshore Fishing Schooners - Mackerel Fleet Southwest Harbor Public Library Description: The view is from the Pemetic Hotel (The Castle) and, on the Southwest Harbor side, shows the Clarence Clark (Ellsbert/Heilaka) house left foreground. The long roofed building in the center, next to the harbor, a bowling alley after World War II - currently the Hamilton Marine building. The building on the right with the striped roof is the firm of Clark & Parker/Manset Marine Supply Co./ and the Oceanarium since 1979. The Oceanarium is the oldest commercial building on Clark Point - the only one extant except the Clarence Clark House. The Manset shore is in the background with discernible landmarks, including the Manset Union Church, the Stanley wharf, the early Stanley House and numerous commercial buildings on the Shore Road. There are about 30 schooners visible in the harbor and tied up at the wharves. - Identifications by Meredith Hutchins - 2006 [show more] |
Schooner Marion E. Turner at Bernard Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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| Schooner Marion E. Turner at Bernard Southwest Harbor Public Library |
Crew Aboard Schooner Emma at Bernard Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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| Crew Aboard Schooner Emma at Bernard Southwest Harbor Public Library Description: "A typical Maine fishing crew. The men of the schooner "Emma" of Swan's Island gathered near the mainmast for a group portrait at Bernard Harbor in the town of Tremont, following a trip to the offshore grounds, c. 1900. Judging from the tubs of trawl along the port rail (center-right), they have been ground fishing. The "Emma" was an 81-ton (n.m.) vessel built at Bath in 1883. Note the crew's leather boots, standard fishing apparel throughout the nineteenth century." - "The Maine Sea Fisheries: The Rise and Fall of a Native Industry, 1830-1890" by Wayne M. O’Leary, 1996 [show more] |
Schooner Emma at Bernard - Between 1900 and 1905 Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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| Schooner Emma at Bernard - Between 1900 and 1905 Southwest Harbor Public Library |
Schooner Marion E. Turner at Bernard Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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| Schooner Marion E. Turner at Bernard Southwest Harbor Public Library |
Wreck of Schooner Wm. Stevens and West Shore of Southwest Harbor with Water Tower Windmill on Freeman Ridge Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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| Wreck of Schooner Wm. Stevens and West Shore of Southwest Harbor with Water Tower Windmill on Freeman Ridge Southwest Harbor Public Library Description: Shows: James Robinson House Emily Farnsworth Store and Post Office Dickey and Farnham cottages Windmill on Freeman Ridge |
Schooner Fred C. Holden in Bass Harbor Passing the Shore at Bernard Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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| Schooner Fred C. Holden in Bass Harbor Passing the Shore at Bernard Southwest Harbor Public Library Description: View from Bass Harbor to Bernard. |
Vanguard - Schooner Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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| Vanguard - Schooner Southwest Harbor Public Library | |
Fleet of Offshore Fishing Schooners - The Mackerel Fleet in Southwest Harbor, Maine Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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| Fleet of Offshore Fishing Schooners - The Mackerel Fleet in Southwest Harbor, Maine Southwest Harbor Public Library Description: The view is from the Pemetic Hotel (The Castle) and, on the Southwest Harbor side, shows the Clarence Clark (Ellsbert/Heilaka) house left foreground. The long roofed building in the center, next to the harbor, a bowling alley after World War II - currently the Hamilton Marine building. The building on the right with the striped roof is the firm of Clark & Parker/Manset Marine Supply Co./ and the Oceanarium since 1979. The Oceanarium is the oldest commercial building on Clark Point - the only one extant except the Clarence Clark House. The Manset shore is in the background with discernible landmarks, including the Manset Union Church, the Stanley wharf, the early Stanley House and numerous commercial buildings on the Shore Road. There are about 30 schooners visible in the harbor and tied up at the wharves. - Identifications by Meredith Hutchins - 2006 [show more] |