1 - 6 of 6 results
Refine Your Search
Subject
- Businesses (1)
- People (4)
- Structures (2)
- Transportation✖
- Automobile (4)
- Carriage (1)
- Cycle (1)
- Bicycle (1)
Type
- Image✖
- Photograph
- Photographic Print (1)
Place
- Southwest Harbor✖
Date
- 1910s✖
Contributor
- Southwest Harbor Public Library
Title | Type | Subject | Creator | Date | Place | Rights | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Crew at the Addison Packing Company, Southwest Harbor Southwest Harbor Public Library |
|
|
|
|
| Crew at the Addison Packing Company, Southwest Harbor Southwest Harbor Public Library Description: The young man at the right of the photograph is probably holding a c. 1914 Sears & Roebuck Peerless bicycle with pneumatic tires. | |
Dr. George Arthur Neal in His Model T Ford Automobile Southwest Harbor Public Library |
|
|
|
|
| Dr. George Arthur Neal in His Model T Ford Automobile Southwest Harbor Public Library | |
Simeon Holden Mayo at the Wheel of his 1907 Maxwell Automobile Southwest Harbor Public Library |
|
|
|
|
| Simeon Holden Mayo at the Wheel of his 1907 Maxwell Automobile Southwest Harbor Public Library | |
Simeon Holden Mayo at the Wheel of his 1907 Maxwell Automobile Southwest Harbor Public Library |
|
|
|
|
| Simeon Holden Mayo at the Wheel of his 1907 Maxwell Automobile Southwest Harbor Public Library | |
Nell Rebecca (Carroll) Thornton and Seth Sprague Thornton Leaving Southwest Harbor for Houlton Southwest Harbor Public Library |
|
|
|
|
|
| Nell Rebecca (Carroll) Thornton and Seth Sprague Thornton Leaving Southwest Harbor for Houlton Southwest Harbor Public Library Description: Nell and Seth Thornton are shown leaving Southwest Harbor for their home in Houlton, Maine in a beautiful 1910 Model T Ford automobile. Nell sits in the back seat, a man is driving and another stands at the side of the car. The Model T may belong to Seth or the other man who may possibly be driving them to Bar Harbor or Ellsworth to board the train for Houlton. If the Ford belonged to the Thorntons the trip from Southwest Harbor to Houlton would have taken them at least 11 hours by automobile in 1912. They probably would have stopped for at least one night thereby making an even longer trip. The Carroll family celebrated the Fourth of July every year with a picnic at their old family home, The Mountain House, on Carroll hill in Southwest Harbor. [show more] |
Rod Waits for Passengers Southwest Harbor Public Library |
|
|
|
|
| Rod Waits for Passengers Southwest Harbor Public Library |