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You searched for: 'bar harbor'✖Contributor: Northeast Harbor Library✖Place: [blank]✖Subject: Other✖Subject: People✖Type: Publication✖
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Title | Type | Subject | Creator | Date | Place | Rights | |
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A Playground Contested; Bar Harbor Natives versus Rusticators, 1875-1925 Northeast Harbor Library |
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| A Playground Contested; Bar Harbor Natives versus Rusticators, 1875-1925 Northeast Harbor Library Description: Copy of article by L. Manion submitted for publication in Island History Journal contrasting the economic and social life of summer and year-round residents of Mount Desert Island. | ||
Uses of Birch-Bark in the Northeast Northeast Harbor Library |
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| Uses of Birch-Bark in the Northeast Northeast Harbor Library Description: ...Published by the Robert Abbe Museum, Bar Harbor, Maine. Second printing, 1974... | ||
Some Ships of the Clipper Ships Era Northeast Harbor Library |
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| Some Ships of the Clipper Ships Era Northeast Harbor Library Description: Their Builders, Owners, and Captains. A glance at an interesting phase of the American Merchant Marine so far as it relates to Boston. With 30 black and white illustrations of ships. (Scanned copy in part from archive.org) File Attachment: SCB 387 STA.pdf …A large party 25 accompanied her to Salem Harbor, and a poem was read, one stanza of which ran: "They say a man came down to-day To carry the Witch …Her first voyage was to New Orleans, and when, pushed by four tugs across the bar at the South-west Pass, she pulled up to the levee, October 11, 1853, …A knight in armor was While entering the Golden Gate in 1857, carried as a figure-head. she struck "Four Fathom Bar" off Point Bonita, but managed to reach | ||
The Concept of Tribal Separation as rationalized in Indian Folklore Northeast Harbor Library |
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| The Concept of Tribal Separation as rationalized in Indian Folklore Northeast Harbor Library Description: Reprinted from "Pennsylvania Archeologist", Vol. XVI, No. 3 |