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You searched for: Date: [blank]Place: Seal HarborSubject: PlacesSubject: StructuresSubject: Dwellings
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Subject
Type
Place
Date
Contributor
  • Northeast Harbor Library
Title Type Subject Creator Date Place Rights
Little Long Pond Carriage Road
Northeast Harbor Library
  • Image, Photograph
  • Places, Carriage Road
  • Places, Lake
  • Structures, Dwellings, House
  • Isaac T. Moore
  • Mount Desert, Seal Harbor
Little Long Pond Carriage Road
Northeast Harbor Library
Description:
"The Eyrie" home of John D. Rockefeller Jr. from 1910 to 1963 when the house was torn down
Martha's Maine
Northeast Harbor Library
  • Publication, Clipping, Magazine Clipping
  • People
  • Places, Island
  • Structures, Dwellings, House, Cottage
  • John Golden
  • Nov-11
  • Mount Desert, Seal Harbor
Martha's Maine
Northeast Harbor Library
Description:
Copy of article of John Gordon's interview with Martha Stewart about living in Maine, what she likes to do, places she likes to go, and her love of her home, "Skylands", in Seal Harbor.
The Eyrie, Seal Harbor, ME
Northeast Harbor Library
  • Image, Photograph, Picture Postcard
  • Places, Landscape
  • Structures, Dwellings, House, Cottage
  • Luther S. Phillips
  • Mount Desert, Seal Harbor
The Eyrie, Seal Harbor, ME
Northeast Harbor Library
Description:
The "Eyrie" was erected in 1914 and demolished in 1962.Colored postal card. Autumn foliage.
Little Long Pond and the Callahan Farm on left
Northeast Harbor Library
  • Image, Photograph
  • Places, Lake
  • Structures, Dwellings, House, Farmhouse
  • Samuel A. Eliot
  • Mount Desert, Seal Harbor
Description:
One of 9 photographs of the Northeast Harbor area taken in the 1880's during encampments by the Champlain Society. "This photo resolves arguments about whether or not the field west of the pond was settled. Frank Callahan was a farmer and blacksmith whose smithy stood out nearer the seawall. This caption and photo are more recent than the others. In the 1880's there was no need to distinguish between this pond and the one one the west side of the island because the other was called 'Great Pond.'" Tom Eliot [show more]