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You searched for: Year start: 1900✖Year end: 1910✖Contributor: Southwest Harbor Public Library✖Subject: Places✖Subject: Mountain✖Type: Reference✖
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- Reference✖
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Date
Contributor
- Southwest Harbor Public Library✖
Title | Type | Subject | Creator | Date | Place | Rights | |
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Huguenot Head Pickett Mountain Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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Dog Mountain St. Sauveur Mountain Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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Jordan Mountain Penobscot Mountain Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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Norumbega Mountain Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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| Norumbega Mountain Southwest Harbor Public Library | |||
Eliot Mountain Asticou Hill Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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Flying Mountain Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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| Flying Mountain Southwest Harbor Public Library | ||
The Cross on Flying Mountain, Acadia National Park - a Mystery Unraveled Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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| The Cross on Flying Mountain, Acadia National Park - a Mystery Unraveled Southwest Harbor Public Library | |
Skiing on Mount Desert Island - a Look Back Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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| Skiing on Mount Desert Island - a Look Back Southwest Harbor Public Library | |
New Facts Concerning the Cross on Flying Mountain Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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| New Facts Concerning the Cross on Flying Mountain Southwest Harbor Public Library | |
Acadia National Park's Little-Known Mountain Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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| Acadia National Park's Little-Known Mountain Southwest Harbor Public Library | |
Acadia Mountain - a Memorial Gift to Acadia National Park Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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| Acadia Mountain - a Memorial Gift to Acadia National Park Southwest Harbor Public Library | |
Canada Cliffs Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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| Canada Cliffs Southwest Harbor Public Library Description: “It was during a lumbering operation on the Fernald land toward Somesville in the winter of 1820 that Canada Hollow received its name. It was a very severe winter and stories of the extreme cold to the north were brought down from Canada. The choppers got the habit of referring to the location of their work as "Canada" believing that no place could be much colder, and the name has been used down through the years and now seems firmly fixed.” - “Traditions and Records of Southwest Harbor and Somesville, Mount Desert Island, Maine” by Mrs. Seth S. Thornton, p. 139 – 1938 [show more] | ||
Newport Mountain, later Champlain Mountain Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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| Newport Mountain, later Champlain Mountain Southwest Harbor Public Library | ||
Robinson Mountain, later Acadia Mountain Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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| Robinson Mountain, later Acadia Mountain Southwest Harbor Public Library Description: Robinson Mountain had been renamed Acadia Mountain in 1918, but was called Robinson Mountain by people who lived on Mount Desert Island for many years. | |||
Bernard Mountain West Peak Western Mountain Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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Green Mountain, later Cadillac Mountain Bald Mountain Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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Mount Katahdin Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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| Mount Katahdin Southwest Harbor Public Library | ||
Green Mountain Railway Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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| Green Mountain Railway Southwest Harbor Public Library Description: "GREEN MOUNTAIN - One of the chief points of interest on Mount Desert is Green Mountain, the highest point on the Island. Some ambitious persons make the ascent on foot, and that can best be done by way of the ruins of the old mill near the foot of Mount Kebo, and then by way of the ravine that separates Green from Dry Mountain. But by far the largest number prefer to go by the regular conveyance furnished by the Green Mountain Railway, which is by carriage to Eagle Lake, thence by steamer up the lake to the base, then by railway to the summit. This gives variety to the trip, and renders it a most enjoyable one. A clear, bright morning should be selected for this excursion, when objects can be seen at a great distance. The railway itself is a marvel of engineering skill, the entire length of the road being six thousand three hundred feet, and the grade averaging one foot to every four feet passed over. There is a good hotel at the summit which will accommodate about thirty guests. The view from Green Mountain, on a clear morning, is one never to be forgotten. The coast line with it many sinuosities, the numerous smaller islands scattered here and there, Mount Desert spread out like a map, and the island landscape with its diversity of views, all go to make up a succession of the grandest pictures imaginable…" - "Bar Harbor and Mount Desert Island" by William Berry Lapham, p. 16 - 1887. "GREEN MOUNTAIN RAILWAY. No person should visit Bar Harbor without ascending Green Mountain by way of Eagle Lake and the Green Mountain Railway. The trip to Eagle Lake, three miles, is made in four-horse barges, which call for passengers at the principal hotels every week day morning during the season. The trip across Eagle Lake to the foot of the mountain is by steamer. The journey up the mountain and the magnificent outlook from the summit…" - Part of an advertisement appearing in Bar Harbor and Mount Desert Island By William Berry Lapham – 1887. "I went up and back once about the year 1890 and there was 19 other young people from South West Harbor." - Robie M. Norwood. See “The Story of Bar Harbor – An Informal History Recording One Hundred and Fifty Years In the Life of a Community,” by Richard Walden Hale, Jr., p. 155-160, Ives Washburn, Inc., 1949 for an excellent version of the story of the Green Mountain Railway. [show more] | ||
Beech Hill Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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| Beech Hill Southwest Harbor Public Library | ||
The Bubbles and Bubble Rock Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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| The Bubbles and Bubble Rock Southwest Harbor Public Library Description: "Mount Desert Island was host to the Laurentide Ice Sheet as it extended and receded during the Pleistocene epoch. The glacier left a number of visible marks upon the landscape, such as Bubble Rock, a glacial erratic carried 19 miles by the ice sheet from a Lucerne granite outcrop and deposited precariously on the side of South Bubble Mountain in Acadia National Park. Other such examples are the moraines deposited at the southern ends of many of the glacier-carved valleys on the Island such as the Jordan Pond valley, indicating the extent of the glacier; and the beach sediments located in a regressional sequence beneath and around Jordan Pond, indicating the rebound of the continent after the glacier's recession approximately 25,000 years ago." - Gilman, R.A., Chapman, C.A., Lowell, T.V., and Borns, H.W., 1988, "Shaping of the Landscape by Glacial Erosion, in The geology of Mount Desert Island: Augusta, Maine Geological Survey Bulletin 38." [show more] | ||
Beech Mountain and Beech Cliff Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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| Beech Mountain and Beech Cliff Southwest Harbor Public Library |