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You searched for: Year end: 1910✖Date: [blank]✖Place: [blank]✖Subject: Places✖Subject: Town✖Type: Publication✖
Title | Type | Subject | Creator | Date | Place | Rights | |
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Telephone Book, Cranberry Isles, Maine 1997-98 Great Cranberry Island Historical Society |
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| Telephone Book, Cranberry Isles, Maine 1997-98 Great Cranberry Island Historical Society Description: Telephone Book, Cranberry Isles, Maine 1997-98, "The DELIGHTful Phone Book", compiled by Hugh Dwelley of Islesford. Includes Town Officials, Great Cranberry Island, Islesford, Sutton, and Bear Islands, local ZIP codes, useful numbers, emergency numbers, and services. Also a short note from Hugh thanking Bruce Komusin for his help with the GCI portion. | |||
Ellsworth American Newspaper Index Northeast Harbor Library |
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| Ellsworth American Newspaper Index Northeast Harbor Library Description: Notes about Mount Desert Island towns taken from the Ellsworth American newspaper from 1901 to 1910.newspapers | ||||
Sketches of Brooks History Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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| Sketches of Brooks History Southwest Harbor Public Library Description: This book was originally published in 1935 and was reprinted 2013 to bring to the newer generations the rich history of the Brooks community specifically, and that of Waldo County generally. This publication includes 50 chapters starting with the Muscongus Grant (Waldo Patent) and culminating with Tombstone Inscriptions, References, and an Appendix of Birth, Marriages and Deaths from 1930 to 1934. | ||
Lost Bar Harbor Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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| Lost Bar Harbor Southwest Harbor Public Library Description: From the 1880s to the end of World War I, the fashionable resort of Bar Harbor attracted thousands of summer visitors with the money and leisure to pursue "the simple life on a grand scale," as A. Atwater Kent put it. They came to rusticate, dance, sail, picnic, flirt--and they did it all with style. Many relaxed at Bar Harbor's lavish hotels, while others built even more lavish and fanciful "cottages" for their own summer retreats. That dazzling era is just a memory now. The Depression and World War II undermined the summer colony, and the Great Fire of 1947 dealt the final blow. Those summer homes and hotels that survived the blaze generally succumbed to changing times, and only a handful stand today. Eighty-six vanished summer palaces are pictured in Lost Bar Harbor. Many never before published photographs from the Bar Harbor Historical Society are supplemented by lively text describing the estates and their colorful inhabitants. It is the most comprehensive collection of early Bar Harbor photographs ever assembled, providing an unparalleled glimpse of one of the world's great resort communities. [show more] |