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Title | Type | Subject | Creator | Date | Place | Rights | |
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Green Mountain Railway Northeast Harbor Library |
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| Green Mountain Railway Northeast Harbor Library Description: The Green Mountain Railway was finalized in 1883 by Frank H. Clergue of Bangor, Maine. It was 6,300 feet long and started on the shores of Eagle Lake. Its cost was $110.000. It closed down in 1893 after only 10 years of operation. (From Item 2162). | ||
Jordan Pond Northeast Harbor Library |
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| Jordan Pond Northeast Harbor Library Description: One of 9 photographs of the Northeast Harbor area taken in the 1880's during encampments by the Champlain Society. Overlook from Jordan Pond House to the Bubbles. | |
View from Sargent Mountain Northeast Harbor Library |
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| View from Sargent Mountain Northeast Harbor Library Description: One of 9 photographs of the Northeast Harbor area taken in the 1880's during encampments by the Champlain Society. | |
View from Mt. Asticou Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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On Top of Newport Mountain, Mount Desert Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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| On Top of Newport Mountain, Mount Desert Southwest Harbor Public Library Description: An illustration of Rusticators on the top of Newport Mountain, later known as Champlain Mountain. From Harper's Weekly, Volume 22, No. 1654 |
Rusticators Climbing Newport Mountain - 1886 Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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| Rusticators Climbing Newport Mountain - 1886 Southwest Harbor Public Library Description: This illustration is part of an article about the various things to do on Mount Desert Island in the late 19th century. Vol. 73 Harper's New Monthly Magazine June to November 1886 LXXIII Title: Climbing Newport Mountain Subject: Rusticators climbing Cadillac Mt. Publication: Harper’s New Monthly Magazine Date: August 1886 Volume and Number): Volume 73 – Number 435 Page: 419 The drawing was an illustration for Chapter 8 of the serialized story, "Their Pilgrimage," by author Charles Dudley Warner in which the characters in the story visited Bar Harbor. Charles Dudley Warner (1829-1900) was a novelist and friend of Mark Twain. [show more] |