Description: Waitresses from the Seaside Inn in Seal Harbor, Maine. Individuals have numbers written in blue pen on their arms. Identification for each individual is written on the back. People Depicted: Blanche Bates, Grace Coggins, Florence Cole, Marie Curtis, Virginia Drury, Winifred Gray, Dorothy Green, Isabella Harper, Rose Harvey, Neva Headley, Elizabeth Hinckley, Liola Hopkins, Lola Huntley, Louise Johnson, Florence Mason, Annie Richie, Annie Ryder, Mabel Snow, Ada Sproule, Thelma Thompson, Velma Wallace, Elsie Whitmore Black and white [show more]
Description: Unidentified group of officers and civilians outside the Otter Cliffs Radio Station. The officers salute an American flag. Black and White
Description: Chiefs and radio operators of the Otter Cliffs Radio Station stand on and around the radio tower. Commanding Officer Lt. Alessandro Fabbri stands in the center in the bottom row. People Mentioned: Alessandro Fabbri Black and White
Description: Attendees pose outside during the reunion for all Otter Cliffs Radio Station men held at Hancock House in Ellsworth, ME on August 19, 1961. The men are individually identified on the back of the photograph. Men in photograph are numbered. People Mentioned: Raymond L. MacRae, Earl Brockway, Fred Grindle, Richard Hastings, William Kumpel, J. Ross Ragan, Orrin E. Dunlap Jr., Mel Whitney, Carl Herr, Fred W. Meinholtz, Harold Castner, Earl Davis, Wilmot I. Brookings, Raymond Cole, Edward Trumpfeller, Carl G. Nowack Color [show more]
Description: Radio equipment at the Otter Cliffs Radio Station. Notes on the back of the photograph identify the station as the first of Arthur Lawford with the call letters 1AT. People Mentioned: Arthur Lawford Black and White
Description: Front and rear views of the Hoxie automatic recorder at the Otter Cliffs Radio Station. The accompanying notes explain how the machine works. These are Pictures #164 and #164-A from an unidentified text. Black and White
Description: Spark receiving and transmitting position at the Otter Cliffs Radio Station. The accompanying notes explain how the apparatus works and the importance of the station during World War I. This is Picture #82 from an unidentified text. Black and White