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You searched for: 'bar harbor'✖Contributor: Great Cranberry Island Historical Society✖Subject: Organizations✖
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Title | Type | Subject | Creator | Date | Place | Rights | |
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Closing Cranberry Isles Post Office in 1985 Great Cranberry Island Historical Society |
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| Closing Cranberry Isles Post Office in 1985 Great Cranberry Island Historical Society Description: ...Series of documents ("Bar Harbor Times" article, letters and drafts of letters of protest to President Reagan, letters in response from House of Representatives... | ||
Maine Summer Visitor's Day program Great Cranberry Island Historical Society |
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| Maine Summer Visitor's Day program Great Cranberry Island Historical Society Description: ...Program of Maine Summer Visitor's Day, hosted by the Abbe Museum at its location at Sieur de Monts Spring in Bar Harbor, 16 Aug 1935, listing acts in an... | ||
Acadia NPS, Sawtelle Collection Finding Aids Great Cranberry Island Historical Society |
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| Acadia NPS, Sawtelle Collection Finding Aids Great Cranberry Island Historical Society Description: ...Collection housed at Acadia National Park Headquarters in Bar Harbor, ME, in the William Sawtelle collection... | ||
Templar's Lodge Charter for Cranberry Isles Great Cranberry Island Historical Society |
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| Templar's Lodge Charter for Cranberry Isles Great Cranberry Island Historical Society Description: Charter document: Grand Lodge of North America (State of Maine) Independent Order of Good Templars, organized May 16, 1855, grant unto G. H. Pressey, C. H. Bulger, L. H. Bracy, A. M. Spurling, G. H. Spurling, Wm. P. Preble, H. A. Preble, L. G. Stanley, C. G. Kimball, A. Bunker, J. M. Bunker, S. A. Bunker and their associates this Charter for a Lodge to be known as Ocean Echo Lodge No. 157 located at Cranberry Isles… signed July 4, 1866. Wikipedia: "The IOGT originated as one of a number of fraternal organizations for temperance or total abstinence founded in the 19th century and with a structure modeled on Freemasonry, using similar ritual and regalia. Unlike many, however, it admitted men and women equally, and also made no distinction by race." According to a local 1888 newspaper article they met Tuesday evenings each week at Norwood's Cove School House. [show more] |