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Date
Contributor
Title | Type | Subject | Creator | Date | Place | Rights | |
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Harding's Wharf Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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| Harding's Wharf Southwest Harbor Public Library Description: William "Bill" Harding's boat the Martha David is visible next to the dock. |
COA Community Garden closure sign College of the Atlantic |
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| COA Community Garden closure sign College of the Atlantic Description: Gardening in the time of COVID-19. The COA Community Garden gate padlocked with a "garden closed" sign. |
Letter to Nina Gormley from Gertrude Bancroft Wendell Gilley Museum |
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| Letter to Nina Gormley from Gertrude Bancroft Wendell Gilley Museum Description: This letter is a reply to the Gilley Museum Director's request for a garden to be donated by the Garden Club of Mount Desert. It also mentions a carving of three gulls on a driftwood based that Mrs. Bancroft commissioned from Wendell Gilley. | ||
Carriage Road Signpost Northeast Harbor Library |
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Thrush Woods, Northeast Harbor Northeast Harbor Library |
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| Thrush Woods, Northeast Harbor Northeast Harbor Library Description: Built 1921; Fred Savage design. Original owner William Jay Turner. also Turner Cottage. 1986 owner: Shelby Davis. No. 181 in 1986 Historic Properties Survey. | |
Memorial of Champlain Discoverer of Mt. Desert, 1604-1904 Northeast Harbor Library |
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| Memorial of Champlain Discoverer of Mt. Desert, 1604-1904 Northeast Harbor Library Description: Grey booklet about the memorial to Samuel de Champlain, discoverer of Mount Desert Island. At the dedication of his monument in Seal Harbor, speakers included Rev. Samuel Eliot and Rev. William Brown. Photographs included. | |||
Frog Fountain in Kimball House Garden Northeast Harbor Library |
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| Frog Fountain in Kimball House Garden Northeast Harbor Library Description: hand colored Photograph (1890 B) of Frog Fountain at Kimball House. See also item 5834. missing | |||
Hadlock's Weir in Bunker's Cove with Mount Desert Island in the Distance Photograph, undated Islesford Historical Society |
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| Hadlock's Weir in Bunker's Cove with Mount Desert Island in the Distance Photograph, undated Islesford Historical Society Description: Hadlock's Weir in Bunker's Cove. Mount Desert Island is visible in the background. Incription on back reads "G. Hadlock's weir in bunker cove" in orange marker People Depicted: G. Hadlock Black and white | ||
Hadlock's Weir in Bunker's Cove Photograph, undated Islesford Historical Society |
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| Hadlock's Weir in Bunker's Cove Photograph, undated Islesford Historical Society Description: Hadlock's Weir in Bunker's Cove. Incription on back reads "G. Hadlock's weir in bunker cove" in orange marker People Depicted: G. Hadlock Black and white | ||
The Boiler, Great Cranberry Island Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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| The Boiler, Great Cranberry Island Southwest Harbor Public Library Description: The huge 11 ton boulder the local fishermen called “The Boiler” had been lodged in the mud just off Fish Point at the entrance to the Pool or harbor on Great Cranberry Island. The Pool, a good sheltered harbor for schooners, is shallow with a 2-foot draft at low tide, rising to an 8 to 10 foot draft when the tide is in. Vessels kept in the Pool were deep draft vessels and only came in and went out at high tide. There was an area called the "Deep Hole" in the Pool where six or more vessels could anchor. “The Boiler,” about 6 feet wide and 4 feet above the bottom, was not visible when the tide was in and, therefore, a hazard to navigation in the narrow channel. It was called "The Boiler" because the water "boiled" around it when the tide came and went. Samuel Newman Bulger (1835-1919) caught his boat on it one time. Enoch Boynton Stanley (1820-1903), “Uncle Jimmy’s” father, told Sam to turn his vessel around and it would come off the rock. The tide came in, the boat spun around and floated off the rock. Ralph Warren Stanley remembers his great uncle, Lewis Gilley Stanley (1869-1957), William Doane “Uncle Jimmy” Stanley’s brother, telling him about the enormous effort it took to move “The Boiler.” “First the group of men went out on several low drain tides to dig around the rock to break the suction. When they finally got enough dug away, they put an iron eye bolt into the rock, put a big log across two dories and tied a line to the rock. When the tide came in it sank both dories. They worked for months on the project. Next time they tried to move ‘the boiler’ they used four dories and just barely floated the rock. The dories were down to the gunnels. With a line on the dories, eight or nine men stood on the shore where they wanted it and hauled it hand over hand about 80 yards toward them, but before the rock reached its destination, the eyebolt [which had been welted into the top of the rock] came out and the dories popped out of the water. They just left the rock there where it sank on the north side of the Stanley wharf (E.B. Stanley & Sons - the Stanley wharf - on the map - now gone). ‘The Boiler’ is still there. “William D. Stanley and others have at last accomplished their long cherished wish to remove the rock designated as “the Boiler” from the channel near the Fish Point. After much hard labor, they succeeded, by the help of 4 dories in raising, floating and dragging it across to the flats, owned by the late Capt. John Stanley, when it struck a rock and in hauling on it caused the welted iron bolts to pull out, and “the Boiler” was anchored somewhat sooner than had been bargained for, but as it is now safely landed it will probably be allowed to remain where it is. It is very doubtful if any further attempt will be made to change its position, and as it is estimated to weigh 11 tons, it will be the cause of much comment for years to come. Wm. D. Stanley is very elated the he with a few others, should have accomplished the feat of removing the rock, which during the last 140 years has been in the way, and a menace to all boats coming in and going out from all parts of the creek, and they are to be congratulated for having removed the dangerous obstruction.” The Bar Harbor Record, February 23, 1900 - Cranberry Island. [show more] | ||
Lobster Traps at the Narrows Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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| Lobster Traps at the Narrows Southwest Harbor Public Library |
Net Reel at Preble's Cove Southwest Harbor Public Library |
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| Net Reel at Preble's Cove Southwest Harbor Public Library |