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You searched for: Subject: is exactly 'Businesses, Store Business'Place: Manset
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Item Title Type Subject Creator Publisher Date Place Address Description
13389W. H. Ward Jr. Store
Centennial Hall
  • Reference
  • Businesses, Store Business
  • Southwest Harbor, Manset
  • 48 Shore Road
W. H. Ward Jr. Store
Centennial Hall
16251W. H. Ward Store Before 1884
  • Image, Photograph, Photographic Print, Cyanotype
  • Businesses, Store Business
  • Places, Harbor
  • Structures, Transportation, Marine Landing, Wharf
  • Southwest Harbor, Manset
  • 55 Shore Road
The original William Henry Ward Store on the Manset shore. This photograph was taken before the expansion of the wharf by William H. Ward.
Description:
The original William Henry Ward Store on the Manset shore. This photograph was taken before the expansion of the wharf by William H. Ward.
16249W. H. Ward Store & Wharf
  • Reference
  • Businesses, Store Business
  • Structures, Transportation, Marine Landing, Wharf
  • Southwest Harbor, Manset
  • 55 Shore Road
11059W.H. Ward Jr. Store - After the Fire
  • Image, Photograph
  • Businesses, Store Business
  • Places, Shore
  • Southwest Harbor, Manset
11737W.H. Ward Jr. Store - Interior
  • Image, Photograph
  • Businesses, Store Business
  • Southwest Harbor, Manset
"W.H. Ward keeps a good supply of groceries, confectionery, boots and shoes and also does a large ice business. In the back of the store is the only billiard hall on the south side as Manset is called." - Bar Harbor Record, June 15, 1895
Description:
"W.H. Ward keeps a good supply of groceries, confectionery, boots and shoes and also does a large ice business. In the back of the store is the only billiard hall on the south side as Manset is called." - Bar Harbor Record, June 15, 1895
11738W.H. Ward Jr. Store - Invoice
  • Document, Form
  • Businesses, Store Business
  • Clark the Printer, Ellsworth
  • Southwest Harbor, Manset
"Clark the Printer" was owned by Walter J. Clark Jr. (1882-1942) "An ingenious ability that has enabled him to surmount all obstacles has brought Walter J. Clark, Jr., to the position of one of the leaders in the business life of Ellsworth. Mr. Clark operates the modern and efficient printing shop at No. 360 Water Street, conducting the business under the name of Clark the Printer. His advance has been steady and sure ever since the early days in the business when the first printing press he owned was a crude, wooden affair made by himself. Walter J. Clark, Jr., received his education in the local public schools and after completing his schooling entered the printing business independently in 1903. His creative ability and determination to succeed were his greatest assets. He carried on his trade with the aid of his personally constructed press until he prospered sufficiently to afford the purchase of a small Kelsey Press, which he installed and used for about a year. Business increased rapidly and he bought a small Liberty Press and later added a Gordon Press continuing to add new equipment and machinery to accommodate the ever increasing demands for his work…" – “Maine Biographies” by Harrie B. Coe, Volume I, published by Clearfield."
Description:
"Clark the Printer" was owned by Walter J. Clark Jr. (1882-1942) "An ingenious ability that has enabled him to surmount all obstacles has brought Walter J. Clark, Jr., to the position of one of the leaders in the business life of Ellsworth. Mr. Clark operates the modern and efficient printing shop at No. 360 Water Street, conducting the business under the name of Clark the Printer. His advance has been steady and sure ever since the early days in the business when the first printing press he owned was a crude, wooden affair made by himself. Walter J. Clark, Jr., received his education in the local public schools and after completing his schooling entered the printing business independently in 1903. His creative ability and determination to succeed were his greatest assets. He carried on his trade with the aid of his personally constructed press until he prospered sufficiently to afford the purchase of a small Kelsey Press, which he installed and used for about a year. Business increased rapidly and he bought a small Liberty Press and later added a Gordon Press continuing to add new equipment and machinery to accommodate the ever increasing demands for his work…" – “Maine Biographies” by Harrie B. Coe, Volume I, published by Clearfield." [show more]
10910S.W. Newman Groceries and Manset Post Office
  • Image, Photograph
  • Businesses, Store Business
  • Structures, Civic, Public, Post Office
  • Structures, Commercial, Store
  • 1905 c.
  • Southwest Harbor, Manset
13180Ike Stanley's Antique Shop
  • Reference
  • Businesses, Store Business
  • Southwest Harbor, Manset
  • 147 Seawall Road
13061S.W. Newman Store
  • Reference
  • Businesses, Store Business
  • Southwest Harbor, Manset
6367The Henry R. Hinckley Company Marine Store - I
  • Image, Photograph
  • Businesses, Boatbuilding Business
  • Businesses, Store Business
  • Ballard - Willis Humphreys Ballard (1906-1980)
  • 1938
  • Southwest Harbor, Manset
  • 130 Shore Road
6368The Henry R. Hinckley Company Marine Store - II
  • Image, Photograph
  • Businesses, Boatbuilding Business
  • Businesses, Store Business
  • Ballard - Willis Humphreys Ballard (1906-1980)
  • 1938
  • Southwest Harbor, Manset
  • 130 Shore Road
6369The Henry R. Hinckley Company Marine Store - III
  • Image, Photograph
  • Businesses, Boatbuilding Business
  • Businesses, Store Business
  • Ballard - Willis Humphreys Ballard (1906-1980)
  • 1938
  • Southwest Harbor, Manset
  • 130 Shore Road