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15541Clark Family Burying Ground
  • Reference
  • Places, Cemetery
  • Southwest Harbor
  • 17 Claremont Road
Behind the: Nathan Clark II House Capt. Nathan Clark House Augustus Clark House, 3 Claremont Road Southwest Harbor, Maine
Description:
Behind the: Nathan Clark II House Capt. Nathan Clark House Augustus Clark House, 3 Claremont Road Southwest Harbor, Maine
345145 Clark Point Road
  • Reference
  • Places, Address
  • Southwest Harbor
  • 45 Clark Point Road
Businesses that have occupied this location: - Fred Mayo’s Carpenter Shop – 1st Location - C.E. Clement Boat Builders
Description:
Businesses that have occupied this location: - Fred Mayo’s Carpenter Shop – 1st Location - C.E. Clement Boat Builders
3513Long Pond
  • Reference
  • Places, Lake
  • Southwest Harbor
  • Long Pond
Long Pond is the largest body of fresh water on Mount Desert Island. It is nearly 4 miles long and reaches over 100 feet deep. The pond is a public water supply.
Description:
Long Pond is the largest body of fresh water on Mount Desert Island. It is nearly 4 miles long and reaches over 100 feet deep. The pond is a public water supply.
12777363 Main Street, Southwest Harbor
  • Reference
  • Places, Address
  • Southwest Harbor
  • 363 Main Street
12780168 Clark Point Road, Southwest Harbor
  • Reference
  • Places, Address
  • Southwest Harbor
  • 168 Clark Point Road
3715Great Pond Camp, Company 158 - Civilian Conservation Corp
  • Reference
  • Organizations, Civic
  • Places, Camp
  • Southwest Harbor
  • 67 Long Pond Road
One of the thousands of camps set up by President Roosevelt's Civilian Conservation Corp program during the great depression. The Great Pond Camp in Southwest Harbor operated from 1933-1941. The men who worked at the camp were integral to the early development of the trail system in Acadia National Park. “The Southwest Harbor camp was opened about May, 1933 with enrollees erecting and living in tents while construction of the roll roofing covered barracks continued. An aerial photo dated September 5, 1933 shows four barracks buildings and four service buildings in place. Officers quarters, dispensary and living quarters for the commanding officer were added later. The last two were of log construction. The camp was located at the height of ground on the west side of the road leading from Southwest Harbor village to the south end of Great Pond [Long Pond]. This was near Acadia National Park lands where most of the work-projects took place. This park being one of the National Park System came under the jurisdiction of the U.S. Department of the Interior. Consequently the Department of the Interior controlled the employees and type of work projects carried out on the ground. This was a typical 200 man camp. All enrollees were Maine residents. Familial relationships were scarce but for most living conditions were a great improvement over depression years living conditions at home. Living conditions, discipline and in-camp activities were the concern of the U.S. Army…” – Fred E. Holt, former forest commissioner - “In the Public Interest: The Civilian Conservation Corps in Maine (1933-1942) - A Pictorial History” by Jon A. Schlenker, Norman A. Wetherington and Austin H. Wilkins, published by the University of Maine at Augusta Press, 1988, p. 67-70
Description:
One of the thousands of camps set up by President Roosevelt's Civilian Conservation Corp program during the great depression. The Great Pond Camp in Southwest Harbor operated from 1933-1941. The men who worked at the camp were integral to the early development of the trail system in Acadia National Park. “The Southwest Harbor camp was opened about May, 1933 with enrollees erecting and living in tents while construction of the roll roofing covered barracks continued. An aerial photo dated September 5, 1933 shows four barracks buildings and four service buildings in place. Officers quarters, dispensary and living quarters for the commanding officer were added later. The last two were of log construction. The camp was located at the height of ground on the west side of the road leading from Southwest Harbor village to the south end of Great Pond [Long Pond]. This was near Acadia National Park lands where most of the work-projects took place. This park being one of the National Park System came under the jurisdiction of the U.S. Department of the Interior. Consequently the Department of the Interior controlled the employees and type of work projects carried out on the ground. This was a typical 200 man camp. All enrollees were Maine residents. Familial relationships were scarce but for most living conditions were a great improvement over depression years living conditions at home. Living conditions, discipline and in-camp activities were the concern of the U.S. Army…” – Fred E. Holt, former forest commissioner - “In the Public Interest: The Civilian Conservation Corps in Maine (1933-1942) - A Pictorial History” by Jon A. Schlenker, Norman A. Wetherington and Austin H. Wilkins, published by the University of Maine at Augusta Press, 1988, p. 67-70 [show more]
12877Chris's Pond
  • Reference
  • Places
  • Southwest Harbor
  • 17 Chris' Lane
12910Kings Point
  • Reference
  • Places
  • Southwest Harbor
12912Clark Point in Southwest Harbor
  • Reference
  • Places
  • Southwest Harbor
12972Village Green, Southwest Harbor
  • Reference
  • Places, Garden
  • Southwest Harbor
1403350 Clark Point Road
  • Reference
  • Places
  • Southwest Harbor
  • 50 Clark Point Road
14302Old Burying Ground - Southwest Harbor
  • Reference
  • Places, Cemetery
  • Southwest Harbor
  • 16 High Road
Oldest burial ground on Mount Desert Island. Established by the Rev. Ebenezer Eaton, pastor of the First Congregational Church, in his own field. Eaton was called in 1801, was not ordained until 1823, and was active until 1834. Many burials have been removed.
Description:
Oldest burial ground on Mount Desert Island. Established by the Rev. Ebenezer Eaton, pastor of the First Congregational Church, in his own field. Eaton was called in 1801, was not ordained until 1823, and was active until 1834. Many burials have been removed.
1433646 Clark Point Road
  • Reference
  • Places, Address
  • Southwest Harbor
  • 46 Clark Point Road
14358Carroll Hill Cemetery
Evergreen Cemetery
  • Reference
  • Places, Cemetery
  • Southwest Harbor
  • 31 Main Street
Carroll Hill Cemetery
Evergreen Cemetery
14414Fernald Point
  • Reference
  • Places
  • Southwest Harbor
13015The Bubbles and Bubble Rock
  • Reference
  • Places, Mountain
  • Southwest Harbor
"Mount Desert Island was host to the Laurentide Ice Sheet as it extended and receded during the Pleistocene epoch. The glacier left a number of visible marks upon the landscape, such as Bubble Rock, a glacial erratic carried 19 miles by the ice sheet from a Lucerne granite outcrop and deposited precariously on the side of South Bubble Mountain in Acadia National Park. Other such examples are the moraines deposited at the southern ends of many of the glacier-carved valleys on the Island such as the Jordan Pond valley, indicating the extent of the glacier; and the beach sediments located in a regressional sequence beneath and around Jordan Pond, indicating the rebound of the continent after the glacier's recession approximately 25,000 years ago." - Gilman, R.A., Chapman, C.A., Lowell, T.V., and Borns, H.W., 1988, "Shaping of the Landscape by Glacial Erosion, in The geology of Mount Desert Island: Augusta, Maine Geological Survey Bulletin 38."
Description:
"Mount Desert Island was host to the Laurentide Ice Sheet as it extended and receded during the Pleistocene epoch. The glacier left a number of visible marks upon the landscape, such as Bubble Rock, a glacial erratic carried 19 miles by the ice sheet from a Lucerne granite outcrop and deposited precariously on the side of South Bubble Mountain in Acadia National Park. Other such examples are the moraines deposited at the southern ends of many of the glacier-carved valleys on the Island such as the Jordan Pond valley, indicating the extent of the glacier; and the beach sediments located in a regressional sequence beneath and around Jordan Pond, indicating the rebound of the continent after the glacier's recession approximately 25,000 years ago." - Gilman, R.A., Chapman, C.A., Lowell, T.V., and Borns, H.W., 1988, "Shaping of the Landscape by Glacial Erosion, in The geology of Mount Desert Island: Augusta, Maine Geological Survey Bulletin 38." [show more]
1308911 Apple Lane, Southwest Harbor
  • Reference
  • Places, Address
  • Southwest Harbor
  • 11 Apple Lane
13142The Causeway, Norwood's Cove
  • Reference
  • Places
  • Southwest Harbor
"The long contemplated scheme of bridging the dam across Norwood cove, Southwest Harbor, shutting in the tide waters for a swimming and boating pool, is being pushed forward by C. E. Cook and others whose shore lots will be greatly increased in value if the scheme materializes. The slate legislature will be petitioned, and if a charter is granted work will begin on the dam in the spring." - Bar Harbor Record, December 21, 1898 OF THE SIXTY FIFTH LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MAINE 1891 ACTS AND RESOLVES Chapter 1.18 An Act to Incorporate the Tremont Ice and Dam Company Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in Legislature assembled as follows SECT 1 Henry H Clark William N Abbott Gilbert L Lurvey Elias H Genn John TR Freeman Wesley Ober Arthur T Richardson John C Ralph RJ Latnont EL Higgins JT Clark JF Young WE Mason SW Her rick Henry Clark SH Clark Clarence Clark Augustus Clark Nathan Clark OW Cousins James A Freeman and AI Holmes their associates successors and assigns are hereby created a body corporate by the name of the Tremont Ice and Dam Company for the purpose of building and sustaining a dam not subject to tide gates or locks across the tide waters of Norwood's Cove in the town of Tremont county of Hancock state of Maine for the purpose of making a fresh water pond also for the purpose of making storing selling shipping and erecting buildings for the purpose of carrying on the ice business and all other means necessary to carry on said business and to have exclusively all the rights and privileges of said pond and incident to corporations of a similar nature.
Description:
"The long contemplated scheme of bridging the dam across Norwood cove, Southwest Harbor, shutting in the tide waters for a swimming and boating pool, is being pushed forward by C. E. Cook and others whose shore lots will be greatly increased in value if the scheme materializes. The slate legislature will be petitioned, and if a charter is granted work will begin on the dam in the spring." - Bar Harbor Record, December 21, 1898 OF THE SIXTY FIFTH LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF MAINE 1891 ACTS AND RESOLVES Chapter 1.18 An Act to Incorporate the Tremont Ice and Dam Company Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives in Legislature assembled as follows SECT 1 Henry H Clark William N Abbott Gilbert L Lurvey Elias H Genn John TR Freeman Wesley Ober Arthur T Richardson John C Ralph RJ Latnont EL Higgins JT Clark JF Young WE Mason SW Her rick Henry Clark SH Clark Clarence Clark Augustus Clark Nathan Clark OW Cousins James A Freeman and AI Holmes their associates successors and assigns are hereby created a body corporate by the name of the Tremont Ice and Dam Company for the purpose of building and sustaining a dam not subject to tide gates or locks across the tide waters of Norwood's Cove in the town of Tremont county of Hancock state of Maine for the purpose of making a fresh water pond also for the purpose of making storing selling shipping and erecting buildings for the purpose of carrying on the ice business and all other means necessary to carry on said business and to have exclusively all the rights and privileges of said pond and incident to corporations of a similar nature. [show more]
13176172 Clark Point Road
  • Reference
  • Places, Address
  • Southwest Harbor
  • 172 Clark Point Road
Businesses at this location include Clark and Parker Store - Second Store, J.N. Mills, Manset Marine Supply and the Oceanarium.
Description:
Businesses at this location include Clark and Parker Store - Second Store, J.N. Mills, Manset Marine Supply and the Oceanarium.
13264Lower Town Dock, Southwest Harbor
  • Reference
  • Places
  • Southwest Harbor
13291345 Main Street, Southwest Harbor
  • Reference
  • Places, Address
  • Southwest Harbor
  • 345 Main Street
13379Southwest Harbor, Maine, 1921 Sanborn Map
  • Reference
  • Places, Town
  • Sanborn Map Company
  • Southwest Harbor
This items ties together sheets 1, 2, and 3, a set of three maps depicting Southwest Harbor, Maine as of September 1921. The upper right corner of Sheet 1 shows the winter population as 206 and the summer population as 1500.
Description:
This items ties together sheets 1, 2, and 3, a set of three maps depicting Southwest Harbor, Maine as of September 1921. The upper right corner of Sheet 1 shows the winter population as 206 and the summer population as 1500.
13406184 Clark Point Road
  • Reference
  • Places, Address
  • Southwest Harbor
  • 184 Clark Point Road
13428Norwood's Cove
  • Reference
  • Places
  • Southwest Harbor
13430Norwood Road
  • Reference
  • Places
  • Southwest Harbor