1 - 25 of 346 results
You searched for: Type: is exactly 'Image, Photograph'Subject: Businesses
Item Title Type Subject Creator Publisher Date Place Address Description
1250926-foot motor tow yawl under construction
  • Image, Photograph
  • Businesses, Boatbuilding Business
  • Ballard - Willis Humphreys Ballard (1906-1980)
  • 1943-03-12
  • Southwest Harbor, Manset
  • 130 Shore Road
The photograph shows a 26-foot motor tow yawl under construction.
Description:
The photograph shows a 26-foot motor tow yawl under construction.
15445303 Cruiser
  • Image, Photograph
  • Businesses, Boatbuilding Business
  • Ballard - Willis Humphreys Ballard (1906-1980)
  • 1948-09-26
15446309 Cruiser
Hinckley Sport Cruiser 30
  • Image, Photograph
  • Businesses, Boatbuilding Business
  • Ballard - Willis Humphreys Ballard (1906-1980)
  • 1947-01-07
"This picture is of a prototype for a production model design by Henry Hinckley to be known as the Hinckley Sport Cruiser 30 built in 1940. Production was postponed because of the war, but it is interesting to note her lines compared to the Picnic Boat. This could have been a very popular boat had it ever gone into production." -- The Hinckley Story (p.89).
309 Cruiser
Hinckley Sport Cruiser 30
Description:
"This picture is of a prototype for a production model design by Henry Hinckley to be known as the Hinckley Sport Cruiser 30 built in 1940. Production was postponed because of the war, but it is interesting to note her lines compared to the Picnic Boat. This could have been a very popular boat had it ever gone into production." -- The Hinckley Story (p.89).
1547035' Fisherman
  • Image, Photograph
  • Businesses, Boatbuilding Business
  • Ballard - Willis Humphreys Ballard (1906-1980)
  • 1945-11-05
1544844' Seine Boat Launching
  • Image, Photograph
  • Businesses, Boatbuilding Business
  • Ballard - Willis Humphreys Ballard (1906-1980)
  • 1944-10-16
16665Addison Packing Company
  • Image, Photograph
  • Businesses, Fishery Business
  • 1973-08
  • Southwest Harbor
  • 11 Apple Lane
View from up the road of the Addison Packing Company
Description:
View from up the road of the Addison Packing Company
5968Addison Packing Company and Camps at Southwest Harbor
  • Image, Photograph
  • Businesses, Cannery Business
  • Structures, Dwellings, Camp House
  • 1918
  • Southwest Harbor
  • 11 Apple Lane
12317Addison Packing Company and the Robert Ash House at Southwest Harbor
  • Image, Photograph
  • Businesses, Cannery Business
  • Structures, Dwellings, House
  • Southwest Harbor
  • 11 Apple Lane
The house in the front of the photograph was the Robert Ash house.
Description:
The house in the front of the photograph was the Robert Ash house.
12316Addison Packing Company at Southwest Harbor
  • Image, Photograph
  • Businesses, Cannery Business
  • Southwest Harbor
  • 11 Apple Lane
The photo shows the factory bus, used to transport factory workers when fish came in.
Description:
The photo shows the factory bus, used to transport factory workers when fish came in.
5954Addison Packing Company at Southwest Harbor
  • Image, Photograph
  • Businesses, Cannery Business
  • 1920 c.
  • Southwest Harbor
  • 11 Apple Lane
5809Addison Packing Company Camps at Southwest Harbor - Summer of 1923
  • Image, Photograph
  • Businesses, Cannery Business
  • Structures, Dwellings, Camp House
  • 1923 Summer
  • Southwest Harbor
  • 11 Apple Lane
11016A.E. Parker Boat Shop
  • Image, Photograph
  • Businesses, Boatbuilding Business
  • 1920 c.
  • Southwest Harbor
9466Aerial View of The Henry R. Hinckley Company, Manset, and Southwest Harbor
  • Image, Photograph
  • Businesses, Boatbuilding Business
  • Places, Harbor
  • Augustus D. Phillips & Son, Northeast Harbor
  • Southwest Harbor, Manset
6386Alton Elwell Trundy's I.G.A. Store, Clark Point Road, Southwest Harbor
  • Image, Photograph
  • Businesses, Store Business
  • Ballard - Willis Humphreys Ballard (1906-1980)
  • 1940
  • Southwest Harbor
  • 4 Clark Point Road
6045Alvah D. Rich, Blacksmith Shop
  • Image, Photograph
  • Businesses, Blacksmith Business
  • Neal - George Arthur Neal (1872-1939)
  • 1905 c.
  • Tremont
The signage in this photograph advertises bicycle repairing, bicycle sundries, galvanizing, horse shoeing, carriage work. wood or iron, brazing, tinkering, ship yacht and fancy iron work, and saws filed. Archivists surmise that one of the men in the photo must be Alvah, but this has not been confirmed.
Description:
The signage in this photograph advertises bicycle repairing, bicycle sundries, galvanizing, horse shoeing, carriage work. wood or iron, brazing, tinkering, ship yacht and fancy iron work, and saws filed. Archivists surmise that one of the men in the photo must be Alvah, but this has not been confirmed.
5973Arthur L. Somes at the Counter of A.L. Somes & Son in the Second Odd Fellows Building, Southwest Harbor
  • Image, Photograph
  • Businesses, Store Business
  • People
  • 1935 c.
  • Southwest Harbor
  • 357 Main Street
5972Arthur L. Somes on the Steps of his Store in the First Odd Fellows Building, Southwest Harbor - Before 1922
  • Image, Photograph
  • Businesses, Store Business
  • People
  • 1922 before
  • Southwest Harbor
  • 357 Main Street
5575Automobiles and Esso Pump at Gordon & White Garage
  • Image, Photograph
  • Businesses, Automotive Repair Business
  • Transportation, Automobile
  • Ballard - Willis Humphreys Ballard (1906-1980)
  • 1960-07-21
  • Southwest Harbor
The cars are a 1954 Ford on the left and a 1956 Chevrolet on the right. The building just visible on the far right is the Mobil gas station.
Description:
The cars are a 1954 Ford on the left and a 1956 Chevrolet on the right. The building just visible on the far right is the Mobil gas station.
15451Baby Rose - Dragger
  • Image, Photograph
  • Businesses, Boatbuilding Business
  • Ballard - Willis Humphreys Ballard (1906-1980)
  • 1944-08-05
“Baby Rose” was built in Thomaston and taken over by the government during WWII. After the war she was refitted at Southwest Boat Corporation for the Ciamentaro family of Gloucester, Massachusetts.
Description:
“Baby Rose” was built in Thomaston and taken over by the government during WWII. After the war she was refitted at Southwest Boat Corporation for the Ciamentaro family of Gloucester, Massachusetts.
6981Bill Leading the Horses at Lawlor Ice Business
  • Image, Photograph
  • Businesses, Other Business
  • People
  • Southwest Harbor
  • 17 Chris' Lane
15452Blue Water Baby - Cruiser
  • Image, Photograph
  • Businesses, Boatbuilding Business
  • Ballard - Willis Humphreys Ballard (1906-1980)
  • 1948-06-02
Owned by Marcus, Philadelphia. Interior photographs were taken on June 28, 1948.
Description:
Owned by Marcus, Philadelphia. Interior photographs were taken on June 28, 1948.
9822Boat Show Display
  • Image, Photograph
  • Businesses, Boatbuilding Business
  • Southwest Harbor, Manset
  • 130 Shore Road
15453Bonaventure - Launching
  • Image, Photograph
  • Businesses, Boatbuilding Business
  • Ballard - Willis Humphreys Ballard (1906-1980)
  • 1942-09
15455Bonaventure - Production
  • Image, Photograph
  • Businesses, Boatbuilding Business
  • Ballard - Willis Humphreys Ballard (1906-1980)
Photos taken in 1941 and 1942. The following comes from interviews with Ralph Warren Stanley between 2009 and 2013. The stern post was from an old elm tree on Carrie Joyce’s lawn. She sold the tree to Bink Sargent for $100. Carrie thought she was rich, as, at that time, she was getting an old age pension of $30 a month. She hired a car and got Ralph Stanley’s grandmother, Celestia “Lessie” Gertrude (Dix) Robinson, Mrs. Ralph Judson Robinson (1875-1961), to go shopping in Bangor with her. Carrie got a blister on her heel from walking around Bangor. Bink paid Harvard Gilley and Jack Ramsdell $15 and a pint of rum to cut the tree down. Henry Dunbar was running the mill at Southwest Boat at the time and he said that they sawed that tree into logs and lumber and used every bit of it. Carrie E. (Bunker) Joyce (1863-1962), Mrs. Joseph Joyce Lennox Ledyard "Bink" Sargent (1916-1989) Jack Ramsdell Harvard N. Gilley (1915-2006) Henry E. Dunbar (1914-1982) 02-12 – this story of the stern post for Bonaventure also goes with SWHPL 9565. 02-15 – putting in the "sealing" 02-16 & 17 – working on the deck frame 02-22 & 23 – pounding in the trunnels (locust) 02-25 – clamping in the oak plank 02-32 – Raymond Bunker on the left and Bink Sargent on the right 02-36 – "faring" (fitting) a timber with an adze the trunels here have been split and wedged in 02-37 & 38 – Stan Mitchell and Raymond Bunker L to R – caulking – Stan always wore felts inside his rubbers 02-39 – building the wooden hatch 02-46 & 47 – mallet and chisel to shape hole for the mast 02-50: Rosemary on the left Open motor boat behind sailboat – no info Watermelon hood boat on left of dock with riding sail was a Raymond Bunker Boat - was sold to a Beal at Islesford Double ender with watermelon hood at end of dock was the Pansy R owned by Cliff Robbins Boat at right of dock with a peaked hood and funny cabin was a Cranberry Island boat House with Mansard roof at back left of Black Ledge was the Henry Hinckley house – later site of Western Way Condos Next house on right was the Charles Bartlett house now torn down 02-55 – back of steering shelter 02-56 – foc’sle 02-68 – Bink’s Lincoln Zephyr style boat and Lyle Newman’s scow Lyle Dennis Newman (1876-1974)
Description:
Photos taken in 1941 and 1942. The following comes from interviews with Ralph Warren Stanley between 2009 and 2013. The stern post was from an old elm tree on Carrie Joyce’s lawn. She sold the tree to Bink Sargent for $100. Carrie thought she was rich, as, at that time, she was getting an old age pension of $30 a month. She hired a car and got Ralph Stanley’s grandmother, Celestia “Lessie” Gertrude (Dix) Robinson, Mrs. Ralph Judson Robinson (1875-1961), to go shopping in Bangor with her. Carrie got a blister on her heel from walking around Bangor. Bink paid Harvard Gilley and Jack Ramsdell $15 and a pint of rum to cut the tree down. Henry Dunbar was running the mill at Southwest Boat at the time and he said that they sawed that tree into logs and lumber and used every bit of it. Carrie E. (Bunker) Joyce (1863-1962), Mrs. Joseph Joyce Lennox Ledyard "Bink" Sargent (1916-1989) Jack Ramsdell Harvard N. Gilley (1915-2006) Henry E. Dunbar (1914-1982) 02-12 – this story of the stern post for Bonaventure also goes with SWHPL 9565. 02-15 – putting in the "sealing" 02-16 & 17 – working on the deck frame 02-22 & 23 – pounding in the trunnels (locust) 02-25 – clamping in the oak plank 02-32 – Raymond Bunker on the left and Bink Sargent on the right 02-36 – "faring" (fitting) a timber with an adze the trunels here have been split and wedged in 02-37 & 38 – Stan Mitchell and Raymond Bunker L to R – caulking – Stan always wore felts inside his rubbers 02-39 – building the wooden hatch 02-46 & 47 – mallet and chisel to shape hole for the mast 02-50: Rosemary on the left Open motor boat behind sailboat – no info Watermelon hood boat on left of dock with riding sail was a Raymond Bunker Boat - was sold to a Beal at Islesford Double ender with watermelon hood at end of dock was the Pansy R owned by Cliff Robbins Boat at right of dock with a peaked hood and funny cabin was a Cranberry Island boat House with Mansard roof at back left of Black Ledge was the Henry Hinckley house – later site of Western Way Condos Next house on right was the Charles Bartlett house now torn down 02-55 – back of steering shelter 02-56 – foc’sle 02-68 – Bink’s Lincoln Zephyr style boat and Lyle Newman’s scow Lyle Dennis Newman (1876-1974) [show more]
15454Bonaventure - Refit
  • Image, Photograph
  • Businesses, Boatbuilding Business
  • Ballard - Willis Humphreys Ballard (1906-1980)
  • 1943-01
Bonaventure came back to Southwest Boat Corporation to have whale back put on her bow. They rebuilt the shelter for the steering station so they could see over the bow and they put on wing boards for trawl netting.
Description:
Bonaventure came back to Southwest Boat Corporation to have whale back put on her bow. They rebuilt the shelter for the steering station so they could see over the bow and they put on wing boards for trawl netting.