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Item Title Type Subject Creator Publisher Date Place Address Description
3213Clark Family Burying Ground
  • Document, MHPC Survey
  • Places, Cemetery
  • Thompson - Deborah Thompson
  • 1999
  • 17 Claremont Road
Maine Historic Preservation Commission, Historic Building/Structure Survey #405-0793
Description:
Maine Historic Preservation Commission, Historic Building/Structure Survey #405-0793
8676The Claremont House Slip
  • Image, Photograph, Photographic Print
  • Places, Shore
  • Structures, Transportation, Marine Landing, Dock
  • Buckman - Emma Johns Buckman (1881-1968)
  • 1923
  • 20 Claremont Road
8680The Claremont House Slip
  • Image, Photograph, Photographic Print
  • Places, Shore
  • Structures, Transportation, Marine Landing, Dock
  • Buckman - Emma Johns Buckman (1881-1968)
  • 1923
  • 20 Claremont Road
13221The Causeway Club
  • Reference
  • Places, Club
  • 10 Fernald Point Road
“It was nearly twenty years after Abraham Somes came with his family to make his home at Somesville before William Gilley, first permanent settler in Southwest Harbor, built his log cabin at Norwood's Cove on land now owned by the Southwest Harbor Country Club and which remained in the Gilley family from William's time to the date of selling to the present owners. William Gilley was at Cranberry Isles in 1777 and it was probably four or five years after that date that he went to Southwest Harbor and took up land, which was sheltered from the sea though close to it.” - “Traditions and Records of Southwest Harbor and Somesville, Mount Desert Island, Maine” by Mrs. Seth S. Thornton, 1938, p. 124. “The house now used as a Country Club house was the home of the Gilley family. William Gilley was the first permanent settler in Southwest Harbor and his first house was a log cabin near the shore. Later he built a house just north of the Gilley Burying Ground. Then John, William's grandson, the eldest son of Benjamin Gilley, built the house that is now the Country Club for his parents. He was under age and for his work on the house his father "gave him his time." The place passed from father to son in the Gilley family until Pedrick D. Gilley, fourth generation to own it, sold it to the present owners. The graves of the three generations preceding him are in the Gilley Burying Ground nearby.” - “Traditions and Records of Southwest Harbor and Somesville, Mount Desert Island, Maine” by Mrs. Seth S. Thornton, 1938, p. 131.
Description:
“It was nearly twenty years after Abraham Somes came with his family to make his home at Somesville before William Gilley, first permanent settler in Southwest Harbor, built his log cabin at Norwood's Cove on land now owned by the Southwest Harbor Country Club and which remained in the Gilley family from William's time to the date of selling to the present owners. William Gilley was at Cranberry Isles in 1777 and it was probably four or five years after that date that he went to Southwest Harbor and took up land, which was sheltered from the sea though close to it.” - “Traditions and Records of Southwest Harbor and Somesville, Mount Desert Island, Maine” by Mrs. Seth S. Thornton, 1938, p. 124. “The house now used as a Country Club house was the home of the Gilley family. William Gilley was the first permanent settler in Southwest Harbor and his first house was a log cabin near the shore. Later he built a house just north of the Gilley Burying Ground. Then John, William's grandson, the eldest son of Benjamin Gilley, built the house that is now the Country Club for his parents. He was under age and for his work on the house his father "gave him his time." The place passed from father to son in the Gilley family until Pedrick D. Gilley, fourth generation to own it, sold it to the present owners. The graves of the three generations preceding him are in the Gilley Burying Ground nearby.” - “Traditions and Records of Southwest Harbor and Somesville, Mount Desert Island, Maine” by Mrs. Seth S. Thornton, 1938, p. 131. [show more]
12052Ernest T. Richardson's Maplewood Lunch and Tourist Camps
  • Image, Photograph, Negative
  • Places, Camp
  • Structures, Commercial, Lodging, Motel
  • Ballard - Willis Humphreys Ballard (1906-1980)
  • 1935-09-02
  • 1281 Main Street (Route 102)
Automobiles: Far left – 1931 Packard Coupe Middle – 1933 or 1934 Ford 2 Door Sedan Right – 1934 Hudson Sedan
Description:
Automobiles: Far left – 1931 Packard Coupe Middle – 1933 or 1934 Ford 2 Door Sedan Right – 1934 Hudson Sedan
7439Main Street, Fairfield
  • Image, Photograph
  • Places, Town
  • Main Street, Fairfield
8063Mill Street in the Snow
  • Image, Photograph, Photographic Print, Albumen Print
  • Places, Road
  • Rand - Henry Lathrop Rand (1862-1945)
  • 1893-02-26
  • Mill St.
15165Magnolia, Massachusetts
  • Reference
  • Places, Town
"Just over the Manchester [Massachusetts] line in the western section of Gloucester is the major portion of the village of Magnolia at Magnolia Point, long one of the North Shore's most important hospitality tourism destinations… Originally a fishing and farming settlement, Magnolia had its beginnings as a summer resort center in the early 1870s with the construction of the first summer cottages there…" - “Summer By The Seaside: The Architecture of New England Coastal Resort Hotels, 1820-1950” by Bryant F. Tolles, Jr., p. 99, University Press of New England – 2008
Description:
"Just over the Manchester [Massachusetts] line in the western section of Gloucester is the major portion of the village of Magnolia at Magnolia Point, long one of the North Shore's most important hospitality tourism destinations… Originally a fishing and farming settlement, Magnolia had its beginnings as a summer resort center in the early 1870s with the construction of the first summer cottages there…" - “Summer By The Seaside: The Architecture of New England Coastal Resort Hotels, 1820-1950” by Bryant F. Tolles, Jr., p. 99, University Press of New England – 2008 [show more]
15529Edward Lothrop Rand Memorial
  • Reference
  • Places, Cemetery
2754The Barque of Barque Beach in Bernard
  • Reference
  • Places, Shore
12876Chisholms Mount Desert Guide Book
  • Reference
  • Places
12890Oak Point
  • Reference
  • Places
12891Bar Harbor Airport
  • Reference
  • Places
12895Appalachian Mountain Club Camp - Southwest Harbor
  • Reference
  • Places, Camp
The Echo Lake Camp began in 1922 when George B. Dorr signed a lease with the Appalachian Mountain Club (AMC) to allow camping on the shores of the lake. In 1926 he signed another lease for ten more years. The land, including thirteen acres with 1600 feet of shoreline on Echo Lake, was deeded in perpetuity to the AMC on November 19, 1934.
Description:
The Echo Lake Camp began in 1922 when George B. Dorr signed a lease with the Appalachian Mountain Club (AMC) to allow camping on the shores of the lake. In 1926 he signed another lease for ten more years. The land, including thirteen acres with 1600 feet of shoreline on Echo Lake, was deeded in perpetuity to the AMC on November 19, 1934.
12897Deep Cove
  • Reference
  • Places
Deep Cove is just above Squid Island below High Head on the western side of Mount Desert Island – not part of the park.
Description:
Deep Cove is just above Squid Island below High Head on the western side of Mount Desert Island – not part of the park.
12906Lurvey Brook
  • Reference
  • Places, Stream
14133Monument Cove
  • Reference
  • Places, Shore
14146Acadia National Park
  • Reference
  • Places, Park
14148Lake Champlain
  • Reference
  • Places, Lake
14149Lake George
  • Reference
  • Places, Lake
14152State of Massachusetts
  • Reference
  • Places
14158Saint John River - Saint John to Fredericton
  • Reference
  • Places
14272Village of Frenchboro
  • Reference
  • Places, Town
See “Hauling by Hand: The Life and Times of a Maine Island” by Dean Lawrence Lunt, 1999 See “Frenchboro, Long Island Plantation Maine” by Vivian Lunt, 1976 See “Frenchboro, Long Island Plantation: The First Hundred Years” by Vivian Lunt, 1980
Description:
See “Hauling by Hand: The Life and Times of a Maine Island” by Dean Lawrence Lunt, 1999 See “Frenchboro, Long Island Plantation Maine” by Vivian Lunt, 1976 See “Frenchboro, Long Island Plantation: The First Hundred Years” by Vivian Lunt, 1980
14273Eagle Lake Camp - Civilian Conservation Corp
  • Reference
  • Places, Camp
14274The Maine Coast
  • Reference
  • Places