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Item Title Type Subject Creator Publisher Date Place Address Description
3000Advertisement for Bath Iron Works
  • Document, Advertising, Advertisement
  • Vessels, Boat
  • 1931
Advertisement in Fortune Magazine, August 1931
Description:
Advertisement in Fortune Magazine, August 1931
3008Trailaway - Lobster Boat
Maddy Sue - Pleasure Boat
  • Reference
  • Vessels, Boat
  • 1932
The second PDF contains an article about the Maddy Sue from various issues of Wooden Boat magazine. Following those articles are pages from what appears to be a Japanese magazine called Sea Dream "The Magazine for Your Marine Life" which contains some of the photos and content from the Wooden Boat articles. The third PDF contains an article from Douglas Brooks about the Maddy Sue.
Trailaway - Lobster Boat
Maddy Sue - Pleasure Boat
Description:
The second PDF contains an article about the Maddy Sue from various issues of Wooden Boat magazine. Following those articles are pages from what appears to be a Japanese magazine called Sea Dream "The Magazine for Your Marine Life" which contains some of the photos and content from the Wooden Boat articles. The third PDF contains an article from Douglas Brooks about the Maddy Sue.
3474Obituary for Chester E. Clement
  • Publication, Clipping
  • People
  • The Bar Harbor Times
  • 1937-03-12
Southwest Hbr. Boat Builder Died Saturday Chester E. Clement of Southwest Harbor, aged about sixty, died at the Mount Desert hospital at Bar Harbor late Saturday afternoon from the effects of an automobile accident which occurred soon after five o'clock Thursday. Mr. Clement started to overtake the mail with an important message, driving a light small truck when he had been accustomed to a heavy car. At a rough place in the road near Echo Lake the car left the road, turned over several times and struck one of the great boulders among the trees. Fortunately, the lights did not go out and the motor was running. Two young men, passing not long after the accident, saw the lights, investigated and found Mr. Clement lying on the ground with badly torn clothing and unconscious. His face was so covered with blood that they did not recognize him, but one remained with him while the other went to call Dr. George A. Neal from Southwest Harbor and also aid from a garage. He was taken to the hospital where it was found that he had ten broken ribs and numerous cuts and bruises besides head injuries. He seemed better Saturday but died suddenly from internal injuries. Mr. Clement's skill as a boat builder and machinist was widely known and he had built many fine craft in his shop here where he employed eight or ten men. Two boats are at present in the shop; one nearly completed and the other not far along.
Description:
Southwest Hbr. Boat Builder Died Saturday Chester E. Clement of Southwest Harbor, aged about sixty, died at the Mount Desert hospital at Bar Harbor late Saturday afternoon from the effects of an automobile accident which occurred soon after five o'clock Thursday. Mr. Clement started to overtake the mail with an important message, driving a light small truck when he had been accustomed to a heavy car. At a rough place in the road near Echo Lake the car left the road, turned over several times and struck one of the great boulders among the trees. Fortunately, the lights did not go out and the motor was running. Two young men, passing not long after the accident, saw the lights, investigated and found Mr. Clement lying on the ground with badly torn clothing and unconscious. His face was so covered with blood that they did not recognize him, but one remained with him while the other went to call Dr. George A. Neal from Southwest Harbor and also aid from a garage. He was taken to the hospital where it was found that he had ten broken ribs and numerous cuts and bruises besides head injuries. He seemed better Saturday but died suddenly from internal injuries. Mr. Clement's skill as a boat builder and machinist was widely known and he had built many fine craft in his shop here where he employed eight or ten men. Two boats are at present in the shop; one nearly completed and the other not far along. [show more]
6416Steamer Westport
  • Image, Photograph
  • Vessels, Steamboat
  • 1935 c.
6464Elias H. Ginn House
  • Image, Photograph
  • Structures, Dwellings, House
  • 1937
6465Elias H. Ginn House
  • Image, Photograph
  • Structures, Dwellings, House
  • 1937
6466Kenneth Usher and His Dog in his 1930 Ford Model A Roadster
  • Image, Photograph
  • Transportation, Automobile
  • 1937
The automobile in the background is a 1935 Ford Sedan.
Description:
The automobile in the background is a 1935 Ford Sedan.
6467Howard Cooper Johnson Cottage - Ledge End
  • Image, Photograph
  • Structures, Dwellings, House, Cottage
  • Vessels, Boat, Sailboat
  • 1936-09
6670Fred V. Thurston and Flora M. Richardson Latty Thurston
  • Image, Photograph
  • People
  • 1935 c.
automobile is a 1935 Ford
Description:
automobile is a 1935 Ford
6813Schooner Theoline in Somes Sound
  • Image, Photograph, Picture Postcard, Real Photo
  • Places, Sound
  • Vessels, Ship, Sailing Ship, Schooner
  • Ballard - Willis Humphreys Ballard (1906-1980)
  • 1930
6880Robert Elliot Stanley and Marcella Katherine (MacKinnon) Stanley, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Elliot Stanley
  • Image, Photograph, Photographic Print
  • People
  • 1930 c.
6930Clark Point After 1937
  • Image, Photograph
  • Places, Shore
  • Ballard - Willis Humphreys Ballard (1906-1980)
  • 1937 after
Shows the Buoy Depot on Clark Point.
Description:
Shows the Buoy Depot on Clark Point.
6959Christopher Wendell Lawlor and Family
  • Image, Photograph
  • People
  • 1934
Front row left to right: William Joseph Lawlor Joseph Christopher Lawlor Back row left to right: Christopher Wendell Lawlor Anne (Coffey) Lawlor Rosemary Lawlor
Description:
Front row left to right: William Joseph Lawlor Joseph Christopher Lawlor Back row left to right: Christopher Wendell Lawlor Anne (Coffey) Lawlor Rosemary Lawlor
7189Schooner Theoline in Somes Sound
  • Image, Photograph
  • Vessels, Ship, Sailing Ship, Schooner
  • 1932
The photograph shows "House of Four Winds" on Fernald Point.
Description:
The photograph shows "House of Four Winds" on Fernald Point.
7212Elmwood Cafe
  • Document, Advertising, Advertisement
  • Businesses, Restaurant Business
  • 1938
7219Dr. Archibald L. Dix and sister Myra Verrill Dix
  • Image, Photograph
  • People
  • 1930
"Archibald and Mira Dix were great-grandchildren of William Dix Jr. (1776-1814) who was in Tremont when he died in 1814. Archibald L. Dix (1867-after 1940) was born in January 1867 to master mariner John P. Dix and Harriet E. Verrill in Tremont, Maine. Capt. and Mrs. Dix settled in Philadelphia some time between 1870 and 1880. Archibald attended the University of Pennsylvania and became a doctor, graduating from there in 1893. He apparently had some notable success in treating Lupus. Archibald’s sister, Mira Verrill Dix (1870-1934) was born on May 18, 1870. She became a teacher. Archibald and Mira lived together in Philadelphia, with various members of their family, for the rest of their lives. While neither married they were frequently mentioned in the social pages of newspapers as attendants in weddings of their family. On November 18, 1897 Archibald was best man at the wedding of his first cousin, Frederick C. Holden, when Frederick married Maud Wilson in Brooklyn, New York. Frederick C. Holden’s mother, Hannah Augusta Verrill, was a sister of Archibald’s mother, Harriet E. Verrill. Their sister, May E. Dix (1873-), married John Lucas on November 19, 1902 with Myra, “Miss Verrill Dix,” as maid of honor and Archibald serving as an usher. After May’s husband, John Lucas died, she lived with the family in Philadelphia from at least 1920 to 1930. Mira, who sometimes went by the name of Verrill Dix, and her sister, May (Dix) Lucas rented the Miller Cottage in Bar Harbor in 1924. Mira Verrill Dix died c. December 29, 1934 and was buried on January 3, 1935 at the Westminster Cemetery in Marion, Pennsylvania where her father was buried. Her brother, Archibald, signed the papers. Archibald L. Dix died some time after 1940."
Description:
"Archibald and Mira Dix were great-grandchildren of William Dix Jr. (1776-1814) who was in Tremont when he died in 1814. Archibald L. Dix (1867-after 1940) was born in January 1867 to master mariner John P. Dix and Harriet E. Verrill in Tremont, Maine. Capt. and Mrs. Dix settled in Philadelphia some time between 1870 and 1880. Archibald attended the University of Pennsylvania and became a doctor, graduating from there in 1893. He apparently had some notable success in treating Lupus. Archibald’s sister, Mira Verrill Dix (1870-1934) was born on May 18, 1870. She became a teacher. Archibald and Mira lived together in Philadelphia, with various members of their family, for the rest of their lives. While neither married they were frequently mentioned in the social pages of newspapers as attendants in weddings of their family. On November 18, 1897 Archibald was best man at the wedding of his first cousin, Frederick C. Holden, when Frederick married Maud Wilson in Brooklyn, New York. Frederick C. Holden’s mother, Hannah Augusta Verrill, was a sister of Archibald’s mother, Harriet E. Verrill. Their sister, May E. Dix (1873-), married John Lucas on November 19, 1902 with Myra, “Miss Verrill Dix,” as maid of honor and Archibald serving as an usher. After May’s husband, John Lucas died, she lived with the family in Philadelphia from at least 1920 to 1930. Mira, who sometimes went by the name of Verrill Dix, and her sister, May (Dix) Lucas rented the Miller Cottage in Bar Harbor in 1924. Mira Verrill Dix died c. December 29, 1934 and was buried on January 3, 1935 at the Westminster Cemetery in Marion, Pennsylvania where her father was buried. Her brother, Archibald, signed the papers. Archibald L. Dix died some time after 1940." [show more]
7262Eleanor "El" Lucille Clark and Herbert Mortimer Gesner Jr. on Their Wedding Day
  • Image, Photograph
  • People
  • 1934-07-15
7454Lisa Caroline (Mayo) Wilkinson
  • Image, Photograph
  • People
  • 1930 c.
7491Simeon "Sim" Holden Mayo and Mark Robinson Lawler in Florida
  • Image, Photograph
  • People
  • 1935
Simeon Holden Mayo was the husband of Mark Robinson Lawler's aunt, Elvira Jane (Robinson) Mayo.
Description:
Simeon Holden Mayo was the husband of Mark Robinson Lawler's aunt, Elvira Jane (Robinson) Mayo.
7600Elvira Jane Robinson Mayo, Mrs. Simeon Holden Mayo with Date Palm
  • Image, Photograph
  • People
  • 1935
7601Simeon Holden Mayo and his Wife Elvira Jane (Robinson) Mayo in Florida
  • Image, Photograph
  • People
  • 1935
7602Simeon Holden Mayo - and wife - and Elvira Jane (Robinson) Mayo - with Friend on Beach in Florida
  • Image, Photograph
  • People
  • 1935
7603Portrait of Simeon Holden Mayo
  • Image, Photograph
  • People
  • 1930 c.
7628Ernest A. Murphy. Jr. and Four Children
  • Image, Photograph
  • People
  • 1936 c.
Left to Right: Barbara Murphy - later Mrs. Irving W. Humphrey, Mrs. Alfred Harry Kelley and Mrs. Ronald Smith (1931-2007) Jeannie Murphy - later Mrs. Douglas Freeman Ernest A. Murphy, Jr. (1910-) Helen E. "Honey" Murphy - later Mrs. William W. Seavey (1933-1990) In Front: Ernest A. Murphy III (1935-1965)
Description:
Left to Right: Barbara Murphy - later Mrs. Irving W. Humphrey, Mrs. Alfred Harry Kelley and Mrs. Ronald Smith (1931-2007) Jeannie Murphy - later Mrs. Douglas Freeman Ernest A. Murphy, Jr. (1910-) Helen E. "Honey" Murphy - later Mrs. William W. Seavey (1933-1990) In Front: Ernest A. Murphy III (1935-1965)
8537Maine Sloop Boat Euryale - Before 1935
  • Image, Photograph
  • Vessels, Boat, Sailboat, Friendship Sloop
  • 1935 before