Description: Mysie's biography is interesting as it illustrates both the later life of this young girl and the social life in Cambridge of which Rand was a part.
"The poem by Holman F. Day is given here as a curiosity but not because it is true." “Traditions and Records of Southwest Harbor and Somesville, Mount Desert Island, Maine” by Mrs. Seth S. Thornton, 1938, p. 230-233.
Description: "The poem by Holman F. Day is given here as a curiosity but not because it is true." “Traditions and Records of Southwest Harbor and Somesville, Mount Desert Island, Maine” by Mrs. Seth S. Thornton, 1938, p. 230-233.
Mailed to: Mrs. Eldora Ward Manset, Me. Text reads: "That post card looks very nice in my large collection. Many thinks but please sign your whole name again so I won't have to guess all day. C.M.W."
Description: Mailed to: Mrs. Eldora Ward Manset, Me. Text reads: "That post card looks very nice in my large collection. Many thinks but please sign your whole name again so I won't have to guess all day. C.M.W."
Everton Gott house on the right behind John Left to Right: Fred Eaton Young son Francis Young on his lap Wesley Carroll John Carroll holding Milton Kittridge on lap
Description: Everton Gott house on the right behind John Left to Right: Fred Eaton Young son Francis Young on his lap Wesley Carroll John Carroll holding Milton Kittridge on lap
Bessie Clark, on the left, was a great-niece of Jacob William Carroll, patriarch of the Carroll clan in Southwest Harbor. Mary Whitmore, "Aunt Mary," on the right, was a sister to Rebecca (Whitmore) Lurvey Carroll, matriarch of the Carroll clan in Southwest Harbor. This relationship is the reason for the photograph of "Aunt Mary and Bessie" in Nell Carroll Thornton's photograph album.
Description: Bessie Clark, on the left, was a great-niece of Jacob William Carroll, patriarch of the Carroll clan in Southwest Harbor. Mary Whitmore, "Aunt Mary," on the right, was a sister to Rebecca (Whitmore) Lurvey Carroll, matriarch of the Carroll clan in Southwest Harbor. This relationship is the reason for the photograph of "Aunt Mary and Bessie" in Nell Carroll Thornton's photograph album.