Left to Right: Kenny, Corey the dog, Marianne New, Leone Marie "Nan" (Wemmert) Kellam, Richard Lawrence "Rick" Church, Dorothy Carolyn (Follansby) Church, Robert "Bob" Church, Arthur Millis "Art" Kellam
Description: Left to Right: Kenny, Corey the dog, Marianne New, Leone Marie "Nan" (Wemmert) Kellam, Richard Lawrence "Rick" Church, Dorothy Carolyn (Follansby) Church, Robert "Bob" Church, Arthur Millis "Art" Kellam
Left to Right: Leone Marie "Nan" (Wemmert) Kellam, Richard Lawrence Chuch Jr., Dorothy Carolyn (Follansby) Church, Robert "Bob" Church, Arthur Millis "Art" Kellam, Dolf Portman
Description: Left to Right: Leone Marie "Nan" (Wemmert) Kellam, Richard Lawrence Chuch Jr., Dorothy Carolyn (Follansby) Church, Robert "Bob" Church, Arthur Millis "Art" Kellam, Dolf Portman
Left to Right: Kenny, Ellen Church, Dorothy Carolyn "Dot" (Follansby) Church, Leone Marie "Nan" (Wemmert) Kellam, Corey the dog, Dolf Portman, Robert "Bob" Church, Marianne New, Arthur Millis "Art" Kellam
Description: Left to Right: Kenny, Ellen Church, Dorothy Carolyn "Dot" (Follansby) Church, Leone Marie "Nan" (Wemmert) Kellam, Corey the dog, Dolf Portman, Robert "Bob" Church, Marianne New, Arthur Millis "Art" Kellam
Left to Right: Kenny, Leone Marie "Nan" (Wemmert) Kellam, Ellen Church, Marianne New, Dorothy Carolyn "Dot" (Follansby) Church, Corey the dog, Dolf Portman
The Arthur Millis and Leone Marie (Wemmert) Kellam Collection
Description: Left to Right: Kenny, Leone Marie "Nan" (Wemmert) Kellam, Ellen Church, Marianne New, Dorothy Carolyn "Dot" (Follansby) Church, Corey the dog, Dolf Portman
An account of the summer visitors and native population on Gotts Island starting in the 1890's, the book describes the island experience, the families, and changes that took place over the next 100 years.
Description: An account of the summer visitors and native population on Gotts Island starting in the 1890's, the book describes the island experience, the families, and changes that took place over the next 100 years.
Description: This photograph was taken off Gotts Island, Maine, and was taken by Thomas C. Moon who was an uncle of Frank's wife, Lura B. (Hodgkins) Babbidge.
The buckboard is stopped on the road between Southwest Harbor and Somesville, now Route 102. The view is looking west across Echo Lake to Beach Cliffs.
Description: The buckboard is stopped on the road between Southwest Harbor and Somesville, now Route 102. The view is looking west across Echo Lake to Beach Cliffs.
Notice the elaborate hat worn by the lady in the front seat! The buckboard is stopped on the road between Southwest Harbor and Somesville, now Route 102. The view is looking west across Echo Lake to Beach Cliffs.
Description: Notice the elaborate hat worn by the lady in the front seat! The buckboard is stopped on the road between Southwest Harbor and Somesville, now Route 102. The view is looking west across Echo Lake to Beach Cliffs.
The lives of authors Ruth Moore and Eleanor Ruth Mayo were their own, but their private lives and the lives they led on Mount Desert Island, were so intertwined that archivists find it difficult to divide documents, stories and photographs between them. It is for this reason that this Item exists in the database. It ties together other Items that relate more to both women than to either as an individual. “Homesick For That Place: Ruth Moore Writes About Maine” by Jennifer Craig Pixley is so well conceived that it may be recommended to those who are interested in Ruth and Eleanor above many other works, but there is much to be learned from everything included here.
Description: The lives of authors Ruth Moore and Eleanor Ruth Mayo were their own, but their private lives and the lives they led on Mount Desert Island, were so intertwined that archivists find it difficult to divide documents, stories and photographs between them. It is for this reason that this Item exists in the database. It ties together other Items that relate more to both women than to either as an individual. “Homesick For That Place: Ruth Moore Writes About Maine” by Jennifer Craig Pixley is so well conceived that it may be recommended to those who are interested in Ruth and Eleanor above many other works, but there is much to be learned from everything included here. [show more]