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You searched for: 'ccc'Date: 2000sSubject: People
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Item Title Type Subject Creator Publisher Date Place Address Description
3459The House that Ruth and Eleanor Built
  • Publication, Newsletter
  • People
  • Structures, Dwellings, House
  • Trask - Muriel (Trask) Davisson-Fahey
  • 2005
  • Tremont, Bass Harbor
File Attachment:
MOORE MAYO HOUSE - 2005.pdf
…For $225 they bought an old CCC camp building on Eagle Lake that provided dry wood for timbers and flooring.
16578Asticou's Island Domain: Wabanaki Peoples at Mount Desert Island 1500-2000.
  • Publication, Book
  • People
  • McBride - Bunny McBride
  • Prins - Harald E. L. Prins
  • National Park Service
  • 2007-12
  • Mount Desert Island
Acadia National Park Ethnographic Overview and Assessment Volume 1 and Volume 2 This two-volume historical-ethnographic overview of Acadia National Park spans almost 500 years and covers a wide coastal stretch between Penobscot and Gouldsboro Bays – and sometimes much beyond. Such breadth of coverage is necessary in order to take in the park’s center piece on Mount Desert Island, plus Isle au Haut and Schoodic Peninsula, along with various land holding arrangements (including easements) on numerous offshore sea-islands in this area.1 The study explores the shifting but ongoing relationship between this habitat and Wabanaki peoples – a group of northeastern Algonquianspeaking ethnic groups or tribal nations today distinguished as the Abenaki, Maliseet, Mi'kmaq, Passamaquoddy and Penobscot.
Description:
Acadia National Park Ethnographic Overview and Assessment Volume 1 and Volume 2 This two-volume historical-ethnographic overview of Acadia National Park spans almost 500 years and covers a wide coastal stretch between Penobscot and Gouldsboro Bays – and sometimes much beyond. Such breadth of coverage is necessary in order to take in the park’s center piece on Mount Desert Island, plus Isle au Haut and Schoodic Peninsula, along with various land holding arrangements (including easements) on numerous offshore sea-islands in this area.1 The study explores the shifting but ongoing relationship between this habitat and Wabanaki peoples – a group of northeastern Algonquianspeaking ethnic groups or tribal nations today distinguished as the Abenaki, Maliseet, Mi'kmaq, Passamaquoddy and Penobscot. [show more]


File Attachments:
wabanaki_peoples_vol1-optimized.pdf
…My boy, when he was young, worked for the CCC [Civilian Conservation Corps] camp on [MDI]. They put some good roads in.