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You searched for: Accession #: is exactly '1010'
Item Title Type Subject Creator Publisher Date Place Address Description
6011Echo Lake and Somes Sound Viewed From Beech Cliff
  • Image, Photograph
  • Places, Lake
  • Neal - George Arthur Neal (1872-1939)
  • 1900 c.
  • Acadia National Park
  • Echo Lake
6470Family with House and Barn
  • Image, Photograph
  • Structures, Agricultural, Barn
  • Structures, Dwellings, House
  • Neal - George Arthur Neal (1872-1939)
  • 1900 c.
Possibly Monroe Barn in Belfast?
Description:
Possibly Monroe Barn in Belfast?
6067First Odd Fellows Building, Southwest Harbor, Maine - Showing Spanish Civil War Addition
  • Image, Photograph
  • Structures, Other Structures
  • 1898
  • Southwest Harbor
  • 357 Main Street
6049Fish Packers on Factory Dock
  • Image, Photograph
  • People
  • Neal - George Arthur Neal (1872-1939)
  • 1900 c.
5998Fish Weir Off Greening Island
  • Image, Photograph
  • Places, Harbor
  • Neal - George Arthur Neal (1872-1939)
  • 1910 c.
The photograph is taken from the Manset shore looking up Somes Sound with Greening Island on the right.
Description:
The photograph is taken from the Manset shore looking up Somes Sound with Greening Island on the right.
6259Fishing Vessels at Lower Town Dock
  • Image, Photograph
  • Vessels, Boat
  • Neal - George Arthur Neal (1872-1939)
  • Southwest Harbor
5090Fleet of Offshore Fishing Schooners - The Mackerel Fleet in Southwest Harbor, Maine
  • Image, Photograph
  • Places, Harbor
  • Vessels, Ship, Sailing Ship, Schooner
  • Neal - George Arthur Neal (1872-1939)
  • 1895 c.
  • Southwest Harbor
The view is from the Pemetic Hotel (The Castle) and, on the Southwest Harbor side, shows the Clarence Clark (Ellsbert/Heilaka) house left foreground. The long roofed building in the center, next to the harbor, a bowling alley after World War II - currently the Hamilton Marine building. The building on the right with the striped roof is the firm of Clark & Parker/Manset Marine Supply Co./ and the Oceanarium since 1979. The Oceanarium is the oldest commercial building on Clark Point - the only one extant except the Clarence Clark House. The Manset shore is in the background with discernible landmarks, including the Manset Union Church, the Stanley wharf, the early Stanley House and numerous commercial buildings on the Shore Road. There are about 30 schooners visible in the harbor and tied up at the wharves. - Identifications by Meredith Hutchins - 2006
Description:
The view is from the Pemetic Hotel (The Castle) and, on the Southwest Harbor side, shows the Clarence Clark (Ellsbert/Heilaka) house left foreground. The long roofed building in the center, next to the harbor, a bowling alley after World War II - currently the Hamilton Marine building. The building on the right with the striped roof is the firm of Clark & Parker/Manset Marine Supply Co./ and the Oceanarium since 1979. The Oceanarium is the oldest commercial building on Clark Point - the only one extant except the Clarence Clark House. The Manset shore is in the background with discernible landmarks, including the Manset Union Church, the Stanley wharf, the early Stanley House and numerous commercial buildings on the Shore Road. There are about 30 schooners visible in the harbor and tied up at the wharves. - Identifications by Meredith Hutchins - 2006 [show more]
6065Four Men at the First Odd Fellows Building, Southwest Harbor, Maine
  • Image, Photograph
  • Structures, Other Structures
  • Neal - George Arthur Neal (1872-1939)
  • 1900 c.
  • Southwest Harbor
  • 357 Main Street
6177Gabled Porch in Mckinley
  • Image, Photograph
  • Structures, Dwellings, House
  • Neal - George Arthur Neal (1872-1939)
  • Tremont, Bass Harbor, McKinley
6111Gaff-Rigged Sloop in Somes Sound
  • Image, Photograph
  • Vessels, Boat, Sailboat, Sloop
  • Neal - George Arthur Neal (1872-1939)
  • 1900 c.
6250George W. Billings Blacksmith Shop, Tremont, Maine
  • Image, Photograph
  • Businesses, Blacksmith Business
  • People
  • Neal - George Arthur Neal (1872-1939)
  • 1900 c.
  • Tremont
6185Gray Rocks Cottage
  • Image, Photograph
  • Structures, Dwellings, House, Cottage
  • Neal - George Arthur Neal (1872-1939)
  • Tremont, Bernard
  • 38 Leffingwell Road
6059Great Gott Island Bar
  • Image, Photograph
  • Places, Island
  • Places, Shore
  • Neal - George Arthur Neal (1872-1939)
  • 1900 c.
  • Tremont, Great Gott Island
9348Harmon - Ronald C, Harmon (1907-1976)
  • Image, Photograph
  • People
  • Neal - George Arthur Neal (1872-1939)
6175House with Women and Children
  • Image, Photograph
  • Structures, Dwellings, House
  • Neal - George Arthur Neal (1872-1939)
  • 1900 c.
6190Ice Harvest on Mt. Desert, Maine
  • Image, Photograph
  • People
  • Neal - George Arthur Neal (1872-1939)
“As Americans developed a preference for fresh fish, demand for ice increased. Here, armed with a handsaw, ice chisel, and ice plow ...these ...men are harvesting ice, which rivaled granite in the 1890s as Maine’s prime export.” - “Mount Desert Island - Somesville, Southwest Harbor, and Northeast Harbor” by Earle G. Shettleworth Jr. and Lydia B. Vandenbergh - Images of America Series, 2001, p. 42.
Description:
“As Americans developed a preference for fresh fish, demand for ice increased. Here, armed with a handsaw, ice chisel, and ice plow ...these ...men are harvesting ice, which rivaled granite in the 1890s as Maine’s prime export.” - “Mount Desert Island - Somesville, Southwest Harbor, and Northeast Harbor” by Earle G. Shettleworth Jr. and Lydia B. Vandenbergh - Images of America Series, 2001, p. 42.
6191Ice Harvest on Mt. Desert, Maine
  • Image, Photograph
  • Nature, Animals
  • People
  • Neal - George Arthur Neal (1872-1939)
“As Americans developed a preference for fresh fish, demand for ice increased. Here, armed with a handsaw, ice chisel, and ice plow ...these ...men are harvesting ice, which rivaled granite in the 1890s as Maine’s prime export.” - “Mount Desert Island - Somesville, Southwest Harbor, and Northeast Harbor” by Earle G. Shettleworth Jr. and Lydia B. Vandenbergh - Images of America Series, 2001, p. 42.
Description:
“As Americans developed a preference for fresh fish, demand for ice increased. Here, armed with a handsaw, ice chisel, and ice plow ...these ...men are harvesting ice, which rivaled granite in the 1890s as Maine’s prime export.” - “Mount Desert Island - Somesville, Southwest Harbor, and Northeast Harbor” by Earle G. Shettleworth Jr. and Lydia B. Vandenbergh - Images of America Series, 2001, p. 42.
5983Inner Harbor - Southwest Harbor
  • Image, Photograph
  • Places, Harbor
  • Neal - George Arthur Neal (1872-1939)
6174Jacob William and Rebecca (Whitmore) Lurvey Carroll at The Mountain House
  • Image, Photograph
  • People
  • Structures, Dwellings, House
  • Neal - George Arthur Neal (1872-1939)
  • 1899 c.
  • Southwest Harbor
6119James Crockett House
  • Image, Photograph
  • Structures, Dwellings, House
  • Neal - George Arthur Neal (1872-1939)
  • 1900 c.
  • Southwest Harbor
  • 405 Main Street
6122John Clement Clem Walls
  • Image, Photograph
  • People
  • Neal - George Arthur Neal (1872-1939)
  • 1898 c.
  • Tremont, Seal Cove
6023John Melbourne Rich House I in 2004
  • Image, Photograph
  • Structures, Dwellings, House
  • Rich - Meredith Adelle (Rich) Hutchins (1939-2016)
  • 2004
  • Tremont, Bernard
  • 5 Hamblen Lane
The house was built by John "Talking John" Melbourne Rich, the first of his three houses. John owed his Uncle Jonathan Rich (1836-1907) a sum of money, so he swapped this Tremont house for Jonathan's older less valuable Richtown house. Emily (Rich) Trask (1884-1981), John Melbourne Rich's daughter, said in a 1975 interview that she was born in the house, "in that back bedroom up there… That was a big place. It was different from these days…it had a piazza clean around it and round the front. Father was great on building big places but he got in debt so much that he had to give up and go over to Richville [Richtown] and live." The main house, minus barn and ell, still exists in 2016, although covered in green asbestos shingles. The house was originally painted a cream color with brown trim. It sits back from the road just before the Tremont Congregational Church. After Jonathan Rich's death in 1907 his widow, Roseanna B. (Dix) Rich sold the house to Joseph E. Wooster. Roseanna built a house on the water opposite. A later owner, Alvah Dalton Rich, Sr.'s widow, Evelyn Frances (Pomroy) Rich's second husband, Charles Edwin Hamblen, tore off the barn and ell during the depression to save money on taxes. The house had no electricity until 1942.
Description:
The house was built by John "Talking John" Melbourne Rich, the first of his three houses. John owed his Uncle Jonathan Rich (1836-1907) a sum of money, so he swapped this Tremont house for Jonathan's older less valuable Richtown house. Emily (Rich) Trask (1884-1981), John Melbourne Rich's daughter, said in a 1975 interview that she was born in the house, "in that back bedroom up there… That was a big place. It was different from these days…it had a piazza clean around it and round the front. Father was great on building big places but he got in debt so much that he had to give up and go over to Richville [Richtown] and live." The main house, minus barn and ell, still exists in 2016, although covered in green asbestos shingles. The house was originally painted a cream color with brown trim. It sits back from the road just before the Tremont Congregational Church. After Jonathan Rich's death in 1907 his widow, Roseanna B. (Dix) Rich sold the house to Joseph E. Wooster. Roseanna built a house on the water opposite. A later owner, Alvah Dalton Rich, Sr.'s widow, Evelyn Frances (Pomroy) Rich's second husband, Charles Edwin Hamblen, tore off the barn and ell during the depression to save money on taxes. The house had no electricity until 1942. [show more]
5993Launch and Sloops in Southwest Harbor
  • Image, Photograph
  • Vessels, Boat
  • Neal - George Arthur Neal (1872-1939)
The center vessel with the ornate trail board is a Friendship Sloop. A steam ferry lies at left and a motor yacht lies in front of the sardine factory.
Description:
The center vessel with the ornate trail board is a Friendship Sloop. A steam ferry lies at left and a motor yacht lies in front of the sardine factory.
5512Lewis Freeman Gott Launching Merry Wing in Bernard, Maine Circa 1903
  • Image, Photograph
  • Structures, Transportation, Marine Landing, Wharf
  • Vessels, Boat
  • Neal - George Arthur Neal (1872-1939)
  • 1900 c.
  • Tremont, Bernard
  • 11 Thurston Road
6176Lewis Freeman House
  • Image, Photograph
  • Structures, Dwellings, House
  • Neal - George Arthur Neal (1872-1939)
  • Tremont, Bernard