The house on the shore behind “Theoline,” between the schooner and the sailboat, is the Samuel Walker Mead Cottage, H.W. Foote’s “House of Four Winds” at 30 Connor Point Road, Southwest Harbor, Tax Map 11 – Lot 9 – MHPC #405-0009.
Description: The house on the shore behind “Theoline,” between the schooner and the sailboat, is the Samuel Walker Mead Cottage, H.W. Foote’s “House of Four Winds” at 30 Connor Point Road, Southwest Harbor, Tax Map 11 – Lot 9 – MHPC #405-0009.
Description: The Claremont Hotel can be seen in the background on the left of the boat. This photograph was taken from Connor's Point in Southwest Harbor, Maine.
Child in boat alongside Amberjack: Benson – William Valentine Benson (1917-1997) Back Row – Left to Right: Frances Alice Kellor (1873-1952) Dreier - Mary Elizabeth Dreier (1875-1963) Marion Dickerman (1890-1983) Antonia Hatvary Middle Row – Left to Right: Cook - Nancy Clyde Cook (1884-1962) Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Jr. (1914-1988) John Aspinwall Roosevelt (1916-1981) Front Row – Left to Right: Roosevelt - Anna Eleanor (Roosevelt) Roosevelt (1884-1962) Roosevelt - Franklin Delano Roosevelt (1882–1945) James Roosevelt II (1907-1991)
Description: Child in boat alongside Amberjack: Benson – William Valentine Benson (1917-1997) Back Row – Left to Right: Frances Alice Kellor (1873-1952) Dreier - Mary Elizabeth Dreier (1875-1963) Marion Dickerman (1890-1983) Antonia Hatvary Middle Row – Left to Right: Cook - Nancy Clyde Cook (1884-1962) Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Jr. (1914-1988) John Aspinwall Roosevelt (1916-1981) Front Row – Left to Right: Roosevelt - Anna Eleanor (Roosevelt) Roosevelt (1884-1962) Roosevelt - Franklin Delano Roosevelt (1882–1945) James Roosevelt II (1907-1991) [show more]
The foremost boat is loaded with big open barrels - they look like half barrels - to store fish as they were caught. The long poles on each side may have been to hold the handlines away from the rails.
Description: The foremost boat is loaded with big open barrels - they look like half barrels - to store fish as they were caught. The long poles on each side may have been to hold the handlines away from the rails.