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Item | Title | Type | Subject | Creator | Publisher | Date | Place | Address | Description | |
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13087 | Addison Packing Company |
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16482 | Addison Packing Company |
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16084 | W. M. Underwood's Sardine Factory, McKinley, Me |
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11022 | The Underwood Canning Factory Crew at McKinley |
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3718 | William Underwood Factory at McKinley |
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| A sardine cannery in McKinely, now Bass Harbor. | ||||
3592 | Freeman's Wharf Farnsworth Fish Factory |
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| Built by John T.R. Freeman around 1885. The wharf was occupied by several canning businesses at various times | Freeman's Wharf Farnsworth Fish Factory Description: Built by John T.R. Freeman around 1885. The wharf was occupied by several canning businesses at various times | ||||
11205 | Women Packing Sardine Cans in Maine - Probably Bass Harbor or Southwest Harbor |
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| Note the scissors hanging on the wall - typical in the old canning factories. The location of this photograph is unknown, but it was in a collection of pictures taken on Mount Desert and could very well have been taken in Bass Harbor, Southwest Harbor or Manset. | Description: Note the scissors hanging on the wall - typical in the old canning factories. The location of this photograph is unknown, but it was in a collection of pictures taken on Mount Desert and could very well have been taken in Bass Harbor, Southwest Harbor or Manset. | |||||
15226 | The Underwood Canning Factory |
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14649 | Machiasport Canning Company McKinley Canning Company C.H. Rich & Co. |
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| "The first owners of the McKinley Canning Company were William "Bill" Herbert Thurston (1886-1957), Henry Bucknam Wass (1906-1986), his brother, Lester Leighton Wass (1905-1987) and their father, Jones Everett Wass (1881-1956). The company later became the Machiasport Canning Company owned by Henry Bucknam Wass and Charles Henry Rich (1892-1967)." - Interview with Elsie (Reed) Lunt, bookkeeper there for many years - 2008. "The building on the south side of the C.H. Rich & Co. property was the McKinley Canning Co. sardine packing factory, a branch of the Machiasport Canning Co., which was owned by Lester Leighton Wass (1905-1987), brother to Henry Bucknam Wass (1906-1986) who was probably involved in the business too. C.H. Rich & Co. bought the building for their lobster dealership and crab picking operation. They later expanded by building on the north side of the property." - Information from Elsie V. (Reed) Lunt, Mrs. Clarence L. Lunt, who was a bookkeeper for C.H. Rich until the business closed in 1963 - Interview 09/22/10 It was a sardine factory and during WWII hake and mackerel were canned there. C.H. Rich bought lobsters and fish. Wass canned sardines, mackerel and hake. | Description: "The first owners of the McKinley Canning Company were William "Bill" Herbert Thurston (1886-1957), Henry Bucknam Wass (1906-1986), his brother, Lester Leighton Wass (1905-1987) and their father, Jones Everett Wass (1881-1956). The company later became the Machiasport Canning Company owned by Henry Bucknam Wass and Charles Henry Rich (1892-1967)." - Interview with Elsie (Reed) Lunt, bookkeeper there for many years - 2008. "The building on the south side of the C.H. Rich & Co. property was the McKinley Canning Co. sardine packing factory, a branch of the Machiasport Canning Co., which was owned by Lester Leighton Wass (1905-1987), brother to Henry Bucknam Wass (1906-1986) who was probably involved in the business too. C.H. Rich & Co. bought the building for their lobster dealership and crab picking operation. They later expanded by building on the north side of the property." - Information from Elsie V. (Reed) Lunt, Mrs. Clarence L. Lunt, who was a bookkeeper for C.H. Rich until the business closed in 1963 - Interview 09/22/10 It was a sardine factory and during WWII hake and mackerel were canned there. C.H. Rich bought lobsters and fish. Wass canned sardines, mackerel and hake. [show more] | |||
13627 | My Grandmother Lived for the Factory Whistle |
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| The story of Mary Louise Mitchell as told by her granddaught, Carol Reed Walsh | Description: The story of Mary Louise Mitchell as told by her granddaught, Carol Reed Walsh | ||||
13407 | William Underwood Company Lobster Cannery at Steamboat Wharf on Clark Point |
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13359 | Benjamin M. Robinson Wharf Allen J. Lawler Canning Factory A.J. Lawler Canning Factory |
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13088 | J.W. Stinson and Son |
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13086 | Addison Packing Camps |
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12488 | The Underwood Sardine Factory, Tremont, Maine |
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12316 | Addison Packing Company at Southwest Harbor |
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| The photo shows the factory bus, used to transport factory workers when fish came in. | Description: The photo shows the factory bus, used to transport factory workers when fish came in. | |||
12317 | Addison Packing Company and the Robert Ash House at Southwest Harbor |
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| The house in the front of the photograph was the Robert Ash house. | Description: The house in the front of the photograph was the Robert Ash house. | |||
7239 | Underwood Canning Factory, McKinley, Maine |
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6555 | Frying Fish at the Underwood Factory, McKinley, Maine |
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6529 | Unloading Herring Next to the Joyce Marie at the Underwood Wharf, McKinley, Maine |
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6541 | Workers at the Underwood Factory, McKinley, Maine |
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| Lawrence Carter - facing camera Mitch Gordius - back to camera Unknown person in back | Description: Lawrence Carter - facing camera Mitch Gordius - back to camera Unknown person in back | |||
6563 | Packing Room at the Underwood Factory, McKinley, Maine |
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9285 | Underwood Sardine Factory, McKinley, Maine |
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