701 - 725 of 12341 results
Item Title Type Subject Creator Publisher Date Place Address Description
14814Artists of Mount Desert Island
  • Set
  • People
14541Ash - Ida Melinia (Ash) Richardson (1862-1923)
  • Reference
  • People
8436Assabet River Bridge and Meadows
  • Image, Photograph, Photographic Print, Albumen Print
  • Places, Landscape
  • Rand - Henry Lathrop Rand (1862-1945)
  • 1895
  • Concord MA probably
16733Assorted Maps and Pamphlets related to Mount Desert Island
  • Uncurated Accession
  • Places, Island
15240Asticou - Passenger Boat
  • Reference
  • Vessels, Boat
2152Asticou Hotel
  • Map, Annotated Map
  • Places
13084Asticou Hotel
  • Reference
  • Structures, Commercial, Lodging, Hotel
  • Mount Desert, Northeast Harbor
7003Asticou Inn, Asticou, Mount Desert Island
  • Image, Photograph, Picture Postcard, Real Photo
  • Structures, Commercial, Lodging, Hotel
  • Sherman
  • 1909 PM
  • Mount Desert, Northeast Harbor
16578Asticou's Island Domain: Wabanaki Peoples at Mount Desert Island 1500-2000.
  • Publication, Book
  • People
  • Prins - Harald E. L. Prins
  • McBride - Bunny McBride
  • 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]
7795At Hadlock Pond
  • Image, Photograph
  • Places, Lake
  • 1888-07-14
  • Mount Desert
5037At Head of Southwest Harbor
  • Image, Photograph, Photographic Print, Albumen Print
  • Places, Harbor
  • Rand - Henry Lathrop Rand (1862-1945)
  • 1890
  • Southwest Harbor
10969At Schooner Head
  • Image, Art, Drawing
  • Places, Landscape
  • Hyde - William Henry Hyde (1858-1943)
  • 1887
  • Bar Harbor, Eden
Illustration by William Henry Hyde or Harry Fenn for Mrs. Burton Harrison's Novel, "Bar Harbor Days".
Description:
Illustration by William Henry Hyde or Harry Fenn for Mrs. Burton Harrison's Novel, "Bar Harbor Days".
12830At the dedication of a tablet to the memory of George Edward Street, pastor, in Phillips church, Exeter, New Hampshire, January 14, 1906
  • Publication, Literary, Article
  • People
  • 1904-06-28
Obituary Record of Graduates of Yale University, Deceased during the Academical Year ending in June, 1904
Description:
Obituary Record of Graduates of Yale University, Deceased during the Academical Year ending in June, 1904
8225At the Gate of Patch Farm
  • Image, Photograph, Photographic Print, Albumen Print
  • Places, Landscape
  • Rand - Henry Lathrop Rand (1862-1945)
  • 1892-05-29
  • Gloucester MA
15070Atherton - Dorcas Foster (Atherton) Rich (1819-1898)
  • Reference
  • People
14456Atherton - George Delorin Atherton (1848-1935)
  • Reference
  • People
5932Athol M. Kane Higgins - Mrs. Howe Dwain Higgins on her Porch
  • Image, Photograph
  • People
  • Structures, Dwellings, House
  • 1987
  • Southwest Harbor
15220Atlanta - Auxiliary Sail Steamer
  • Reference
  • Vessels, Steamboat
16122Atlantic, Me. Golden Gate.
  • Image, Photograph, Picture Postcard
  • Places, Town
  • A.J. Huston, Rockland, Me.
  • 1909-10-21
  • Swans Island
Mailed to: Mrs. Clara Philips, Southwest Harbor, Maine. Signed: Vira Joyce
Description:
Mailed to: Mrs. Clara Philips, Southwest Harbor, Maine. Signed: Vira Joyce
12871Atterbury - Grosvenor Atterbury (1869-1956)
  • Reference
  • People
Grosvenor Atterbury was an American architect, urban planner and writer, born in Southampton, NY. He studied at Yale University, where he was an editor of campus humor magazine The Yale Record. After travelling in Europe, he studied architecture at Columbia University and worked in the offices of McKim, Mead & White. Much of Atterbury’s early work consisted of weekend houses for wealthy industrialists. Atterbury was given the commission for the model housing community of Forest Hills Gardens which began in 1909 under the sponsorship of the Russell Sage Foundation. For Forest Hills, Atterbury developed an innovative construction method: each house was built from approximately 170 standardized precast concrete panels, fabricated off-site and assembled by crane. The system was sophisticated even by modern standards: panels were cast with integral hollow insulation chambers; casting formwork incorporated an internal sleeve, allowing molds to be "broken" before concrete had completely set; and panels were moved to the site in only two operations (formwork to truck and truck to crane). Atterbury's system influenced the work of mid-1920s European modern architects like Ernst May, who used panelized prefab concrete systems in a number of celebrated experimental housing projects in Frankfurt. In this way Atterbury can be considered a progenitor of the Modern Movement. Atterbury was elected to the National Academy of Design in 1918 as an Associate member, and became a full member in 1940.
Description:
Grosvenor Atterbury was an American architect, urban planner and writer, born in Southampton, NY. He studied at Yale University, where he was an editor of campus humor magazine The Yale Record. After travelling in Europe, he studied architecture at Columbia University and worked in the offices of McKim, Mead & White. Much of Atterbury’s early work consisted of weekend houses for wealthy industrialists. Atterbury was given the commission for the model housing community of Forest Hills Gardens which began in 1909 under the sponsorship of the Russell Sage Foundation. For Forest Hills, Atterbury developed an innovative construction method: each house was built from approximately 170 standardized precast concrete panels, fabricated off-site and assembled by crane. The system was sophisticated even by modern standards: panels were cast with integral hollow insulation chambers; casting formwork incorporated an internal sleeve, allowing molds to be "broken" before concrete had completely set; and panels were moved to the site in only two operations (formwork to truck and truck to crane). Atterbury's system influenced the work of mid-1920s European modern architects like Ernst May, who used panelized prefab concrete systems in a number of celebrated experimental housing projects in Frankfurt. In this way Atterbury can be considered a progenitor of the Modern Movement. Atterbury was elected to the National Academy of Design in 1918 as an Associate member, and became a full member in 1940. [show more]
15597Atwater Kent - Inventor, Industrialist and Philanthropist
  • Publication, Literary, Article
  • People
  • Lenahan - Donald Patrick Lenahan
  • 2016-12-26
12754Audubon Boy
  • Image, Art, Illustration
  • Nature, Animals
Audubon Boy Number: 41471 Foaled: 1897 Sire: J.J. Audubon Dam: Flaxy by Bourbon Wilkes Bred by: E.P. Weathers of Avon, Kentucky Sold to: James Y. Gatcomb, Concord, New Hampshire Pacing Record: 1:59¼ From Wallace’s American Trotting Register containing the pedigrees of Standard Bred Trotters and Pacers and an Appendix of Non-Standard Animals, by The American Trotting Register Association, Volume XVII, Chicago, 1907, Standard Stallions, p. 153.
Description:
Audubon Boy Number: 41471 Foaled: 1897 Sire: J.J. Audubon Dam: Flaxy by Bourbon Wilkes Bred by: E.P. Weathers of Avon, Kentucky Sold to: James Y. Gatcomb, Concord, New Hampshire Pacing Record: 1:59¼ From Wallace’s American Trotting Register containing the pedigrees of Standard Bred Trotters and Pacers and an Appendix of Non-Standard Animals, by The American Trotting Register Association, Volume XVII, Chicago, 1907, Standard Stallions, p. 153. [show more]
14135Audubon Boy
  • Reference
  • Nature, Animals
2218Augustus Bowman Farnham Cottage
  • Map, Annotated Map
  • Places
13093Augustus Bowman Farnham Cottage
Mary S. Snow Cottage
Grey Rock
  • Reference
  • Structures, Dwellings, House, Cottage
  • Southwest Harbor
  • 388 Main Street
One cottage of the twin cottages that were the first built by rusticators in Southwest Harbor, Maine, the other built by W.P. Dickey.
Augustus Bowman Farnham Cottage
Mary S. Snow Cottage
Grey Rock
Description:
One cottage of the twin cottages that were the first built by rusticators in Southwest Harbor, Maine, the other built by W.P. Dickey.

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