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You searched for: Contributor: Southwest Harbor Public LibraryPlace: [blank]Subject: Transportation
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Subject
Type
Place
Date
Contributor
  • Southwest Harbor Public Library
Title Type Subject Creator Date Place Rights
Southwest Harbor Bus Lines
Southwest Harbor Public Library
  • Image, Photograph
  • Transportation, Bus
  • Ballard - Willis Humphreys Ballard (1906-1980)
  • 1946-02
  • In Copyright
Southwest Harbor Bus Lines
Southwest Harbor Public Library
Description:
The front of the bus says "Charter" and the destinations on the side list Ellsworth, S.W Harbor, Bernard, McKinley (now Bass Harbor) and Manset.
Site of George Lyman Hinckley's Plane Crash
Southwest Harbor Public Library
  • Image, Photograph
  • Transportation, Aircraft
  • In Copyright - Non-Commercial Use Permitted
Site of George Lyman Hinckley's Plane Crash
Southwest Harbor Public Library
Nan Kellam in the Spizzler
Southwest Harbor Public Library
  • Image, Photograph, Photographic Print
  • People
  • Transportation, Automobile
  • 1940 c.
  • In Copyright - Non-Commercial Use Permitted
Nan Kellam in the Spizzler
Southwest Harbor Public Library
Description:
The Spizzler was Art and Nan Kellam's 1936 Ford Coupe.
Nan Kellam with the Spizzler
Southwest Harbor Public Library
  • Image, Photograph, Photographic Print
  • People
  • Transportation, Automobile
  • In Copyright - Non-Commercial Use Permitted
Nan Kellam with the Spizzler
Southwest Harbor Public Library
Description:
The Spizzler was Art and Nan Kellam's 1936 Ford Coupe. Caption reads: “En route – Russellville”
Green Mountain Railway, Mt. Desert, Me.
Southwest Harbor Public Library
  • Image, Photograph, Photographic Print, Stereograph
  • Transportation, Railroad
  • Bradley - Bryant Bradley (1838-1890)
  • Copyright Undetermined
Green Mountain Railway, Mt. Desert, Me.
Southwest Harbor Public Library
"Shenandoah" Dirigible
Southwest Harbor Public Library
  • Image, Photograph, Negative
  • Transportation, Aircraft
  • Rugen - J. Rugen, 295 Thames St., Newport, R.I.
  • Copyright Not Evaluated
"Shenandoah" Dirigible
Southwest Harbor Public Library
Description:
The “Shenandoah” was on her way to Bar Harbor from the naval air station at Lakehurst, New Jersey.
1921 Harley-Davidson Motorcycle
Southwest Harbor Public Library
  • Reference
  • Transportation, Motorcycle
  • In Copyright - Non-Commercial Use Permitted
1921 Harley-Davidson Motorcycle
Southwest Harbor Public Library
1914 Model Peerless Bicyle
Southwest Harbor Public Library
  • Reference
  • Transportation, Cycle, Bicycle
  • In Copyright - Non-Commercial Use Permitted
1914 Model Peerless Bicyle
Southwest Harbor Public Library
Advertisement for 1914 Model Peerless Bicycle
Southwest Harbor Public Library
  • Document, Advertising, Advertisement
  • Transportation, Cycle, Bicycle
  • 1914
  • Copyright Not Evaluated
Advertisement for 1914 Model Peerless Bicycle
Southwest Harbor Public Library
1921 Harley-Davidson
Southwest Harbor Public Library
  • Image, Photograph
  • Transportation, Motorcycle
  • Copyright Not Evaluated
1921 Harley-Davidson
Southwest Harbor Public Library
The Bar Harbor Express Between Bangor, Maine and Boston, Massachusetts
Southwest Harbor Public Library
  • Image, Photograph, Picture Postcard
  • Transportation, Railroad
  • 1907-11-02
  • Copyright Not Evaluated
Description:
Printed in Germany
Railroad Station from the Bridge in Truro, Nova Scotia
Southwest Harbor Public Library
  • Image, Photograph, Photographic Print, Albumen Print
  • Transportation, Railroad
  • Rand - Henry Lathrop Rand (1862-1945)
  • 1894-07-16
  • No Copyright - United States
Buckboard Party to The Caves
Southwest Harbor Public Library
  • Image, Photograph, Photographic Print, Albumen Print
  • Nature, Animals
  • Transportation, Carriage
  • Rand - Henry Lathrop Rand (1862-1945)
  • 1903-08-30
  • No Copyright - United States
Buckboard Party to The Caves
Southwest Harbor Public Library
Unknown Building with 1911 Ford Model T
Southwest Harbor Public Library
  • Image, Photograph, Photographic Print
  • Structures, Other Structures
  • Transportation, Automobile
  • Copyright Not Evaluated
Unknown Building with 1911 Ford Model T
Southwest Harbor Public Library
Description:
The automobile is probably a 1911 Ford Model T with acetelyne head lamps.
Unknown Man and Coupe
Southwest Harbor Public Library
  • Image, Photograph, Photographic Print
  • People
  • Transportation, Automobile
  • Copyright Not Evaluated
Unknown Man and Coupe
Southwest Harbor Public Library
Toot 'N' Be Darned
Southwest Harbor Public Library
  • Image, Photograph, Picture Postcard
  • Transportation, Carriage
  • 1907
  • Copyright Not Evaluated
Toot 'N' Be Darned
Southwest Harbor Public Library
Description:
American Horse Breeder Publishing Co. postcard with hand written local inscription Number 5903. According to Jeff Beaumont, the car in the illustration is a 1906 Rambler. "In Mt. Desert, Tremont and Southwest Harbor nearly all the voters have signed the petitions while in the town of Eden [Bar Harbor] more than half of the voters have signed and a number of names are being added to the list each day. As is well known, practically every summer visitor to the island favors the absolute prohibition of automobiles on the island. The island of Mt. Desert is a dead end, so to speak, and an automobile could cover the whole island in a few hours, making no incentive for a prolonged stay. Yet a great deal of damage could be accomplished in a few hours in such a place as this where practically the entire summer population passes a large portion of each day in driving. The horses are not city broke and the numerous accidents that have already occurred here through the use of autos furnish a good specimen of what would happen were their use more common." - The Bar Harbor Record, December 30, 1908, quoted in the Bar Harbor Times, “Times Past” column by Deborah Dyer, January 1, 2009 See SWHPL 7484 for a photograph of Simeon "Sim" Holden Mayo breaking the rules and driving his automobile in Bar Harbor in 1908. [show more]
A Buckboarding Party at the Bluffs - Echo Lake
Southwest Harbor Public Library
  • Image, Photograph
  • People
  • Places, Mountain
  • Transportation, Carriage
  • Neal - George Arthur Neal (1872-1939)
  • 1900 c.
  • No Copyright - United States
A Buckboarding Party at the Bluffs - Echo Lake
Southwest Harbor Public Library
Description:
The buckboard is stopped on the road between Southwest Harbor and Somesville, now Route 102. The view is looking west across Echo Lake to Beach Cliffs.
Ralph Stanley's First Lobster Boat
Southwest Harbor Public Library
  • Image, Photograph
  • Structures, Transportation, Marine Landing, Dock
  • Transportation, Automobile
  • Vessels, Boat, Lobster Boat
  • 1953
  • Copyright Not Evaluated
Ralph Stanley's First Lobster Boat
Southwest Harbor Public Library
Description:
Automobiles Left to Right: Unknown Unknown truck 1949-1950 Ford wood panelled station wagon 1950-1951 Pontiac sedan Unknown truck 1950 Plymouth 4-door sedan
Maine Central Railroad Advertisement
Southwest Harbor Public Library
  • Document, Advertising, Advertisement
  • Transportation, Railroad
  • 1897
  • Copyright Not Evaluated
Maine Central Railroad Advertisement
Southwest Harbor Public Library
Description:
Advertisement appearing in "A Guide to Bar Harbor" published by W.H. Sherman
Viola A. Marshall Murphy - Mrs. John Tyler Murphy and Children Shopping in Southwest Harbor
Southwest Harbor Public Library
  • Image, Photograph
  • Nature, Animals
  • People
  • Transportation, Carriage
  • 1924 c.
  • Copyright Not Evaluated
Description:
The Murphys were in Southwest Harbor, shopping on Clark Point Road. Perry "Ped" L. Sargent's livery stable is on the left and R.M. Norwood's carpentry shop is the large building at the back of the photograph. Marjorie is bringing her little brother a cookie.
Dr. Willis Watson's Automobile
Southwest Harbor Public Library
  • Reference
  • Transportation, Automobile
  • Copyright Not Evaluated
Dr. Willis Watson's Automobile
Southwest Harbor Public Library
Dr. Willis Watson's Automobile
Southwest Harbor Public Library
  • Image, Photograph
  • Transportation, Automobile
  • 1913 c.
  • Copyright Not Evaluated
Dr. Willis Watson's Automobile
Southwest Harbor Public Library
Buckboard Riding
Southwest Harbor Public Library
  • Reference
  • Transportation, Wagon
  • In Copyright - Non-Commercial Use Permitted
Buckboard Riding
Southwest Harbor Public Library
Description:
"The other outdoor sport of the time was buckboard riding. There were several livery stables here… In the afternoon, summer visitors…would hire these buckboards, first having to send a small boy with the message because there were no telephones then, and would drive to all parts of the island - Bar Harbor, Jordan Pond, Bubble Pond, and even to the western side of the island. People were so keen on driving that they would sometimes take the "J.T. Morse" in the afternoon to Southwest Harbor, hire a team there, and drive all around the western side of the island. Then they would hire some kind of motorboat to bring them back from the Claremont House in the early evening." - Mount Desert - An Informal History Edited by Gunnar Hansen, section written by Rear Admiral Samuel Eliot Morison, p. 182-3 - 1989. "The buckboard deserves particular mention, as being the vehicle best suited to the roads of the island. The first buckboard was rudely fashioned out of two pairs of wheels with a couple of planks stretched between them, and seats nailed or tied on the planks. But it has developed wonderfully, and some of the buckboards of the present day are marvels of the builder's and painter's arts. Many of them are now shipped to all parts of the country for people who have first seen the vehicle here. The gentle swaying motion of the board while traveling at full speed over the hilly roads is simply delightful; and no person who has ever ridden on one wishes to use any other kind of vehicle during his stay." - A Guide to Bar Harbor published by W.H. Sherman, p. 34 - 1897. “Early buckboards were constructed out of two pairs of wheels with wooden planks attached between them. One to four seats were commonly attached to the planks. The crude buckboard evolved into the more refined examples that survive today… A buckboard ride is amazingly comfortable because of the spring action of the planks away from the axles. – Charles Morrill 11/04/07. Before the arrival of buckboards a wagon ride was a bumpy affair. In the 1820s, the Abbot Downing Company of Concord, New Hampshire developed a system whereby the bodies of stagecoaches were supported on leather straps called "thoroughbraces", which gave a swinging motion instead of the jolting up and down of a spring suspension (the stagecoach itself was sometimes called a "thoroughbrace") - Wikipedia. “At the four corners of the frame [of a Concord coach] were firmly braced S-shaped iron standards. At the upper ends these connected with the iron “shackles” that held the heavy leather straps, or thorough braces, on which the body of the coach rested.” - “Wagons, Mules and Men: How the Frontier Moved West” by Nick Eggenhofer, published by Hastings House Publishers - 1961 - p. 161. “The invention and perfection of the steel spring brought out a rash of vehicles designed for short-distance travel… In the post-Civil War period especially, spring carriages were produced in mounting proportions, with the buggy and the surrey most popular and numerous and the phaeton a close third; in the West, the buckboard rivaled the buggy in popularity.” - “Wagons, Mules and Men: How the Frontier Moved West” by Nick Eggenhofer, published by Hastings House Publishers - 1961 - p. 131 The buckboard “had a slatted bottom, which acted as a kind of spring, besides having a spring seat.” - “Wagons, Mules and Men: How the Frontier Moved West” by Nick Eggenhofer, published by Hastings House Publishers - 1961 - p. 133 In their heyday, it was not uncommon to see dozens of buckboards parked “at the ready” near resort hotels, train depots and ferry piers. The majority of tourists arrived by steamship and needed transportation once on Mount Desert Island. Buckboards pulled by up to four horses were available for hire at most livery stables. These stables quickly realized transporting groups of as many as twelve tourists around beautiful Mount Desert Island was lucrative business. These horse-drawn tours continued longer here than at most resort communities because cars were banned from Mount Desert Island until 1915.” - “Collection Corner: Bar Harbor Buckboard” by Greg Cuffey - “Down The Lane” Skyline Farm Newsletter, June-September 2006, Accessed online 11/01/07; http://www.skylinefarm.org/newsletter.asp W.H. & H.E. Davis were brothers who took over their father’s business in 1880. They made a specialty of “improved” buckboards. In addition to their workshop in Ellsworth, the Davis brothers had premises in Bar Harbor, a fashionable summer resort. [show more]
Route of Steamers of the Eastern Railroad Company
Southwest Harbor Public Library
  • Reference
  • Transportation, Railroad
  • In Copyright - Non-Commercial Use Permitted
Uncle Jimmy's 1924 Essex Coach Automobile
Southwest Harbor Public Library
  • Reference
  • Transportation, Automobile
  • In Copyright - Non-Commercial Use Permitted
Uncle Jimmy's 1924 Essex Coach Automobile
Southwest Harbor Public Library
Description:
"Uncle Jimmy bought a 1924 Essex automobile, in about 1926, for $800 from Lyle Newman at Clark's Point and drove it round the Harbor. Reached Manset and his home on Mansell Lane, drove into the driveway, but when he got into the barn he didn't know how to stop it. My father, Chester Stanley, and Aunt Nan, Uncle Jimmy's wife, heard a crash and there was the Essex with the front end out through the end of the barn. The wheels were still spinning and Uncle Jimmy was standing there scratching his head. Jimmy said, "Ches, if you can get her out, she's yourn." My father drove the car until 1936. He sold it for junk during World War II. It drove like a baby carriage - had good springs and a Fisher body." - Ralph Stanley 01/28/08 [show more]