In August, 1993, Great Cranberry Island summer resident Susan Ward hosted a gathering of interested islanders to discuss the formation of a historical society for the Island. Concerned about preserving the stories of Great Cranberry Island, those present agreed this would be a welcome addition. For its first seven years the historical society had no home and focused on collecting photographs, conducting oral histories, and publishing occasional papers, such as interview transcripts and cemetery inscriptions.
When the Longfellow School closed due to lack of students in 2000, historical society members saw an opportunity in the former classrooms. Following renovations, exhibition spaces opened in August of 2000. With room for exhibits and storage, the historical society began to acquire artifacts and archival materials relating to the history of Great Cranberry, and its relationship to the surrounding islands.
Built in 1904 by Alonzo Bryant and later enlarged to include space for the Great Cranberry Island Library, the Longfellow School (shown at right) was a fitting headquarters for Great Cranberry Island Historical Society.
Aware that the Longfellow School would eventually be reopened as a school, the historical society decided that a more permanent solution was necessary. In 2004 board member Bruce Komusin donated two acres of land to the historical society, and plans were developed for a new museum.
Rather than build from scratch, the historical society identified an existing large two-story building (shown at right in the photo) that was then used for storage, but had an interesting history. Annie Spurling operated it as the Mountain View Inn by during the early 1900s. Guests were served in a restaurant upstairs, where they enjoyed views toward the ocean, while the food was cooked on the ground floor and sent up in a dumbwaiter. The Spurlings also lived in the building during the summer months, when their own island house was rented to summer guests.
After the Mountain View Inn closed, Wesley Bracy, Sr. used the building as a workshop, repairing and painting lobster buoys, and for storage. Realizing it had potential, the historical society began to raise funds to buy the building and move it to their property near the church and Ladies Aid Building.
In November 2004 the Mountain View Inn was moved onto a new foundation and, following extensive renovations, opened as the Cranberry House and Preble-Marr Historical Museum on June 15, 2008. The ground floor of the building is a museum exhibitions and a café, with seating on a new deck. Upstairs was retrofitted for use as an arts center, and for public events, lectures, and movies. An extenstion, completed in 2021, added more exhibit space, needed work space, and climate-controlled archival storage.
Since opening Cranberry House, the Society has made improvements to the museum and developed a campus where visitors can connect with history, and the community. The Cranberry House now includes a cafe and arts center, environmentally-controlled archival storage, and museum exhibition spaces.
The grounds encompass three gardens, two ponds, Sammy Sanford’s historic cabin, and separate buildings that house a gift shop, kids recreation center, and second-hand recyclables shop. The campus has also become the trailhead for two separate shore trails—Whistler Cove and Preble Cove, which provide public access to the western shore of Great Cranberry.
(Image: Great Cranberry Island HS)
(Schematic drawing, previous page: Cheryl Moore)
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