From collection Bar Harbor Village Improvement Association - Permanent Collection

Page 1

Page 2

Page 3

Page 4

Page 5

Page 6

Page 7

Page 8

Page 9

Page 10

Page 11

Page 12

Page 13

Page 14

Page 15

Page 16

Page 17

Page 18

Page 19

Page 20

Page 21

Page 22

Page 23

Page 24

Page 25

Page 26

Page 27

Page 28

Page 29

Page 30

Page 31

Page 32

Page 33

Page 34

Page 35

Page 36

Page 37

Page 38
Search
results in pages
Metadata
Forty-first Annual Report of the Bar Harbor Village Improvement Association, 1931
REPORT
OF THE
FORTY-FIRST YEAR
OF THE
Village Improvement
Association
OF
BAR HARBOR
Ending September 1, 1932
REPORT
OF THE
FORTY-FIRST YEAR
OF THE
Village Improvement
Association
OF
BAR HARBOR
Ending September 1, 1932
OFFICERS FOR 1932 - 1933
PRESIDENT
Major Gist Blair
VICE-PRESIDENTS
Mr. Fred C. Lynam
Rev. William E. Patterson
Mrs. A. Murray Young
SECRETARY
Mr. Frank B. Rowell
TREASURER
Mr. R. E. McKown
Standing Committees
FINANCE COMMITTEE
Major Chester P. Barnett, Chairman
Mr. R. E. McKown
Mr. Thomas Searls
VILLAGE COMMITTEE
Mr. John H. Stalford, Chairman
Mrs. Cadwalader Jones
Mrs. Foster Kennedy
Miss Fanny Norris
Mr. J. Alden Morse
Mrs. William E. Patterson Mrs. A. Murray Young
SANITARY COMMITTEE
Dr. Ludwig Kast, Chairman
Mr. Dave Hennen Morris, Chairman
Miss Bell Gurnee
Mrs. Peter A. Jay
Mr. H. C. Copp
Dr. James F. Mitchell
Dr. Charles C. Morrison, Jr. Mrs. Harold Peabody
Dr. R. W. Wakefield
COMMITTEE ON PATHS
Mr. Benjamin L. Hadley, Chairman
Dr. John Dane
Mr. Everett Liscomb
Mrs. Wm. G. Beale ?
COMMITTEE ON ROADS
Miss Mildred McCormick, Chairman
Mr. William McNair
COMMITTEE ON PARKS
Mr. Charles E. Sampson, Chairman
Mrs. Shepard Fabbri
Miss Bell Gurnee
Dr. Augustus Thorndike
Mr. Albion F. Sherman
4
TREASURER'S REPORT
Bar Harbor Village Improvement
Association
August 31, 1932
ASSETS
Cash
$ 1,170.94
Investment
23,161.76
Trust Investment
409.00
Mary F. Higgins Fund
$24,741.70
LIABILITIES
Bates Bequest
5,000.00
A. C. Gurnee Bequest
5,000.00
A. C. Gurnee Bequest, Int.
582.34
Path Committee Fund
407.44
Gurnee Path Fund
1,000.00
Gurnee Path Fund Int.
34.25
Canyon Brook Path Fund
1,000.00
Canyon Brook Path Fund
Int.
65.25
Mrs. A. Murray Young,
Path Fund
1,000.00
Mrs. A. Murray Young,
Path Fund Int.
75.75
Mrs. C. Morton Smith,
Path Fund
525.00
Mrs. C. Morton Smith,
Path Fund Int.
69.12
Green Mt. Gorge Path
Fund,
1,101.50
Green Mt. Gorge Path
Fund, Int.
100.05
Mary F. Higgins Trust
Fund
409.00
5
Mary F. Higgins Trust
Fund, Int.
95.43
Nolan Pamphlet
300.00
Sanitary Committee Fund
871.39
Profit & Loss
7,105.18
$24,741.70
Statement of Receipts and Disbursements
Bar Harbor Village Improvement Association
August 31, 1931 - August 31, 1932
RECEIPTS
Donations, General Fund
$1,014.50
Donations for Paths
450.00
Donations for Sanitary
Committee
1,865.00
Interest, Investment and
Bank Account
723.58
Interest, Mary F. Higgins
Trust Fund
22.90
Interest, Mrs. C. Morton
Smith Path Fund
22.50
Interest, Mrs. A. Murray Young
Path Fund
50.00
Interest, A. C. Gurnee
Bequest
255.00
Interest, Gurnee Path Fund
55.00
Interest, Canyon Brook
Path Fund
55.00
Interest, Green Mt. Gorge
Path Fund
65.66
$4,579.14
Cash on hand Aug. 31, 1931
1,888.84
$6,467.98
6
DISBURSEMENTS
Purchase of Bonds
$1,945.00
Sanitary Committee
Expense
993.61
Glen Mary Park
440.00
Mary F. Higgins Trust Fund
Expense
6.40
Paths
172.05
Woodbury Park
101.00
Miscellaneous Expense
512.24
A. C. Gurnee Bequest
Expense
170.04
Village Committee
629.70
C. Morton Smith Path
Fund Expense
34.00
Mrs. A. Murray Young Path
Fund Expense
62.25
Gurnee Path Fund Expense
75.75
Canyon Brook Path Fund
Expense
83.75
Green Mt. Gorge Path Fund
Expense
71.25
$5,297.04
Cash on hand August 31, 1932
$1,170.94
Statement of Income and Expense
Bar Harbor Village Improvement Association
August 31, 1931 - August 31, 1932
INCOME
Donations, General Fund
$1,014.50
Donations, Paths
450.00
Donations, Sanitary
Committee
1,865.00
7
Interest, Investments &
Bank Deposits
723.58
Interest, Mrs. C. Morton
Smith Path Fund
22.50
Interest, Mrs. A. Murray Young
Path Fund
50.00
Interest, A. C. Gurnee
Bequest
255.00
Interest, Gurnee Path Fund
55.00
Interest, Canyon Brook
Path Fund
55.00
Interest, Green Mt. Gorge
Path Fund
65.66
$4,556.24
EXPENSE
Sanitary Committee
Expense
$ 993.61
Glen Mary Park
Expense
440.00
Paths
172.05
Village Committee
Expense
629.70
Woodbury Park Expense
101.00
A. C. Gurnee Bequest
Expense
170.04
Mrs. C. Morton Smith
Path Fund Expense
34.00
Mrs. A. Murray Young
Path Fund Expense
62.25
Gurnee Path Fund Expense
75.75
Canyon Brook Path Fund
Expense
83.75
Green Mt. Gorge Path Fund
Expense
71.25
Miscellaneous Expense
512.24
$3,345.64
Income exceeds Expense
$1,210.60
8
Auditor's Report
I hereby certify that I have audited the
accounts of the Bar Harbor Village Improvement
Association for the fiscal year ending August 31,
1932 and find them correct with proper vouchers
for all money expended.
FRED L. HADLEY,
Auditor.
September 1, 1932
Bar Harbor, Maine
9
Report of the Village Committee
During the past year your committee
has carried out the work assigned to them.
The care of the Shore Path with the usual
temporary repairs, this Path requires to be
laid with a hard surface where not already
done. The conditions have improved in
regard to barrels being used for light
housekeeping refuse.
The Village Cemetery has had in addi-
tion to the regular care, loam fertilizer and
seed which has improved the grass.
Your Committee met at Mrs. W. E. Pat-
terson's on August 20th and went over the
year's problems, we complained to our
Road Commissioner regarding Spring
Street sidewalk and this has been attended
to.
Your Chairman met with the Selectmen
and the Chamber of Commerce in May re-
garding the picking up of all debris, in-
cluding old automobiles on the sides of all
the main highways. When this work was
completed our highways presented the
neatest appearance they have for years.
Last year I took the matter up regarding
prizes for the best and neatest kept
grounds of our resident cottages. Mrs. A.
Murray Young offered a prize of $25.00
for one class of house and Miss Bell Gurnee
offered $25.00 for another class, Mrs. A.
10
Murray Young and Miss Bell Gurnee to
be the judges. As the Garden Club had
offered such prizes, these were not put
into effect. Mrs. Patterson, who has charge
of the neatness of the residents reported
at our last meeting a much neater and
more sanitary condition.
I employed a man this year at a reduc-
tion of three dollars per week. He has
proven himself a good man for the po-
sition.
In closing I wish to thank my Commit-
tee for the interest they have taken and
to Mrs. Cadwalader Jones for the assist-
ance she gave me last autumn in explaining
the running of the Village Committee.
Respectfully submitted,
JOHN H. STALFORD,
Chairman.
11
Report of Path Committee
Since the annual meeting of the V. I. A.
a year ago, the organization has suffered
distinct loss through the resignation of Mr.
Harold Peabody from the chairmanship of
the Path Committee and through the death
of Mr. Andrew Liscomb as path superin-
tendent. Each served this Association
faithfully and well, and the good effect of
this service will long endure.
During the autumn of 1931 the usual
trail maintenance work was carried on.
Apart from the usual fall work, the Na-
tional Park made possible the realignment
of the North Ridge Trail on Cadillac Moun-
tain at the higher levels to avoid crossing
the road. A new trail was carried around
the summit of White Cap, opening up new
and interesting vistas. Work was also be-
gun on improving the trail at the head of
Eagle Lake, starting at Bubble Pond
stream and working toward the Carry
Trail. All trail work was suspended at
the end of October.
Early in April of this year, Mr. Peabody,
on account of ill health and his expected
absence from Bar Harbor during the sum-
mer, arranged to have Mr. B. L. Hadley,
of the Acadia National Park, take over the
temporary superintendence of the trail
12
work. Active work was started on April
25, one man being employed. From then
until mid-June the usual amount of trail
clearing was done. From mid-July until
the end of August one man was kept at
work mowing and bushing along the trail
sides.
If any one feature of Mount Desert Is-
land may be said to stand out above all
others, it is the trail system. Some pro-
gram should be undertaken which will re-
sult in greater use of it. Non-use of the
trails weakens the justification for their
up-keep.
Respectfully submitted,
B.L. HADLEY.
13
Report of Committee on Parks
It is pleasant to be able to report a great
improvement in the condition of the trees
and general appearance in both Woodbury
and Glen Mary Parks.
During the winter the dead wood was
cleared in both parks. There has been
gratifying new growth.
The white pines in Woodbury Park
which formed SO important a border to the
side of the Park on Cleftstone Road were
much benefited by the work of clearing
birches and other growth which interfered,
and they are doing well. There are no
signs of blister on any of the trees in these
Parks.
Last year the Town of Bar Harbor ap-
propriated one thousand dollars for the
improvement of Woodbury Park. This
was used for clearing, and planting
grass on an acre of rough ground to make
a suitable playground for children, and we
hoped to continue and plant another acre
this year, but the Town declined to make
this appropriation again because the Park
is not public land, but owned by the Vil-
lage Improvement Association. This acre
had already been plowed, and as there
were many unemployed gardeners, it was
divided into nine lots which were offered
14
to needy men to raise vegetables for their
own use. Only eight of the nine lots were
taken, and the land was not found satis-
factory by them. Better land has been
procured elsewhere for their use, SO an-
other season the committee hopes to have
this acre put into grass.
Mr. Stalford has given both Parks much
personal attention and excellent care.
The How Memorial Park has also been
well cared for.
Yours respectfully,
CHARLES E. SAMPSON,
Chairman.
15
Report of the Sanitary Committee
Health conditions were favorable during
the past year. The death rate for 1931
corrected for residents and non-residents
was 14.0 per 1000 population compared
with a rate 14.9 in 1930.
Communicable Disease Control
During the year ending August 31st,
1932, there were 76 cases of communicable
diseases reported compared with 242 cases
for the corresponding period last year. No
diseases became epidemic although small
outbreaks of chickenpox occurred in the
Forest Street and Hulls Cove School dis-
tricts. Twenty cases of whooping-cough,
mostly in the kindergarten and sub-prim-
ary classes, occurred during the late win-
ter. From a public health standpoint, the
important feature of this outbreak was that
none of the cases resulted in fatalities.
The number of school children pro-
tected against smallpox continues to in-
crease. At present 63 per cent of the school
population are successfully vaccinated.
Probably the outstanding piece of pub-
lic health work during the year was the
diphtheria immunization program con-
ducted during May, 1932, when 43 per
cent of the school population were given
16
the protective treatments against diph-
theria.
Tuberculosis Control
Four deaths from tuberculosis occurred
in Bar Harbor during 1931, a mortality per
100,000 of 89 compared with a rate of
less than 50 for the State.
Milk Control
The milk situation continues to improve.
The cooperation of the milk dealers with
the Health Officer and the establishment
of the Mount Desert Island Dairies, Inc.,
a central plant for processing and dis-
tributing milk, assure a better and more
centralized control over the quality of the
milk.
Water Supply
The question of the Bar Harbor water
supply has been the subject of conferences
between the Bar Harbor Water Company
and the Department of Health of the State
of Maine, the local Health Department and
your Sanitary Committee. Several ex-
perts studied this question and came to the
conclusion that the safest protection of our
water supply lies in installing a plant
through which the drinking water can be
purified at times when such protection is
needed. We are informed by the Presi-
dent of the Bar Harbor Water Company
17
that the installation of such a plant has
been decided upon and will be completed
in the near future. The Bar Harbor Water
Company deserves the appreciation of the
Town for this added sanitary protection of
our water supply.
Appraisal of Health Activities
Last summer the public health activities
of the Town were thoroughly studied and
appraised by the American Public Health
Association. This year the same activ-
ities were reappraised by the same method
in order to ascertain in what respects
changes have occurred.
A true picture of existing conditions can-
not be gained by taking rates for only one
year as in small communities the rates may
fluctuate greatly from year to year.
However if the following table is studied
it will be noted that the rate for Bar Har-
bor has not dropped as much as the rate
for the State.
Period
Bar Harbor
State
1906-10
104.5
not available
1911-15
81.5
130
1916-20
40.5
116
1921-25
71.5
75
1926-30
74.0
64
The children who may be borderline
cases of tuberculosis and who were discov-
ered as a result of the clinics conducted
18
early in 1931 by the Maine Public Health
Association have been carefully followed
up. Clinics will be conducted again this
fall and the Rest and Nutrition Classes will
be continued.
Infant Hygiene
A study of infant mortality in Bar Har-
bor since 1906 shows a decrease from 85
deaths per 1000 live births during the
period 1906-10 to 50.7 during the period
of 1926-30.
This decided decrease in the death rate
of infants under one year of age is almost
entirely due to a decrease in the death rate
among infants between one month and one
year of age. So far as the death rate of
infants under one month is concerned
(neonatal deaths), we are just about where
we were twenty-five years ago. The same
is true of still-birth rates.
These deaths in the first month of life
and the still-births, in most instances, are
due to prenatal influences. Prenatal in-
fluences stand as the chief cause of infant
mortality. In common with the rest of
the country, much remains to be done in
Bar Harbor in bringing to the attention
of expectant mothers the value of adequate
prenatal care.
In reporting on the public health prob-
lems in Bar Harbor it is a source of satis-
faction and encouragement to state that
19
there is in the Town a splendid spirit of CO-
operation between the municipal, public
and private agencies concerned in the
health of our population, the Red Cross,
the School Department, the medical pro-
fession and the Mt. Desert Hospital are all
contributing to the progressive health pro-
gram which makes Bar Harbor every year
a safer and healthier place to live in.
L. KAST, Chairman.
20
CHARTER
LAWS OF 1891. CHAPTER 186
An Act to Incorporate the Bar Harbor
Village Improvement Association
Be it enacted by the Senate and House
of Representatives in Legislature
Assembled as follows:
SECTION 1. Parke Godwin, Fred C.
Lynam, William H. Sherman, Morris K.
Jesup, Robert Amory, Charles T. How,
De Grasse Fox, Luere B. Deasy, Edward
Coles, Serenus H. Rodick, Henry Sayles,
William B. Rice, David A. Bunker, Elihu
T. Hamor, Addie B. Higgins, Mary G. Dorr,
Augustus Gurnee, A. W. Morrell, Ephi-
genia Z. Place, Francis E. Wood, George
W. Vanderbilt, Gertrude S. Rice, Louisa
S. Minot, F. G. Peabody, Abby A. Potter,
Francis M. Conners, John E. Clark, George
M. Wheeler, Eugene B. Richards and their
associates and successors are hereby in-
corporated under the name of the Bar
Harbor Village Improvement Association,
for the purpose of instituting and main-
taining public improvements in the village
of Bar Harbor and other parts of Mount
Desert Island.
SECTION 2. For the purpose of its in-
corporation this Association may receive
and hold real and personal property not
21
exceeding fifty thousand dollars in a-
mount; make contracts to be binding upon
itself but not upon its individual members;
and make by-laws not inconsistent with
the law for the regulations of its mem-
bership and its government.
SECTION 3. The first meeting of this
corporation may be called by any of the
above associates, by a notice published
two weeks successively before the time
of said meeting in any newspaper publish-
ed in Bar Harbor.
SECTION 4. This act shall take effect
when approved.
22
By-Laws
PREAMBLE
Whereas, it is evident to all who are in-
terested in the village of Bar Harbor
that some method of united action is need-
ed in order to preserve the natural beauties
of the place by the ornamentation of the
streets and public grounds of the village,
by planting and cultivating trees and do-
ing such other acts as shall tend to beauti-
fy, adorn and increase the attractions of
the village; therefore we have formed
ourselves into an Association and agree
to be governed by the following by-laws:
No. 1.--NAME
This Society shall be known as the Bar
Harbor Village Improvement Association.
No. 2-MEMBERSHIP
SECTION 1. The members of this As-
sociation shall consist of two classes: An-
nual and Life.
SECTION 2. Any person over fourteen
years of age, by the payment of one dollar
annually, and any child under fourteen
years of age who shall pay the sum of
fifty cents annually, shall be a member of
this Association for the current fiscal year,
which shall end on the first Thursday of
September.
23
SECTION 3. The payment of Two hun-
dred and fifty dollars in one sum shall
constitute a person a life member of this
Association.
SECTION 4. Irrespective of payment
of dues, the following persons shall be
members of the Association: The Select-
men, the Town Clerk, The Treasurer, The
Road Commissioner, the Superintendent of
Schools, the Board of Health, the Sewer
Commissioner, and the Inspector of Build-
ings of the Town of Bar Harbor; the
pastors and rectors of all Christian Church-
es in the village of Bar Harbor, and all
physicians licensed to practice in said
village.
No. MEETINGS
The meetings of the Association shall be
held in each year as follows:-on the third
Tuesday of June, the second Thursday of
July and of August, and on the first Thurs-
day of September, of which the meeting
in September shall be the annual meeting
of the Association.
Said meetings shall be held at some con-
venient place in the village of Bar Harbor,
of which due notice shall be given by the
Secretary.
Other meetings of the Association may
be called by the president and shall be
24
called on written request of five members
of the Association.
No. 4 -OFFICERS OF THE
ASSOCIATION
At the annual meeting, the Association
shall elect by ballot the following officers:
President
Three Vice-Presidents
Treasurer
Secretary
who shall hold office for one year and
until their successors are duly elected.
At the same time and place, the Asso-
ciation shall elect, or empower the newly
elected President to appoint, the chair-
man and members of the following Stand-
ing Committees to serve for one year:
Finance, Village, Sanitary, Roads, Paths,
Parks and Publicity.
Special Committees may be appointed
by a vote of the Association at any time.
No. 5-DUTIES OF OFFICERS
SECTION 1. The President shall pre-
side at all meetings of the Association and
in his absence one of the Vice-Presidents
shall perform the duties of his office.
SECTION 2. The Treasurer shall have
charge of all money and other property
of the Association, and shall report at each
of its regular meetings. The report pre-
25
sented by him at the annual meeting shall
be in writing accompanied by an account
and vouchers for audit. He shall be the
sole disbursing officer of the Association
and shall pay out the moneys of the Asso-
ciation only upon written approval either
of the chairman of the committee from
whose appropriation the disbursement is
made, or of the President, or a member of
the Finance Committee. Except for usual
office expenses, he shall pay out no money
until the same shall have been appropriat-
ed by the Association.
SECTION 3. The Secretary shall keep
a correct and careful record of all the pro-
ceedings of the Association, in a suitable
book, shall have charge of the books,
records, and seal of the Association, shall
give notice of all meetings, shall send
copies of the minutes of each meeting to
the Chairman of each Committee, and shall
take charge of the issuing of the catalogue,
with any other details pertaining to this
office.
No. 6-DUTIES OF COMMITTEES
FINANCE COMMITTEE. It shall be
the duty of the Finance Committee to
devise ways and means to procure funds
for the use of the Association, by extend-
ing the membership, procuring subscrip-
tions and donations or by any other means.
26
If at any time there shall be found in the
hands of the Treasurer a surplus of money
beyond estimated disbursements, such
surplus may be invested in marketable
and interest paying securities.
VILLAGE COMMITTEE. It shall be
the duty of this committee to add to the
general attractiveness of the town by sug-
gesting, advocating, and, in co-operation
with the town authorities, assisting in such
improvements as are deemed expedient.
SANITARY COMMITTEE. It shall be
the duty of this Committee to keep itself
informed as to the condition and care of
the water of Eagle Lake, both in winter
and summer, to examine the stables, the
disposal of garbage, sewers, drains, tene-
ment houses and localities generally like-
ly to become sources of injury or conta-
gion, and to report to the Association.
COMMITTEE ON PATHS. It shall be
the duty of this Committee to report as to
the condition of the roads and to lay out,
keep in repair and mark with signs, cairns
and pointers paths and trails over the
mountains, and through the woods on the
eastern part of the island.
COMMITTEE ON ROADS. It shall be
the duty of this Committee to report as
to the condition of the roads and to im-
27
prove the appearance of roadsides by such
means as lie within its power.
COMMITTEE ON PARKS. It shall be
the duty of this Committee to provide for
the care and up-keep of Glen Mary and
of Woodbury Park and further to observe
the conditions in the deed of trust of park
lands. It shall also be the duty of this
committee to give such attention as may
be necessary to the island called Bald
Rock, as having been conveyed by deed
of gift to the Village Improvement
Association.
COMMITTEE ON PUBLICITY. It shall
be the duty of this Committee to provide
lectures, send out leaflets, publish news
articles, and otherwise stimulate interest
in the endeavor to create a sentiment in
favor of rendering the town more attrac-
tive, co-operating toward this end with
duly recognized Town authorities and or-
ganizations as fully as possible.
Each Standing Committee shall make a
report in writing at each regular meeting
of the Association.
No. 7-FISCAL YEAR
The fiscal year of the corporation shall
begin on the first day of September and
shall extend through the thirty-first day
of the following August.
28
No. 8-SEAL
The corporation shall have a seal bear-
ing its name and date "1891."
No. 9-DEEDS AND CONTRACTS
Deeds and contracts shall be executed
by the President, Treasurer, and one of
the Vice-Presidents. No members shall
be personally liable to any contract of
debt of the Corporation.
No. 10-QUORUM
Eleven members of the Corporation or a
majority of the members of any committee
shall constitute a quorum; and a quorum
being present, a majority thereof shall
control.
No. 11-AMENDMENTS
These By-Laws as a whole, or any part
thereof, may be repealed or amended by
a vote of two-thirds of the members pre-
sent at any regular or official meeting of
the Association; but a notice of any pro-
posed change shall be given in the call of
the meeting.
No. 12-ORDER OF BUSINESS
Reading of the minutes of the preceding
meeting and action thereupon.
Report of the Secretary.
Report of the Treasurer.
Report of Standing Committees.
Report of Special Committees.
New Business.
29
Members Ex-Officio
Board of Selectmen for 1932.
Officers of the Town
The Treasurer.
The Town Clerk.
The Superintendent of Roads.
The Health Officer.
The Inspector of Buildings
Rev. Walter H. Cass
Rev. Edward F. Fitzpatrick
Rev. J. Homer Nelson
Rev. William E. Patterson
Dr. G. R. Hagerthy
Dr. R. G. Higgins
Dr. C. C. Morrison
Dr. C. C. Morrison, Jr.
Dr. James F. Mitchell
Dr. R. W. Wakefield
30
Life Members
Anson, Mrs. Alfred
Archbold, Mrs. Anne
Auchincloss, Mr. John W.
Babcock, Mr. and Mrs. Henry D.
Barney, Mrs.
Barret, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil
Beale, Mrs. William G.
Topadin ?
Biddle, Miss Christine W.
Blair, Major and Mrs. Gist
Bowdoin, Miss Edith G.
Bowen, Mrs. Joseph T.
Bowler, Mrs. Robert B.
Bradley, Mrs. J. D. C.
Brooks, Mrs. H. Mortimer
Burnham, Miss Nina
Burrill, Mr. and Mrs. M. S.
Carnegie, Mrs. Andrew
Carpenter, Miss Agnes Miles
Carpenter, Mr. Charles L.
Cassatt, Mrs. A. J.
Clark, Mrs. Anna M.
Clark, Miss Zelina Keyser
Chew, Mrs. Benjamin
Coats, Mrs. Alfred M.
Cochran, Miss Mary N.
Coles, Miss Mary R.
Coxe, Mrs. Alexander B.
Crafts, Mr. E. C.
Crocker, Mrs. Uriel H.
Cuyler, Miss Eleanor deGraff ?
Cuyler, Mrs. T. DeWitt
Dane, Dr. and Mrs. John
Davis, Mrs. A. H.
Denby, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin H.
Derby, Mrs. Hasket
Dimock, Mrs. Henry F.
Dorr, Mr. George B.
31
Draper, Mr. and Mrs. William P.
DuPont, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred I.
Fabbri, Mrs. Shepard
Fenno, Mr. and Mrs. J. Brooks
Farrand, Mrs. Max
Gould, Mr. and Mrs. E. S.
Griswold, Mrs. F. Gray
Hale, Mr. Chandler
Hale, Mr. Richard W.
Harrison, Mr. M. F. B.
Hatfield, Mr. Henry R.
Hawkes, Mrs. Morris
Hoffman, Miss Mary U.
Howard, Mr. Edgar B.
Hunt, Mrs. Platt
Johnson, Mrs. F. H.
Jones, Mrs. Cadwalader
Kahn, Mr. and Mrs. Otto H.
Kingsland, Mrs. William M.
Kierman, Miss Isabel
Kutz, Miss Lucy A.
Ladd, Mrs. Walter G.
LaMontagne, Mrs. Edward
LaMontagne, Mrs. Maurice
Langhorne, Mr. Marshall
Lawrence, Rt. Rev. William
Linzee, Miss Elizabeth
Livingston, Mrs. John C.
Livingston, Mr. and Mrs. Philip
Luquer, Mrs. Lea McIlvane
MacLeod, Mrs. Norman
Markoe, Mrs. John
McCagg, Mrs. Louis B.
McMichael, Mrs. Charles B.
McCormick, Miss Mildred
McCormick, Mrs. Robert H.
McNair, Mr. William
Miller, Miss Edith Macculloch
Miller, Mrs. Henry Irving
Minot, Miss
32
Montgomery, Mrs. Thomas L.
Moore, Mr. Barrington
Moore, Mr. William S.
Morgan, Miss C. L.
Morgenthau, Hon. and Mrs. Henry
Morris, Mr. and Mrs. Dave Hennen
Norris, Miss Fanny
Ogilvie, Mrs. Clinton
Opdycke, Mrs. L. E.
Palmer, Mr. Courtlandt
Peabody, Mr. F. H.
Peabody, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Pearson, Mrs. Frederick
Pike, Mrs. Charles B.
Place, Mrs. George
Polk, Mrs. William ?
Pratt, Mr. John T.
Procter, Mr. and Mrs. William
Rogers, Mr. and Mrs. John S.
Rosen, Mr. Walter T.
Rowell, Mr. and Mrs. Frank B.
Ryle, Mr. Arthur
Sampson, Miss Gertrude
Sampson, Mr. Charles E.
Scott, Mr. and Mrs. Charles R.
Scott, Mrs. Edgar
Satterlee, Col. and Mrs. Herbert L.
Schelling, Mrs. Ernest
Schieffelin, Mr. and Mrs. William Jay
Schiff, Mrs. Jacob ?
Sears, Mrs. J. Montgomery
Slattery, Mrs. Charles L.
Smith, Mrs. C. Morton
Smith, Mrs. Edward A.
Smith, Miss Josephine C.
Speyer, Mr. James
Stotesbury, Mr. and Mrs. Edward T.
Sweeney, Mr. Thomas B.
Thompson, Mrs. George L.
Thorndike, Dr. and Mrs. Augustus
33
Townsend, Mrs. R. H.
Trevor, Miss Emily
Tuckerman, Mrs. Leverett S.
Vanderbilt, Mr. Frederick
Vanderbilt, Mrs. George W.
Weekes, Mr. Frederic Delano
Winthrop, Miss Marie
Wright, Mrs. C. K.
Young, Mrs. A. Murray
34
Annual Members and Other Contributors
General Fund
Miss Susan C. Amory
$ 10.00
Mrs. Walter Ayer
10.00
Bar Harbor Water Company
10.00
Mr. and Mrs. J. Hampton Barnes
10.00
Mrs. Samuel Bell
5.00
Miss Christine Biddle
10.00
Major and Mrs. Gist Blair
15.00
Dwight Blaney
5.00
Mrs. Gerald M. Borden
25.00
Miss. Edith Bowdoin
10.00
Mrs. John A. Brown, Jr.
10.00
Mrs. Edward Browning
10.00
Mrs. Henry D. Burnham
5.00
Miss Miles Carpenter
25.00
Mrs. D. B. Catherwood
10.00
Miss. Zelina Clark
10.00
Clark Coal Company
5.00
Miss Frances Coleman
10.00
Miss Mary Roberts Coles
10.00
Mr. and Mrs. M. P. Collins
10.00
Viscountess d'Alte
10.00
Madame deHenry
10.00
Mr. Edwin H. Denby
25.00
Mrs. H. Derby
5.00
Mrs. John T. Dorrance
100.00
Mrs. Arthur Espy
10.00
Mr. and Mrs. Max Farrand
15.00
Mrs. Dorothy Fremont-Smith
2.00
Dr. J. Austin Furfey
5.00
Green and Copp
10.00
Mrs. J. M. Hartshorne
10.00
Mr. Henry R. Hatfield
25.00
Dr. James D. Heard
5.00
A. B. and J. R. Hodgkins
5.00
Mr. and Mrs. Peter A. Jay
25.00
Mrs. Mabel V. R. Johnson
5.00
35
Martin Van Buren
Dr. Ludwig Kast
10.00
Miss Alice VanRa
Miss Lucy A. Kutz
5.00
Mrs. C. Minot W
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Graeme Ladd
50.00
Mrs. Oliver J. We
William Lawrence
10.00
Chester A. Wesc
Douglas Leffingwell
2.50
Mrs. A. J. Wurts
Miss Mary Leffingwell
5.00
Mrs. A. Murray
Mrs. Maria H. Lewis
15.00
Miss Elizabeth Linzee
5.00
Miss Ludwig
5.00
Mr. F. C. Lynam
10.00
Mrs. John Markoe
10.00
Mrs. Edward Porter May
15.00
Mrs. J. F. Mitchell
3.00
Mr. and Mrs. Charles T. McCawley
10.00
Miss Mildred McCormick
15.00
Mrs. R. H. McCormick
10.00
McKay Cottages
5.00
Mrs. Addison Moore
2.00
Hon. and Mrs. Henry Morgenthau
25.00
Rev. and Mrs. J. Homer Nelson
2.00
Mrs. L. E. Opdycke
5.00
Miss Lynda H. Pancoast
5.00
Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Patterson
10.00
Mrs. Harold Peabody
10.00
Mr. Charles B. Pineo
10.00
Mrs. Howard Roberts
10.00
Mrs. George S. Robbins
5.00
Mr. and Mrs. John S. Rogers
10.00
Mr. and Mrs. Frank B. Rowell
25.00
Mr. Charles E. Sampson
25.00
Miss Gertrude Sampson
25.00
Mrs. Herbert Satterlee
50.00
Mrs. G. S. Selfridge
5.00
Shea Brothers
10.00
Mrs. Henry Slack
3.00
Mrs. Charles Slattery
5.00
Mrs. C. Morton Smith
25.00
Mrs. Robert H. Stevenson
25.00
F. J. Stimson
10.00
Mr. Henry M. Tilford
10.00
36
Path Fund
(Donations Jan.1, 1932 to Jan. 1, 1933)
Mrs. Anne Archbold
$ 25.00
Miss Zelina T. Clark
10.00
Miss Mary Coles
10.00
Dr. and Mrs. John Dane
10.00
Mrs. Walter Damrosch
5.00
Mrs. Brooks Fenno
15.00
Mrs. Peter A. Jay
25.00
Mrs. John Markoe
10.00
Mr. Harold Peabody
20.00
Mrs. Frank B. Rowell
15.00
Mr. and Mrs. George S. Robbins
10.00
Mrs. John S. Rogers
25.00
Mrs. Herbert L. Satterlee
50.00
Mrs. Ernest Schelling
10.00
Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Scott
100.00
Miss Dorothy Sturgis
25.00
Dr. and Mrs. Augustus Thorndike
10.00
Mrs. H. H. Thorndike
5.00
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Train
5.00
Woodbury Park
Mrs. Edith S. Fabbri
$ 25.00
38
Bar_Harbor_Historical Society
L129
from 2nd C. hynam & Cp
Viewer Controls
Toggle Page Navigator
P
Toggle Hotspots
H
Toggle Readerview
V
Toggle Search Bar
S
Toggle Viewer Info
I
Toggle Metadata
M
Zoom-In
+
Zoom-Out
-
Re-Center Document
Previous Page
←
Next Page
→
Forty-first Annual Report of the Bar Harbor Village Improvement Association, 1931
Annual report of the Bar Harbor Village Improvement Association. For the year ending September 1st, 1932. The report includes individual committee reports, a list of members, and the association's charter and by-laws. 38 pages.