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Thirty-ninth Annual Report of the Bar Harbor Village Improvement Association, 1930
REPORT
OF THE
Thirty-Ninth Year
OF THE
Village Improvement
Association
OF
BAR HARB
ENDING SEPTEMBER FIRST
1930
REPORT
OF THE
Thirty-Ninth Year
OF THE
Village Improvement
Association
OF
BAR HARBOR
046
ENDING SEPTEMBER FIRST
1930
OFFICERS FOR 1930-1931
PRESIDENT
Major Gist Blair
VICE-PRESIDENTS
Rev. Wm. E. Patterson
Mr. Fred C. Lynam
Mrs. A. Murray Young
SECRETARY
Mr. Frank B. Rowell
ASSISTANT SECRETARY
Mrs. Theresa Rowan
TREASURER
Major C. .P. Barnett
Standing Committees
FINANCE COMMITTEE
Major Chester P. Barnett, Chairman
Mr. R. E. McKown
Mr. Harold Peabody
Mr. Joseph Pulitzer
Mr. Thomas Searls
VILLAGE COMMITTEE
Mrs. Cadwalader Jones, Chairman
Mrs. Chester P. Barnett Miss Edith Macculloch Miller
Mrs. Foster Kennedy
Mr. J. Alden Morse
Mrs. William E. Patterson
Miss Fanny Norris
Mr. Charles B. Pineo
Mr. John H. Stalford
Mrs. A. Murray Young
4
COMMITTEES
SANITARY COMMITTEE
Dr. Ludwig Kast, Chairman
Mr. Dave H. Morris, Alternate Chairman
Mrs. Peter A. Jay
Miss Bell Gurnee
Dr. James F. Mitchell
Dr. Charles C. Morrison, Jr.
Dr. R. W. Wakefield
COMMITTEE ON PATHS
Mr. Harold Peabody, Chairman
Mrs. William G. Beale
Miss Dorothy Sturges
Dr. John Dane
COMMITTEE ON ROADS
Rev. Alsop Leffingwell, Chairman
Mr. Walter Damrosch
Mr. Fred C. Lynam
Mr. William S. Moore
COMMITTEE ON PARKS
Mr. Charles E. Sampson, Chairman
Mrs. Shepard Fabbri
Mr. Albion F. Sherman
Miss Bell Gurnee
Dr. Augustus Thorndike
COMMITTEE ON PUBLICITY
Mr. Albion F. Sherman
Report of the President of the Village Im-
provement Association for the Year
Ending September 1, 1930
With this Report of the Bar Harbor Village
Improvement Association, we wish to greet
our many members and friends and to recall
again the helpful ways in which the Associa-
tion benefits the Town. Its aims are, and
have been, to improve the Town and be an
Improvement Association in every sense of the
word. More and more each year the village
has been benefited by the assistance and co-
operation of the Association.
Bar Harbor is fortunate in having most of
the elements out of which a beauty spot can be
made an invigorating climate which draws
many people to its shores; prosperity which has
its main source in this blessing of nature and
in the industry of the people; able guidance of
churches and schools; an active board of trade;
a progressive medical profession and a first-
class hospital; an American Red Cross Chapter,
active Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A., American
Legion and clubs for men and women which
are the center of social gatherings in the in-
6
PRESIDENT'S REPORT
terest of literature, art and recreation. Bar
Harbor has able, public spirited men and
women conducting its affairs, and with them
the V. I. A. and many summer residents are
united in the desire to make this community a
place where life is not only pleasing but useful
and healthy.
The summer residents who come to this
resort to enjoy its climate, beauty and peace
are more than ready to contribute their share
to the public welfare. Their interest in, and
contributions to, the V. I. A. are herewith set
forth, and will increase as long as they have
the effective co-operation of all permanent
residents in placing the community on a well
organized and efficient basis. This co-opera-
tion may be strengthened by the presence of
more permanent residents of the Town at the
regular monthly meetings of the Association
which are held at stated times each month
during the summer. We hope for the presence
of a larger number of residents at the meetings
during the summer of 1931.
1.-FINANCE COMMITTEE
Attention is specially called to the report of
the Finance Committee, in whose charge are
PRESIDENT'S REPORT
7
funds and investments aggregating about
$20,000.00. The income received being speci-
fically appropriated for the support of various
paths and other purposes. These funds are
invested only in the class of securities which are
approved by the laws pertaining to trust funds
in the States of Massachusetts and New York,
and any member of our Association who wishes
to contribute towards any specific object for
the benefit of Bar Harbor can do SO with every
assurance that the money SO received by us will
be carefully guarded and all of the income will
be used for the purposes specified. Our
funds are audited each year and our books
and accounts are always open to inspection to
members. Lists of the bonds and securities in
which our trust funds are invested are set
forth in our Trustees' reports.
2.-SANITARY COMMITTEE
The Sanitary Committee has been more than
active and the report shows these activities.
The health department of the Town was es-
tablished largely through the efforts of this
Committee.
8
PRESIDENT'S REPORT
3.-PATH COMMITTEE
The report of the Path Committee explains
in detail the care given to the innumerable
and interesting walks to be found through
the country surrounding Bar Harbor, which
greatly add to this interesting feature of Bar
Harbor life. This Committee superintends
these paths, provides signs and sees that plants
and trees are cared for.
4.-PARK COMMITTEE
In the report on Parks the Committee de-
scribes in detail their work which has been
carefully cared for by the Chairman. He has
not only cared for the parks, with the assist-
ance of the Committee, but where means were
not sufficient he has without hesitation con-
tributed towards the work.
5.-GOOD ROADS COMMITTEE
The report of the Good Roads Committee
but scantily describes its usefulness. The
roads which form such an attractive feature to
Bar Harbor life in many instances run through
places where the scenery has been obstructed
by the growth of unattractive bushes and trees.
In former days the views from these roads
PRESIDENT'S REPORT
9
were exceptionally fine. Many of these views
can no longer be seen at all. This Committee,
with the assistance of the owners of the ad-
joining land, are seeking to bring back many
of these views SO that those who motor travel
on the roadways of Mount Desert Island may
enjoy these beautiful scenes.
6.-The Right Reverend William Lawrence,
Bishop of Massachusetts, has been for many
years an efficient and helpful member of this
Association. He has held many offices and
never failed to contribute towards our work.
He was the principal in obtaining from Mr.
Charles Eliot the beautiful plan for the devel-
opment and beautification of Mount Desert
Island. At the last Annual Meeting he was
retired from the Vice-Presidency of this Asso-
ciation, at his special wish.
Public recognition of his great service, not
only to this Association but the Town of Bar
Harbor, should receive an appropriate recog-
nition at an early date, and it seems to me our
Association should recognize Bishop Lawrence
in some appropriate way at our first meeting
in 1931.
GIST BLAIR,
President.
RESOLUTION: The Village Improvement As-
sociation records with regret the death in
July of Mrs. Emma B. Kennedy, its oldest
members. Mrs. Kennedy has been identified
with the Association since its beginning; and
until two years ago was a regular and eager at-
tendant at its meetings. She has been a gener-
ous contributor to the Association itself and
to the betterment of Bar Harbor. In her going
the community has lost a public-spirited citizen
whose positive and personal interest will long
be attested by her gifts for the well-being of
the people.
RESOLUTION: Everybody who has come into
touch with Mrs. Ketterlinus has had an appre-
ciation of her staunchness, her real gift of a
happy spirit, and of her quick, unstinted re-
sponsiveness to calls upon her sympathy. Not
only her personal friends, but Bar Harbor as
a community have lost one with whom there
have been friendly, happy, and helpful asso-
ciations for a long period of years, and the
loss is felt by all of us.
This is an inadequate word, but it is meant
to let you know our sense of a realization of
this loss and to give you our warm sympathy.
RESOLUTION: The Village Improvement As-
sociation has learned with deep regret of the
death of Mr. Leonard A. Austin, who for many
years has been a member of its Finance Com-
mittee.
In its long period of acquaintance with Mr.
Austin, the Association has always found in
him calm and impartial judgment, a kindly
and sympathetic spirit, and indeed friendliness
and trustworthiness in large measure.
The Association feels that his death is not
only a loss to itself, but to all Bar Harbor.
RESOLUTION: The Village Improvement As-
sociation records with deep regret the death in
March, 1930, of Mr. Lea McI. Luquer, a
member of its Finance Committee. During
his long connection with the Association, Mr.
Luquer has served on many committees and
has been earnestly interested in the purposes
and accomplishments of the Association.
Always alert to the various problems arising
from the development of the village and of the
National Park, he has won our gratitude by his
never-failing thought and effort in behalf of
the community.
Treasurer's Report
Bar Harbor Village Improvement Association
August 31, 1929 to August 31, 193,0
ASSETS
Cash
$3,199.34
Investments
20,265.70
Trust Investment, Mary F. Hig-
gins
400.00
$23,865.04
LIABILITIES
Bates Bequest
$5,000.00
A. C. Gurnee Bequest
5,000.00
A. C. Gurnee Bequest, Interest
412.93
Path Committee
685.79
Gurnee Path Fund
1,000.00
Mrs. A. Murray Young Path
Fund
1,000.00
Mrs. A. Murray Young Path
Fund, Interest
38.00
Mrs. C. Morton Smith Path Fund
500.00
Mrs. C. Morton Smith Path Fund
Interest
60.00
Canyon Brook Path Fund
1,000.00
Canyon Brook Path Fund Inter-
est
39.00
Green Mt. Gorge Path Fund
1,100.00
Green Mt. Gorge Path Fund
Interest
43.75
TREASURER'S REPORT
13
Mary F. Higgins Trust Fund
400.00
Mary F. Higgins Trust Fund
Interest
103.29
Nolan Pamphlet
125.00
Profit and Loss
7,357.28
$23,865.04
RECEIPTS
Donation, General Fund
$2,291.50
Donations for Paths
785.00
Interest, Investment and Bank
Account
550.21
Interest, Mary Higgins Trust
Fund
17.01
Interest, Mrs. C. Morton Smith
Path Fund
27.50
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
61.75
Received for Sale of Bonds
1,000.00
Donation for Canyon Brook Path
Fund
1,000.00
Cash on hand August 31, 1929
2,653.42
$8,801.39
14
TREASURER'S REPORT
EXPENDITURES
Glen Mary Park
559.60
Mary Higgins Trust Fund Ex-
pense
14.50
Paths
557.45
Woodbury Park
172.00
Miscellaneous Expense
778.05
Mrs. A. Murray Young Path
35.00
A.C. Gurnee Bequest Expense
165.00
Gurnee Path
64.00
Canyon Brook Path
16.00
Village Committee
814.72
Green Mt. Gorge Path
18.00
Paid for Bonds (Investment)
2,407.73
$5,602.05
Cash on hand August 31, 1930
$3,199.34
TREASURER'S REPORT
15
Investments of the
Bar Harbor Village Improvement Association
August 31, 1930
Par. Val.
Rate
Interest
Due
Fourth Liberty Loan
$1,000.00
4 1-4%
$42.50
10/15/38
Illinois Power & Light
1,000.00
51-2%
55.00
12/1 /54
Manitoba Power & Light
1,000.00
51-2%
55.00
1 /1 /51
Northern States Power Co.
500.00
5 1-2%
27.50
12/1 /50
Chicago, Rock Island & Paci-
fic
1,000.00
4
40.00
4 /1 /34
Midvale Steel & Ordnance
2,000.00
5
100.00
3 /1 /36
Utah Power & Light Co.
1,000.00
5
50.00
2 /1 /44
10 shares Bangor Hydro-
Electric Co.
1,000.00
6
%
60.00
6 shares Bar Harbor Water
Co.
300.00
6
%
18.00
Cash in Savings Department,
Bar Harbor Banking and
Trust Co.
900.00
4
%
36.86
Mercantile Properties Inc
1,000.00
5 1-2
55.00
1 /1 /46
Montana Power Co.
1,000.00
5
%
50.00
7 /1 /43
Northern States Power Co
500.00
5 1-2
27.50
12/1 /50
Montana Power Co.
1,000.00
5
%
50.00
7 /1 /43
Chicago, Rock Island & Paci-
fic
1,000.00
4
%
40.00
4 /1 /34
First Mtg. Certificate Law-
yers Mtg. Co.
3,000.00
5 1-2
175.00
Illinois Power & Light
1,000.00
5 1-2
55.00
12/1 /54
Standard Gas & Electric Co
1,000.00
6
%
60.00
2 /1 /51
Liberty Loan 1917
100.00
3 1-2%
3.50
1 /15/47
Inland Steel Co
1,000.00
4 1-2%
45.00
4 /1 /78
$20,300.00
$1,045.86
Mary F. Higgins, Trust Fund
1st Liberty Loan, Convert-
ed
400.00
4 1-4%
17.00 1932-1947
The Association holds in trust a fund of $400.00, the
income from which is to be used for the care of the Mary
F. Higgins burial lot in the cemetery on Mt. Desert
Street, Bar Harbor.
Invested in Government bonds.
H. M. CONNERS,
Treasurer
Auditor's Report
I hereby certify that I have audited the
accounts of the Bar Harbor Village Improve-
ment Association for the fiscal year ending
August 31, 1930, and find them correct with
proper vouchers for all money expended.
I have also verified the amount of the invest-
ments and special funds and find the cash on
hand as stated in the report of the Treasurer
to agree with the balance on deposit with the
Bar Harbor Banking and Trust Company.
FRED L. HADLEY,
Auditor.
September 2, 1930.
Bar Harbor, Maine.
Report of Finance Committee
The accounts of the Village Improvement
Association have been audited and found cor-
rect. Cash on hand at the present time is
$3,199.34, a part of which is the income from
funds donated for special purposes. The re-
mainder will be invested under the supervision
of the Finance Committee.
The attached list shows all securities now
held in different funds belonging to the Village
Improvement Association.
Respectfully submitted,
C.P. BARNETT,
Chairman.
September 4, 1930.
Report of Village Committee
On the departure for Europe of Miss Ger-
trude Sampson the Acting Chairman of the
Village Committee, I was asked to substitute
for her as Chairman. Before her departure
Miss Sampson informed me that the general
plan of the Committee's work had been laid
out and that it was only necessary for me to
give a general supervision to see that the work
was carried out. This I have endeavored to
do, and have found that on the whole the work
has been well done. This report is only meant
to cover the interim period of Miss Sampson's
absence, and not the entire year's work of the
Village Committee.
Respectfully submitted,
KATHERINE BARNETT,
Acting Chairman.
Report of the Sanitary Committee
This year marks an important turning point
in the affairs of this committee. Heretofore
sanitary problems in Bar Harbor were attended
to by a part-time health officer of the Town
who performed his duties under great difficul-
ties in an admirable manner. The Sanitary
Committee of the V. I. A. had the privilege of
co-operating in sanitary matters. Two years
ago a movement was started with a view to the
establishment of a Health Department which
would take charge of sanitary problems in a
more up-to-date manner. The Town of Bar
Harbor is to be congratulated upon the wise
and far-sighted decision to make the necessary
appropriation for the creation of such a Health
Department and the appointment of a trained,
full-time health officer. This step adds to the
fine reputation which Bar Harbor has enjoyed.
as a community managing its affairs efficiently
and in a progressive spirit.
Mr. A. A. Robertson has been in office as
the Health Officer for three months and all
indications point to a cordial co-operation
20
SANITARY COMMITTEE
between him and the other agencies concerned
in the public welfare of our community.
In regard to the health conditions of last
year the following data are of interest to the
V. I. A.:
During the year ending August 31st, 1930,
the following cases of communicable diseases
were reported:
Scarlet fever
7
Typhoid fever
1
Pulmonary tuberculosis
2
Septic sore throat
8
Vincent's angina
1
Whooping-cough
5
Mumps
5
Chicken-pox
5
Toward the end of August there were indi-
cations of a mild epidemic of mumps.
The death-rate for 1929, corrected for resi-
dent and non-resident deaths was 14.5.
The infant death rate for 1929 was 23.8.
The tuberculosis death rate is somewhat high
for a community of our size and our type.
During the summer months about one-fifth
of the milk supply of the town was Pasteurized.
But this Pasteurized milk was transported from
SANITARY COMMITTEE
21
Bangor, a distance of fifty miles, usually kept
here over night and delivered next morning.
Obviously such arrangements are not entirely
satisfactory, and the whole question of securing
the best available milk supply for Bar Harbor
is being investigated.
The sanitary disposal of garbage and other
waste has been much improved by the con-
struction of a 60-ton incinerator at a cost of
$80,000. The problem of municipal collection
of garbage is now under investigation by the
Board of Selectmen because it has been found
that many local residents cannot afford the
cost of having the garbage collected and conse-
quently several vacant lots in the town have
become a dumping ground.
Another problem which will engage our
attention concerns the many shacks still in-
habited in Bar Harbor. Many of them should
be condemned as unfit for human habitation,
but such a procedure would force the occu-
pants to find habitation somewhere else and in
many instances this would mean a great
hardship to the people concerned. The Health
Officer from whose report these data are ob-
tained suggests that this subject be studied by
the different public agencies concerned includ-
ing the V. I. A.
22
SANITARY COMMITTEE
Already two years ago it was suggested by
this committee that the most promising plan of
reorganizing sanitary supervision of Bar Har-
bor ought to be linked up with the larger plan
of organizing Mount Desert Island as a health
district. Conferences and correspondence with
the Commissioner of Health of the State of
Maine indicated that such a plan appears high-
ly desirable and would have the full endorse-
ment of the State authorities. It stands to
reason that even the best health supervision of
Bar Harbor could not exclude danger to our
populations as long as adjacent communities
are not organized on the same or similar basis.
Obviously it would be in the interest of efficien-
cy and economy to bring the different commun-
ities of this Island into an organized unit of
health service for which each town would pay
its proportionate share. Efforts are made to
bring about the necessary negotiations. While
it will inevitably take some time to inform
public opinion on such an undertaking it may
be confidently hoped that such an arrangement
will be brought about in the near future.
Sincerely yours,
L. KAST,
Chairman.
Report of Path Committee
Removal of 213 trees, building new cairns,
bridges, putting up many new steps and step-
ping stones, bushing and mowing have kept
two men busy all summer. Destruction of a
part of one of the trails on the eastern side of
Newport Mountain by a landslide last winter
has added to the work. The men report that
more people have been walking than for several
years past which encouraged them to do the
best they can. Thanks are again due Andrew
Liscomb and the National Park authorities
for their continued help and advice.
Respectfully submitted,
HAROLD PEABODY,
Chairman.
Report of Park Committee
During the past year much important work
has been done in both Glen Mary and Wood-
bury Parks, especially in improving the condi-
tion of the trees.
In Glen Mary Park, where the white pine
blister had been very prevalent in the pine
trees, as all the infected branches possible were
cut out the previous year, there was compara-
tively little of the blister found, but the dead
wood was taken from the deciduous trees and
the spruces during the autumn and winter,
and the condition of the trees on the hillside
has shown great improvement this summer in
consequence of the work done.
In the lower portion of the Park, which is
much used by the children, there was a large
amount of poisonous ivy growing, especially
along Spring Street and Morris Avenue, which
had to be destroyed. It has proved very
difficult to destroy the roots and more work
will be necessary there this autumn. Many of
the trees in that part of the Park have been
much damaged by the children, and the winter
PARK COMMITTEE
25
has proved to be a particularly hard one especi-
ally on the cedars. The old Balm of Gilead
trees are dying out fast, and your Committee
hopes that it may be possible to have these
trees replaced by some good maples.
In the winter, the hollow was flooded and it
made a good skating pond for the children,
which they enjoyed very much and used ex-
tensively.
In the early spring, all that Park and the
land of the adjoining property owners was
thoroughly examined for new growth of the
wild currant bushes which propagate the
white pine blister, and a large number de-
stroyed.
In the Woodbury Park we have found an
alarming amount of white pine blister, par-
ticularly in the young pine trees, and felt that
the neighboring land had not been carefully
cleared of the propagating plant, as no currant
bushes could be found in Woodbury Park.
Mr. Frost, head of the State Commission in
charge of this work, very kindly came to Bar
Harbor and made a thorough examination of
the condition of these trees, with me, and ex-
plained that the infection was caused long be-
fore the eradication of the currant bushes by
26
PARK COMMITTEE
the State Commission, and some of the branch-
es infected as long as fifteen years ago. The
blister appears only on branches that can be
cut off without serious injury to the trees, as
it does not appear upon the trunks, not having
reached them yet. As the State does not re-
move branches, your Committee will have
that work done this autumn, which Mr.
Frost states will be time enough. Mr. Frost
has agreed that the State Commission will
have all the land neighboring the Park exam-
ined again by their men, and any wild currant
and gooseberry bushes that may be there eradi-
cated without expense to the V. I. A.
The How Memorial Park has been very well
cared for this summer and kept in excellent
condition.
Respectfully submitted,
CHARLES E. SAMPSON,
Chairman.
Report of Good Roads Committee
The Good Road Committee of the V. I. A.
herewith submits its Annual Report for the
year ending September 4, 1930.
Net result: Numerous cuttings and clear-
ances principally along the Bay View Drive
and the Schooner Head Road; also removal of
old shacks, signs, and other unsightly objects
from the public highways: nearly all of which
work has been noted in previous reports, to-
gether with assurance of further co-operation
with the V. I. A. on the part of Mr. A. At-
water Kent and others.
ALSOP LEFFINGWELL,
Chairman.
Members Ex-Officio
Selectmen: Mr. Julien Emery
Mr. Alvah Abbott
Mr. Seth Libby
For 1930
Mr. Eben K. Whitaker
Mr. Frank E. Higgins
Treasurer: Mr. Charles F. Paine
Town Clerk: Mr. Wyman P. Wadleigh
Supt. of Roads: Mr. Leslie Hamor
Supt. of Schools: Mr. George H. Beard
Health Officer: A. A. Robertson
Inspector of Buildings: Mr. J. M. Milliken
Rev. J. Homer Nelson
Rev. William E. Patterson
Rev. W. H. Cass
Rev. Edward F. Fitzpatrick
Dr. G. R. Hagerthy
Dr. R. G. Higgins
Dr. C. C. Morrison
Dr. C. C. Morrison, Jr.
Dr. E. J. Morrison
Dr. James F. Mitchell
Dr. R. W. Wakefield
Life Members
Anson, Mrs. Alfred
Archbold, Mrs. Anne
Auchincloss, Mr. and Mrs. John W.
Babcock, Mr. and Mrs. Henry D.
Baker, Miss Charlotte S.
Barney, Mrs.
Barret, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil
Beale, Mrs. William G.
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, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred M.
Cochran, Miss Mary N.
Coles, Miss Mary R.
Coxe, Mrs. Alexander B.
Crafts, Mr. E. C.
30
LIFE MEMBERS
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.
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
Hinkle, Mrs. A. Howard
Hoffman, Miss Mary U.
Howard, Mr. Edgar B.
Hunt, Mrs. Platt
Ingraham, Hon. George L.
Johnson, Mrs. F. H.
Jones, Mrs. Cadwalader
Kahn, Mr. and Mrs. Otto H.
Ketterlinus, Mr. J. L.
Kingsland, Mrs. William M.
Kierman, Miss Isabel
LIFE MEMBERS
31
Kutz, Miss Lucy A.
Ladd, Mr. and Mrs. Walter G.
Lagergren, Marquise
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
Macy, Mr. V. Everett
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
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.
32
LIFE MEMBERS
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
Seely, Mrs. W. W.
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.
Sturges, Miss Dorothy
Sweeney, Mr. Thomas B.
Thompson, Mrs. George L.
LIFE MEMBERS
33
Thorndike, Dr. and Mrs. Augustus
Townsend, Mrs. R. H.
Trevor, Miss Emily
Tuckerman, Mrs. Leverett S.
Vanderbilt, Mr. Frederick
Vanderbilt, Mrs. George W.
Walcott, Mrs. F. C.
Weekes, Mr. Frederic Delano
Winthrop, Miss Marie
Wright, Mrs. C. K.
Young, Mrs. A. Murray
Annual Members and Other Contributors
From Sept. 1, 1929 to Aug. 31, 1930
Mrs. C. B. Amory
$5.00
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Auchincloss
20.00
Mrs. Walter Ayer
15.00
Miss Charlotte S. Baker
15.00
Mrs. Samuel Bell
10.00
Miss Christine W. Biddle
5.00
Major Gist Blair
15.00
Mrs. Dwight Blaney
5.00
Mr. Gerald W. Borden
20.00
Miss Edith G. Bowdoin
15.00
Mrs. Robert B. Bowler
50.00
Mrs. John A. Brown, Jr.
10.00
Mrs. Edward Browning
10.00
Mrs. Henry D. Burnham
10.00
Mr. and Mrs. James Byrne
100.00
Miss Agnes Miles Carpenter
25.00
Mrs. Henry C. Chapman
10.00
Mrs. Henry C. Chapman
10.00
Mrs. D. Crawford Clark
10.00
Miss Mary R. Coles
25.00
Miss Frances Coleman
10.00
Mr. N. Hugh Cotton
5.00
Mrs. Victor N. Cushman
5.00
Mr. Edwin H. Denby
25.00
Mrs. Hasket Derby
10.00
Mr. H. W. deForest
10.00
Madame de Hedry
10.00
DONATIONS AND MEMBERSHIP DUES
35
Mrs. H. Howard Ellison, Jr.
5.00
Mrs. Shepard Fabbri
50.00
Mrs. Max Farrand
15.00
Mrs. M. L. Fearey
5.00
Mrs. J. B. Fenno
10.00
Dr. and Mrs. R. H. Fowler
15.00
Dr. J. Austin Furfey
10.00
Mr. Henry Reed Hatfield
25.00
Mr. J. M. Hartshorne
10.00
N. Hillson & Sons
5.00
A. B. & J. R. Hodgkins
5.00
Miss Mary U. Hoffman
10.00
Mrs. Platt Hunt
10.00
Hon. George L. Ingraham
15.00
*Mrs. J. L. Ketterlinus
25.00
R. H. Kittredge
5.00
Miss Lucy A. Kutz
10.00
Mr. and Mrs. Walter G. Ladd
50.00
Rev. and Mrs. W. A. Lawrence
10.00
Rt. Rev. William Lawrence
10.00
Mrs. M. LaMontagne
10.00
Mr. Douglas Leffingwell
2.50
Miss Mary M. Leffingwell
5.00
Mrs. Louis C. Lehr
10.00
Miss Elizabeth Linzee
5.00
Miss Mina Ludwig
5.00
Mrs. Lea McI. Luquer
10.00
Mr. and Mrs. Fred C. Lynam
10.00
Mrs. John Markoe
10.00
Mr. W. Miller
5.00
Mrs. Henry Morgenthau
25.00
*Deceased.
36
DONATIONS AND MEMBERSHIP DUES
Miss Edith Macculloch Miller
5.00
Mr. and Mrs. Dave H. Morris
10.00
Mr. Dave H. Morris
10.00
Mrs. W. S. Moore
25.00
Dr. C. C. Morrison
5.00
McKay Cottages
5.00
Estate of Louis B. McCagg
500.00
Miss Mildred McCormick
15.00
Mr. George A. McKinlock
25.00
Mt. Desert Nurseries
10.00
Mr. G. S. Munson
25.00
Mrs. Clinton Ogilvie
25.00
Mrs. L. E. Opdycke
5.00
Miss Linda Pancoast
5.00
Mrs. A. M. Patterson
5.00
Mrs. T. DeWitt Peltz
5.00
Mrs. Harold Peabody
10.00
Mr. Charles B. Pineo
10.00
Mrs. George Place
5.00
Mrs. B. Pocker
10.00
Mrs. M. Taylor Pyne
15.00
Mr. Arden M. Robbins
10.00
Mrs. George S. Robbins
5.00
Mrs. Howard Roberts
10.00
Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Satterlee
50.00
Mr. Thomas Searls
5.00
Mrs. G. S. Selfridge
5.00
Shea Brothers
10.00
Mr. Albion F. Sherman
5.00
Mrs. F. Fremont Smith
2.00
Mrs. C. Morton Smith
25.00
Mrs. W. F. Stafford
10.00
DONATIONS AND MEMBERSHIP DUES
37
Mr. John H. Stalford
25.00
Mrs. H. O. Sturges
25.00
Mrs. H. H. Thorndike
15.00
Miss Emily Trevor
10.00
Mr. Theodore V. A. Trotter
2.00
Dr. R. W. Wakefield
5.00
Mrs. C. Minot Weld
5.00
Mrs. Oliver J. Wells
10.00
Mrs. N. M. Williams
5.00
Mrs. Charles B. Wood
10.00
Mrs. C. K. Wright
10.00
Mr. Alexander J. Wurts
5.00
Mrs. A. Murray Young
50.00
GIFTS FOR THE MAINTENANCE OF PATHS
Miss Caroline M. Amory
$5.00
Mrs. Anne Archbold
25.00
Mrs. J. Howland Auchincloss
10.00
Mrs. William G. Beale
25.00
Miss Nina H. Burnham
25.00
Mrs. John A. Brown, Jr
10.00
Mr. and Mrs. James Byrne
25.00
Miss Agnes Miles Carpenter
10.00
Miss Mary R. Coles
10.00
Mrs. Walter Damrosch
10.00
Dr. and Mrs. John Dane
25.00
Mrs. J. Brooks Fenno
15.00
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Hale
25.00
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Augustus Jay
25.00
*Mrs. John S. Kennedy
25.00
Mrs. John Markoe
10.00
Mr. Harold Peabody
50.00
38
DONATIONS AND MEMBERSHIP DUES
Mr. William Procter
50.00
Mr. Lansing P. Reed
50.00
Mr. William K. Richardson
25.00
Mr. and Mrs. George S. Robbins
25.00
Mr. and Mrs. John S. Rogers
25.00
Mrs. Frank B. Rowell
10.00
Mr. Charles E. Sampson
50.00
Miss Gertrude Sampson
25.00
Mrs. Herbert L. Satterlee
50.00
Mrs. Ernest Schelling
25.00
Mrs. Charles R. Scott
50.00
Mr. R. H. Stevenson
25.00
Hon. F. J. Stimson
10.00
Miss Dorothy Sturges
25.00
Dr. Augustus Thorndike
10.00
Mrs. H. H. Thorndike
5.00
GIFTS FOR SPECIAL PURPOSES
Mrs. Henry Morgenthau
One-half cost of maintaining policeman on
Ocean Drive
$150.00
Mr. Charles E. Sampson
For Mosquito Committee
25.00
For Park Committee
100.00
Dr. and Mrs. Augustus Thorndike
For Park Committee
50.00
Miss Emily Trevor
For Mosquito Committee
10.00
Mrs. H. H. Thorndike
For Mosquito Committee
25.00
Mrs. A. Murray Young
For Mosquito Committee
25.00
*Deceased.
The Village Improvement Association re-
cords with special interest and pleasure the
very substantial gift of $1,000 made on Octo-
ber 5, 1929, by Dr. James B. Murphy of Seal
Harbor, in the interest of the Canyon Brook
Path Fund. This amount was invested and
credited to the Canyon Brook Path Fund, the
income to be used for its maintenance. The
thanks of the Association have been extended
to Dr. Murphy for his generous contribution.
L129
Bar Harbor Historical Society
From girl C. Lynami e.
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Thirty-ninth Annual Report of the Bar Harbor Village Improvement Association, 1930
Annual report of the Bar Harbor Village Improvement Association. For the year ending September 1st, 1930. The report includes individual committee reports, a list of members, and the association's charter and by-laws. 39 pages.