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Item Title Type Subject Description Creator Date Property Name Street Pages Medium Condition
5520Steamer RANGELEY at Bar Harbor
  • Image, Photograph
  • Vessels, Steamboat
B/W Photograph of the steamship "RANGELEY" at town dock, Bar Harbor.
  • Willis H. Ballard
  • early 1900's
Description:
B/W Photograph of the steamship "RANGELEY" at town dock, Bar Harbor.
4313Bar Harbor, Maine
  • Image, Photograph
  • Vessels, Steamboat
Shows steamers SAPPHO and NORUMBEGA with unidentified two-masted schooner at Bar Harbor. Mounted on 22x10" board.
Description:
Shows steamers SAPPHO and NORUMBEGA with unidentified two-masted schooner at Bar Harbor. Mounted on 22x10" board.
4314Steamer SAPPHO
  • Image, Photograph
  • Vessels, Steamboat
Shows port quarter view of SAPPHO inbound to Bar Harbor with deck cargo of people! Cargo port on cargo deck is open. Mounted on 22x10" board.
Description:
Shows port quarter view of SAPPHO inbound to Bar Harbor with deck cargo of people! Cargo port on cargo deck is open. Mounted on 22x10" board.
5958Steamer RANGELEY at Bar Harbor, Mount Desert Island
  • Image, Photograph, Picture Postcard
  • Vessels, Steamboat
  • Willis H. Ballard
  • 1 postcard
4240Yacht in Bar Harbor
  • Image, Photograph
  • Vessels, Ship, Sailing Ship, Schooner
  • Julia G. Manchester
  • 1897
  • 1 photograph, 1 glass plate negative
1587The Bar Harbor Treasure Ship
  • Publication, Clipping, Magazine Clipping
  • Vessels, Ship
Article in Discover Maine, Maine's History Magazine, for Washington & Hancock County about the German ship Kronprinzessin Cecilie and the Revenue Cutter, Androscoggin, confrontation in Frenchman's Bay in 1914. vol. 3, no. 7
  • Charles Francis
  • 2006
  • 5
Description:
Article in Discover Maine, Maine's History Magazine, for Washington & Hancock County about the German ship Kronprinzessin Cecilie and the Revenue Cutter, Androscoggin, confrontation in Frenchman's Bay in 1914. vol. 3, no. 7
4245Yacht in Bar Harbor and breakwater
  • Image, Photograph
  • Vessels, Pleasure Craft, Yacht
  • Julia G. Manchester
  • 1 photograph, 1 glass plate negative
5446Battleship Massachusetts
  • Image, Photograph
  • Vessels, Naval Vessel, Warship, Frigate
Battleship Massachusetts on U.S. Navy visit to Bar Harbor.
  • Julia G. Manchester
  • 1897
  • photograph, glass plate negative
Description:
Battleship Massachusetts on U.S. Navy visit to Bar Harbor.
5447USN Cruiser Dolphin in Bar Harbor
  • Image, Photograph
  • Vessels, Naval Vessel, Warship, Frigate
Light cruiser Dolphin on Navy visit to Bar Harbor.
  • Julia G. Manchester
  • 1897
  • photograph, glass plate negative
Description:
Light cruiser Dolphin on Navy visit to Bar Harbor.
5449Battleship New York
  • Image, Photograph
  • Vessels, Naval Vessel, Warship, Frigate
Battleship New York on Navy visit Bar Harbor
  • Julia G. Manchester
  • 1897
  • photograph, glass plate negative
Description:
Battleship New York on Navy visit Bar Harbor
5450Gunboat Puritan
  • Image, Photograph
  • Vessels, Naval Vessel, Warship, Frigate
"Monitor" type gunboat Puritan on U.S. Navy visit to Bar Harbor
  • Julia G. Manchester
  • 1897
  • photograph, glass plate negative
Description:
"Monitor" type gunboat Puritan on U.S. Navy visit to Bar Harbor
5451Battleship Brooklyn
  • Image, Photograph
  • Vessels, Naval Vessel, Warship, Frigate
Battleship Brooklyn on U.S. Navy visit to Bar Harbor
  • Julia G. Manchester
  • 1897
  • photograph, glass plate negative
Description:
Battleship Brooklyn on U.S. Navy visit to Bar Harbor
4241Boat Race at Bar Harbor
  • Image, Photograph
  • Vessels, Boat, Sailboat
US Naval visit to Bar Harbor. War Boats (ship's yawl boats) This is a race among the various yawl boats serving the naval vessels visiting Bar Harbor.
  • Julia G. Manchester
  • 1897
  • photograph, glass plate negative
Description:
US Naval visit to Bar Harbor. War Boats (ship's yawl boats) This is a race among the various yawl boats serving the naval vessels visiting Bar Harbor.
4232Boat Race, Bar Harbor
  • Image, Photograph
  • Vessels, Boat
War boats (ship's cutters)
  • Julia G. Manchester
  • 1897
  • 1 photograph, 1 glass plate negative
Description:
War boats (ship's cutters)
5957Egg Rock Light, Bar Harbor, ME
  • Image, Photograph, Picture Postcard
  • Structures, Transportation, Lighthouse
  • 1 postcard
1360Garage and Apartment for Mr. and Mrs. Wesley C. Dudley
  • Document, Projection, Architectural Drawing
  • Structures, Dwellings
  • Structures, Outbuildings, Garage
Foundation plan, elevations, sections & details, door & window schedules, electrical & plumbing, material schedule, sketches
  • Roc Caivano
  • 1991
  • Schooner Head Road
  • 46 sheets
  • 13 mylar, 9 paper vellum, 6 tracing papers, 3 papers, 15 diazo
  • great
Description:
Foundation plan, elevations, sections & details, door & window schedules, electrical & plumbing, material schedule, sketches
1247Equipment Garage at Kenarden
  • Document, Projection, Architectural Drawing
  • Structures, Outbuildings, Garage
Elevations, sections, floor plans, details Roc's Comments: Small maintenance project for Tris and Ruth Colket. I also helped them research and engineer the restoration of an antique garden platform and trellis which Denis Bracale later took credit for doing?
  • Roc Caivano
  • 1993
  • 2 sheets
  • 1 mylar, 1 paper vellum
  • great
Description:
Elevations, sections, floor plans, details Roc's Comments: Small maintenance project for Tris and Ruth Colket. I also helped them research and engineer the restoration of an antique garden platform and trellis which Denis Bracale later took credit for doing?
1398Jackson Laboratory Building 19 MGL Renovation
  • Document, Projection, Architectural Drawing
  • Structures, Other Structures, Laboratory
Facade upgrade, demo plan and elevations, wall sections, details, penthouse repairs details
  • Roc Caivano
  • 2001
  • Building 19 MGL
  • 5 sheets
  • 5 paper vellum
  • great
Description:
Facade upgrade, demo plan and elevations, wall sections, details, penthouse repairs details
1173Erection Plan of Platform for Dr. Augustus Thorndike
  • Document, Projection, Architectural Drawing
  • Structures, Other Structures
  • Megquier & Jones
  • 1913
  • 1 sheet
  • blueprint
7035Bar Harbor High School
  • Document, Projection, Architectural Drawing
  • Structures, Institutional, School
Now Bar Harbor Municipal Building. Elevations.
  • Fred L. Savage
  • 1909
  • 2
  • tracing paper
  • good
Description:
Now Bar Harbor Municipal Building. Elevations.
1292The Turrets at College of the Atlantic
  • Document, Projection, Architectural Drawing
  • Structures, Institutional, School
elevations, floor plans, site plans, details, sketches Roc's Comment: First renovation of the abandoned Turrets building at COA. 1979 thru 1981. Work done by students and faculty and a large selection of local sub-contractors. Design and construction managed by Roc, Harris and Sass. Dick Reinhardt and Roc went to Washington and received a grant with further assistance from the State to repair and re inhabit the building.
  • Roc Caivano, Harris Hyman, Barb Sassman
  • 1979-1981
  • The Turrets
  • Eden Street, Bar Harbor
  • 21 sheets
  • 8 mylar, 10 sepia, 3 paper
  • good
Description:
elevations, floor plans, site plans, details, sketches Roc's Comment: First renovation of the abandoned Turrets building at COA. 1979 thru 1981. Work done by students and faculty and a large selection of local sub-contractors. Design and construction managed by Roc, Harris and Sass. Dick Reinhardt and Roc went to Washington and received a grant with further assistance from the State to repair and re inhabit the building.
1310Reconstruction of the COA Greenhouse
  • Document, Projection, Architectural Drawing
  • Structures, Agricultural, Greenhouse
  • Structures, Institutional, School
Sketches, elevations, floor plans Roc's Comments: I started the program in Environmental Design at College of the Atlantic in 1974. We got a good sized grant for the Fund for Post Secondary Education to develop our curriculum. Part of the program was for the advanced students to do pro bono work in the community. The greenhouse was a student designed project and the site analysis done for a new Information building at the head of the island was another. Keith Miller the then superintendent paid the our class' token fee with a bag of silver dollars. We bought a radio. I think Tripp Royce, Wells Bacon, Patty Dodd, Megan and Carole Mananan were some of the students involved with these projects.
  • Roc Caivano
  • 1978
  • Eden Street
  • 3 sheets
  • 2 paper vellum, 1 tracing paper, 2 diazo
  • great
Description:
Sketches, elevations, floor plans Roc's Comments: I started the program in Environmental Design at College of the Atlantic in 1974. We got a good sized grant for the Fund for Post Secondary Education to develop our curriculum. Part of the program was for the advanced students to do pro bono work in the community. The greenhouse was a student designed project and the site analysis done for a new Information building at the head of the island was another. Keith Miller the then superintendent paid the our class' token fee with a bag of silver dollars. We bought a radio. I think Tripp Royce, Wells Bacon, Patty Dodd, Megan and Carole Mananan were some of the students involved with these projects. [show more]
1312Schematic Design for College of the Atlantic Auditorium and Site Plan
  • Document, Projection, Architectural Drawing
  • Other, Land
  • Structures, Institutional, School
  • Structures, Other Structures
These are drawings of an Auditorium for College of the Atlantic. They are a good example of the extent of the COA campus and future plans in the early 80's. Stewart Brecher was hired to replace me as the teacher in Environmental design. He went to Judy Swazey, the president who had just replaced Ed Kaelber, and complained that I was still involved in the College. Judy decided to use nether of us for the design and hired Dan Sculley as their new architect for the project. There was a faculty member, Paul Dubois, who was an arsonist and Paul for unexplainable reasons burned down the original Campus building. Dan then designed the new Kaelber Hall- dining, library and classroom building and the College prospered from that point on. Long story. Toward the end of my work teaching and establishing a program in Environmental Design at College of the Atlantic I was asked to design a new auditorium for them. Sort of a swan song and thank you gift from the College. Harris Hyman and Barbara Sassaman and I did this. There were a number of alternative schemes presented and they settled on the one included here. There is a clever little 1/8th scale model with removable roof that goes along with these drawings. After I left the College, Stuart Brecher became the design teacher and complained to the new president of COA, Judy Swazey, that he should be the one to do the project. Judy took me to lunch and, while picking up the check, said she had decided to have neither of us do the project but put us on a committee to hire a third architect. Our committee hired Dan Sculley, an old friend, to do the new auditorium. Within the year Paul Dubois, a disgruntled COA teacher set the original Kaelber Hall on fire and it was totally destroyed. Sculley then did an excellent job designing a new Library/student center and Dining Hall in its place. By the time of its completion I was working in Philadelphia for the firm Venturi, Rauch, Scott-Brown and the college of the Atlantic decided to hire Turner Brooks (another friend and Yale classmate) to do a new Auditorium/Classroom building. When we returned to MDI in 1990 I was finally asked to do a project for COA, the reason we moved to MDI in the first place. The building we eventually completed was the Blair/ Tyson Dormitory. Sculley, Brooks and I sat within 2o feet of each other in graduate school and have been friend ever since. We went on to each do projects for Marlboro College in Vermont. The "three amigos" of New England architecture:)
  • Roc Caivano, Harris Hyman
  • 1981-1982
  • Eden Street
  • 48 sheets
  • 19 mylars, 6 diazo, 9 tracing papers, 14 paper vellum
  • good
Description:
These are drawings of an Auditorium for College of the Atlantic. They are a good example of the extent of the COA campus and future plans in the early 80's. Stewart Brecher was hired to replace me as the teacher in Environmental design. He went to Judy Swazey, the president who had just replaced Ed Kaelber, and complained that I was still involved in the College. Judy decided to use nether of us for the design and hired Dan Sculley as their new architect for the project. There was a faculty member, Paul Dubois, who was an arsonist and Paul for unexplainable reasons burned down the original Campus building. Dan then designed the new Kaelber Hall- dining, library and classroom building and the College prospered from that point on. Long story. Toward the end of my work teaching and establishing a program in Environmental Design at College of the Atlantic I was asked to design a new auditorium for them. Sort of a swan song and thank you gift from the College. Harris Hyman and Barbara Sassaman and I did this. There were a number of alternative schemes presented and they settled on the one included here. There is a clever little 1/8th scale model with removable roof that goes along with these drawings. After I left the College, Stuart Brecher became the design teacher and complained to the new president of COA, Judy Swazey, that he should be the one to do the project. Judy took me to lunch and, while picking up the check, said she had decided to have neither of us do the project but put us on a committee to hire a third architect. Our committee hired Dan Sculley, an old friend, to do the new auditorium. Within the year Paul Dubois, a disgruntled COA teacher set the original Kaelber Hall on fire and it was totally destroyed. Sculley then did an excellent job designing a new Library/student center and Dining Hall in its place. By the time of its completion I was working in Philadelphia for the firm Venturi, Rauch, Scott-Brown and the college of the Atlantic decided to hire Turner Brooks (another friend and Yale classmate) to do a new Auditorium/Classroom building. When we returned to MDI in 1990 I was finally asked to do a project for COA, the reason we moved to MDI in the first place. The building we eventually completed was the Blair/ Tyson Dormitory. Sculley, Brooks and I sat within 2o feet of each other in graduate school and have been friend ever since. We went on to each do projects for Marlboro College in Vermont. The "three amigos" of New England architecture:) [show more]
1212Blair/Tyson Dorms at College of the Atlantic
  • Document, Projection, Architectural Drawing
  • Structures, Dwellings, Dormitory
  • Structures, Institutional, School
Elevations, floor plans, site plans, sketches, full construction set Roc Caivano, architect; Wells Bacon, student assistant; Lanpher Associates, engineers Roc's comments: Lou Rabineau, COA President asked us to design new dorms for COA. We did some research and learned that groups of 8 or less will take responsibility for their living environment but more than that number ignore their responsibilities to others. So we designed seven separate 8 bed apartments interconnected. The building form followed the real estate divisions of the of the old property lines, the geological shape of the land at the entrance to the Turrets and was meant to evoke images of older 19th century barns and stables and work buildings. The courtyard faced true south and brought fresh air and sun into every room. We came to MDI to work at the newly founded College of the Atlantic in 1974. I did any number of small projects and helped renovate the Turrets during those years but always wanted to do something of substance for them. When we returned from an extended "residency" working as an associate in the Venturi, Rauch and Scott Brown firm in Philadelphia, Lou Rabineau, the then president of the college, asked me to design a new dormitory for them. They had come a long way since our earlier struggling days and, I think Lou had a great deal to do with putting them on the right track. Todd Stanley, John Gordon, Wells Bacon and John De Fazio ( a Venturi colleague) all helped with this first large project. I did some research and found that groups of people in units of 8 or less were aware and cared for their common environment so we divided the dormitory into 7, 8 bed living units- each with kitchens common rooms and separated bathrooms on each floor. We oriented the clusters at the entrance to the Turrets where the old carriage house and servant facilities were once placed and treated the building form in the same detail and scale. We prepared the rooms so each got direct sunlight and fresh air and all opened onto a common courtyard. The single rooms were designed to code minimum doubles and the double rooms to code minimum triples which allowed the college to expand from the 56 beds used on a regular basis to a 74 bed capability in an emergency. All of this worked! The building has been the home for close to 2000 young students and survived in excellent form with very little maintenance. One of my proudest accomplishments ever.
  • Roc Caivano
  • 1993-1994
  • College of the Atlantic
  • Eden Street
  • 141 sheets
  • 40 paper vellum, 4 diazo, 1 paper, 28 tracing paper, 1 sepia, 67 mylar
Description:
Elevations, floor plans, site plans, sketches, full construction set Roc Caivano, architect; Wells Bacon, student assistant; Lanpher Associates, engineers Roc's comments: Lou Rabineau, COA President asked us to design new dorms for COA. We did some research and learned that groups of 8 or less will take responsibility for their living environment but more than that number ignore their responsibilities to others. So we designed seven separate 8 bed apartments interconnected. The building form followed the real estate divisions of the of the old property lines, the geological shape of the land at the entrance to the Turrets and was meant to evoke images of older 19th century barns and stables and work buildings. The courtyard faced true south and brought fresh air and sun into every room. We came to MDI to work at the newly founded College of the Atlantic in 1974. I did any number of small projects and helped renovate the Turrets during those years but always wanted to do something of substance for them. When we returned from an extended "residency" working as an associate in the Venturi, Rauch and Scott Brown firm in Philadelphia, Lou Rabineau, the then president of the college, asked me to design a new dormitory for them. They had come a long way since our earlier struggling days and, I think Lou had a great deal to do with putting them on the right track. Todd Stanley, John Gordon, Wells Bacon and John De Fazio ( a Venturi colleague) all helped with this first large project. I did some research and found that groups of people in units of 8 or less were aware and cared for their common environment so we divided the dormitory into 7, 8 bed living units- each with kitchens common rooms and separated bathrooms on each floor. We oriented the clusters at the entrance to the Turrets where the old carriage house and servant facilities were once placed and treated the building form in the same detail and scale. We prepared the rooms so each got direct sunlight and fresh air and all opened onto a common courtyard. The single rooms were designed to code minimum doubles and the double rooms to code minimum triples which allowed the college to expand from the 56 beds used on a regular basis to a 74 bed capability in an emergency. All of this worked! The building has been the home for close to 2000 young students and survived in excellent form with very little maintenance. One of my proudest accomplishments ever. [show more]
1405New Oncology Suite for Mount Desert Island Hospital
  • Document, Projection, Architectural Drawing
  • Structures, Institutional, Health Facility
Life safety plan, demolition plan, floor plan, reflected ceiling plan, sections, elevations, storefront details, cabinet details, door schedule and details, window schedule and details, finish plan and schedule, plumbing plan supply and waste, plumbing schedule and details, heating plan, ventilation plan, mechanical details, electrical power riser plan, electrical power plan, lighting plan, fire alarm plan, communication plan
  • Roc Caivano
  • 2009-2010
  • 10 Wayman Lane
  • 76 sheets
  • 3 diazo, 4 tracing papers, 69 papers
  • great
Description:
Life safety plan, demolition plan, floor plan, reflected ceiling plan, sections, elevations, storefront details, cabinet details, door schedule and details, window schedule and details, finish plan and schedule, plumbing plan supply and waste, plumbing schedule and details, heating plan, ventilation plan, mechanical details, electrical power riser plan, electrical power plan, lighting plan, fire alarm plan, communication plan