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You searched for: Subject: is exactly 'Structures, Transportation, Bridge'Date: 1900s
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Type
Place
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Tags
Item Title Type Subject Description Creator Date Property Name Street Pages Medium Condition
5926Season's Greetings
  • Image, Photograph, Picture Postcard
  • Places, Shore
  • Structures, Transportation, Bridge
Gilpatrick Cove from Rock End Hotel Shows Hodgdon carpentry shop lower left
  • ca. 1900
  • 1 postcard
Description:
Gilpatrick Cove from Rock End Hotel Shows Hodgdon carpentry shop lower left
5132Train Bridge-Penobscot River
  • Image, Photograph
  • Structures, Transportation, Bridge
Three B/W matted photographs (a-c) of the 1901 ice wreckage of the train bridge over the Penobscot River between Bangor and Brewer.
  • William Otis Sawtelle (1874-1939)
  • 1901
  • 3 photographs
Description:
Three B/W matted photographs (a-c) of the 1901 ice wreckage of the train bridge over the Penobscot River between Bangor and Brewer.
5508Gilpatrick Cove
  • Image, Photograph
  • Places
  • Structures, Dwellings, House, Cottage
  • Structures, Transportation, Bridge
Three sepia photographs/postcards (a-c) of Gilpatrick Cove: (a) from Smallidge Point across to South Shore Rd. with two Frazier & Dabney cottages, showing foot bridge and capt.'s hut on doc. (b+c) Looking toward Smallidge Point, showing footbridge and cottages. Cards picked up by Alfred T. Coulombe when he (age about 14) came to Northeast Harbor one summer with his father and uncles to build some houses the 1920 (about). They came by schooner which they lived in - probably anchored in the Sound or NE Harbor.
  • Isaac T. Moore
  • 1890's-1900's
Description:
Three sepia photographs/postcards (a-c) of Gilpatrick Cove: (a) from Smallidge Point across to South Shore Rd. with two Frazier & Dabney cottages, showing foot bridge and capt.'s hut on doc. (b+c) Looking toward Smallidge Point, showing footbridge and cottages. Cards picked up by Alfred T. Coulombe when he (age about 14) came to Northeast Harbor one summer with his father and uncles to build some houses the 1920 (about). They came by schooner which they lived in - probably anchored in the Sound or NE Harbor. [show more]