Tag Archives: maine

220/365. a beautiful day on indian lake.

220/365. a beautiful day on indian lake.

you really couldn’t ask for a more beautiful summer day in maine. not too muggy and hardly any bugs 🙂

the dock is getting rebuilt so you can see part of the underlying structure. i probably should be spending time helping to rebuild the rock wall that my grandfather built which stretches from one end of the cove to the other buuuuuut i’m going to take some time to actually vacation on my vacation.

does anyone visit on a desktop anymore? if you do, go ahead and view the large panorama on a big ol’ monitor.

218/365. more maine vacation traditions – clams at jordan’s snack bar.

218/365. more maine vacation traditions - clams at jordan’s snack bar. I.

if you’re passing through ellsworth, maine and you don’t stop by jordan’s snack bar to get some clams, you’re doing it wrong. closing time at 9pm and there’s still a line of mostly locals. no doubt there was a much longer line earlier in the day.

218/365. more maine vacation traditions - clams at jordan’s snack bar. II.

i’ve been getting fried clams ( and hotdogs and ice cream ) at jordon’s for a loooooooong time so it’s always nice to visit again. brings back fond memories.

42/365. machias, maine 150th anniversary photo.

42/365. machias, maine 150th anniversary photo.

in 1913, my hometown in machias, maine celebrated the 150th(!) anniversary of its founding by gathering the 150 or so town residents for a giant panorama. they’re all dressed up in costumes presumably getting ready for founding days parade/festival. i can spend hours looking at the panorama imagining stories about those in the photograph. there’s at least a half dozen stories just in this shot alone.

it’s strange to think my ancestral relatives are likely somewhere out there in the photo peering back at me ( my ancestors were there at the founding of the town ). maybe even one of them is the kid in middle!

my ancestor photoblogging in the 1920s about the 1630s.

my ancestor photoblogging in the 1920s about the 1630s. I.

on a trip to my ancestral homeland in machias, maine my mother showed me one of many photos she has been entrusted with that tell the story of her mother’s side of the family which have been handed down from matriarch to matriarch. they are simply incredible.

they were written by a woman named grace who, i believe was a cousin to my grandmother’s mother ( my mother will correct me if i’m wrong ).

my ancestor photoblogging in the 1920s about the 1630s. II.

this one tells the story of elaie(sp?) fuller berry means who daughter of william berry jr, descendant of william berry who was the a member of founders of portsmouth, new hampshire and newburyport, massachusetts. she was also the direct descendant of benjamin berry who was the first white child born in machias, maine and his father, was one of the “original 16” founders of machias in the 1630s ( i fail at geneology because i can’t quite decipher the relationship between william and benjamin berry ).

william berry came over to the colonies from devonshire with the “mason colony”, led by john mason in 1630 settling in what would become portsmouth. she claims they brought the first cattle to new england and notes that the mason colony “had the contempt of the [massachusetts] colony which said they came to fish and not to pray.”

ha!

given my love of taking photos and telling stories, i think i really would have gotten along nicely with grace.