Inventing Vacationland – Scott Andrews

Scarborough Historical Society Meeting, 2:00 p.m., September 8, 2019, at the Scarborough Public Library.

Following a short Historical Society meeting on September 8th, Scott Andrews will present a program “Inventing Vacationland”.

Maine has officially advertised itself as “Vacationland” since 1916. Before then it was touted as “The Nation’s Playground” and “Sportsmen’s Paradise.” Today the business of tourism and recreation plays host to more than 33 million visitors who spend more than $6 billion each year, by far Maine’s biggest industry.

Maine has been a preeminent destination for rusticators, tourists, vacationers and recreational enthusiasts of all stripes and all seasons for nearly two centuries, beginning with Henry David Thoreau and a coterie of painters.

How did Maine become a vacation mecca? What were the milestones? Who were the key actors? What did they do and where did they do it? That’s the subject of Inventing Vacationland, a fascinating PowerPoint slideshow and talk by Scott Andrews that will be presented at the Scarborough Public Library on September 8th, at 2 PM. 

The Jocelyn was a grand hotel of the Victorian era that stood on Prouts Neck in Scarborough between 1890 and 1909. This image is among many that will be shown Sept. 8 when the Scarborough Historical Society hosts Inventing Vacationland, a presentation and talk about the history of Maine tourism by Scott Andrews, at 2 p.m. at the Scarborough Public Library.
(photo courtesy Scarborough Historical Society)

Inventing Vacationland will touch on issues of transportation, accommodations, amenities, activities, arts, and recreation from before the Civil War to the present day. Scarborough played a key role in this story. Much material for Inventing Vacationland was contributed by the Scarborough Historical Society and the Prouts Neck Historical Society.

About the presenter: Scott Andrews earned a B.A. in history from the University of Chicago, an M.B.A. from the Chicago Booth School of Business and an M.Sc. from the London School of Economics. He has been involved in the Maine tourism industry since his teenage years when he worked at his family’s campground in Oxford County. A longtime lifestyle journalist, Andrews has written about two thousand articles on the arts, recreation, and tourism for a variety of local and national publications.

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Photos – Organizations – First Aid Class

Photo Box 2

Folder: Organizations – First Aid Classes

Photos are below this table.  Hover the individual photo to see its title. 

Title – Comment

Accession #

First Aid Class – ca. 1910

Taken at New Wayland – Dunstan GrangersFront Row: Leland Merrill, Elsie Spear, George West, Ruth Witham, Duane Merrill, and Noah Merrill

2nd Row: Scot Pillsbury, Abbie Libby, Dorothy Googins, Dorris Leary, Clifford Leary, Nellie Higgins, Ethel Higgins, Mary Gower, Eva Longfellow, Helen Carter

3rd Row: Arlington Johnson, Howard Carter, Fred Merrill, Lottie Merrill, Florence Boothby, Blanch Scamman, Herbert Rice, Gladys Rice, Irving Boothy, Percy Scamman

4th Row: Cora Carter, Raymond Leary, ? ?, Frank Rogers, Earl Leary, Otis Leary, Liz Baker, Smith Carter

2000.10.1

First Aid Class – 15 April 1936

First Row, Left to Right
1. George Wood, State Police Patrolman
2. Natalie Lothrop, Teacher
3. Dorothy Clark, Teacher
4 Willard O. Howe, Instructor and Chairman, First Aid
Committee
5. John H. Stevens, Chairman First Aid Comm. of Portland
Chapter American Red Cross
6. Florence Hearn, teacher
7. Ina Knight, Postmaster
8. Roger L, Doyle, State Police Patrolman.

Second Row, Left to Right
1. Russell Moulton, WPA Foreman
2. Henry Gould, Fire Chief
3. Ralph Sargent, Constable
4. Howard Knight, Fire Captain
5. Dr. Ray Littlefield
6. Arthur Snow, Fire Captain
7. Fred Davis, First Aid Instructor
8. Joseph R. Knight, Chairman Scarborough Red Cross

Dog Brownie

Photo from Tisdale Studio, 116 Revere St., Portland, ME

92.22.84
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Photos – Organizations – WW2 Ground Observers & Posts

Photo Box 2

Folder: Organizations – WW2 Ground Observers & Posts

Photos are below this table.  Hover the individual photo to see its title. 

Title (Comment) Accession #
WWII Observers – Val Krijanovsky in center 90.45.1k
WWII Observers – Mildred McDonald 90.45.1b
WWII Observers – C. Martins, V. Krijanovsky, Marion Krijanovsky 90.45.1i
WWII Observers (Two women in tower) 90.45.1d
WWII Observers 90.45.1c
WWII Observation Post (Behind State Police Bldg 90.45.1j
WWII Observation Post 90.45.1h
WWII Observation Post 90.45.1g
WWII Observation Post 90.45.1f
WWII Ground Observers (climbing stairs) 90.45.1c
Val Krijanovsky at Ground Observer Post (where Parker Tilton Building is now – WWII 90.45.2
Ground Observation Post (behind Edgar Thurston’s Place) Marion Krijanovsk at top. 90.45.1a
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Beech Ridge Schoolhouse Update – June and July 2019

Time to give everyone an update on our schoolhouse project.

Stanley E. Hillock Well Contractors of Scarborough worked to repair the well pipe that was damaged. Photo by Tom Osborne

First, the well has been checked, free of charge, by the Stanley Hillock Well Co.  They replaced the cap, cleaned and deepened the well from 68 feet to about 200 feet. We are very grateful for their generosity.

Next, Steve Ross has surveyed the property so that we know our boundaries. He will also place pins, marking where the new foundation needs to be, so the building can go back to its exact, original location.

During the week of July 8th, Merry and Sons Movers began work on preparing the building’s move. Their goal was to move it in 4-5 days. The excavator asked that the building be moved from the area of the foundation and then moved back. Merry and Sons agreed to move in it back rather than to the side as originally planned, allowing more room for the foundation work to take place. Trees needed to be limbed before this move.  Scarborough Public Works came quickly to our rescue. We truly appreciate their timely help.

Front porch removed and schoolhouse up off the foundation. Photo by Joyce Alden.

The porch on the front was no longer securely attached to the building, needing a speedy repair or its removal.  Since it was not original to the building and in poor condition, it was removed. It will be replaced later.

As the Merrys started to put a support under the building, it was determined that THREE steel beams for permanent support, rather than two, as previously thought, would be needed.  Next bricks were removed to put in the support beams. It was found that the mortar between the bricks had almost completely dried out and was no longer holding the bricks together.  It was just a matter of time before the original brick foundation would have begun to collapse.

On Thursday, another problem presented itself. The back addition to the original building needed more reinforcement in order to move it with the rest of the school.  The addition sill and one wall were too rotted to support the move.  Support beams were placed differently to safely allow the move.

The schoolhouse moved back free of the old foundation. Photo by Joyce Alden.

On Wednesday of the following week beams and rollers were in place. The building was moved back six feet by noontime! By late afternoon the school had been winched back completely clearing the original foundation. The front door now rests well behind where the original back wall of the school had been.

The Beech Ridge School now sits on cribbing and beams awaiting a new foundation. We are in the process of salvaging the original bricks from the rubble and cleaning them for use as a facing to the new foundation.

On Sunday and Monday, a group moved the bricks from the building area to the sides so we can save them and hopefully use them to put a brick facing on the foundation so it will look original. Thanks to Scott Chase and Boy Scouts from Troop 39 as well as Joyce Alden, Charlie Alden and his sister Peggy and Dennis Holmes.

Excavation begins for the new foundation. Photo by Karlene Osborne

On July 31st, Jeff Greenleaf and his crew began the excavation for the foundation. He estimates that it will be done by the next day.

Donations to the Beech Ridge School Restoration Project may be made at “Go Fund Me” or in person at the museum, Tuesdays 9 AM to Noon (or the 2nd Saturday of the month from 9 AM to Noon).


Photos of the Project, so far, are posted to our Beech Ridge School Project Gallery below.

– Becky Delaware

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Scarborough Bicentennial Quilt

 

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