• rates
    • Class of 2026 Senior Photos. Rates, Contact, and FAQs.
    • Senior Year Images
    • 10% For Conservation
    • Where would like your senior photo taken?
    • Senior Photo FAQs
    • Not What I Wanted: My Diane Arbus Phase
    • Rare and uncommon books for sale
    • How It Began
    • Book of the Month, June '22
    • Witter Bynner's Grenstone Poems
    • Campagne de Russie 1812
    • Longfellow, "Ballads and Other Poems," 1842
    • Henry Wadsworth Longfellow: 16 Works By or About Him
    • Familiar Quotations by John Bartlett, Second Edition (Convince me otherwise)
    • Addams Family, BHS Players, March, 2025
    • Brunswick City Limits 2025
    • Girls Hockey, Maine State Championship 2025
    • Replacement of the Frank J. Wood "Green" Bridge, 2023-2025
    • Downtown Arts Festival, 2024
    • Brunswick City Limits 2024
    • Brunswick Girls Basketball, Maine State Champions, 2024
    • Curling Comes to Brunswick.
    • Phantom of the Opera, March 22, 2024
    • Brunswick City Limits 2023, A Benefit For The Brunswick Area Student Aid Fund
    • Pride and Prejudice, BHS Players 2024
    • Northern Maine XC Championship 2024
    • Dragon Scramble, 2024
    • Phantom of the Opera, Dress Rehearsals, BHS, 2024
    • Festival of Champions, Belfast, Maine 2024
    • "Anything Goes," BHS Players 2023
    • Dragon Scramble, 2023
    • The Great Gatsby, BHS Players 2023
    • Six Rivers Youth Sports Zamboni Pull, 2023
    • Harpswell Democrats
    • about
    • contact
    • Walks during a pandemic
    • Baxter State Park 2021
    • portfolio
    • Bynner's Grenstone Poems
    • Moonrise Over Brunswick Football
    • Brunswick Boys 6, Poland/Leavitt et al 1
    • Brunswick Boys win ugly over Cape
    • Brunswick Boys' Hockey 2, Thornton Academy 1
    • Missed calls, too much BC, and another tie with Yarmouth.
    • Brunswick Boys 5, York 4
    • Who plays in the best rink in Maine? The Brunswick Dragons do.
    • Mt. Ararat Boys Tennis visits Brunswick
    • Mt.A Track Meet May 19, '23
    • XC Regionals 2023 (Mainly BHS and a Handful from MTA)
    • Vassar Treble Choir 2023
    • Around Vassar, Fall 2023
    • Brunswick Girl's Hockey 10, Winslow et al 3
    • BHS Swim, Dec 15, 2023
    • Raise the Rink! Zamboni Pull
    • Brunswick/Freeport Boys Hockey Falls to Yarmouth/Cheverus
    • Brunswick Girls Hockey Claims 4-3 OT Thriller Over Yarmouth/Freeport
    • Brunswick Girls Hockey Falls to Cheverus
    • Skolfield Shores Preserve: Three Winter Storms, 2024
    • Mt. Ararat Tops Brunswick, Boys Basketball
    • Collision Course: Eagles Dragons, Regional Championship
    • Brunswick 39, Mt. Ararat 30, Regional Final 2024
    • Brunswick Girls Softball Beats Mt. Blue
    • Brunswick Baseball Drops Medomak Valley
    • Morse and Brunswick Meet in Girls Lacrosse
    • Yarmouth topples Brunswick in Girls Lax
    • Brunswick Boys' Lax Closes Season With a Comeback Win
    • Mt. Ararat Girls Lacrosse End Regular Season 14-0
    • Mt. Ararat Track and Field at States, 2024
    • Brunswick Track & Field at States, 2024
    • Bowen 8, Brunswick 7, Marshwood 6. Boys lacrosse playoffs 2024
    • Brunswick High Graduation 2024
    • Mt. Ararat Girls Lacrosse Moves to Semis With 12-10 Win Over Biddeford
    • Mt.A Girls Lax Edged by Greely in Playoffs
    • Freeport Girls Lacrosse Thrashes Messalonskee
    • Goslings with Maine Coast Heritage Trust 2024
    • Frances Perkins Homestead, Newcastle
    • Brunswick Football at Flight Deck
    • Brunswick/Mt.Ararat/Morse Volleyball vs Hampden Academy
    • Girls XC at Brunswick v Morse, Medomak & Boothbay
    • Boys XC at Brunswick, Morse, Boothbay/Wiscasset
    • Girls Soccer Brunswick 6 Lew 1
    • Football Brunswick 20 Mt.Blue 15
    • Boys Soccer: Brunswick 6 Hampden 0
    • Girls Soccer: Brunswick 2, Camden Hills 5
    • Volleyball, "Brunswick" tops NYA
    • Girls Soccer: Bangor gets by Mt. Ararat
    • Boys Soccer: Brunswick 6 Mt. Blue 1
    • Brunswick Boys Soccer Edges Mt.Ararat 2-1
    • Mt. Ararat Girls Soccer Beats Brunswick 3-1
    • Morse Girls Soccer v Wells
    • Morse Boys Soccer 9, Lake Region 1
    • Brunswick Football, Senior Day, vs. Cape
    • Brunswick Girls Hockey Edges Gorham
    • Come for the Bridge Construction, Stay for the Falcon
    • Brunswick High Baseball 7 Lincoln Academy 3
    • Mt. Ararat Girls LAX 13, Brunswick 8
    • Brunswick Boys Lax Beats Gardiner
    • Brunswick Baseball Tops Messo
    • Morse, Mt.A, and Brunswick T & F at BHS
  • blog
Menu

Douglas Park Media

  • Photography
    • rates
    • Class of 2026 Senior Photos. Rates, Contact, and FAQs.
    • Senior Year Images
    • 10% For Conservation
    • Where would like your senior photo taken?
    • Senior Photo FAQs
    • Not What I Wanted: My Diane Arbus Phase
  • Rare and Uncommon Books
    • Rare and uncommon books for sale
    • How It Began
    • Book of the Month, June '22
    • Witter Bynner's Grenstone Poems
    • Campagne de Russie 1812
    • Longfellow, "Ballads and Other Poems," 1842
    • Henry Wadsworth Longfellow: 16 Works By or About Him
    • Familiar Quotations by John Bartlett, Second Edition (Convince me otherwise)
  • Event Photography
    • Addams Family, BHS Players, March, 2025
    • Brunswick City Limits 2025
    • Girls Hockey, Maine State Championship 2025
    • Replacement of the Frank J. Wood "Green" Bridge, 2023-2025
    • Downtown Arts Festival, 2024
    • Brunswick City Limits 2024
    • Brunswick Girls Basketball, Maine State Champions, 2024
    • Curling Comes to Brunswick.
    • Phantom of the Opera, March 22, 2024
    • Brunswick City Limits 2023, A Benefit For The Brunswick Area Student Aid Fund
    • Pride and Prejudice, BHS Players 2024
    • Northern Maine XC Championship 2024
    • Dragon Scramble, 2024
    • Phantom of the Opera, Dress Rehearsals, BHS, 2024
    • Festival of Champions, Belfast, Maine 2024
    • "Anything Goes," BHS Players 2023
    • Dragon Scramble, 2023
    • The Great Gatsby, BHS Players 2023
    • Six Rivers Youth Sports Zamboni Pull, 2023
    • Harpswell Democrats
  • About & Contact
    • about
    • contact
  • galleries
    • Walks during a pandemic
    • Baxter State Park 2021
    • portfolio
    • Bynner's Grenstone Poems
    • Moonrise Over Brunswick Football
    • Brunswick Boys 6, Poland/Leavitt et al 1
    • Brunswick Boys win ugly over Cape
    • Brunswick Boys' Hockey 2, Thornton Academy 1
    • Missed calls, too much BC, and another tie with Yarmouth.
    • Brunswick Boys 5, York 4
    • Who plays in the best rink in Maine? The Brunswick Dragons do.
    • Mt. Ararat Boys Tennis visits Brunswick
    • Mt.A Track Meet May 19, '23
    • XC Regionals 2023 (Mainly BHS and a Handful from MTA)
    • Vassar Treble Choir 2023
    • Around Vassar, Fall 2023
    • Brunswick Girl's Hockey 10, Winslow et al 3
    • BHS Swim, Dec 15, 2023
    • Raise the Rink! Zamboni Pull
    • Brunswick/Freeport Boys Hockey Falls to Yarmouth/Cheverus
    • Brunswick Girls Hockey Claims 4-3 OT Thriller Over Yarmouth/Freeport
    • Brunswick Girls Hockey Falls to Cheverus
    • Skolfield Shores Preserve: Three Winter Storms, 2024
    • Mt. Ararat Tops Brunswick, Boys Basketball
    • Collision Course: Eagles Dragons, Regional Championship
    • Brunswick 39, Mt. Ararat 30, Regional Final 2024
    • Brunswick Girls Softball Beats Mt. Blue
    • Brunswick Baseball Drops Medomak Valley
    • Morse and Brunswick Meet in Girls Lacrosse
    • Yarmouth topples Brunswick in Girls Lax
    • Brunswick Boys' Lax Closes Season With a Comeback Win
    • Mt. Ararat Girls Lacrosse End Regular Season 14-0
    • Mt. Ararat Track and Field at States, 2024
    • Brunswick Track & Field at States, 2024
    • Bowen 8, Brunswick 7, Marshwood 6. Boys lacrosse playoffs 2024
    • Brunswick High Graduation 2024
    • Mt. Ararat Girls Lacrosse Moves to Semis With 12-10 Win Over Biddeford
    • Mt.A Girls Lax Edged by Greely in Playoffs
    • Freeport Girls Lacrosse Thrashes Messalonskee
    • Goslings with Maine Coast Heritage Trust 2024
    • Frances Perkins Homestead, Newcastle
    • Brunswick Football at Flight Deck
    • Brunswick/Mt.Ararat/Morse Volleyball vs Hampden Academy
    • Girls XC at Brunswick v Morse, Medomak & Boothbay
    • Boys XC at Brunswick, Morse, Boothbay/Wiscasset
    • Girls Soccer Brunswick 6 Lew 1
    • Football Brunswick 20 Mt.Blue 15
    • Boys Soccer: Brunswick 6 Hampden 0
    • Girls Soccer: Brunswick 2, Camden Hills 5
    • Volleyball, "Brunswick" tops NYA
    • Girls Soccer: Bangor gets by Mt. Ararat
    • Boys Soccer: Brunswick 6 Mt. Blue 1
    • Brunswick Boys Soccer Edges Mt.Ararat 2-1
    • Mt. Ararat Girls Soccer Beats Brunswick 3-1
    • Morse Girls Soccer v Wells
    • Morse Boys Soccer 9, Lake Region 1
    • Brunswick Football, Senior Day, vs. Cape
    • Brunswick Girls Hockey Edges Gorham
    • Come for the Bridge Construction, Stay for the Falcon
    • Brunswick High Baseball 7 Lincoln Academy 3
    • Mt. Ararat Girls LAX 13, Brunswick 8
    • Brunswick Boys Lax Beats Gardiner
    • Brunswick Baseball Tops Messo
    • Morse, Mt.A, and Brunswick T & F at BHS
  • blog
×
Old things surround the Elijah Kellogg Church, Congreational in Harpswell Maine. Old trees, an old graveyard, and an even older meeting house across the road.

Old things surround the Elijah Kellogg Church, Congreational in Harpswell Maine. Old trees, an old graveyard, and an even older meeting house across the road.

Where is Elm Island, Mr. Kellogg?

Benet Pols September 15, 2019

“Where is Elm Island, Mr. Kellogg?”

“Oh, I made that Island out of my imagination for the story. You know it’s pretty hard finding an island on the Maine coast bearing northwest from the mainland. Still, notwithstanding that fact, I know at least half a dozen islands are pointed out as the suppositious place where Lion Ben and the boys lived and labored.”



For most people around these parts the name Elijah Kellogg evokes the memory of a family wedding, drives down to the Dolphin Marina, or the funeral of a friend. It’s that quaint church in Harpswell, on the neck, just opposite an older meeting house with the ancient burial ground. On the left not long after the Lookout Point Road.



That wasn’t always the case however, Kellogg was a celebrity of sorts in the 19th century. Not long before Kellogg passed on in 1901 he was visited by another then renowned Mainer, Holman Day. Day was putting together a retrospective on Kellogg’s career. His piece, which includes the quoted exchange about Elm Island, would wend its way around for a couple of decades before landing in Maine, My State, a 1919 publication intended as a reader for Maine’s primary schools. Consider how more recent figures of Maine children’s literature—Robert McCloskey, E.B.White, or Barbara Cooney—are lauded now.



The Church’s website itself tells us the, “Reverend Elijah Kellogg was called as Pastor on April 25,1844 and installed on June 18, 1844.  So began an affiliation that lasted, though not without interruptions, until Reverend Kellogg's death on March 17, 1901. The Harpswell Centre Congregational Church was renamed in his honor and is now known as The Elijah Kellogg Church, Congregational.” A substantial monument to the man dominates the church yard; its inscription includes, “A lover of the Sea and the sailor and a sympathetic friend of boys, for whom he wrote many stories which have made his name and memory dear to them everywhere.” 



But for the most part “who was Elijah Kellogg?” Is a question that doesn’t get asked much outside of his old stomping grounds.

Kellogg wrote five different series of stories. The Elm Island series is what captured Holman Day’s attention, and Elm Island was the first of Kellogg’s five series, published by Lee & Shepard of Boston between 1869 and 1871, It’s also what first caught my attention as I have three first editions: The Ark, Hardscrabble, and Lion Ben, the first of the series of six different books.

Three of the six titles of the Elm Island Stories. They are often seen as “Lion Ben of Elm Island,” or “The Ark of Elm Island.”

Three of the six titles of the Elm Island Stories. They are often seen as “Lion Ben of Elm Island,” or “The Ark of Elm Island.”




The engravings throughout the text and including the frontispieces are by John Andrew & Son of Boston, which, among other great works it produced, was responsible for the engraving of the first eleven volumes of Edward Sheriff Curtis’s monumental work, The North American Indian. According to one source, John Andrew & Son opened in 1869, the year Lion Ben, Kellogg’s first in the Elm Island series was published. According to another source the firm opened for business in 1852. Both sources make it clear that the book publishing business of the time involved a significant number of reconfigurations of business models and relationships among the shops responsible for different parts of book publishing. Within one building might be several business each devoted to one of the constituent parts of getting a book to market, typesetting and printing in one shop, engraving in another, and binding handled by yet a third.

kellogg-eng1.jpeg kellogg-eng2.jpeg kellogg-eng3.jpeg





Elm Island as Kellogg imagined it might not have been a real place when Holman interviewed Kellogg, but the Maine Island Registry does list Elms Islands as among Maine’s 4600 or so islands. The pair of little islands are even in Harpswell, just a shade west of Orr’s Island but a good distance by water from Kellogg’s neighborhood on the neck. Wheeler’s History of Brunswick, Topsham and Harpswell first published in 1878 also notes an Elm Island consistent in location with the Elm Island of the Maine Island Registry: “east of the lower part of Orr’s Island.” But these little Islands are much smaller than the three mile by two mile dimensions of Kellogg’s imagined Elm Island. Six square miles would comprise an island of some 3840 acres, half the size of Isle au Haut. The Elms are listed at just half an acre a piece, and are much as Kellogg described countless little islands throughout the bay in the opening pages of Lion Ben, “a mere patch of rock and turf, fringed with the white foam of the breakers.”





A travelogue of the era, Scenic Gems of Maine, published in 1898 by Geo W. Morris of Portland, stated with authority, but no attribution, that “Ragged Island, midway between Bailey’s and Small Point Harbor, is pointed out as the Elm Island where “Lion Ben,” and other homely heroes portrayed by Elijah Kellogg had their imaginary being.”  Ragged is a good sized island of about 75 acres, and has had its share of literary glory as the seasonal home of Edna St. Vincent Millay from the 1930s until her death in 1950, but it is still far smaller than Kellogg’s Elm Island.





But this, as Kellogg reported to Holman Day with his quizzical smile is just suppositious.

(See Abebooks.com for listing of these three titles along with many others)


There are a lot of Stovers in the graveyard across the street from the Elijah Kellogg Church. Unlike Elm Island, the. Stover’s gave their name to a very real place in Harpswell, Stover’s Point. The dates of death of this pair make it likely that Kel…

There are a lot of Stovers in the graveyard across the street from the Elijah Kellogg Church. Unlike Elm Island, the. Stover’s gave their name to a very real place in Harpswell, Stover’s Point. The dates of death of this pair make it likely that Kellogg would have known them as parishioners; perhaps he presided over their funerals.

In Book Seller, Maine, Maine History, Maine Photographer Tags Harpswell, Maine, rarebooks, Maine Books, Pejepscot Historical Society, Brunswick
movies 2.jpg

It's No Drive-In Movie, But The Price is Right

Benet Pols August 8, 2019

With the Red Sox in an early August tailspin, Jerry Remy and Dave O’Brien needed something to fill the grim innings. Something to divert them from the diversion they’re paid to talk about. They settled on the drive-in movie theaters of their youth. Even the youngish Guerin Austin chimed in.



Here in Maine where trends are slow to arrive and even slower to depart, drive-ins had mainly faded away by the early 1980s though a few stubborn hold-outs still plug away here and there. Remdawg’s reminiscences about the big boxy speaker hanging off the car window, parking on a hill, “Let’s all go to the lobby,” playing between features, and the thrill of riding into the drive-in hidden in the trunk of a Plymouth Valiant ring true in Brunswick, Maine as much as in Somerville Mass. 



The Bowdoin Drive-In, located about where the Walmart is now, faded away first, leaving no trace at all. “Cinema Treasures” suggests the Brunswick Drive-In on the Portland Road closed around 1984. Just a whisper of its grandeur persists.



Drive by too fast and you’ll miss the marquee of the old Bowdon Drive-In. All that remains on the Portland Road to remind that 350-400 cars once parked back behind the trees to watch Star Wars on the big screen.

Drive by too fast and you’ll miss the marquee of the old Bowdon Drive-In. All that remains on the Portland Road to remind that 350-400 cars once parked back behind the trees to watch Star Wars on the big screen.



But the silver screen still lights up the summer skies of Brunswick. Since 2012 the NorthWest Brunswick Neighborhood Association and the Town of Brunswick have put on monthly summer movie nights in Davis Park. No cars, and the neighbors get to hear the movies, but there is plenty of food even without a lobby. Tess’s Market is right there, and Taco the Town, or some other local vendor will be on hand.



The next movie, “The Lego Movie 2,” will play Thursday, August 15 at dusk. Bolos will be there with chips and salsa, there will be a field hockey clinic and camp games to warm up the crowd and pass the time waiting for the sky to darken.

movies in davis park--Brunswick-10.jpg
movies in davis park--Brunswick-11.jpg
movies in davis park--Brunswick-2.jpg
movies in davis park--Brunswick-4.jpg
movies in davis park--Brunswick-10.jpg movies in davis park--Brunswick-11.jpg movies in davis park--Brunswick-2.jpg movies in davis park--Brunswick-4.jpg
In Maine Photographer Tags Brunswick, Maine History, Pejepscot Historical Society
bridge jumps-4.jpg

Bridge Stories: A VW Beetle named Gregor?

Benet Pols August 26, 2018

“Are you guys jumping?”

 

“Thinking about it….probably not.”

 

They did. Maybe the camera, and the thought of blog immortality, helped tip the balance. There was a time not long ago when no one would have imagined swimming in this water.

 

It’s a beautiful site and the swinging bridge evokes memories for most natives to the Brunswick-Topsham area. The associations fall into three categories: the once foul pollution of the river, the origin of the bridge as a commuter route for Franco-American millworkers, or the friend-of-a-friend who once drove a VW across the swinging bridge.

 

The bridge, spanning the Androscoggin, once traversed what was considered one of the ten most polluted rivers in America.  Because of the incredible pollution throughout the first three-quarters of the 20th century, no one would swim in the water. Nothing lived in it. Generally covered in a vile yellow brown foam, particularly down river and below the falls, in colder months the foam solidified.  For all appearances it could have been walked across. When sheets of the foam would calve and float away, the piece left behind would reveal striations like aged geological formations with colored layers—none of them seen in nature—moving from darkest to a grim faded yellow at the top. The smell was legendary.

 

The second well documented bit is the history of the bridge itself. First built in the late 19th century to support a burgeoning housing development in the Topsham heights where mill-workers at the growing textile and paper mills might live one day, it has been repaired and replaced a number of times since.  Intwined with the Franco American heritage of the region and their connections to the mills and to St. John’s Parish, there has always been an affection and fascination with the swinging bridge. At the end of the 20th century a coordinated effort to preserve the bridge as a cultural and scenic asset rehabilitated it and added some park-like amenities.

 

Less well documented is the story of the VW Beetle. Or was it a Rabbit? In any event it was a friend of a friend from high school who did it. And no matter how poorly documented the story is, everyone—of a certain age, at least—claims a connection to the driver, or at least to the passenger.

“It was a guy named Mo in a yellow Beetle, he works at the yard now. He was riding with a guy named Ted whose father was the school superintendent. They were coming up from Water Street when Joe Labbe blue lighted them so Mo took off, went the wrong way on Gilman, up Oak Street, and then across the bridge and into the heights. The cruiser couldn’t follow so Joe was just there sputtering like Rosco P. Coltrane.”

 

“No way, it wasn’t Mo, Ted was driving his Rabbit, but Mo was with him. And it was Jeffries, not Labbe.”

 

“Nuh-uh. It was Shelley and her sister. That family owned two VW Things. They both went across, And there weren’t any cops.”

 

“It was a girl all right, but her name was Janice. And she did get caught even though she made it across the bridge. She got caught because the Beetle—its name was Gregor Samsa—was tricked out with one of those fake Rolls Royce hoods so everyone knew exactly who it was. Cops just went to her house and waited. Her father was the Dean over at the College so you can imagine the scene.”

 

“The College. Gregor. Figures.”

 

(Maybe you’ve heard your own version of driving across the bridge? Drop a line. Click right on photo below for more)

bridge jumps.jpg
bridge jumps-2.jpg
bridge jumps-3.jpg
bridge jumps-5.jpg
bridge jumps-6.jpg
In Maine Photographer, Maine History Tags Brunswick, Pejepscot Historical Society

Search Posts

 
  • May 2025
    • May 17, 2025 Did you click like? Don't forget the money!!! May 17, 2025
  • March 2025
    • Mar 14, 2025 "Guzzle." Why Books Are So Much Better Than The Internet. Mar 14, 2025
  • February 2025
    • Feb 22, 2025 The Benefits of Clarity (in Lightroom anyway) Feb 22, 2025
    • Feb 6, 2025 One True Friend: The Brunswick Area Student Aid Fund Feb 6, 2025
  • January 2025
    • Jan 5, 2025 Lurking by the River: Happy New Year From My Friends Rachel and Frank Jan 5, 2025
  • November 2024
    • Nov 23, 2024 It was my father who first put him down cellar Nov 23, 2024
  • September 2024
    • Sep 26, 2024 Bangor Girl's Soccer Upends Mt. Ararat, 2-1. Sep 26, 2024
  • August 2024
    • Aug 23, 2024 Bartlett's "Familiar Quotations," a Second Edition (convince me otherwise). Aug 23, 2024
    • Aug 18, 2024 Arts! Crafts! Music! and a little bit of learning. Aug 18, 2024
  • July 2024
    • Jul 27, 2024 Seeing With New Eyes Jul 27, 2024
  • June 2024
    • Jun 14, 2024 Quesadillas for cash, golfing for good Jun 14, 2024
  • May 2024
    • May 6, 2024 Four Thousand New Old Books: tales from the Flea Market, Part II May 6, 2024
  • April 2024
    • Apr 30, 2024 Killdeer, A Jack Antonoff Project Apr 30, 2024
  • March 2024
    • Mar 9, 2024 Four-thousand new old books: Tales from the flea market, Part I Mar 9, 2024
  • February 2024
    • Feb 3, 2024 Photographing Phototropism: embracing the optimism of a single yellow birch. Feb 3, 2024
  • January 2024
    • Jan 5, 2024 Famed Broadcaster Dale Arnold Visits Six Rivers Youth Sports to Help Raise The Rink! Jan 5, 2024
  • December 2023
    • Dec 30, 2023 Saying Good-bye Dec 30, 2023
    • Dec 16, 2023 Raise the Rink! Hockey Moms and the Rest of the Skating Community Come Together to Have Some Fun and Build a New Rink in Topsham. Dec 16, 2023
    • Dec 1, 2023 We Belong to the Rock. Dec 1, 2023
  • November 2023
    • Nov 24, 2023 Scouting Locations, Looking to Photograph the Northern Lights Without a Plan Nov 24, 2023
    • Nov 21, 2023 On the Trail of John McKee, Part II: A Missed Opportunity Revisited. Nov 21, 2023
    • Nov 17, 2023 Getting In Touch With My Inner John McKee Nov 17, 2023
  • October 2023
    • Oct 2, 2023 I told Carter he might be the last kid with a yearbook photo taken under the Green Bridge Oct 2, 2023
  • July 2023
    • Jul 28, 2023 Get The Light While You Can Jul 28, 2023
    • Jul 14, 2023 Brunswick's Folk Orange Debuts EP Jul 14, 2023
    • Jul 5, 2023 Golfing for Good, The Peter Gardner Scholarship. The Brunswick, Maine High Class of 1980 sets out to endow their third perpetual scholarship with the Brunswick Area Student Aid Fund. Jul 5, 2023
  • June 2023
    • Jun 23, 2023 The Sportswriter Jun 23, 2023
  • April 2023
    • Apr 2, 2023 Grant Wood Was a Drone Pilot Apr 2, 2023
  • March 2023
    • Mar 30, 2023 The Best Picture I Never Took: Missing the Hero Shot. Mar 30, 2023
  • December 2022
    • Dec 26, 2022 Laura E. Richards's House, Lost to a Christmas Fire Dec 26, 2022
  • October 2022
    • Oct 22, 2022 What a Way to Go: A Scholar's Death Oct 22, 2022
  • September 2022
    • Sep 12, 2022 A Full Moon, and Football, Return to Brunswick High School Sep 12, 2022
  • June 2022
    • Jun 19, 2022 I buy it if I like the album cover. Jun 19, 2022
  • February 2022
    • Feb 27, 2022 Who Owned This Book? And, Have You Seen "Topper" Lately? Feb 27, 2022
  • December 2021
    • Dec 31, 2021 The Back-Checker Dec 31, 2021
    • Dec 22, 2021 Hey Catherine Maria Sedgwick, What's Your Pub Date? Dec 22, 2021
    • Dec 13, 2021 Pull Up In Black And Orange And Get Rowdy Dec 13, 2021
  • November 2021
    • Nov 24, 2021 The Tree in Mr. Hubbard's Yard Nov 24, 2021
    • Nov 16, 2021 A Couple of Old Friends Nov 16, 2021
  • October 2021
    • Oct 30, 2021 Down by the River, I Shot My Camera Oct 30, 2021
  • September 2021
    • Sep 8, 2021 f/64. I wish. Focus stacking in pursuit of legendary detail. Sep 8, 2021
  • January 2021
    • Jan 24, 2021 A Favorite View Jan 24, 2021
  • December 2020
    • Dec 16, 2020 On Its Way Home, Samuel Parker's Exploring Tour Beyond the Rockies. Dec 16, 2020
  • August 2020
    • Aug 29, 2020 We Walked Because We Had To Aug 29, 2020
    • Aug 24, 2020 Old Books With Maps, Always a Welcome Trip Down the Rabbit Hole. Aug 24, 2020
  • July 2020
    • Jul 11, 2020 You Want to be Where Everybody Knows Your Name (Or Do You?) Jul 11, 2020
  • May 2020
    • May 16, 2020 This Year, Go Ahead And Buy That Teacher Gift May 16, 2020
  • April 2020
    • Apr 13, 2020 Learning To Judge A Book By Its Cover Apr 13, 2020
  • February 2020
    • Feb 8, 2020 Kate Douglas Wiggin. A Face of Brunswick in 1904 and the first President of the Bowdoin Society of Women Feb 8, 2020
  • January 2020
    • Jan 26, 2020 A Chop Shop For Old Art Books? Jan 26, 2020
  • December 2019
    • Dec 27, 2019 Harriet Beecher Stowe, A Face of Brunswick since 1850. First editions, her imitators, detractors, and their work. Dec 27, 2019
    • Dec 4, 2019 Not What I Wanted: My Diane Arbus Phase Dec 4, 2019
  • November 2019
    • Nov 6, 2019 In October's endless brightness Nov 6, 2019
  • September 2019
    • Sep 15, 2019 Where is Elm Island, Mr. Kellogg? Sep 15, 2019
  • August 2019
    • Aug 20, 2019 A Rabbit Hole Filled With Books Aug 20, 2019
    • Aug 8, 2019 It's No Drive-In Movie, But The Price is Right Aug 8, 2019
  • February 2019
    • Feb 22, 2019 1344 Pounds of Granite Feb 22, 2019
  • November 2018
    • Nov 23, 2018 Light the tree with Brunswick High's talented singers. How did they get so good? Nov 23, 2018
    • Nov 3, 2018 Welcome Home Lily Nov 3, 2018
  • October 2018
    • Oct 29, 2018 Maine's Most Complete Coverage of the State Cross-Country Championships . Oct 29, 2018
  • September 2018
    • Sep 26, 2018 Learning a New Sport, Part II: At least there is no offsides. Sep 26, 2018
    • Sep 3, 2018 Learning a New Sport Sep 3, 2018
  • August 2018
    • Aug 28, 2018 They Don't Build Them Like This Anymore Aug 28, 2018
    • Aug 26, 2018 Bridge Stories: A VW Beetle named Gregor? Aug 26, 2018
    • Aug 22, 2018 Not What I Wanted Aug 22, 2018
    • Aug 21, 2018 On The Road From Belfast: A Conversion Story Aug 21, 2018
  • July 2018
    • Jul 22, 2018 The Fruits of Her Labor: How to Brand a Job. Jul 22, 2018
    • Jul 17, 2018 Drive-by shooting Jul 17, 2018
    • Jul 13, 2018 Joy gives way to empathy. Jul 13, 2018
    • Jul 8, 2018 Finding the vantage point. Jul 8, 2018

Powered by Squarespace