Category Archives: Uncategorized

Sunset Cruising on Casco Bay

Deborah Clark cruise photo

My husband, daughter, and I enjoyed a wonderful boat cruise aboard the Blue Nun motoring around Casco Bay last Tuesday evening courtesy of Steve and Chris McDuffie.  They generously donated the trip as a raffle fundraiser for the Long Island Library and my husband won the prize.  Steve asked us where we wanted to go and since we had never seen Portland Head and Two Lights from “the other side,” we decided to boat down the coast to Cape Elizabeth.

The weather was perfect with a warm breeze and clear skies. Chris surprised us with some delicious snacks and my husband was able to snap several beautiful photographs of the area. As I took in the surrounding landscape and wildlife with binoculars, my daughter quizzed Chris on the local history and happenings of the islands.

On the return leg of the trip, we spotted the new Nova Star ferry coming in to dock at Portland’s Ocean Gateway Pier and a friendly harbor seal poked his head up to check us out. Steve took us around the back side of Peaks Island and with one last look at Fort Gorges, we got back to Portland just in time to take in a lovely sunset. We all had a marvelous time. Thank you to the McDuffies for making a two-hour boat ride such a memorable occasion.

Deborah Clark, Raymond, ME (with photographs by Craig Clark)

Deborah Clark cruise photo of Steve and Chris

 

Portland Pottery exhibit

This collection of pottery, on loan from Carl and Pauline Silveri, represents Portland and local Maine potters from about 1840 to the early 1920s, including E. Swasey & Company of Portland ME, a company which at one time was one of New England’s most prolific pottery works and today is all but forgotten.Portland Pottery exhibit

Eban Swasey was a potter who apprenticed in Exeter NH in the mid-1800s.  In 1875 he and his partner, Rufus Lamson, moved to Portland ME and established the Portland Earthen Ware Manufactory, producing redware.  Swasey and Lamson eventually went their separate ways, and in 1890 Swasey established E. Swasey & Co. at 273 Commercial Street in Portland.

In 1897, Swasey’s youngest son Perley joined the company, which became a sizeable enterprise by the turn of the century.  Eban died in 1906, but the business carried on until finally sputtering out of business in the Depression.  The factory buildings are still there on Commercial Street – refurbished and with the “E. Swasey” logos freshly restored on the end of the mill, they serve today as an office park.

http://davescupboard.blogspot.com/2010/08/vintage-sunday-e-swasey-co-pottery.html

There are also documents in the exhibit related to the E. Swasey & Co. Other Portland pottery companies in the exhibit include J.E. Goold and Geo. A. Young Co.

 

New bookstore in town!

For all you book lovers, here is some good news! There is a new bookstore in downtown Portland, and it’s beautiful. Sherman’s Books and Stationery has come to town, just opening in the Old Port on Exchange Street. It’s a visual treat inside – not only lots of attractive and appealing books, but lovely items to go with them. I was there on Earth Day (April 22) and a lot of earthy and green items caught my eye. There is a huge children’s area. Many of the books are reasonably priced.

Sherman books

Sherman’s Books was founded by Bill Sherman in 1886 in Bar Harbor. (They advertise themselves as “Maine’s oldest bookstore.”) There are stores in Camden, Freeport, and Bar Harbor. And now Portland! Lucky us. It’s so nice to see another Maine business come to our area.

For more information see www.shermans.com

and

https://www.facebook.com/ShermansBooks

 

Cookies, cookies, cookies

Happy New Year! It’s been a wintry year so far, with bitter cold, snow, wind, and even some rain. Perfect time to do some serious cookie baking, and eating. In order to celebrate the fine art of this culinary pleasure, we’ve installed a new exhibit in the library
to inspire you.  This exhibit of cookie cutters, collected by Nancy Noble throughout the years, has been installed in the glass case between the library and the small meeting room. These include not only Christmas cookie cutters, but also other holidays, from Presidents Day to Thanksgiving, as well as animals, teapots, fish, boats, and even Mickey Mouse. Come visit the exhibit, if you can, and pick out your favorites! A few cookie recipe books are also displayed (so, yes, there is a book connection)cookie exhibit at LICL

 

1924 tax records for Long Island – available for research!

Word is out – the 1924 tax records, owned by the City of Portland, are now available for research! Just go to the site (available through the Maine Memory Network, a site of the Maine Historical Society) to find your house or favorite building on Long Island:

http://www.mainememory.net/search/ptr

Probably the best way to see them all is to type in “Long Island” into the keyword search box.

You can limit the search by street address, owner, etc.

You will be able to see a picture of the building, as well as other information.

The Portland, Maine, 1924 Tax Records were created as part of a city-wide tax reevaluation.   The 2 3/4″ x 4″ original black and white photographs provide extraordinary documentation of the appearance and condition of every taxable property in the city at that time. The accompanying tax forms provide equally valuable information, including the use of the property, the original building materials and finishes and the property’s assessed value as of 1924. On the back of each form, a pencil sketch illustrates the size and shape of the building footprint on the property.

The collection consists of 131 books containing approximately 30,000 pages, each page recording a single property (properties with more than one building will generally have a page for each building).  The records were kept in a cabinet in the Portland tax assessor’s office in City Hall until 2009.1924 tax record project 6

Having these records available online has created quite a buzz all over Portland and Casco Bay, and great fun for researching houses, although some are no longer or unrecognizable.

This was a joint project between the City of Portland, the Portland Public Library, and the Maine Historical Society.

Ode to magazines

It’s not enough that I check out books from several libraries, as well as pick up books at used book sales, we also subscribe to many magazines (can’t help it!). There are boating magazines (even though our boat has been in the yard for several years) such as Cruising World and Sail Magazine, travel magazines (even though we don’t travel as often as I’d like) such as National Geographic Traveler and Afar, woodworking magazines (Michael’s favorite is American Woodworking), and home/decorating magazines (Country Living and English Home). Some are nostalgic for me. My mother subscribes to Threads for me, a knitting magazine. I will never be able to make anything in it as the patterns are way beyond my abilities, but I love to just look at the pictures (I can almost feel the yarn between my fingers) and think of my mother, an expert knitter. She also used to subscribe to Cooks Illustrated for Michael, knowing his love of cooking. I love Arizona Highways, which my father (whose birthday is today) first subscribed to for me, along with Alaska magazine. Several years ago my sister and I were in the Arizona Highways gift shop and she resubscribed for me, as an early birthday present. In contrast, I receive the local magazines Maine and Maine Home + Design, as freebies through work. I also can’t resist a good deal, such as Yankee Magazine and Smithsonian, which I subscribed to for about $10. National Geographic, which my husband has been receiving since he was a child, used to be a real bargain, but the prices have increased so much that I had to stop subscribing, to my sadness. However, a few months after dropping it, I received an offer I couldn’t resist, so I resubscribed at a lesser rate. Sometimes we’ll get free subscriptions through various offers, which explains why magazines such as “Inc” or “GQ” land in our mailbox. Long Island garden tour 2012 - Jacqui's porch

What are some of your favorite magazines, to read or subscribe to?

Librarians in politics

From our Maine State Librarian, Linda Lord:

Christine B. Powers, director of the Naples Public Library, has been elected to the 126th session of the Maine State Legislature. Regardless of political party or any other considerations it is a joy to announce that a librarian is serving in the House. Congratulations on your success, Christine!

(Yes, the more librarians in the state legislature, the better for our state’s public libraries, including Long Island Community Library!)