Vintage Bar Harbor Map is a photograph by Edward Fielding which was uploaded on December 18th, 2013.
Vintage Bar Harbor Map
Note: the watermark in the lower right does not appear in the final print.... more
Title
Vintage Bar Harbor Map
Artist
Edward Fielding
Medium
Photograph - Photography
Description
Note: the watermark in the lower right does not appear in the final print.
....
Perspective map not drawn to scale. Bird's-eye-view. LC Panoramic maps (2nd ed.). Bar Harbor, Maine
Original lithograph was drawn, ca. 1886, Charles Jorgensen
Notice the hotel on the top of Cadillac Mountain. Today there is only a gift shop and bathroom facility.
Also interesting to note the cog railroad leading up to the top of Cadillac Mountain. This train was later sold and moved to Mount Washington in the White Mountains of New Hampshire were it is still in service today.
The Green Mountain Cog Railway was a mountain railway built to carry tourists to the top of Green Mountain (now known as Cadillac Mountain) on Mount Desert Island in Maine. Its track was built to 4 ft 8 in (1,422 mm) gauge, which is technically a narrow gauge, as it is a 1⁄2-inch less than 4 ft 8 1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge.
At the end of the 19th century, Maine's tourist industry was developing rapidly. The islands off the coast of Maine were popular attractions, and the possibility of a cog railway to the top of Green Mountain was first explored in the late 1870s, following the success of the Mount Washington Cog Railway in New Hampshire. Construction of the railway started in 1883, and it was built to the designs in the Marsh patents developed for the Mount Washington line. The first locomotive was built by the Manchester Locomotive Works, and was meant to be for the Mount Washington line. After the first season, Frank Clergue, "owner and operator", bought another coach and locomotive, both identical to their predecessors. The coaches and work cars were built by the Hinckley & Egery Iron Co. The coaches had eight benches, with open air seating that could hold six. During bad weather, canvas tarps were rolled down from the ceiling to protect the passengers from the wind and rain. The #1 locomotive was named "Mount Desert", and #2 was not named. Both locomotives were used at the same time when there were large numbers of passengers. There were no switches on the railway, so the trains did not have the ability to pass each other.
The line operated during the summer season and for the first few years was successful. But tourist numbers declined, and after the 1890 season the railway ceased operations. The railway's two steam locomotives were sold to the Mount Washington Cog Railway in 1895 after five years of disuse.
Uploaded
December 18th, 2013
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Comments (6)
Edward Fielding
Thanks to my collector of a 30.000" x 22.750" METAL print of Vintage Bar Harbor Map to a buyer from Delray Beach, FL. Enjoy!
Edward Fielding
Thanks to my collector who purchase a 20.000" x 15.125" print of Vintage Bar Harbor Map going to Reading, MA
Harvey Jorgensen
I bought some of these greeting cards, a T-shirt and plan to buy more. I was thrilled to find this image on various items. The original lithograph was drawn, ca. 1886, by my Great Grandfather, Charles Jorgensen, who lived in Boston. An original, with attribution, is in the collections of the Boston Athenaeum. Thank you for popularizing his work. I will do more shopping here. H. Jorgensen Carolina, RI