Archive for the ‘Images of Maine’ Category

Q. What do Brooklyn, New York and Brunswick, Maine have in common?

Sunday, January 10th, 2010

A.  The same company that was responsible for design/build of the famous Brooklyn Bridge designed and built the suspension footbridge from Brunswick to Topsham Heights.

Swing Bridge Tower, Brunswick to TopshamAlthough I’ve lived in Brunswick, Maine for almost 4 years now, it was just a few months ago that I finally stopped at that little pedestrian suspension bridge over the Androscoggin River. The bridge was built when the tenement housing in Brunswick (for workers of the Cabot Manufacturing textile mill – mostly immigrants from Quebec) became overcrowded.  Additional housing being built in Topsham Heights required a way to cross the River when walking to work.

I stopped again today on a very, VERY, cold day in January. Walking out to the middle of the bridge and standing there briefly while freezing winds whipped through the cables brought to mind the mill workers who walked it each day on their way to work.  My commute starts with pushing the remote control starter on my car to get a little warmth going before I leave home.  Then it often requires a swing through the drive up at the local Tim Hortons for coffee.  From there, it’s a 30 minute drive down I-295 to the Portland waterfront.  By comparison, the commute must have been a cold uncomfortable walk for the mill workers.  The deck of the bridge was iced over, the winds caused a slight sway, making the cable squeak with cold.  Pedestrian BridgeThe walking commute would have probably been the beginning and end of a 14 hour day in a noisy dust filled mill, 6 days a week.  Something to think about while I sip my coffee and wait for my computer to warm up.

A few of the details:

The A.J. Roebling Sons Company built the bridge in 1892.

It was almost lost during a spring flood in 1936, but the bridge was repaired and the original wire suspension cables are still in use.  (See archive image of flood damage to bridge.)

It was built for the mill workers, but also used by students and church goers as it provided access to St. John  Catholic School and Church, as well as the Brunswick High School

For more information and some terrific old photos visit the Maine Memory Network.

More on Cabot Mill and the French Canadian immigrants that worked there.

Androscoggin River from swinging bridge.

Victoria Mansion, Portland, Maine

Sunday, January 3rd, 2010

Victoria Mansion ExteriorSince I’m snowed in for the weekend, I’m finally starting the New Year with a long overdue blog post.  This past week I visited the Victoria Mansion in Portland, decorated beautifully for the Holiday Season.  My original intention was to share this visit with you through photographs, but unfortunately I found that they do not allow interior photos to be taken. When I asked a couple of volunteers why photography was not allowed, I was told:

1)  Security – If photos were seen it could encourage someone to steal the antiques. (Apparently the detailed photos for sale in the gift shop are not a risk?)
2)  Flash might hurt the delicate paint on the walls.

When I mentioned I was hoping to use photos in my blog post, a very nice volunteer did encourage me to contact the management which might supply me with some approved photos. (That would take all the fun out of it for me.  The exterior photos shown are mine.)

This got me thinking about how much has changed, not only since the time the house was built, but since the time this policy must have been set.  Indoor photos can be easily taken without flash by most cameras.  Blogging is a common way of sharing information that would encourage more visitors to enjoy historic landmarks such as the Victoria Mansion, but a picture is indeed worth a thousand words.  What do you think?

I decided to view the house anyway ($15) and it was indeed lovely.  Today is the last day it will be open this winter, but if you are in Portland you will be able to enjoy it starting in May.

http://www.victoriamansion.org/tour.html

Victoria Mansion Exterior

September Sailing

Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009

A couple months ago we went on a company sailing day, and there were many great photographers on the trip.  We had loads of photos of sails, photos of water, and photos of people taking photos of people taking photos of water and sails.

Given the professionals had some pretty outstanding results, I’ve been dragging my feet about posting any of  my own pics, but finally here are some of my favorites by my own hand:

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Change of Seasons

Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009

This year more than most, it seemed that the seasons changed on a specific day.   Sunday, the first day of November and the first day of the early dark the time change brings, was a beautiful day.  It followed a Halloween night that was an unlikely 62 degrees.  The forsythia outside my window was still a brilliant gold as the sun shone through the leaves.  Within the hour the light had shifted so that they looked a dull brown and every gust of wind took more of them to the ground.

Anxious to get out and enjoy this “last” day of the season before 6 months of gray trees here in Maine, I took a ride down to the Orr’s Island area, and again was struck by how late afternoon light effects the beauty of the scenery, and that it is even more beautiful because of the shadows balancing the light.


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Dining Alone

Sunday, July 12th, 2009

It’s a beautiful sunny day today, something fairly rare this rainy summer in Maine.  But I’m inside, sticking to my resolve to sort through and shred old papers that have been lurking in storage areas for years.   Among the many things I found and have had no reason to keep:  my first credit card, from Rines Department Store in Bangor – from 1972 or thereabouts; my reading materials from the NTL lab in Bethel almost a decade ago; and a find I’ll hold onto longer still – one of my occasional writing attempts from over a decade ago.

On this sunny day, this little view of having popovers at Jordon Pond teahouse brought me back to how much I love Mt. Dessert Island, but am not so fond of dining out alone.  I usually bring a book with me, but this time I brought a notebook and pen and made up this little vignette with a semi imaginary character named Ellie.  So next time you are faced with dining alone, take in your surroundings by capturing them with a descriptive writing exercise.



Ellie sat in the tea house waiting for the young man assigned to her table to return.  According to the card on the table he was from Dublin and named Mick. The wait staff typically came from far away places to spend the summers between their college years in Maine.

It was a wonderful place to be for someone lunching alone.  The huge windows looked out over the garden, providing vignettes of families and couples as they wandered in their striped and sneakered tourist finery through summer scents and colors.  Ellie had stopped once and spoken with the gardener, asking the names of the different plants.  Some had amusing names like gooseneck with its high stem topped by a graceful curving white cluster of tiny flowers, giving the impression of a goose just bending its head down.

Mick dropped off her order and she now dawdled over her coffee. The smell of hot popovers slathered with butter and strawberry jam that had brought fame to the teahouse wafted through the air, and she was enjoying the entertainment beyond the panes of glass.

Hundreds of bees hovered upwards from the flowers like tiny helicopters, moving on to their next conquest.  Hikers coming in from the network of nearby trails hovered as well; pointing, oohing and ahhing at the gardens, the view of the pond and the wonder of being somewhere other than where they spent their real lives.

The people who visited the teahouse now were different than those from long ago, and this was reflected in the changes to the restaurant.  The original had been a primitive dining room with walls covered with birch bark.  Diners waited in a closed entry room until the dining room doors opened to reveal a spectacular view of the pond and the hills rising like two giant bubbles on its far edge. Set at optimum perspective, the effect was breathtaking.  Everyone was seated at the same time with an air of some special expectation, almost as if the tea house were holding its breath, suddenly releasing when the wait staff fanned out to the semi circle of tables, listening to orders and getting them perfectly right without benefit of paper and pen.

Now the restaurant was pleasant, light and airy; and much the same as other yuppie restaurants in tourist resting spots.

The effect of the location though had not changed.  Ellie was on the last few days of her vacation.  Never before had she taken three weeks together – at least not without it involving a job hunt.  The stress of a life spinning fast, combined with turning 40, called for something special though like this extended vacation.  For an introvert, the anonymity of being just another tourist, with no expectations placed on her, no demands on her time, no one projecting their needs onto her, brought relaxation and a centering back to some core place in her spirit. At this particular place and time, alone was a good place to be.


The Unexpected Muse

Sunday, June 7th, 2009

A while back I took some pictures down at Orr’s and Bailey’s Island.  I’ve wanted to go back and get some of the same spots now that the flowers and leaves are out, but schedule and weather haven’t meshed.

The other night I thought I should just take the time and go, but once I was down there it just wasn’t inspiring.  Although the sun was out, the light seemed flat and my reaction was ho hum.

On my way home I took a shortcut through Bowdoin College, and the sun was dappled on some rhododendrons so I stopped and halfheartedly took a few shots, one of which is posted below.  On the return to my car I turned around and noticed a pillar with this fabulous lion.  Not at all what I intended to take a picture of, but the unexpected muse grabbed me and this was my favorite shot of the evening.


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Play Tourist in Your Own Hometown

Sunday, April 5th, 2009

This morning I saw a brief clip on TV of the beautiful cherry blossoms in Washington – WOW spring really is coming. Here in Maine though we’re still weeks away from that first blush of spring green showing up. So I thought I’d play tourist in my own neck of the woods and go looking for the beauty of Maine even if the major color scheme is gray trees and brown mud. Turns out I found a lot more color after all – hope you enjoy these images from Bailey’s Island near Brunswick, ME.

Bailey's and Orrs Island, Maine
Dock waiting for summer
Maine
lichen on stone
Maine
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