Monday, November 30, 2009

St Anne’s Church on Indian Island, Old Town, Maine




This is St Anne’s Church on Indian Island, Old Town, Maine. This picture shows the Convent, which on Google Earth, appears to be gone. The church is white in the photo and also shows white snow all around. Currently the church is brown.
I attended Mass there as a child. We used to walk across the old metal bridge, sometimes, as my home was not far away. The wind always seemed to blow down the Penobscot River so we were most always chilled even with hats pulled over our ears.
My Gephyrophobia, or bridge phobia, made the walk interesting to say the least.
They had a 5pm mass on Sunday that was very short (30 minutes and no singing). At the time there were no Saturday masses so you would see the people who would sleep in on Sunday or workers from the day shift at the pulp mill still in their work clothes and smelling of black liquor (like rotten eggs). The Indian children used to raise hell in the front pews at times and the priest would give them the evil eye. After mass we would walk home and look for something for supper (this was the only meal of the week you were on your own in my mother’s house)

44°56'34.04"N
68°39'8.90"W

New information:

National Register of Historic Places
(added 1973 - Building - #73000141)

Sunday, November 8, 2009

Center & Main Street in the 1930’s






Most of my postcards are from earlier in the century, but here are two showing two views of the intersection of Main and Center St.
The first image is heading toward French Island and Milford. Note the fine steel bridge which I loathed crossing. It had a grated deck and “sang” as you crossed in a car. It still brings shivers thinking of when I walked across it because you could see the Penobscot River; it seemed like, miles below.
The second image, and much safer direction in my mind, is toward Indian Island, the woolen mills and where I grew up. When I visited Old Town last summer I sat on a bench where the drug store was and imagined all what had happen in that spot over the last few hundred years. I invite others to do the same in a location familiar to you and feel how relaxing and satisfying it can be.

44°56'5.27"N
68°38'44.63"W

Friday, October 9, 2009

Old Town Woolen Mill

Old Town Maine has been a mill town for over 150 years. We have seen saw mills, pulp mills, shoe shops, canoe/boat shops and woolen mills. Some are still here and producing and some are here, but serving other purposes.

The subject of this posting is the Old Town Woolen Mill. From Sanborn Maps this building is shown in place as a woolen mill in 1895, but it was there many years before that. In the 1960’s it was a shoe shop and today is called Penobscot River House (a retirement apartment complex).

It is sometimes confused with the American Woolen Mill which was south on N. Main St. At one time they were under one ownership.

I do plan on sharing more information in the future, but now it is about the pictures.



In the distance is the woolen mill, Indian Island would be on the left.

From the Milford side of the river.



A comment on the back of the above postcard states this is a place where he works with about 200 little french girls.


A little drama added to this postcard.


The road looks rutted and muddy.

Saturday, September 26, 2009

Downtown Old Town Again


I enjoy seeing the changes between postcards and trying to guess what happened. Old Town had many fires so this is probably the major cause.

Another downtown Old Town, Maine postcard



The previous post was from the opposite direction. The one has been colorized (not my favorite technique). We can see the street car as well a horse and wagon. This is looking north toward Indian Island.

44°56'6.24"N
68°38'45.29"W

Friday, September 25, 2009

Very old Old Town, Maine downtown


This is a very old picture of Old Town downtown showing horse and wagons as well as the tracks of the Bangor Street Railway. This section ran from Bangor to Great Works via Main St-Stillwater Ave.-College Ave and more or less Route 2 thru Veazie to Bangor.

This photo is rich in detail showing dirt roads, horses, wagons and a bicycle. Many people can be seen walking on the wide sidewalk.


44°56'8.45"N
68°38'46.66"W

Monday, September 7, 2009

Old Location of St. Joseph Church

I found the answer in an excellent history of St. Joseph Church written by Genie Wollstadt.

She says that it was located in the current Forest Hill Cemetery between the first and second entrance roads. This is the location of the Catholic section, which makes sense.

My parent’s future burial site is about in this location as well as my grandparents.

44°55'14.89"N
68°38'25.75"W

St. Joseph Church Newspaper Article


This explains what happen to the church on Water Street.
I wonder where the location was in Great Works?

Sunday, September 6, 2009

More about Old Town Churches



I found a book with more pictures of Old Town, ME churches. Some are still there and I have added their locations. Some are guesses using old maps.

First Congregation (Demolished) (Star in the East Lodge #60 A.F. & A.M. on this site)
44°56'3.16"N
68°38'53.65"W

First Baptist
44°56'6.37"N
68°38'58.41"W

Methodist Episcopal (Was Demolished) (Old Town Canoe Expansion on site)
44°56'10.83"N
68°38'56.45"W

Universalist Church of Our Father (Was demolished)
44°55'58.26"N
68°38'41.19"W

Chapel Indian Island
44°56'33.75"N
68°39'8.60"W

St. James Episcopal
44°56'4.18"N
68°38'45.49"W

St. Joseph Catholic
44°55'49.14"N
68°38'37.61"W

Union at Stillwater
44°54'36.81"N
68°41'13.41"W

Baptist at Great Works
44°55'2.05"N
68°38'21.40"W

Sunday, August 30, 2009

Old High School in Old Town, ME



When I was a kid this was the Jefferson Street Elementary School, but in my mother's day it was the high school. Notice the water stand pipe in the background that was used for Old Town's water.
This area was called Academy Hill because; I believe possibly the school started out as private. I need to complete more research on this subject. The building is still there last I checked.

44°55'51.94"N
68°39'27.44"W

Friday, August 14, 2009

Herbert Gray School Old Town, Maine


I attended K-6 here as my mother did. This building is no longer there. I was always amused that over the side doors it was engraved BOYS and on the other GIRLS. I guess early in the 1900's the sexes could not use the same doors. I was sad when it was demolished. It was a fine brick and granite structure. The groups of five windows in the front were different rooms. Bottom right was my 1st grade, then clockwise...2nd, 3rd and 5th.
44°56'12.16"N
68°39'14.37"W

Friday, July 31, 2009

Other Churches



Top Picture Location
44°56'2.70"N
68°38'52.39"W
Church has been replaced with Masonic Lodge
Second Picture
44°55'58.44"N
44°55'58.44"N
Church no longer there
Third Picture
Same as second

Catholic Churches (Continued) Indian Island and Orono



Top Picture
Indian Island Church
St Ann's
44°56'33.75"N
68°39'8.60"W
Second Picture
St. Mary's Orono, ME
44°52'51.78"N
68°40'26.97"W

Catholic Churches (Continued) St Mary's




Catholic Churches

The following cards show some of the Catholic churches in Old Town. There were two churches when I grew up in Old Town. St. Josephs, which I was a member and St. Mary’s. St. Josephs was considered the “French” church and St. Mary’s the “English”.


If I recall correctly St. Josephs was first located in the Great Works area of Old Town then relocated near the present location, but on Water St. The present location is on South Main St. One card will show both buildings. St. Joseph’s name was changed to Holy Family when it combined with St. Mary’s and now is called the Holy Family Church of the Resurrection of the Lord Parish. I am not sure of the details of that name change, but I believe it is due to priest shortages and parish consolidations.

There were other Catholic churches on Indian Island and Bradley. I actually lived nearer to the Island church and attended there occasionally as the mass was shorter and it was an easy walk.

So please enjoy and I hope to add more details in the future.
was first located in the Great Works area of Old Town then relocated near the present location, but on Water St. The present location is on South Main St. One card will show both buildings. St. Joseph’s name was changed to Holy Family when it combined with St. Mary’s and now is called the Holy Family Church of the Resurrection of the Lord Parish. I am not sure of the details of that name change, but I believe it is due to priest shortages and parish consolidations.

There were other Catholic churches on Indian Island and Bradley. I actually lived nearer to the Island church and attended there occasionally as the mass was shorter and it was an easy walk.

So please enjoy and I hope to add more details in the future.

The church in the background is the present St Josephs and the foreground is the one since torn down.
Approx. Location of old church - in foreground
44°55'49.70"N
68°38'36.37"W
Present church
44°55'48.64"N
68°38'42.19"W