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Trip from Damariscotta Mills to Madawaska
Maine State Archives, Text

Pages from a journal regarding a trip from Damarariscotta Mills to Madawaska, mentioning the terrain, French settlers living along the route and their churches, Indians found living there, and conflict with representatives of the British Gov't in N.B.

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Churches
Conflict-Stability: control of Maine, land disputes, French-English-Indians
Surveys
Waterways
Native Americans
Rivers
Settlements
Land Disputes

Text
Letter from Benjamin Mathes, Jr. to Samuel S. Lewis, Apr. 12, 1836
Maine Historical Society, Text

Letter from Benjamin Mathes, Jr. to Samuel S. Lewis of Boston, April 12, 1836 about two cargos of lumber.

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Boston and Eastern Mill and Land Company
Letters
Lewis, Samuel S.
Lewis, Samuel S. -- Correspondence
Lumber trade -- Maine
Manuscripts
Mathes, Benjamin
Mathes, Benjamin -- Correspondence
Shipping -- Maine
West River Mill & Lumber Company

Moving Image
View Americans Living in Shanghai
Northeast Historic Film, Moving Image, 00:02:18

Clip excerpted from original films donated to Northeast Historic Film by Joan Swan Branch, daughter of Joseph E.C. Swan. The Joan Branch Collection, Accessions 0706 and 0712, is 7400 feet of silent 16mm reversal film shot between 1920 and 1940, primarily in Maine and China. Joan Branch's grandfather, Forrest Colby of Bingham, Maine, was Maine Forest Commissioner. Forrest Colby's daughter, Lena Mary Colby, married Joseph E.C. Swan in Shanghai, China, in 1923. The China footage was shot by Swan's father, Joseph E.C. Swan, between 1928 and 1936. Joseph E.C. Swan (1898-1960) was a founding member of Swan, Culbertson & Fitz, a banking and brokerage firm in the Far East. He was associated with the firm from 1926 to 1936. He lived with his wife and three children in Shanghai. This video clip shows: 1. Views of an American family's driveway from outside a gate, which is opened by a Chinese household servant while another stands by as a large automobile enters. A closer view of the house's front door, arrival of car, and a young girl in summer dress walking up the steps. The girl is Joan Swan, donor of the film. 2. American children and dogs run toward the camera across the lawn at an expatriate home in Shanghai, China. 3. Views of American family at the beach with Chinese amah caring for the children. Row of beach houses.

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Americans - China - Shanghai - History - 20th century
Shanghai (China) -- Social life and customs -- 20th century

Moving Image
People of the dawn
MPBN: Home Series, Moving Image, 0:26:37

The first and longest lasting period of Maine’s history is the world of the Native American, stretching from the retreat of the last Ice Age, 12,000 years to the present. People of the Dawn tells the story of the dynamic people who’ve inhabited the landscape of Maine.

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Native Americans
Canoes and canoeing
Maliseet Tribe
Micmac Tribe
Penobscot Tribe
Passamaquoddy Tribe
Wabanaki Tribe

Still Image
Log Jam above Falls
Maine Folklife Center, Still Image

Photograph of big log jam on rocks above falls. Some logs sticking straight up in air. Log jams were one of the primary problems in river driving. Once a jam formed, men would have to "pick the jam" in order to get the logs moving again. Picking the jam involved going out onto the logs in order to move them one by one until the men found and moved the one log that was holding all of the others in place. When this happened the jam would let go. At this moment, with many logs heading downstream at once, any river driver left on the river was in grave danger.

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Log driving
Lumbering
Lumbering
Rivers

Moving Image
A Place Apart
MPBN: Home Series, Moving Image, 00:27:01

Maine is a place apart from the mainstream of American society. Beginning early in Maine’s history, settlers, merchants, visitors, artists, and writers brought images of Maine to the rest of the world that shaped the State's economy, identity, and heritage. The history behind the image of Maine remains a vital part of how we and those from away view Maine today.

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Maine heritage
European settlement
History - Colonial Period

Moving Image
View The Paper Chase
Northeast Historic Film, Moving Image, 00:01:41

An event held by an expatriate club in Shanghai, China, in which riders raced over a course through the countryside. Clip excerpted from original films donated to Northeast Historic Film by Joan Swan Branch, daughter of Joseph E.C. Swan. The Joan Branch Collection, Accessions 0706 and 0712, is 7400 feet of silent 16mm reversal film shot between 1920 and 1940, primarily in Maine and China. Joan Branch's grandfather, Forrest Colby of Bingham, Maine, was Maine Forest Commissioner. Forrest Colby's daughter, Lena Mary Colby, married Joseph E.C. Swan in Shanghai, China, in 1923. The China footage was shot by Swan's father, Joseph E.C. Swan, between 1928 and 1936. Joseph E.C. Swan (1898-1960) was a founding member of Swan, Culbertson & Fitz, a banking and brokerage firm in the Far East. He was associated with the firm from 1926 to 1936. He lived with his wife and three children in Shanghai.

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Horse sports
Americans - China - Shanghai - History - 20th century
Shanghai Paper Hunt Club (Shanghai: China)

Still Image
Picking a Jam with Batteau
Maine Folklife Center, Still Image

Photograph of a group of men picking a log jam, batteau being held in the current ready to take them off when the jam begins to go. Log jams were one of the primary problems in river driving. Once a jam formed, men would have to "pick the jam" in order to get the logs moving again. Picking the jam involved going out onto the logs in order to move them one by one until the men found and moved the one log that was holding all of the others in place. When this happened the jam would let go. At this moment, with many logs heading downstream at once, any river driver left on the river was in grave danger. The batteaux would wait in order to take the men off the logs as the jam let go.

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Boats and boating
Log driving
Lumbering
Lumbering
Rivers

Still Image
Picking a Jam
Maine Folklife Center, Still Image

Photograph of group of men picking a small jam on rocks in rapids on the Wassataquoik River. Cant dogs in use. Batteau drawn up to right. Log jams were one of the primary problems in river driving. Once a jam formed, men would have to "pick the jam" in order to get the logs moving again. Picking the jam involved going out onto the logs in order to move them one by one until the men found and moved the one log that was holding all of the others in place. When this happened the jam would let go. At this moment, with many logs heading downstream at once, any river driver left on the river was in grave danger. The batteaux would wait in order to take the men off the logs as the jam let go.

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Log driving
Lumbering
Lumbering
Rivers

Moving Image
View Images from the Countryside
Northeast Historic Film, Moving Image, 00:03:56

Clip excerpted from original films donated to Northeast Historic Film by Joan Swan Branch, daughter of Joseph E.C. Swan. The Joan Branch Collection, Accessions 0706 and 0712, is 7400 feet of silent 16mm reversal film shot between 1920 and 1940, primarily in Maine and China. Joan Branch's grandfather, Forrest Colby of Bingham, Maine, was Maine Forest Commissioner. Forrest Colby's daughter, Lena Mary Colby, married Joseph E.C. Swan in Shanghai, China, in 1923. The China footage was shot by Swan's father, Joseph E.C. Swan, between 1928 and 1936. This clip shows: 1. An American family drives in a convertible into the countryside and passes through villages. Views include a stone bridge with a bench, another bridge with pavilions, and views of the road ahead from the moving car. The camera pans a village scene with Chinese people interacting with an American woman. Views of the village, waterway and road, showing a harvest, the car parked near a building, an elderly man. The moving car passes people by roadside; views over the windshield through a town. The American woman walks by thatched and tile-roofed buildings. Driving along canal or waterway at high speed, speeding through a village with people and chicken by side of road, in the countryside, people stopped to observe. Western man in hat is on ground, reclining. Chinese boy turns and looks at camera. 2. West Lake holiday; men paddle covered boats with upholstered sofas. A view from a boat of the hotel with upturned roof line, trees on the lakefront. Large car stopped on the road while American family walks among Chinese people. Pan to stone building by the road. A water buffalo plows with a man walking behind next to the road. View of the road receding into the distance with mountains. Joseph E.C. Swan (1898-1960) was a founding member of Swan, Culbertson & Fitz, a banking and brokerage firm in the Far East. He was associated with the firm from 1926 to 1936. He lived with his wife and three children in Shanghai.

(Relevance: 662)   Find Similar Resources
Americans - China - Shanghai - History - 20th century
Shanghai (China) -- Social life and customs -- 20th century
Suzhou (China) -- Social life and customs -- 20th century
Hangzhou (China) -- Social life and customs -- 20th century

You found 50 resources
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