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Moving Image
View Joan Branch Collection, Reel 5501
Northeast Historic Film, Moving Image, 00:48:36

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.

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Americans - China - History - 20th century
China -- Social life and customs -- 20th century

Moving Image
View Joan Branch Collection, Reel 5502
Northeast Historic Film, Moving Image, 00:28:23

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.

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Americans - China - History - 20th century
China -- Social life and customs -- 20th century

Moving Image
View American Family Tours the Countryside
Northeast Historic Film, Moving Image, 00:06:35

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. Street performers with a crowd around them: a man catches and throws a stick, a child grimaces while wearing various costumes. A band performs with drums. A puppet show with audience in the foreground. A man performs magic tricks with a ball, cloth and cup. Food vendors on the street. 2. An American family drives in the countryside and uses simple ferries for river crossing. Views of a stone bridge with a Chinese person walking by, a river with passing watercraft. Ferry with closeups of arrival and loading the large American car on the ferry, which is like a simple raft. A pig by the roadside. Chinese family including children on a boat. Women steer and row a ferry with the car on board. Views of passing covered boats and watercraft at the ferry landing. Extended views of wooden ramps for boarding and getting off the ferry. 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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Americans - China - Shanghai - History - 20th century
Shanghai (China) -- Social life and customs

Moving Image
View Shanghai
Northeast Historic Film, Moving Image, 00:00:27

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 views of The Bund on the Shanghai waterfront with street traffic including cars, rickshaws, trucks, a trolley and pan up a building with a clock tower. 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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Americans - China - Shanghai - History - 20th century
Shanghai (China) -- Social life and customs -- 20th century

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)

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

Text
John Dunn's Moosehead Lake 1889 diary
Maine Historical Society, Text

This is a diary kept by John W.G. Dunn about his hunting and fishing trip in the Moosehead Lake area from August through September 1889. His guides were Henry Tremblay and John F. Hildreth.

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Dunn, John W.G.
Dunn, John W.G.(1869-1941) -- Diaries
Fishing -- Maine -- Diaries
Hildreth, John F.
Hunting -- Maine -- Diaries
Manuscripts
Moosehead Lake (Me.) -- Diaries
Tremblay Henry

Moving Image
Trails, Rails, and Roads
MPBN: Home Series, Moving Image, 00:28:01

The story of transportation in Maine is the story of the state's ongoing challenge to keep its people connected both to economic markets and to each other. Whether it's Route 113 in western Maine, US Route 1 meandering up the coast, or the once plentiful rail routes that joined every corner of the state, Maine's communities have been formed by the patterns of transportation.

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Transportation
Railroads

Moving Image
Bioinvasion
MPBN: Quest Series, Moving Image, 00:58:03

As human activity silently globalizes our world, our modern day ecology is under onslaught from spreading alien organisms. These plants and animals are capable of moving aggressively into a habitat and monopolizing resources to the detriment of other species. Can scientists help us win the war against this bio-invasion?

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Invasive species
Ecology

Moving Image
They Came By Sea
MPBN: Home Series, Moving Image, 00:28:01

Europeans arrived here by sea, attracted by the region's phenomenal fisheries and the natural resources visible on the coast. At first, they weren't interested in establishing permanent settlements but, as an appreciation for the economic value of Maine's natural resources grew, colonial settlement began. Today, Maine continues to rely on the economic advantages available through the natural resources of the coast.

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Fishing/Fisherman
History - Colonial Period

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