Thursday, September 29, 2016

A Pleasant Perambulation

Over a mile long, about a half mile wide and nearly enclosed by mountains, Jordan Pond is 150' deep, abundant with lake trout and salmon and reputed to be the clearest lake in Maine. It makes for a beautiful, but moderately strenuous, 3.2-mile loop walk from the Jordan Pond House. Along the way are three memorials, all easily reached on the east side of the lake.

The first memorial is near the water's edge at the lake's south end, just 900 feet down the path from the Jordan Pond House. It is a stone bench. The inscription there reads:

IN GRATEFUL LOVING MEMORY OF
SARAH ELIZA SIGOURNEY CUSHING
WIFE OF EDWARD TUCKERMAN
1832-1915
SHE DEARLY LOVED THIS SPOT

Born in Boston, she married Edward Tuckerman (1817-1886), a professor of botany at Amherst College and an expert on lichens. Tuckerman’s Ravine in NH's White Mountains is named for him. Both were friends of poet Emily Dickinson. Sarah and Edward are buried in Wildwood Cemetery in Amherst, MA. Her slate tablet there states she was “A helpful and uplifting influence in the family, community, college and church” and that she was “Rich in good works.”
Sarah Cushing

The second memorial, tucked in the woods on a boulder off the right side of the path two-thirds of a mile further north, is to Ruth Marie and Tristram Coffin Colket, Jr. The inscription reads:

ACADIA TRAILS FOREVER
RESTORATION OF ACADIA’S
HISTORIC HIKING TRAILS
AND THEIR PERPETUAL
CARE
WERE MADE POSSIBLE
THROUGH
THE GIFTS OF MANY,
AND ESPECIALLY THROUGH
THE VISION
AND GENEROSITY OF TWO
ARDENT HIKERS:
RUTH AND TRIS COLKET
DECEMBER 1998

Philanthropists, they donated $5 million to Acadia Trails Forever, a joint project of Acadia National Park and Bar Harbor-based Friends of Acadia to restore and maintain the park’s historic trail system. Tristram is a grandson of Dr. John T. Dorrance, the chemist who in 1897 invented the process for condensing soup (later becoming the Campbell Soup Company). Ruth is a board member of the Maine Sea Coast Mission, a non-denominational Christian charity on West Street in Bar Harbor. In 1973 the Colkets donated their 1902-built, 35-room brick mansion, La Rochelle, to the mission for use as its headquarters.*1

The third memorial is to Joseph Allen and is located a half mile beyond the Colket memorial on a lakeside boulder at the northeast end of Jordan Pond near the South Bubble Trail. The inscription states:

LOVER OF ROCKS AND
HIGH PLACES
BUILDER OF TRAILS
CONSERVER OF NATURAL
BEAUTY
JOSEPH ALLEN
CHAIRMAN
SEAL HARBOR PATH COMMITTEE
1914-1945

He was born in New Bedford, MA in 1870. After graduating from Harvard, he married Annie Ware Winsor. They lived in New York City and then settled in White Plains, NY, where he ran for mayor. He was an associate professor of mathematics at NYC's City College for 43 years until his retirement in 1940. They summered at Grayrock, a Seal Harbor cottage.*2
Joseph Allen
All three memorials are easy to reach on the path's level eastside that is interrupted occasionally by drainage culverts. The path's west side requires negotiating some large rocks and balancing on an elevated and narrow boardwalk. Either way, the Jordan Pond Path is a pleasant walk.

*Footnotes:
1 A second Colket memorial, a Louis Comfort Tiffany stained-glass window, is inside St. Saviour’s Church in Bar Harbor. It is in memory of Ethel Dorrance Colket, John’s daughter and Tristram’s mother.

2 The chairman of a path committee was responsible to a village improvement society or association for the design, construction and maintenance of all the village's paths.

2 comments:

  1. Hey Don! Welcome back to Acadia blog world! As always, job well done!

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  2. I missed this one. Great work as usual. The Allen monument has meaning for me. While I worked at Jordan Pond House answering questions posed by visitors a young boy asked me who Joseph Allen was. I told him that I did not know but would get back to him on his next visit. Even though I walked around the pond almost every day I worked there I never saw the memorial. After a lot of searching I found out Allen's role at the NEH VIS but I still had not seen the monument. Seeing the boy again a few weeks later I told him about Allen's chairmanship and asked him why he asked about Allen. Only when he replied did I learn of the memorial's existence. Don your research and publication really enhances the experience of hiking in ANP. Thanks.

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