Acadia National Park's Forsaken Lakes
In the northeast section of Acadia National Park
near Hulls Cove are two idyllic bodies of fresh water named Lake Wood and Fawn
Pond, which oddly the Park does not promote to the public.
Lake Wood |
Fawn Pond |
The 17-acre Lake Wood was last privately owned by
the Schermerhorn sisters, descendants of an old New York City Dutch family.
They donated the lake to the Park. At the north end of the lake is a memorial
to them, completed in October 1929, which states: In memory of Annie Cottenet Kane and Fanny Schermerhorn Bridgham who
gave the lake and the surrounding land to Acadia National Park. Perley Pond,
a granite cutter who operated a quarry on MDI and had a shop on Cottage Street
in Bar Harbor, built the 26x5-foot granite bridge and inscribed the nearby boulder.
Renowned landscape architect Beatrix Farrand designed the bridge, a plan
approved by Park superintendant George Dorr in November, 1928.
In 1990 a Bangor, ME
newspaper ran a story about the Schermerhorn memorial being "recently uncovered by volunteers working on trails
in the park."*5
Bangor Daily News FOA volunteers at Lake Wood - 1990 |
The photo caption reads: Discussing the clearing of the Lake Wood trail are (from left)
volunteers Ken Sergeson, George Buck and Friends of Acadia Director Duane
Pierson. (NEWS Photo by Kathy Harbour)
The Schermerhorn memorial is the largest and was once the grandest in the Park. Sadly, due to neglect it is in disgraceful condition.
Fawn Pond is near Lake Wood's
southeast corner. It perhaps was another local swimming hole. The 4-acre pond
was owned by Charles How, a Bostonian who came to Bar Harbor in 1870. He saw
the potential to attract others to MDI and began acquiring land for development.
He was among the incorporators in 1891 of the Bar Harbor Village Improvement Association,
an organization founded to help ensure the safety, health and beauty of the
village. In 1904 How gave Fawn Pond to the BHVIA. Two years later the BHVIA
installed a bronze memorial plaque in his honor on a granite face at the pond's
north edge. It reads: This tablet
commemorates the gift by Charles T. How of the Fawn Pond and forty acres of
land to the Bar Harbor Village Improvement Association 1906. Secluded Fawn
Pond is a short walk from Lake Wood by way of two converging unmaintained paths.
Lake Wood and Fawn Pond are accessible via Lake Wood
Pond Road off the Crooked Road 0.7 miles west of Route 3 at Hulls Cove. Parking
and restrooms are available. The Schermerhorn memorial lies about 250 feet
northwest of the beach. The How memorial is to the southeast, less than half a
mile from the beach.*7
Note: As of this
date, the Park has not yet opened Lake Wood Pond Road to cars.
*Footnotes:
1 Bar Harbor Record, December 1, 1892, p.4.
2 Bar Harbor Record September 21, 1898, p.5.
3 Bar Harbor Times, March 28, 1934, p.7.
4 I am thankful to Mike Alley, once a nearby
resident and youthful swimmer, for his Lake Wood recollections.
5 "Lake Wood monument, foot bridge echo a forgotten
past." Bangor Daily News, October
2, 1990.
6 In addition to the Lake Wood donation, Annie and
John and Fanny and her husband, Samuel Bridgham, also donated 467 acres of
Acadia NP's Kebo Mountain to the Hancock County Trustees of Public
Reservations, the seminal organization that created the Park from such
donations.
7 GPS locations of the Schermerhorn memorial (N44°
24.648' W068° 16.246') and the How memorial (N44° 24.416' W068° 15.890').
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