Month: August 2013

26 Aug

Loon Lodge Inn

The Loon Lodge Inn sits majestically on the shores of Rangeley Lake. Home of  The Restaurant at Loon Lodge Inn and the Pickford Pub, this is a classic year round resort hotel. Built in 1909 as a family camp, it was originally named Camp Weduba.  Spacious grounds and lakeside amenities all add to the comfort to be discovered at this western Maine gem. Whether it is water based sports and activities in the summer, or snowmobiling in the winter, the Loon Lodge Inn covers your rusticating pursuits in a warm and ever-so-friendly manner.

15 Aug

Announcement: Tilbury House Book Project

I am pleased to announce that this spring and summer I have been on assignment traveling across Maine for Tilbury House Publishers for their upcoming 2014 book, Maine Coastal Cottages.  Stay tuned in the weeks ahead for updates from the field.  As Tilbury House explains:

Between the Civil War and World War I, each year the Maine coast attracted thousands of summer tourists to experience its natural beauty, recreational advantages, and social life. By the 1880s some of the more affluent visitors opted to build their own cottages, employing such noted architects as John Calvin Stevens of Portland, Fred Savage of Bar Harbor, and Chapman & Fraser of Boston. While many of these summer homes exemplified the popular Shingle Style, others reflected the picturesque Queen Anne and Tudor Revival tastes.

From 1885 to 1905, the Scientific American Building Monthly published pictures, floor plans, and descriptions of hundreds of stylish American homes to provide inspiration and information to architects, builders, and clients. Among these many designs are fifty in Maine, many of them Shingle Style summer cottages. Maine Coastal Cottages presents these fifty homes to a contemporary audience through reproducing the magazine’s photographic illustrations, floor plans, and descriptions, coupling them with recent photographs by David Clough. Historical and architectural commentary is provided by Maine State Historian Earle G. Shettleworth, Jr., and Architect Christopher Glass. A Spring 2014 publication date is anticipated by Tilbury House, Publishers.

For more information, please contact Tilbury House, Publishers at 800-582-1899.

<http://www.tilburyhouse.com/home.html>

14 Aug

Historic New England Meeting House

The Clough Meeting House was originally built by the Second Free Will Baptist Church of Lewiston, Maine in 1846 at a cost of $808.57. It is located across the street from the Clough Cemetery. The original structure was 36′ x 40′, and is one of 16 known ”reverse plan” churches in the state. Meaning the preaching stand is in the front of the building – note in the photos that there are paired front doors leading to symmetrical vestibules, so that as you entered the building you would have been looking at the congregation sitting in the 40 pews…best not be late to service! The Clough Meeting House is considered to be one of Maine’s best preserved reverse plan churches, and it is the oldest church structure still standing in Lewiston. As seen in the photos, the Meeting House is also significant for the examples of both grain painting and smoke painting.  The Meeting House is owned and maintained by the Clough Cemetery Association and has recently been placed on the National Register of Historic Places. For more information on the building’s historical significance, please visit: <http://www.nps.gov/nr/feature/places/13000438.htm>