Generous Donation from Young Sisters Boosts Art Supplies at Jesup Memorial Library
Briefs: Real Estate News, Open Table World Cafe Benefit, Butterfly Festival, Acadia Wildlife and Author Talks at Jesup, Climate Jamboree and More!
The following news items are a collection of briefs sent to us throughout the week and some shorter collated pieces. We do it this way to help decrease the amount of emails you receive each day.
SISTERS’ DONATION CREATES A CREATIVE LEGACY
BAR HARBOR—The Jesup Memorial Library is thrilled to announce a generous and heartwarming donation from two young community members, Ada (10) and Emmy (8). The sisters recently received some money from a family member and were asked to donate it to a local organization. They chose the Jesup Memorial Library and requested that their gift be used specifically for art supplies for the Youth Department.
Thanks to Ada and Emmy’s thoughtful contribution, the library will now be able to offer a wider variety of craft supplies this summer. Young patrons can look forward to new materials for bracelet making, origami, and more. These supplies will be readily available upon request and housed in a special “Ada and Emmy’s Art Cart.”
“We are incredibly grateful for Ada and Emmy’s donation,” said Abby Morrow, Jesup’s youth services lLibrarian. “Their generosity will have a ripple effect and help to spark creativity in the Youth Room.”
The library invites young community members to come and explore “Ada and Emmy’s Art Cart” and join in the creative fun. This act of generosity not only enhances the library’s offerings but also sets a wonderful example of community spirit and the impact of giving.
For more information about Jesup Memorial Library’s youth programs and services, please visit https://www.jesuplibrary.org/youth-families or contact Abby in the Youth Services Department at amorrow@jesuplibrary.org or (207) 288-4245.
BUTTERFLY FESTIVAL
TRENTON—Trenton Butterfly Gardens is excited to announce its third annual Butterfly Festival, a fun-filled day of activities celebrating these beautiful and important pollinators.
The festival will take place on Saturday, July 13 from 3 - 5pm at the fire pond behind the Trenton Town Office (rain date July 20). The event will feature a pollinator parade, a raffle, children’s activities, live monarch butterflies, and educational stations. Participants of all ages are encouraged to dress up in their best pollinator costumes and march in a colorful procession.
A suggested donation of $5 includes entrance and 1 raffle ticket. Funds will help support our work to restore habitat and to raise awareness in our community about the importance of butterflies, bees, and other pollinators. For more information or to register for the pollinator parade, please contact Barb Acosta at trentonbutterflies@gmail.com or 301-906-8378 or visit us on Facebook www.facebook.com/groups/trentonbutterflygardens.
World Central Kitchen & Open Table MDI Benefit Concert: Feeding People Far and Near!
Date: Sunday, July 14, 2024
Time: 3 to 6 p.m.
Place: Bar Harbor Congregational Church-UCC (BHCC-UCC), 29 Mt. Desert Street
Summer refreshments provided!
BAR HARBOR—Open Table MDI and BHCC-UCC are co-hosting a fundraiser concert to benefit two nonprofit organizations dedicated to feeding people far and near. The concert on Sunday, July 14, will take place from 3 to 6 p.m. on the front lawn at Bar Harbor Congregational Church-UCC.
Performers will include the MDI-based Big Moose Contra Dance Band, playing traditional acoustic music and lively dance tunes; award-winning pianist Masanobu Ikemiya, blending classical and ragtime music in joyous expression; and virtuoso musicians from the Baroque Orchestra of Maine, featuring baroque-period instruments in their performance.
Around the globe, World Central Kitchen’s programs provide food to people impacted by emergency and climate-related disasters, as well as people impacted by the invasion of Ukraine and the conflict in the Middle East.
Close to home, Open Table MDI’s programs carry out their two-fold mission to alleviate food insecurity and build community on MDI by providing healthy sit-down community suppers every Tuesday; serving chef-made ramen for take-out or eat-in dining 3 days a week; and delivering healthy meals once a week to people who are homebound.
This concert offers a rare opportunity to hear a variety of talented musicians playing outdoors in downtown Bar Harbor. Enjoy cool refreshments, and dance if you want to! Your donations will help feed people both far away and right here on MDI. Please join us in having fun AND doing good! The event will take place rain or shine.
For more information, contact Debby Hammond @ (207) 650-7723 or debbyhammond@hotmail.com.
2024 Annual Harbor House Flamingo Festival
SOUTHWEST HARBOR—The annual Harbor House Flamingo Festival is whimsical, lighthearted and decidedly pink, this fun filled family festival truly has something for everyone and runs from July 13-15, 2024.
The annual Polo & Yacht Club Cocktail Party will be on Sunday July 14, 2024, from 5-7 p.m. at the Causeway Club Barn on 10 Fernald Point Road.
The $40 per person price includes hors d'oeuvres, two drink tickets and dancing to "The Seal Harbor Boys"!
To RSVP please fill out the form below, you will then have a link at the end to pay for your tickets online.
https://forms.gle/jNko9R1hfFFaJQ3j7
For more information contact Diana at 207-244-3713 or email her at diana@harborhousemdi.org
Festive pink attire is encouraged!
Fourth Annual Ashley Bryan Lecture: Storytelling, Authenticity and Race in America with Samuel James
Thursday, July 18 at 7 pm
BAR HARBOR—At its best, storytelling is an expression of authenticity, but in a culture reliant on layers of inequity, authenticity can be difficult to understand or even define. Samuel James explores these ideas and more during Jesup Memorial Library’s 2024 Ashley Bryan Honorary Lecture.
Samuel James is a musician, journalist and storyteller. As a storyteller, James has been featured on This American Life and The Moth Radio Hour. His other work with The Moth includes Mainstage storyteller, interviewer, Radio Hour host, and contributor to the NYT Bestselling books How to Tell a Story: The Essential Guide to Memorable Storytelling from The Moth and The Moth Presents: A Point of Beauty.
As a musician, James has been touring internationally for more than fifteen years, performing in the Black American Folk Tradition. He has released seven albums, scored film soundtracks and museum exhibits. James' award-winning songwriting has been compared to Leonard Cohen's and his guitar virtuosity to that of Jimi Hendrix.
James’ monthly column Racisms can be currently found in The Bollard and his weekly newsletter Banned Histories of Race in America can be found on Substack. He’s also the creator and host of the podcast 99 Years, exploring the deliberate creation of the whitest state in the nation.
The Jesup Memorial Library hosts an annual lecture celebrating the life and ideals of Ashley Bryan. A noted printmaker, author especially of children’s books, puppet maker, painter, story teller, illustrator, and maker of art from sea glass and other found materials, Bryan devoted his life in the arts to bringing people together. Every year, the Jesup invites a distinguished artist or critic whose work reflects similarly deep interest in racial equity to discuss that work with the Downeast Maine community for a mid-summer presentation.
This event is free and open to the public. Register here: https://www.jesuplibrary.org/events/james
Making Democracy Work
BAR HARBOR—The Jesup Memorial Library, Acadia Senior College, and the League of Women Voters Downeast are pleased to announce the second event in a short series of programs under the theme "Making Democracy Work." This series features prominent speakers addressing the challenges facing modern governance and proposing ways to enhance the democratic process.
Dr. Steven Levitsky will speak on Tuesday, July 16th at 7:00 PM. Dr. Levitsky's talk will be held in-person at the Jesup Memorial Library and will also be available for streaming. Steven Levitsky is the David Rockefeller Professor of Latin American Studies and Professor of Government at Harvard University, where he also serves as Director of the David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies. His research interests include democratization and authoritarianism, political parties, and weak and informal institutions, with a particular focus on Latin America and the crisis of democracy in the United States.
Levitsky is the co-author, along with Daniel Ziblatt, of "How Democracies Die," a New York Times Best-Seller published in 30 languages, and "Tyranny of the Minority: Why American Democracy Reached the Breaking Point." He has authored or edited 11 other books, including "Transforming Labor-Based Parties in Latin America: Argentine Peronism in Comparative Perspective" (Cambridge University Press, 2003), "Competitive Authoritarianism: Hybrid Regimes after the Cold War" (with Lucan Way) (Cambridge University Press, 2010), and "Revolution and Dictatorship: The Violent Origins of Durable Authoritarianism" (with Lucan Way) (Princeton University Press, 2022). Currently, Levitsky and Lucan Way are working on a book about democratic resilience worldwide.
Levitsky’s talk follows a presentation by Dr. Rachel Kleinfeld. The event, titled "Why We're at the Breaking Point and 5 Strategies for Repair,” was met with wonderful feedback from those who attended. Watch Dr. Kleinfeld’s talk here: https://www.jesuplibrary.org/2024-talks
In 2019, the "Making Democracy Work" series featured notable speakers such as Theda Skocpol with her talk “Saving America Again,” Burt Neuborne with "How Good Are the Brakes on This Train?", and Richard Fallon discussing “Law and Legitimacy in the Supreme Court.”
We invite the community to join us for this insightful discussion as we explore ways to strengthen and improve our democratic institutions.
Register for Dr. Steven Levitsky’s talk: https://www.jesuplibrary.org/events/levitsky
BAR HARBOR HISTORICAL SOCIETY
Hudson to Harbor Art Invitational Reception
BAR HARBOR — Join the Bar Harbor Historical Society at La Rochelle on August 2 at 5 p.m to 7 p.m. for an exclusive art sale and reception showcasing work from select local artists that reflect the surrounding area.
Cocktails and hor d’oeuvres will be served, and there will also be a raffle drawing for a piece of art from the exhibition selected by Carl Little.
PUBLIC EXHIBITION AND RAFFLE
On Saturday, August 3, artistic works will be exhibited for free and will be available for purchase around BHHS. Also, on Saturday, there will be a raffle drawing for a piece from the exhibition selected by Carl Little! Raffle tickets are $20 and will be available for purchase throughout the weekend.
The Bar Harbor Historical Society is one of Bar Harbor’s best used public spaces: the #1 cultural community center for the village and one of the top five “must see” destinations on Mount Desert Island. The Society is a community and institutional leader that welcomes residents and visitors alike to discover the past in order to understand the present, and to take pride in community connections. It is a dynamic, bustling regional center for research, dialogue, and learning where stories are told through multiple media daily. A professional, well-run living museum, its schedule is filled with events and programs. It is a place of smiles, wonder, and imagination.
Tickets are $50/person. For tickets, please head to barharborhistorical.org/events
PLEIN AIR CLASSES
BAR HARBOR—In anticipation of its upcoming Hudson to Harbor artist invitational, the Bar Harbor Historical Society is hosting two plein air painting courses taught by artists featured in the event. The two courses run from July 23 to July 26 and August 3 to August 6. Additionally, there will be a Hudson to Harbor cyanotype class available on July 30.
Please visit barharborhistorical.org/events for more information.
The BHHS is delighted to partner with the Land and Garden Preserve for this year's Hudson to Harbor events. The Preserve will host many of the invited artists during their creative process. If you would like to learn more about the Preserve and their work, please visit them at: https://www.gardenpreserve.org/
Picture This!
SOUTHWEST HARBOR—Textile collage artist Elaine O’Neil will be at the Gilley to teach two classes creating art from fabric on Thursday, July 18. There will be one session from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., and the other from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m.
A Maine native, O’Neil now lives half the year in her home state and the other half in North Carolina.
“I create textile collage art of places and scenes that either have a personal meaning to me or a collective, special value to a community. Much of my work originates from subjects related to my ancestors and fond memories of my childhood in Maine...The scenes I create are inspired to convey a sense of an idyllic and joyful life,” she said.
Come make a collage of one of your special places in this workshop.
To reserve your spot, click here.
Indigenous Land Justice is Coffee & Conversation Focus
BAR HARBOR—Indigenous scholar Dr. Darren Ranco shares his insights into land justice issues for Wabanaki communities in Maine at the next College of the Atlantic Coffee & Conversation on July 16.
The free event begins at 9:30 a.m. in the Davis Center for Human Ecology room 101 and will also be livestreamed. Registration is required for both options and can be accessed at coa.edu/coffeeandconversation.
Ranco is a professor of anthropology at University of Maine, where he serves as chair of Native American programs and coordinator of Native American research. His research focuses on the ways in which Indigenous communities in the United States resist environmental destruction by using Indigenous diplomacy and critiques of liberalism to protect cultural resources, and how state knowledge systems, rooted in colonial contexts, continue to expose Indigenous Peoples to an inordinate amount of environmental risk. He teaches classes on Indigenous intellectual property rights, research ethics, environmental justice, and tribal governance. A member of the Penobscot Nation, Ranco is particularly interested in how better research relationships can be made between universities, Native and non-Native researchers, and Indigenous communities.
Ranco speaks with COA professor Dr. Todd Little-Siebold about the emerging work around land justice and Wabanaki communities’ efforts to identify and protect culturally and ecologically significant sites throughout Maine.
Coffee & Conversation is held every Tuesday morning in July and August on the COA campus, with options to participate virtually. Sessions are one hour long, and include a Q&A. Coffee and pastries are served prior to each session. Coffee & Conversation events are free and open to the public, but registration is required for both in-person and virtual participation.
Maine Beer Company supports seals, whales
FREEPORT—Maine Beer Company is celebrating a 15-year partnership with College of the Atlantic Allied Whale with a $20,000 challenge grant to support eastern Maine marine mammal rescue operations.
In making a gift toward Allied Whale’s work with distressed seal pups, dolphins, whales, and sea turtles, Maine Beer Company (MBC) is challenging all supporters of ocean mammals to step up and do the same.
“Our commitment to the environment is a core part of Maine Beer Company’s values,” said Steve Mills, CEO of Maine Beer Company. “Supporting the work that COA Allied Whale does to help some of our most important ocean creatures aligns with our purpose of doing good through great beer.”
Individuals wishing to help COA meet MBC’s challenge grant can contribute a tax-deductible donation at coa.edu/supportalliedwhale and allocate your gift to the Marine Mammal Stranding Program.
COA Allied Whale, based in Bar Harbor, is one of just two organizations authorized by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) to respond to marine mammal emergencies in Maine, servicing 2,600 of coastline from Rockland to the Canadian border. The group receives about 130 distress calls a year.
“Fulfilling NOAA’s mandate has been challenging this year as Allied Whale has recently faced federal funding cuts from NOAA that have affected our ability to respond,” said COA Steven K. Katona Chair in Marine Sciences Sean Todd, the director of Allied Whale. “The support of organizations like Maine Beer Company is vital to the work that we do.”
Since 2009, Maine Beer Company has contributed over $3,000,000 to nonprofits, including over $110,000 to COA Allied Whale. One of their most popular beers, Lunch, is an India Pale Ale named after a finback whale that has been spotted and cataloged by Allied Whale since 1982. Lunch’s dorsal fin looks as though a bite has been taken out of it, adding to her distinctive character.
“We are incredibly grateful for our 15-year partnership with Maine Beer Company,” said COA President Dr. Sylvia Torti. “Since 1972, COA Allied Whale has been at the forefront of modern whale research and innovation. For the past 15 years, MBC has been right by our side, helping us fulfill our mission and doing good in the world.”
Based in Freeport, Maine, Maine Beer Company was founded in 2009 by brothers David and Daniel Kleban. They were determined to create a company purposed with doing good through great beer. Their motto, “Do what’s right,” is at the forefront of every decision they make from how they treat their employees, to the beer they brew, to their commitment to the environment.
College of the Atlantic is the first college in the U.S. to focus on the relationship between humans and the environment. The intentionally small school of 350 students and 35 faculty enriches the liberal arts tradition through a distinctive educational philosophy—human ecology. A human-ecological perspective integrates knowledge from all academic disciplines and from personal experience to investigate—and ultimately improve—the relationships between human beings and our social, natural, built, and technological environments. The human-ecological perspective guides all aspects of education, research, activism, and interactions among the college’s students, faculty, staff, and trustees.
Saving Sick & Injured Wild Animals, with Acadia Wildlife Center’s Tony Mullane, Thursday, July 25 at 7 pm
BAR HARBOR—The Jesup Memorial library is excited to host an upcoming presentation by Tony Mullane, the newly appointed executive director of the Acadia Wildlife Center, on the Center's mission to rehabilitate sick and injured native wildlife in Maine. The event will highlight Tony’s unique upbringing, from catching eagles, to feeding baby squirrels, to pushing a moose calf through the woods. Tony will also discuss the Center's pivotal role in preserving Maine’s ecosystems and will be showing several educational animals!
Acadia Wildlife Center, established in 1994, is dedicated to the rescue, rehabilitation, and release of sick and injured native wildlife in Maine. Through education and community engagement, the Center promotes awareness of wildlife conservation and the importance of preserving natural habitats.
This event is free and open to the public. Reserve your seat here: https://www.jesuplibrary.org/events/awc
J. Courtney Sullivan presents THE CLIFFS with Christina Baker Kline
Saturday, July 27 at 3:30 p.m.
BAR HARBOR—Join best-selling authors J. Courtney Sullivan and Christina Baker Kline at the Jesup Memorial Library as they discuss Sullivan's new novel, THE CLIFFS, a story of family, secrets, ghosts, and homecoming set on the seaside cliffs of Maine.
J. Courtney Sullivan is the best-selling author of the novels Commencement, Maine, The Engagements, Saints for All Occasions, and Friends and Strangers. Her work has been translated into seventeen languages. Sullivan's writing has appeared in The New York Times Book Review, The Washington Post, Chicago Tribune, New York, Elle, Glamour, Allure, Real Simple, and O, The Oprah Magazine, among many others. In 2017, she wrote the forewords to new editions of two of her favorite classic novels—Anne of Green Gables and Little Women. She lives in Massachusetts with her husband and two children.
A #1 New York Times bestselling author of eight novels, including The Exiles, Orphan Train, and A Piece of the World, Christina Baker Kline is published in 40 countries. Her novels have received the New England Prize for Fiction, the Maine Literary Award, and a Barnes & Noble Discover Award, among other prizes, and have been chosen by hundreds of communities, universities and schools as “One Book, One Read” selections. Her essays, articles, and reviews have appeared in publications such as the New York Times and the NYT Book Review, The Washington Post, The Boston Globe, The San Francisco Chronicle, LitHub, Psychology Today, and Slate.This event is free and open to the public.
Reserve your seat here: https://www.jesuplibrary.org/events/sullivan
23rd Annual Luminaria Event Scheduled for August 10
BAR HARBOR—YWCA MDI will hold its 23rd annual Carol Dyer Memorial Luminaria Evening on Saturday, August 10 to benefit the Beth C. Wright Cancer Resource Center.
The first luminaria evening took place in 2001 to celebrate the life of Carol Dyer, a local children’s librarian and friend of YWCA MDI. The event has become a local tradition, with hundreds of luminaria lining the sidewalks of the Bar Harbor Village Green on a night every August. Each personalized luminaria is dedicated to a friend or family member lost to or fighting cancer. Together, they illuminate the night with hope for a cancer-free world.
This year, luminaria will be on display on the Bar Harbor Village Green from 7:00 to 9:30 PM on August 10th, with a rain date of August 17. Chris Popper of WDEA will serve as master of ceremonies, and Alice French will provide music.
Luminaria are available for pre-order at https://donate.ywcamdi.org/carol-dyer-memorial-luminaria-evening/ and will be available the evening of the event. The suggested donation is $10 for each luminaria. Proceeds will benefit the Beth C. Wright Cancer Resource Center in Ellsworth.
YWCA Mount Desert Island is in its 120th year of service on MDI. YWCA is dedicated to eliminating racism, empowering women, standing up for social justice, supporting families, and strengthening communities. Visit https://www.ywcamdi.org to learn more about the YWCA’s work on MDI and beyond.
The Beth C. Wright Cancer Resource Center in Ellsworth provides support, wellness groups, advocacy, education, and patient navigation services to people in Washington and Hancock Counties.
THIS WEEK AT THE FINNBACK
Musica Alta Italia: Baroque Harp Concert with Phoebe Durand
Wednesday, July 24 at 6:30 p.m.
BAR HARBOR—The Jesup presents a live concert featuring Phoebe Durand-McDonnell performing seventeenth-century Northern Italian music on the baroque triple harp.
Phoebe Durand-McDonnell grew up in Bar Harbor and began studying modern harp at age 10 with Liza Rey Butler. She earned a BM in harp performance at Oberlin Conservatory studying with Yolanda Kondonassis.
In 2019, she received a Fulbright Research grant to study historical harp performance and early music at the Haute École de Musique Genève (HEM) in Geneva, Switzerland. Phoebe received her first MA in 2021 from HEM, with intensive study on medieval and renaissance single- and double-rowed harps, Spanish arpa de dos ordenes, Italian and Welsh baroque arpa doppia, and the harpe organisée, or single-action pedal harp.
While in Europe, Phoebe performed with conductors Paul Agnew and Leonardo García Alarcón, and studied at the International School of Improvisation with Dr. Maria Cleary and Davide Monti. In North America, she has performed with the Baroque Orchestra of Maine, Crescendo Early Music, and collaborated with the Episcopal Chaplaincy at Harvard for their "Treasures of Darkness" program. Phoebe has given masterclasses in baroque and renaissance harps at the Boston University Tanglewood Institute and the Halifax Institute of Traditional and Early Music, and gave the inaugural recital of the Halifax Early Music Festival.
In 2023, Phoebe completed an MA in musicology at Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia.
This event is free and open to the public. Reserve your seat here: https://www.jesuplibrary.org/events/harp
CLIMATE SOLUTIONS JAMBOREE
ISLESFORD—A Climate Solutions Jamboree will be on Monday, July 22, 4-8:30 p.m., at the Islesford Arts & Technology Park on Little Cranberry Island. Speakers will discuss climate solutions. There will also be live music.
The festival is free and hosted by A Climate To Thrive and Sam Shaw. Snacks and drinks will be available for a small fee per item. Those attending are encouraged to dress festively.
According to its website:
“Event-specific transportation has been organized from Northeast Harbor with a fee of $10 each direction. Ferry reservations are available and encouraged, as boats filled very quickly last year.
“Reserve a spot at https://tinyurl.com/ykcpe3km.
“In addition, Isles-ford Dock Restaurant will accommodate private boats at its dock for the evening. If folks are heading out with boats and have space for others to join, let organizers know at admin@ aclimatetothrive.org.”
Event Schedule
Speakers at the 10 Spot Stage:
4-4:30 p.m.: Amanda Joy Ravenhill: “A Vision of TMRW”
4:30-5 p.m.: Angie Flores: “Exploring Community Resilience”
5-5:30 p.m.: Brianna Cun-liffe: “Community-Driven Climate Action for the Win!”
6:30-7 p.m.: Andrew Revkin: “Covering the Climate, from the International to Local”
7-7:30 p.m.: Johannah Blackman: “Hope in Action”
4:45-5:45 p.m.: Sydney Patten Solo Piano
6-6:45 p.m.: Clare Monfredo Solo Cello
7:15-8:15 p.m.: Nate Shaw Jazz combo
7:30-8 p.m.: Vaughan Woodruff: “The Human Element of the Energy Transition”
Music at the Spiral Stage:
5:30-6:15 p.m.: King Tide 6:45-7:30 p.m.: Hannah Mohan
7:45-8:30 p.m.: Hannah Mohan
For more information, including speaker bios, and to register, visit https://www.aclimatetothrive.org/jamboree
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
BAR HARBOR
Kebo Properties LLC, Bar Harbor to Emily Dwyer, Bar Harbor, land.
Thomas L. Koontz and Tammy J. Koontz, Mechanicsburg, Pa., to Thomas Lee Koontz and Tammy Jean Koontz Living Trust, Mechanicsburg, Pa., land.
MOUNT DESERT
The Judith S. Norwood Family Trust, Ellsworth to Teresa N. Gray, Northeast Harbor, land with buildings and improvements.
Estate of Judith S. Norwood, Ellsworth to The Judith S. Norwood Family Trust, Ellsworth, land with buildings and improvements.
Estate of Alice G. Carter, Northeast Harbor to Katrina L. Carter and David Wilfred Granston III, Northeast Harbor, tenants in common, 93.6 percent interest, land.
Seal Harbor Cemetery Association, Mount Desert to Brooke Newberg, South Harpswell, land.
Seal Harbor Cemetery Association, Mount Desert to Sarah Shubert, Falmouth, land.
Seal Harbor Cemetery Association, Mount Desert to Kenyon Shubert, Portland, land.
Northeast Harbor Public Cemetery, Northeast Harbor, otherwise known as Forest Hill Cemetery, Northeast Harbor to Estate of Joan Y. Tyler, Northeast Harbor, land.
Northeast Harbor Public Cemetery, Northeast Harbor, otherwise known as Forest Hill Cemetery, Northeast Harbor to Michael Kelley and Jennifer Kelley, Northeast Harbor, land.
Northeast Harbor Public Cemetery, Northeast Harbor, otherwise known as Forest Hill Cemetery, Northeast Harbor to Richard Habermann and Carol Habermann, Northeast Harbor, land.
Northeast Harbor Public Cemetery, Northeast Harbor, otherwise known as Forest Hill Cemetery, Northeast Harbor to Paul Fremont Smith and Carol Fremont Smith, Seal Harbor, land.
Northeast Harbor Public Cemetery, Northeast Harbor, otherwise known as Forest Hill Cemetery, Northeast Harbor to Daniel Pearl and Shelagh Ellman-Pearl, Mount Desert, land.
Northeast Harbor Public Cemetery, Northeast Harbor, otherwise known as Forest Hill Cemetery, Northeast Harbor to Brandon Chase, Northeast Harbor, land.
Northeast Harbor Public Cemetery, Northeast Harbor, otherwise known as Forest Hill Cemetery, Northeast Harbor to Alex Kimball, North Yarmouth, land.
Northeast Harbor Public Cemetery, Northeast Harbor, otherwise known as Forest Hill Cemetery, Northeast Harbor to Terry E. Stanley, Northeast Harbor, land.
Northeast Harbor Public Cemetery, Northeast Harbor, otherwise known as Forest Hill Cemetery, Northeast Harbor to Horace Nalle and Patricia Nalle, Atlanta, Ga., land.
Northeast Harbor Public Cemetery, Northeast Harbor, otherwise known as Forest Hill Cemetery, Northeast Harbor to Gale Davis and Shelby Davis, Northeast Harbor, land.
Northeast Harbor Public Cemetery, Northeast Harbor, otherwise known as Forest Hill Cemetery, Northeast Harbor to John Fehlauer and Wendy Fehlauer, Mount Desert, land.
Northeast Harbor Public Cemetery, Northeast Harbor, otherwise known as Forest Hill Cemetery, Northeast Harbor to Ellen W. Lukens, Middletown, Conn., land.
Northeast Harbor Public Cemetery, Northeast Harbor, otherwise known as Forest Hill Cemetery, Northeast Harbor to Christopher Orthwein, Palm Beach, Fla., land.
Northeast Harbor Public Cemetery, Northeast Harbor, otherwise known as Forest Hill Cemetery, Northeast Harbor to Gilbert Butler, Great Neck, N.Y., land.
Northeast Harbor Public Cemetery, Northeast Harbor, otherwise known as Forest Hill Cemetery, Northeast Harbor, to Robert Young and Mary Anne Young, Mount Desert, land.
Seal Harbor Cemetery Association, Seal Harbor to Stacie Gray, Seal Harbor, land.
TREMONT
Frances M. Howley and Terry E. Stanley, Bass Harbor to Terry and Fran Joint Revocable Trust, Bass Harbor, land with improvements.
Estate of Virginia B. Libhart, Bangor to Rose-Marie Dennis Trust, Trenton, land with buildings and improvements.
Libhart Family Credit Shelter, Bangor to Rose-Marie Dennis Trust, Trenton, land with buildings and improvements.
TRENTON
Mark E. Dunbar, Mount Desert to Matthew Fitzer, Massapequa Park, N.Y., land with improvements.