Legendary Locals of Bangor
By Richard R. Shaw and Brian F. Swartz
()
About this ebook
Richard R. Shaw
Bangor native Richard R. Shaw is a 30-year veteran of the Bangor Daily News, where he enjoyed answering arcane questions as the city's unofficial historian and photograph archivist. His freelance features have appeared in magazines and newspapers, and he has served as a History Channel commentator. This is his fourth Arcadia Publishing book about Bangor. Author and photographer Brian F. Swartz is a 27-year veteran of the Bangor Daily News, where he edited special sections and The Weekly, a community broadsheet. An avid Civil War historian, he also writes the popular Maine at War weekly blog.
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Legendary Locals of Bangor - Richard R. Shaw
sources.
INTRODUCTION
I think the best stories always end up being about the people
rather than the event, which is to say character-driven.
—Stephen King
On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft
Many harrowing events have shaped Bangor, Maine, since Jacob Buswell, the first white settler, decided to call the riverfront burgh his home in 1769. Floods in the 19th and 20th centuries forced merchants and homeowners to regroup and rebuild. So did infernos like the great fire of 1911, which claimed two lives and inflicted $3 million in damages on the city’s downtown.
The voter-approved urban renewal seemed like a fine way to wipe out urban blight, but 50 years and many lost landmarks later, it remains a point of controversy. When Dow Air Force Base left town in 1968, skeptics said the population loss would thrust Bangor into economic chaos. But typical of the city’s spirit, planners converted the base into a thriving international airport.
Behind every event in the Queen City’s history have been people whose lives were forever changed by circumstances beyond their control. The authors, both former Bangor Daily News staff writers and editors, learned that with every historical moment is a human being whose story is waiting to be told.
Newspaper readers wanted to know all about the Civil War widows whose husbands’ bodies were shipped back home from Gettysburg and about the neighbors of the Brewer men, John Scribner and George Abbott, who perished in the 1911 fire. And they wanted details of the lives of Louis Lacrosse and Shep Hurd (see page 107), Dakin’s Sporting Goods Co. employees who were caught up in the 1937 Brady Gang massacre on Central Street.
People like to read about people, and that is what this book is all about. All of the faces captured in photographs and paintings are true locals. Many, such as teacher Bernard Mann (see page 120), were born in the Queen City; others, like Lt. James Dow (see page 41), namesake of the city’s Air Force base, did not live here, but their names will forever be intertwined with the city’s fabric.
The authors strived to locate legends of all stripes. You can imagine that the list is endless . . . enough to fill 100 books. People rattled off their own lists of businessmen, politicians, artists, musicians—even a few scoundrels who shall remain nameless—whom they thought should make it into the book. Our challenge was to present Bangor’s story in the lives of its people, starting with its earliest days and ending with the present.
Eight chapters seemed like a logical size to fill 125 pages with text and pictures. Based on the hundreds of images made available to us by the Bangor Daily News, Bangor Public Library, Bangor Historical Society, Raymond H. Fogler Library, private individuals, and various other sources, the chapter breakdown came into focus.
The city’s strong legacy of wartime sacrifice certainly deserved a chapter. Civil War heroes such as Charles Jameson and Daniel Chaplin found a home in Chapter 2, Military Achievers,
as did lesser-known figures such as the Army Air corpsman Willard Orr, who died December 7, 1941, in the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.
Other legends featured are candy-maker George F. Burton (see page 106); country singer Dick Curless (see page 81); librarian Mary Curran (see page 104); and Penobscot Indian Molly Molasses (see page 114).
Some of our legends qualify for more than one chapter. Molly Molasses lived to A Ripe Old Age
(Chapter 8), but she also was a household name in the mid-1800s, as a fixture on the city’s streets and steamboats. Television veterans Eddie Driscoll (see page 83) and George Hale (see page 89), found in Chapter 5, Entertainment and Sports,
are also household names.
While the majority of the book’s people are deceased, it was important to feature living legends, as well. All were truly honored, and at times surprised, to be in such esteemed company as Vice Pres. Hannibal Hamlin (see page 48), Congressman Charles Boutelle (see page 29), and Bangor’s philanthropist and horror master, Stephen King (see pages 70, 71).
One of the advantages of living locally all of our lives was actually knowing some of the book’s legends. The authors, individually and collectively, personally know or knew Bernard Mann, Catherine Lebowitz (see page 121), Bob Cimbollek (see page 87), J. Normand Martin (see pages 73 and 124), Clara Swan (see pages 118, 119), and Zip Kellogg (see page 52), along with others. Maybe there is something in the city’s air or water that has produced so many memorable characters, including the Baldacci, McKernan, and Cohen political dynasties represented in this book.
A word about the images—all were carefully selected with an eye for variety, diversity, and quality. When our capable editor, Erin Vosgien, said none had been rejected for any reason, we were a little surprised and happy. That meant retaining the wonderfully grainy images of Charlie Howard (see page 61) and Willard Orr (see pages 36 and 37).
Most photographers’ names have been lost to time, but a few survive. The Bangor Daily News’ bow tie–wearing veteran Carroll Hall, a legend in his own right, snapped the classic shot of Stephen King that graces the book’s front cover.
But maybe the photographers’ names are less important than their subjects, such as those featured on the front and back covers. Among the legends on the covers of the book are businessman Alonzo Johnson, canoeist Zip Kellogg, reporter Nelle Penley (see page 69), librarian L. Felix Ranlett (see page 103), and bakers Reuben and Clara Cohen (see page 56).
Some legends never actually lived, or did they? Stephen King’s book characters and Paul Bunyan, who has overlooked Main Street since 1959, are members of Bangor’s family.
Perhaps the greatest tribute is not to be forgotten but for others to know that your life was well lived. Hopefully, Legendary Locals of Bangor will rekindle memories of memorable characters and introduce readers to others they never knew.
How many more legendary locals can you name for future books? Maybe people not yet born will make the short list. Budding writers, artists, athletes, or politicians may be in the lineup and not even know it.
Penobscot River
Penobscot River panoramas give a sense of what Bangor was like more than a century ago. The long covered bridge that once linked the city to Brewer was damaged in a 1902 flood and rebuilt with two iron spans. Boston steamboats linked Bangor to Bean Town from 1835 to 1935. (Both, courtesy of RRS.)
Amelia Earhart
Amelia Earhart appeared at the Bangor House in 1933 during the first of two visits to the city to promote the local airport and women in flight. Flanking the celebrated aviator are civic leaders and curious onlookers. (Courtesy of RRS.)
CHAPTER ONE
Queen City Pioneers
Ever since the Spanish-hired explorer Estevan Gómez navigated his ship up
the Penobscot River in the spring of 1525, pioneers have either visited the Queen City or settled here. And what a group of eclectic people they were!
After Gómez came itinerant French explorer Samuel de Champlain (1604), Massachusetts soldier and trader Robert Treat (1774), and the legendary Rev. Seth Noble (1786), the first minister hired in Kenduskeag Plantation,
as Bangor was then called. Champlain sailed away to explore the New England coast, but Treat liked what he saw and stayed.
And did Noble surreptitiously change the official name of Bangor, as local lore insists?
From the American Revolution through the mid-1800s, people came to Bangor from other parts of Maine and New England to build new lives in the new settlement (soon-to-be town) growing where the Kenduskeag Stream merged with the Penobscot River.
Despite the rugged terrain—rolling hills, fast-flowing streams, and thick, almost-trackless forests—and cold, snowy winters, within two generations the pioneering men and women had transformed the area around the Kenduskeag Stream and Penobscot River into a large town and a major seaport that specialized in shipping lumber, singles, bricks, and ice worldwide.
These hardy folk pioneered the Queen City,
as Bangor came to be known. Although exactly who first coined the phrase Queen City
remains unclear, the Bangor Daily Whig & Courier referred to the Queen City of the East
in 1859.
And what of those Queen City pioneers? Rumored to have the sharpest-looking horses and carriage in town, fashionable bachelor Rufus Dwinel made his fame and fortune as a lumber baron.
Charles Hayward proved that a grocer could do well in Bangor.
When Henry David Thoreau needed a traveling companion for his famous trip to Mount Katahdin, he tapped his cousin’s husband, Bangor businessman George Thatcher. Imagine that, being written into history as Thoreau’s companion?
There were doctors and lawyers; Sumner Laughton had to