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Series 3: Graphic materials (continued) | |||||||||||||
Black-and-white negatives (continued) | |||||||||||||
Frances Gendreau, Madawaska, Maine; St. Agatha Catholic Church, Monfort, Maine; Adrien Morin, potato farmer, Saint David, Maine, July 27, 1991 (continued) | |||||||||||||
Digital content available: afc1991029_dw_b057 | |||||||||||||
36 35 mm black-and-white film negatives | |||||||||||||
These images document a group of artifacts in the possession of Frances Gendreau of Madawaska; these objects were given to her by her uncle, Fred Albert; 2-3, Small hand-carved wooden box; 4-10, Clay pipe; Ms. Gendreau associates this pipe with a story her uncle told her about smoking it with an American Indian visitor; 11-26, Ms. Gendreau had two stone tools given to her by her uncle; she said that she thought he had unearthed a number of such artifacts while plowing his fields; Some miscellaneous images from St. Agatha, ME; 27-28, St. Agatha Catholic Church; 29-30, Monfort Heights, a former convent converted into a residence facility for senior citizens; 31-32, Plaque on St. Agatha Catholic Church; 33-35, Decorative stonework on St. Agatha Catholic Church; These images document a visit to potato grower and barrel maker Adrien Morin of St. David, ME; 36-end, Morin (front) shows field coordinator Ray Brassieur some of his barrel-making equipment. | |||||||||||||
Call number: AFC 1991/029: DW-B058 | Visit to home or Adrien Morin, potato grower and barrel maker, Saint David, Maine, July 27, 1991 | ||||||||||||
Photographer: David A. Whitman | |||||||||||||
Digital content available: afc1991029_dw_b058 | |||||||||||||
36 35 mm black-and-white film negatives | |||||||||||||
These images document a visit to Adrien Morin, a potato grower and barrel maker in St. David, ME. Wooden potato barrels were once commonly used in the study area when potatoes were harvested by hand, but the advent of mechanical harvesting has rendered them nearly obsolete. Some are still used on area farms for storage; 2-10, Morin shows field coordinator Ray Brassieur how staves are made; 11-12, Adrien's son Ray, who has worked in the barrel making operation, joins the conversation; 13-16, Stave-making equipment; 17-18, The Morins show Brassieur how hoops are made; 19, Material for making wooden hoops; 20-24, Demonstration of hoop-making; 25, Adrien Morin shows how he cuts the bottom of a barrel; 26, Barrel-making equipment; 27, Stacks of barrel bottoms; 29-30, Various parts for the barrel-making equipment; 31-32, One of the buildings which houses part of the barrelmaking operation; 34-36, Ray Morin demonstrates the final assembly process.; 37, Finished potato barrels. | |||||||||||||
Call number: AFC 1991/029: DW-B059 | Various buildings and scenes, Upper St. John River Valley area, Maine; Eloi Daigle house, Fort Kent, Maine, July 28, 1991 - July 29, 1991 | ||||||||||||
Photographer: David A. Whitman | |||||||||||||
Digital content available: afc1991029_dw_b059 | |||||||||||||
36 35 mm black-and-white film negatives | |||||||||||||
These images document a variety of buildings and scenes; 1-6, Decorative facial boards on the eaves of houses in Wallagrass, ME; there are quite a variety of these throughout the study area, cut in a number of different shapes from triangular to compound-curved examples like these; 7-8, Members of a group calling themselves "Rainbows;" they were traveling from a national gathering of Rainbows in Vermont, and had stopped at this rest area along State Highway 11 in Wallagrass; 9-10, Pump connected to a well at the rest area; 11-12, House in Soldier Pond connected to a former storefront; 13-22, Exterior views of the Eloi Daigle house on U.S. Highway 1 in eastern Fort Kent; this is a typical mid-nineteenth century Acadian house which has been moved and enlarged since its construction. The unpainted sections represent much later additions; 23-30, Closet door in the Eloi Daigle house; an interesting and typically Acadian feature is the chamfered panels on the inside of the door; 31-32, Ship's knee in the Fred Albert house in St. David, ME; 33-36, Close-ups of ship's knee showing the heads of the iron fasteners called drift pins. | |||||||||||||
Call number: AFC 1991/029: HM-B001-61317 | Various scenes, Madawaska, Maine; Fred Albert House, Madawaska, Maine, June 25, 1991 | ||||||||||||
Photographer: Howard W. Marshall | |||||||||||||
Digital content available: afc1991029_hm_b001_61317 | |||||||||||||
35 35 mm black-and-white film negatives | |||||||||||||
2, US 1 n. edge of Madawaska; 3-4, David Whitman at local grocery store; Catholic shrine statues (for private yards) for sale; 5-23, exterior views of Fred Albert House, a piece-sur-piece en colombacre Acadian cottage that has been moved to this site and made into a museum; building recorded; note the house form (Georgian-influenced symmetrical central hall, double-pile house); gable roof; gallery porch on front; story-and-one-half height; horizontal lapped weatherboarding; 24, framed French flag in hallway; 25, porch; 26-27, detail: panelled ceiling; 28-29, museum founder and expert local historian of Acadian ancestry Claude "Blackie" Cyr; 30-36, armoire (cupboard); details; important example of locally-made built-in cupboards found in Acadian houses. | |||||||||||||
Call number: AFC 1991/029: HM-B002-61327 | Fred Albert House, Madawaska, Maine, June 25, 1991 | ||||||||||||
Photographer: Howard W. Marshall | |||||||||||||
Digital content available: afc1991029_hm_b002_61327 | |||||||||||||
36 35 mm black-and-white film negatives | |||||||||||||
1-7, interior details in rear rooms; note Acadian furniture; 8-11, locally-made armoire in kitchen; details; 12-15, views of original back door of Fred Albert House; 16-18, views of stairway to second floor off of hallway; this was the fancier stairs and used only by girls and women; 19, old photos; 20, worn pine flooring; 26, boxed stairway of the medieval European variety (and early American variety) in rear hallway of Albert house; provided access to sleeping area in second story used only by boys and men; 27-33, details of roof construction in sleeping loft; 34-36, ship's knees (braces) in sleeping loft. | |||||||||||||
Call number: AFC 1991/029: HM-B003-61316 | Fred Albert House, Madawaska, Maine, June 25, 1991 | ||||||||||||
Photographer: Howard W. Marshall | |||||||||||||
Digital content available: afc1991029_hm_b003_61316 | |||||||||||||
36 35 mm black-and-white film negatives | |||||||||||||
1-2, more views of ship's knees in second story sleeping loft; 3-5, roofing details; #3 shows rafter footing joining the hewn log plate; #4 shows joining (half lap) of rafter collar and rafter; 6, view of second story / loft / attic; 7, detail of horizontal plate and its meeting with the vertical grooved column from below (the column / en coulisse that receives on both sides the hewn madriers or members that constitute the pieces in pjece-sur-piece en colombacre construction); 8, detail of cutout portion of girt in the gable, to provide for installation of window; 9, detail of horizontal hewn members / madriers bearing walls in rear corner of house; exposed to view; 10-14, details of vertical flush board walling in same room; #13-14 show the ceiling joist and flooring of loft; 15-16, interior of front north parlor, showing one of the vertical columns that is the principal feature of this kind of construction; note the column has been left raw and the vertical flush board walling and the panelled ceiling has been painted; 17, view in same room, rearward; 18, detail cutaway view next to front door in hallway showing pencilled names; 19-20, Mr. Claude "Blackie" Cyr; 21, section of woven mat that was found in the house when it was moved; 22, Claude Cyr; 23, view in second story of plate receiving a vertical column from below; 24, Acadian festival mural in the attic; 25-27, fine Acadian chairs in the loft / attic; 28, Ray Brassieur and Dave Whitman (l.) look at their fieldnotes in the attic of the Fred Albert house; 29-30, potato basket in attic; 31-34, furniture in the house; #34 is an important peg leg bench used for working at the loom; 35-36, Ray Brassieur admires an old basket. | |||||||||||||
Call number: AFC 1991/029: HM-B004-61319 | Fournier-Chasse House and Fred Albert House, and other vernacular buildings, near Madawaska, Maine; Log blockhouse, Fort Kent, Maine, June 25, 1991 | ||||||||||||
Photographer: Howard W. Marshall | |||||||||||||
Digital content available: afc1991029_hm_b004_61319 | |||||||||||||
36 35 mm black-and-white film negatives | |||||||||||||
1-2, views Fournier-Chasse House, a piece-surpiece Acadian house that has been considerably remodelled (adding brick veneer siding) and expanded by additions; St. David community (adjacent to Madawaska), US 1; 3-5, Ray Brassieur (l.) and Dave Whitman ponder their fieldnotes in front of the house; 6-14, views of the house and in #7 of the St. John River just below it; 15-17, Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Chasse; 18-21, details inside the house; Mrs. Chasse in #21; 22-23, views of the house; 24, view of Fred Albert House, adjacent to Fournier-Chasse House; 25, vernacular houses across US 1 from FournierChasse House, St. David; 26-27, store at St. David, US 1; 28-31, vernacular houses and buildings along US 1 between Madawaska on Ft. Kent; 32-36, Fort Kent, 1839-1840 log blockhouse at confluence of St. John River and Fish River in Ft. Kent. | |||||||||||||
Call number: AFC 1991/029: HM-B005-61324 | Maison Daigle St. Jean, a piece-sur-piece en colombage Acadian cottage reconstructed on a museum site in Clair, New Brunswick (across the Saint John River from Fort Kent, Maine), June 26, 1991 | ||||||||||||
Photographer: Howard W. Marshall | |||||||||||||
Digital content available: afc1991029_hm_b005_61324 | |||||||||||||
36 35 mm black-and-white film negatives | |||||||||||||
1-6, views of the Maison Daigle, a fine Acadian house; behind it the museum staff have recreated a traditional granae Acadien (Acadian barn) from scratch; this is a public museum where visitors pay small admission charge and get guided tours; important collection of artifacts of all kinds are here; 7-8, views of the new / recreated Acadian barn (a three-bay frame barn); 9-11, views of interior of the house; niche for holding religious statues in #9; 12, attic of the house; 13-15, ship's knees (braces) in the attic / loft; 16-17, the niche in the kitchen / dining area on the first floor; 18-20, views of the kitchen / dining area; note the cutout wall section to allow for circulation of heat from the cast iron stove; 21-23, views of the columns in the front parlor; corner columns are boxed grooved columns (that within the walling receive the horizontal madriers that constitute the bearing walls of piece-sur-oiece; 24-25, views of the rear of the house and the new barn 2 6 "Societe Historique" sign on old farm equipment in front of the house; 29-32, views of exterior of Maison Daigle; note very ornate front entry with painted symbols and sidelight windows; 33-36, field team members Lisa Ornstein (l.) Ray Brassieur (c.) Dave Whitman (r.) at the Maison Daigle; 34-35, views of the framing inside the replica / recreated Acadian barn. | |||||||||||||
Call number: AFC 1991/029: HM-B006-61312 | Maison Daigle St. Jean, Clair, New Brunswick, Canada; Potato houses and Bangor and Aroostook Railroad, Fort Kent, Maine; Acadian house in Fort Kent, Maine, June 26, 1991 | ||||||||||||
Photographer: Howard W. Marshall | |||||||||||||
Digital content available: afc1991029_hm_b006_61312 | |||||||||||||
36 35 mm black-and-white film negatives | |||||||||||||
1, hallway of the recreated Acadian barn; 2, field researchers Ray Brassier (l.) and Lisa Ornstein (r.) at the barn; 5-8, views of St. River from the Maison Daigle, looking from south to north, including view of Ft. Kent, Maine; 9-10, views of the sign for the Maison Daigle museum from highway; 11, the Customs check point on the Clair, NB side of the bridge; 12-13, St. River and bridge from the international boundary point on the bridge between Clair and Ft. Kent; 14-27, potato houses and Bangor and Aroostook Railroad cars along Market Street in Ft. Kent; some photos show flat cars loaded with harvest logs to be shipped to mills; 15, Acadian cottage, in form much like the Maison Daigle (Clair, NB), next to railroad on Dube St. in Ft. Kent; 16-33, historic structures along the BAR rail: old caboose and restored station; 34, businesses on US 1 in Ft. Kent, near BAR; 35-36, Acadian house on Dube St. (see #15). | |||||||||||||
Call number: AFC 1991/029: HM-B007-61309 | Acadian house in Fort Kent, Maine ; Frenchville historic site, Frenchville, Maine; Vernacular architecture on Route 1 between Fort Kent and Madawaska, Maine; Soldier Pond rest area and landscape on Maine 11, near Madawaska, Maine, June 26, 1991 | ||||||||||||
Photographer: Howard W. Marshall | |||||||||||||
Digital content available: afc1991029_hm_b007_61309 | |||||||||||||
36 35 mm black-and-white film negatives | |||||||||||||
1-2, Acadian house type on Dube St., Ft. Kent (continued); 3-4, Acadian house type on US 1 near Upper Frenchville; 5-11, views of historic BAR railroad water tower and vernacular houses in the community of Upper Frenchville on US 1; 12-16, views of Jesse Michaud store in Upper Frenchville; this is a rehabbed / enlarged and modified piece-sur-piece Acadian cottage house type; 17-19, Acadian cottage house type, Upper Frenchville of the bridge; 20, commercial building on US 1 (main street), Madawaska, "Acadian Festival Headquarters"; 21, [do], nice false-front building; 22-23, Acadian cottage, with enclosed front porch, Madawaska, US 1; 24-26, commercial building in Madawaska, US 1; 27, vernacular house with exceptionally developed pilasters, US 1 in Madawaska; 28-36, Soldier Pond rest area and landscape, Maine 11 south of Ft. Kent; historic markers overlooking the valley; site of original road into the area (Fish River Road); arpent land division system visible in these photos. | |||||||||||||
Call number: AFC 1991/029: HM-B008-61318 | Acadian houses on Maine 11, Maine; St. Joseph Catholic Church and statuary, Wallagrass, Maine; Buildings in and around Eagle Lake, Maine; Val Violette House; Van Buren, Maine, June 26, 1991 - June 27, 1991 | ||||||||||||
Photographer: Howard W. Marshall | |||||||||||||
Digital content available: afc1991029_hm_b008_61318 | |||||||||||||
36 35 mm black-and-white film negatives | |||||||||||||
1-3, shingled, restored Acadian house type on Maine 11 (for sale); 4-10, St. Joseph Catholic church and statuary, Wallagrass community, Maine 11; 11-12, potato house (partly subterranean) on Maine 11 near Wallagrass / Plaisted communities; 15-16, Acadian house type with porch and larger attached room, Maine 11, Eagle Lake; 17, post office, Eagle Lake, Maine; 18, old folks home, Eagle Lake; 19—20, Victorian period New England temple-form house type, Maine 11, n. of Eagle Lake; 21-23, John Brown house, Maine 11, Eagle Lake; note clipped gables, color scheme (sang de bouef / oxblood plus grey); 24-36, Val Violette Acadian cottage house type, with Greek Revival exterior details, Van Buren on US 1; a National Register site; #34 shows old madriers (logs) cut out of rear wall during remodelling; #3 6, Ray Brassieur studies them; #35 shows the enclosed porch on the rear of the house. | |||||||||||||
Call number: AFC 1991/029: HM-B009-61313 | Val Violette House, Van Buren, Maine; Acadian Village Museum,Van Buren, Maine, June 27, 1991 | ||||||||||||
Photographer: Howard W. Marshall | |||||||||||||
Digital content available: afc1991029_hm_b009_61313 | |||||||||||||
36 35 mm black-and-white film negatives | |||||||||||||
1-3, Ray Brassieur examines the remnants of madrier removed during remodelling of the Val Violette house; 4-5, views of the Val Violette house, rear; 6-13, views of architectural details, roof system, braces, etc. in attic of V. Violette house; 14-18, loom equipment / tools and historic loom in attic of V. Violette house; 19-23, Catholic nuns (and blood sisters) visiting in the Violette house while owners are away: Ludwina Deveau (rt.) and her sister, Sister Hermine Deveau (a Marist missionary) ; Brassieur talks with them in #21-23; 24-25, main building and gift shop at Acadian Village open-air museum, n. of Van Buren, US 1; 26-27, buildings there; 28-33, Parent-Roy log house of the earliest Acadian variety, much like houses of the British or Anglo-Americans except for the cornering details (#31) ; note the square-notching of the horizontal logs at the corners but with the vertical wooden pins to lock the corners in place (partially destroyed during museum relocation and reconstruction) ; note also that the logs are hewn with a broad axe square on all four sides and they fit flush horizontally (unlike Anglo-American log construction); note roof detail (eave treatment), a Quebec tradition; 34-36, interior. | |||||||||||||
Call number: AFC 1991/029: HM-B010-61323 | Acadian Village Museum, Van Buren, Maine, June 27, 1991 | ||||||||||||
Photographer: Howard W. Marshall | |||||||||||||
Digital content available: afc1991029_hm_b010_61323 | |||||||||||||
36 35 mm black-and-white film negatives | |||||||||||||
1-9, Parent-Roy log house, continued; note armoire in #2, built-in corner bed in #3 ; Brassieur and freestanding fireplace in #4; 10, exterior — note Quebec curve to the eave of the roof; 11-14, exterior of Maison Morneault historic house, Acadian Village museum; a piece-sur-piece Acadian cottage en colombage; c. 1857; post office addition to south gable end; ship's knees in sleeping loft (two pair); note detailing around front door of the house (classical revival; federal); note bird house attached to corner of the house (as with other Acadian houses); 15-33, interior of attic: note especially the ship's knees (braces) in #15 etc., birch bark wall and roof insulation in #17, mortise-and-tenon construction of framework; 34-36, interior downstairs; loom, armoire. | |||||||||||||
Call number: AFC 1991/029: HM-B011-61329 | Acadian Village Museum, Van Buren, Maine, June 27, 1991 | ||||||||||||
Photographer: Howard W. Marshall | |||||||||||||
Digital content available: afc1991029_hm_b011_61329 | |||||||||||||
36 35 mm black-and-white film negatives | |||||||||||||
1-4, interior, Maison Ouellette, 1859 Acadian cottage; horizontal log construction (perhaps half-dovetailed); note cast iron cook stove in #1 and cutout area of wall behind to allow better heat circulation; sink in #3; 5-6, the builder, Regis Levasseur in old photo displayed in the parlor of the Maison Ouellette; 7-10, interior views of parlor and bedroom; note furnishings; 11-12, old lithograph of Millais's "The Gleaners" on wall; 13, kitchen, armoire; 14-18, attic details; note newspaper insulation; 19-20, information posted to the interior wall of the house; 21-22, exterior of Maison Ouellette; 23, view of Maison Morneault (note post office room added to gable); piece-sur-piece Acadian cottage, en colombacre; 24-27, Maison Ouellette exterior, continued; note swallow house on corner; Acadian barn is visible behind house in #26; 28-31, Acadian barn fun grange Acadien) brought to the museum and reconstructed; shingled, three-bay barn of the early kind; 32, museum director Mrs. Ann Roy; 33-35, potato knife Marshall bought at Jesse Michaud store, Upper Frenchville; 36, parade float at the museum. | |||||||||||||
Call number: AFC 1991/029: HM-B012-61314 | New Sweden community log house, New Sweden, Maine; Notre Dame du Mont Carmel Catholic Church and surrounding area, Lille, Maine, June 28, 1991 | ||||||||||||
Photographer: Howard W. Marshall | |||||||||||||
Digital content available: afc1991029_hm_b012_61314 | |||||||||||||
36 35 mm black-and-white film negatives | |||||||||||||
1, highway signs, Frenchville; 2-3, Swedish style log house, New Sweden community, Aroostook County interior; 4-11, Notre Dame du Mont Carmel, idled Catholic church in Lille, on US 1, being restored by owner Don Cyr; a National Register site; 12-13, porch details of the rectory; note the niche in the wal1; 14, Don Cyr's truck with Acadian pride license plate; 15, vie of landscape behind the church; 16-22, views of the church and rectory, continued; 23-24, cemetery; 24, the church; 25-26, connected dwelling, barn, and commercial building on US 1 adjacent to the church, Lille; 28-33, church, continued; 34-35, the structures in 25-26, continued; 36, the church. | |||||||||||||
Call number: AFC 1991/029: HM-B013-61325 | Notre Dame du Mont Carmel Catholic Church, Lille, Maine; Violette log house (dismantled/stored), Lille, Maine, June 28, 1991 | ||||||||||||
Photographer: Howard W. Marshall | |||||||||||||
Digital content available: afc1991029_hm_b013_61325 | |||||||||||||
36 35 mm black-and-white film negatives | |||||||||||||
1, connected, buildings, US 1 next to Lille church; 2-3, vernacular houses on US 1 in Lille, across from the church; 4-10, Notre Dame du Mont Carmel, the Catholic church in Lille, on US 1, being restored by owner Don Cyr; a National Register site; 11-15, interior of the church; 16-22, cast iron angels, gilt, to be replaced on top of the twin towers of the church by Don Cyr; 23, detail of one of the interior columns grained to imitate marble; 24-26, drift pins, 8" hand-forged iron, from ship's knees in the dismantled Violette piece-surpiece en colombaqe house owned by Don Cyr; 27-28, Acadian barn, remodelled, part of the church property; Don Cyr stores antiques and parts of old buildings here; 29, Ray Brassieur (l.) visits with Don Cyr about the old buildings Cyr plans to restore; 30-34, Violette log house (piece-sur-piece), dismantled and stored under tarps behind the church Don Cyr owns; a National Register site, ithis dismantled building; 35-36, cemetery behind the church. | |||||||||||||
Call number: AFC 1991/029: HM-B014-61315 | Don Cyr and the Violette log house (dismantled), Lille, Maine; Various scenes and vernacular barns, St. Agatha, Maine, June 28, 1991 | ||||||||||||
Photographer: Howard W. Marshall | |||||||||||||
Digital content available: afc1991029_hm_b014_61315 | |||||||||||||
36 35 mm black-and-white film negatives | |||||||||||||
1-2, Don Cyr and some of the stored parts of the Violette log house (dismantled), a National Register site; 3-4, the area continued; Acadian barn to the right; 5-6, Ray Brassieur (l.) visits with owner Don Cyr about his plans to reconstruct the Violette log house; 6-7, ship's knees from the loft of the Violette log house, stored under tarps; 8-10, flooring stored, V. house; 11-12, more parts from the house; 13-14, Acadian festival mural painted by Don Cyr; 15-16, cultural landscape behind (west of) the church and barn; 17-20, the Danny Labrie frame twin barn, St. Agatha community (2 1/2 mi. south of Frenchville), on a prosperous family potato farm. A twin barn is essentially a pair of Acadian type barns placed one behind the other with the interstice framed in with a transverse roof; note that the exterior walls are shingled; interior views suggest the framing (documented in Marshall fieldnotes); #18 features a new sheet metal equipment shed built like World War Two vintage "quonset hut" buildings; 21-36, interior of the Labrie twin barn. | |||||||||||||
Call number: AFC 1991/029: HM-B015-61311 | Danny Labrie's "twin barn," St. Agatha, Maine, June 28, 1991 | ||||||||||||
Photographer: Howard W. Marshall | |||||||||||||
Digital content available: afc1991029_hm_b015_61311 | |||||||||||||
36 35 mm black-and-white film negatives | |||||||||||||
1-10, continued: Danny Labrie frame twin barn interior; 11-14, Ray Brassieur visits with Danny Labrie's father about how the barn was used and how it has been altered through time; 15, interior, continued (peak); 16-36, exterior of the barn circumscribed; potato field adjacent; the new quonset hut building (#28); shingle siding #27 etc. | |||||||||||||
Call number: AFC 1991/029: HM-B016-61326 | Danny Labrie farm and post office, St. Agatha, Maine; Herman Deprey potato house, Maine; Buildings and scenes, Madawaska, Maine, June 28, 1991 | ||||||||||||
Photographer: Howard W. Marshall | |||||||||||||
Digital content available: afc1991029_hm_b016_61326 | |||||||||||||
36 35 mm black-and-white film negatives | |||||||||||||
1-3, Danny Labrie farm — house to left, an Acadian cottage type house; 4-5, landscape near Labrie farm; 6, post office, St. Agatha, Maine; 7-31, the Herman Deprey potato house; the structure features a concrete fire wall; located adjacent to Bangor and Aroostook Railroad line; potatoes are brought here from the fields and stored until shipped via rail to the market; the potato house (a kind of twolevel barn) has thickly insulated walls and is very dark; it is partly built into the side of the hill to provide access for loading the potato house from the top down; #29 is Ray Brassieur (r.) visiting with Mr. Deprey; 32, "Multi-Purpose Center," Madawaska, where the Acadian Festival fiddlers convention and dance was held; 33, Acadian house on US 1 in Madawaska across the road from the McDonalds; 34-35, Dolly's restaurant, Acadian cuisine, north of Madawaska on US 1; 36-36a, Lakeview diner on main street at K-Mart shopping center, Madawaska. | |||||||||||||
Call number: AFC 1991/029: HM-B017-61328 | Lakeview Diner, Madawaska, Maine; Acadian Festival, Multi-Purpose Center, Madawaska, Maine, June 28, 1991 | ||||||||||||
Photographer: Howard W. Marshall | |||||||||||||
Digital content available: afc1991029_hm_b017_61328 | |||||||||||||
36 35 mm black-and-white film negatives | |||||||||||||
1-2, Lakeview diner, US 1, Madawaska; 3-36, Acadian Festival evening event featuring fiddlers, step-dancers, dancing, and local food at the Multi-Purpose Center, Madawaska; 7-14, local people representing the Bouchard company making and selling Acadian ploves during the event; they sell a pre-mixed recipe for making ploy; 32, parking lot; 33-35, more views of exterior of Multi-Purpose Center. | |||||||||||||
Call number: AFC 1991/029: HM-B018-61310 | Acadian Festival, Multi-Purpose Center, Madawaska, Maine; Acadian cottage near Soldier Pond, Maine, June 28, 1991 | ||||||||||||
Photographer: Howard W. Marshall | |||||||||||||
Digital content available: afc1991029_hm_b018_61310 | |||||||||||||
36 35 mm black-and-white film negatives | |||||||||||||
1-35, continuation of the Acadian Festival evening event featuring fiddlers, step-dancers, dancing, and local food at the Multi-Purpose Center, Madawaska; 14-17; 19-24, Mr. Arcad Richaut, an important regional step-dancer, playing French harp; he has been to the Smithsonian's Festival of American Folklife; Ray Brassieur visited with him; 25-34, fiddlers and other musicians warming up (jamming, swapping tunes) in the back room; 27, this chap was the central player among the old-time fiddlers; Brassieur, Ornstein, Whitman fieldnotes have names, etc.; 36, Acadian cottage of the early type, with fine galleries, on Maine 11 near Soldier Pond. | |||||||||||||
Call number: AFC 1991/029: HM-B019-61322 | Acadian vernacular architecture, on Maine 11, Upper Saint John River area, Maine, June 29, 1991 | ||||||||||||
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