| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name
 | Date | Lines | 
|---|
| 491.1 | There was this Mainiac who . . . | CSSE::COUTURE |  | Tue Feb 24 1987 08:45 | 8 | 
|  |     "Cruising Guide To New England" will give you a lot of info on sailing
    the Maine islands.  "Shipwrecks of the New England Coast" should
    provide a bit of history and some anecdotes.  I don't know what
    stone slooping is.  Would you enlighten me?
    
    Your best bet would probably be to visit "The Armchair Sailor" in
    Newport or the bookstore at Mystic Seaport.   
 | 
| 491.2 | a couple of sources | PULSAR::BERENS | Alan Berens | Tue Feb 24 1987 09:26 | 21 | 
|  | Chapelle wrote a classic book about American sailing ship design -- I
don't recall the title offhand. 
You might also look at John Leavitt's "In the Wake of the Coasters" 
which discusses schoonering along the Maine coast.
re .1: Schooners and sloops were used to carry granite mined along the 
Maine coast to Boston and elsewhere. When they sprung a leak, they sank 
like stones, so to speak. There are derricks on various islands that are 
the remains of the granite mining. One island off Stonington (I don't 
recall the name) looks like the entire top has been cut off. There are 
still stone wharves there and a number of derricks. Carrying lime on 
schooners was another fun occupation. Wet lime burns spontaneously and 
the fires were virtually impossible to extinguish.
Damariscove Island off Boothbay was once the largest fishing port in New 
England. Trivia question: What was the first town in North America with
paved streets? Answer: Pemaquid, Maine. One of the artifacts found 
during the archeological digging at Pemaquid was a glass something or 
other made in Italy a century or two before being brought to Pemaquid.
 | 
| 491.3 | Towering above the Mall... | ASGNQH::BALD | John Bald - VAXing poetic | Tue Feb 24 1987 15:34 | 11 | 
|  |     Many famous buildings built in the 1800's were made of granite from
    islands such as Vinalhaven.  The granite was shipped on sloops well
    designed for carrying heavy, massive objects.  Many succesful stone
    sloopers were built on Chebeague Island.
    
    A couple of notable buildings built with Maine granite: Chicago
    Board of Trade, a wing of the Massachusetts State House, and, under
    its marble, the Washington Monument.
    
    
 | 
| 491.4 | Islands of Mid-Coast Maine | VIKING::CONAHAN |  | Tue Feb 24 1987 19:19 | 11 | 
|  |     Try "Islands of the Mid-Maine Coast" by Charles B. McLane - Kennebec
    River Press/Woolwich, Main{.   It tells you everything there you
    ever wanted to know about the the islands, the people and how they
    made their livings (508 pages worth with maps and pictures).  My
    wife and I vacation every year in coastal Maine and it holds a{
    special value and meaning for us. {We  found this book a real delight
    and I think it will add greatly to your research.  You might also
    place your inquiry in the Maine notesfile on UCOUNT. Good Luck!
    
    Frank
 | 
| 491.5 | Fishing | 3D::GINGER |  | Thu Feb 26 1987 15:10 | 6 | 
|  |     Try "Charlie York, Maine Coast Fisherman' published by International
    Marine Publishing, Camden. Great life story of a fisherman, born
    in 1892 or 1893.
    
    Ron
 | 
| 491.6 |  | SWSNOD::RPGDOC | Dennis (the Menace) Ahern 223-5882 | Fri Mar 06 1987 13:45 | 8 | 
|  |     For information on the stone sloops used to transport quarried granite
    along the New England coast, visit the Sandy Bay Historical Society
    museum at the corner of King and Granite Streets Rockport,
    Massachusetts.
    
    
    
 |