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You searched for: Title: is exactly 'Steamer J. T. MORSE'✖
Item | Title | Type | Subject | Description | Creator | Date | Property Name | Street | Pages | Medium | Condition | |
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4081 | Steamer J. T. MORSE |
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| Shows the MORSE outbound for the Western Way. The view is of the port bow. |
| Description: Shows the MORSE outbound for the Western Way. The view is of the port bow. | ||||||
4084 | Steamer J. T. MORSE |
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| Perspective from the area of the Claremont hotel in Southwest Harbor. Shows range of Northeast Harbor homes along the far shore |
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| Description: Perspective from the area of the Claremont hotel in Southwest Harbor. Shows range of Northeast Harbor homes along the far shore | |||||
5095 | Steamer J. T. MORSE |
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| Framed, colored, 20 x 17" photograph of an oil painting of the steamer J. T. Morse by Augustus Phillips for Casper W. Morris. |
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| Description: Framed, colored, 20 x 17" photograph of an oil painting of the steamer J. T. Morse by Augustus Phillips for Casper W. Morris. | ||||
5521 | Steamer J. T. MORSE |
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| Colored Photograph of the steamer "J. T. Morse." |
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| Description: Colored Photograph of the steamer "J. T. Morse." | |||||
5948 | Steamer J. T. MORSE |
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7269 | Steamer J. T. MORSE |
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| The last large side-wheeler steamer used in New England for both passenger and freight service was the 214-foot J. T. Morse, built in 1903-04 in East Boston for the Eastern Steamship Company. Powered by a 600-horsepower, single-beam engine, it traveled the Rockland, Maine to Bar Harbor run from April to October or November each year. The ship was named for James Thomas Morse of the well-known maritime (shipping and towing) family from Bath, Maine. (Text from visitacadia.com) | Description: The last large side-wheeler steamer used in New England for both passenger and freight service was the 214-foot J. T. Morse, built in 1903-04 in East Boston for the Eastern Steamship Company. Powered by a 600-horsepower, single-beam engine, it traveled the Rockland, Maine to Bar Harbor run from April to October or November each year. The ship was named for James Thomas Morse of the well-known maritime (shipping and towing) family from Bath, Maine. (Text from visitacadia.com) [show more] |