The Life and Times of a Maine Island
An excerpt from a history of Frenchboro, Long Island, one of Maine's last remaining year-round island communities
- By Dean Lawrence Lunt
- Smithsonian.com, May 01, 2008, Subscribe
An island is a special place, often invested by both its residents and outside observers with an identity, a life and a personality. People talk and whisper, defend and attack, brag and condemn an island as if the landmass were a friend, family member or nemesis.
I don't know why islands inspire such personification or generate such strong opinions. Some people, including friends and relatives of mine, have stepped off the shores of Long Island and never again returned. Others leave for several years before coming back. And still others leave, but no matter how young they were when they sailed, they still consider it "down home."
For me, even more than an island or a hometown, Long Island is a family and a heritage. I was born an eighth-generation islander. I am unapologetically proud to say my family built the island community and has helped sustain it for going on 200 years.
The family flourished and failed and feuded on the shores of Long Island. They were keen business operators, tireless workers, layabouts, bandits, alcoholics, church workers, community leaders, detached, mean, congenial and fun-loving along the banks of a harbor that bears the family name and on hillsides that contain the bodies of their forebears.
It is a heritage that to people from other states sometimes inspires a certain amount of intrigue, bewilderment and snobbery. The myths, both positive and negative, about islands—and Maine itself, for that matter—are legion. Residents of both are alternately portrayed as crusty fisherman, sturdy woodsmen, wizened sages or drunken, backward hicks.
Certainly, some spiritual justification exists for all this. An island does seem to possess, and can potentially lose, a unique life force. Some 300 year-round Maine island communities, although many consisted of no more than a few families, have died over the past century or so. Yet, more than 250 years after it first appeared on nautical charts and nearly two centuries after settlers built the first log cabins, Long Island survives. Out "amid the ocean's roar," as one writer put it, Long Island is one of only 15 Maine islands that still support a year-round community. And it is one of the smallest and most remote.
The island itself lies in Blue Hill Bay roughly eight miles southwest of Mount Desert Island, but a world away from the tourist-driven economy of Bar Harbor and the posh estates of Northeast Harbor and Seal Harbor.
The working-class village surrounding Bass Harbor is the closest mainland port and the one most frequently used by Long Islanders. On the run from Bass Harbor to Long Island, three main islands are clustered in the first four miles: Great Gott Island, Placentia Island and Black Island. All three once supported year-round communities, but now Great Gott has summer residents only, Black has one house and Placentia is abandoned.
Because of its spot along the outermost line of Maine islands, Long Island was usually called Outer Long Island and sometimes Lunt's Long Island in the 1800s to distinguish it from a similarly named island closer to Blue Hill. Starting in the 1890s, the village on the island became known as Frenchboro, named after a Tremont lawyer who helped establish the island's first post office.
The community of about 70 year-round residents sits on or near the sloping banks of Lunt Harbor, a long horseshoe-shaped inlet that provides protection from all weather but a northeast wind. The sheltered and accessible harbor is one reason why Long Island has survived while other island communities have died.
Lunt Harbor opens toward Mount Desert Island with the Mount Desert hills looming ghostlike on the horizon. On summer nights, you can sit on a wharf and watch headlights from cars full of tourists as they climb to the peak of Cadillac Mountain, high above Acadia National Park.
The banks make sharply away from Lunt Harbor, providing a perch for mostly modest homes to sit in quiet observance of the daily goings and comings.
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Comments (8)
Gayle Jackson,
Susan Parker is my second cousin. Harriet's home is on Great Gott not Little Gott. I would be glad to speak with you.
Posted by Callie Marsh on March 15,2011 | 06:07 AM
My best childhood friend from New Jersey used to go with her family to Little Gott Island in the summer. Her stories of the rustic, pristine beauty and lifestyle enchanted me. That influence, coupled with my own fantastic experience in Finland (which has similar coastline, flora and terrain) as an exchange student in high school provided the impetus for me to seek out Maine as a vacation destination after I graduated from college. I started out going to Hancock Point, then ultimately settled happily on returning each summer to an island in mid-Penobscot Bay. What prompts this message is the hope that Jana St. James, who posted a comment on April 7, 2009, might still be following this conversation and see my query: Would she or her father know how I could find my childhood friend? Her late mother's name was Harriet Holmes Parker. Harriet Parker in her last years lived at Bass Harbor in the winter and moved to Little Gott Island in the summer, I believe. But I have lost track of her daughter, my friend, Susan Parker (and have lost and forgotten her married name). I hope she has been able to keep the family home on Little Gott Island in her possession.
Posted by Gayle Jackson on November 1,2010 | 03:57 PM
Just visited Placentia today and saw the old house site. Very cool! Was just reading about the couple that lived there for over 30 years.
Posted by MD on September 15,2010 | 07:59 PM
Just came back from a few days on Great Gott Island. It was very rustic and beautiful. As for tourists, there aren't any. (There also are no cars and no utilities like electricity or telephone.) The island is inhabited by a few dozen people in the summer and is empty most of the year. All the land is either privately owned or in conservation. To stay there one would have to know someone who has a house there.
Posted by Paul Geffen on August 14,2009 | 08:04 PM
I am a Gott orginally from northwest Indiana and now in Los Angeles. My 90 year old father, David Gott, has given me a book about the history of my family where I am learning about Great Gott and Little Gott Islands. I hope I can visit one day. Can anyone tell me a good source of tourist information? Many thanks.
Posted by Jana St James on April 7,2009 | 03:15 PM
The memories come flooding back.Think i will go "Down home" for a while.
Posted by kevin Lunt on August 25,2008 | 10:07 PM
We just visited both Frenchboro and Great Gott islands. We live on Swan's Island in the summer. They are really extraordinary places. I am married to a person with deep roots in the year-round community, whereas I descend from the first "summer people" on Swans Island. When we go to the island ghosts are waiting for both of us. What makes these places live is the year-round community. We need to keep it alive. Otherwise they become just scenery.
Posted by Iver Lofving on August 20,2008 | 09:54 PM
tears now, comment later
Posted by Donna Forsgren on May 24,2008 | 07:39 AM