Saturday, June 29, 2013

South End Streets,
 photo by Sandra Sylvester

“A Sense of Place”

A Special Event at

Thomaston Public Library

July 17, 7:00 pm





Come and join the discussion with

Sandra Sylvester

Author of The South End and

The blog

“Beyond the South End”

And

Head Librarian,

Ann Harris

We will discuss the strong sense of cultural regionalism or “sense of place” which is unusually strong in our Great State of Maine. Why do we have these strong feelings, where do they come from? Why do visitors from out-of-state love us for it?

Sandra will discuss the topic in relation to her book, The South End. She will have books on hand for sale and signing for those who are interested. If you already have a book that is unsigned, please bring it with you and Sandra will be glad to sign it for you.

Ann will add her discoveries about the subject and tell you why it is so important to Maine people and to her. Discussion with the group is anticipated and welcomed. Come join us and discover why Maine people are so unique.

Friday, June 21, 2013


A Sense of Place
Scene from Mcloud Street in the South End, Photo by Sandra Sylvester


Anyone who has ever lived in the South End; along the coast of Maine; or in any other area of Maine, for that matter, has a sense of place.

Our Maine writers do a good job of introducing you to the different areas of Maine they write about. Any writer hopes that if they write about the place where they grew up that they will get readers from not only the area they are writing about, but other readers out of the area. They therefore will work diligently while writing their “Maine” story to place the reader in the scene they are talking about. It only makes literary sense, after all.

I have recently had an email discussion with Ann Harris, head librarian at Thomaston Public Library about this very subject. She agrees with me about using local history in creating literature, such as the big “fire” story in Rockland’s history, which I included in my book, The South End.

To quote her email: “I’m very, very interested in the whole “sense of place” subject: how important place is, why we are drawn to some places more than others, how we seem to be losing much of the sense of place in this country as it is paved over and homogenized, etc.”

The chances of keeping the local flavor of our coastal area are bleak at this time. As one more chain store goes up, we lose another dose of local color. Do you miss Dave’s restaurant, for instance? How much longer do you think Dorman’s will last? It’s up to the Maine writer to preserve past pictures of the area as well as preserve local history.

How does a Maine writer create this “sense of place” in their story? There are many approaches the writer may use, including the senses (what special smells abound in your story); what scenery do you see around you; taste (can you taste salt water on your tongue?); hearing (do you hear fog horns or taxi cab horns…different scenes altogether.

If I may use The South End as an example, this is how I placed you into the many scenes of my story.

In the very first scene, I put our main character, Frank on the boardwalk in wintertime. He feels the cold winter breeze from the ocean. How he is dressed is mentioned to remind you of how cold you would feel in that environment.

I have included an actual map of the South End at the beginning of my book and pointed out where the homes of the important fictional characters of my story live.

When my characters travel around the neighborhood of the South End, I include the streets they cover, how they connect, and the weather conditions they encounter. A local reader can follow them easily and an out-of-town reader is then placed into the scene with other readers.

Another aspect of a “sense of place” is the ethos of the area. South End people have always known their “place” and taken pride in their resilience and ability to carry on no matter what. They help each other out and have each other’s back when necessary. The Frank in my story epitomizes the “go-to” person of the neighborhood who everyone goes to when they are in trouble. His struggles become our struggles; his triumphs also become ours.

To further the “sense of place” of the South End folks, I have included scenes from a resort area, the Samoset, at the other end of town. It’s a very different scene and one in which many of the characters in my story will never participate in even though the distance is but two or three miles away at the most.

As you read the stories of Elizabeth Ogilvie, Sarah Orne Jewett, Kenneth Roberts, Robert McCloskey and even our own Steven King, and poet Edna St. Vincent Millay, notice their “sense of place.” “Three long mountains and a wood” from Edna’s most famous poem, “Renascence,” tells you where you are in an instant. We’ve looked out at that scene many times from the top of Camden’s hills overlooking that harbor.

Rediscover your favorite Maine writers this summer. There are so many to choose from. Your local librarian will be happy to help you. My book is available at local libraries also. Happy reading!

Thanks for listening.

Monday, June 17, 2013


Sail, Power & Steam Museum

June 21

7:30pm

Come and hear the Songs of Summer, Songs of the Sea, the original and traditional music by Castlebay. Julia Lane, Fred Gosbee and special guest Nikos Apolonio.

 
Tickets $12, call 594-701-7627

Friday, June 14, 2013


The Hilton Homestead

The Hilton Homestead, in Bremen Maine, is the latest guest blog to join us here on “On Being a Southender.” Mary Sue Hilton Weeks is my cousin. We hope to bring you some historical material and other facets of the Homestead in the months to come. Exciting things are about to happen and we are both excited to bring them to you here.
                                           
I am living on a 100-acre farm that has been in my family through my great-grandmother's side for over 200 years. My great-grandfather William Bainbridge Hilton bought the farm from his wife Rhoda Little's family, and from then on it was known as the Hilton Homestead. I live next door to the family home where I grew up in the one-room school house where I went to school grades 4 - 8. In 1998 my sister Diane and her husband Lee retired from Washington, DC and took over the family home. They both passed away last year, and having no children, I acquired the family home. This blog is about my progress in trying to deal with it.
 
 
We have some pictures to share with you this month of activities, improvements, summer flowers, and animals now at the Hilton Homestead.

Repairs were made on the barn to go along with the new roof. Now it will last for another 200 plus years.







Here is some pictures of the sheep that have been added to the fields on the Homestead.







 
 
Mary Sue recently posted pictures of her summer garden. Her house, the old schoolhouse is in the background and to the right you can see the homestead.







 
 
 
Become a Member of Crescent Run Farm
If you would like to become a member of Crescent Run Farm, see details at:
They also have different levels of participation. Choose the one that best suits you. Here’s what it says on the site:
Each week we will harvest, wash, and pack your produce to be picked up on the scheduled day. The CSA will run for approximately 17 weeks, between early June and late September, until the value of your share is met. Factors such as climatic conditions, season, and pests can influence the value of an individual pick-up, and the full value of your investment will be met over the course of your membership.
A Note for the Family: If you have pictures of the farm to share, especially one of the family reunions, please email them to me at southendstories@aol.com. Thanks.

I inadvertently left out the Blues Festival when giving you overviews of activities in Rockland this summer. For a complete run-down of events, please go to the May archives, “Enjoy Rockland this Summer.”


Tickets are on sale for this year’s North Atlantic Blues Festival, featuring some of the best Blues artists from around the world, hosted at the Public Landing in Rockland, Maine.
July 13, 14 2013

For more info and to purchase your tickets: http://www.northatlanticbluesfestival.com/
For travel info and reservations: http://www.kevinsgetaways.com

 

Sail, Power & Steam Museum

 
 

 
June 15-June 16
10AM
Family Fun Days
Yard Sale, Model T Ford Rides, Nautical Scavenger Hunt,
 Coastal Children’s Museum,
Petting Zoo-Touch Tank,
 Roasting Hot Dogs at the lime kiln,
 Music all day long.

Saturday, June 8, 2013

By Ted Sylvester
 
Ted was surprised to read he was a part of history when he spied a recent “Today in History” story in the May 18-19 edition of the Bangor Daily News. He was reporting on this demonstration at Loring Air Force Base when the incident happened:
“On May 18, 1969, as reported in the Bangor Daily News, a veteran Air Force pilot with more than 100 missions over North Vietnam, escaped injury when he was forced to make a ‘barrier arrested’ landing after the left main landing gear of his F-106A interceptor malfunctioned during an aerial demonstration for the Armed Forces Day open house at Loring Air Force Base. The incident was out of view of the open house crowd estimated at more than 5,000.”
Here’s Ted’s Fish and Chips column for this month which originally appeared in the BDN on May 3, 1991.
Vacation in Arizona was visit to Paradise
 
Fanny Vance
Blotville Mountain,
Blotville, Maine
Dear Aunt Fanny:
It has been a while since I wrote. But I have got to tell you about our vacation for two weeks in Arizona. If there ever was a place that could be called “Paradise in the Springtime,” it would have to be Arizona. The weather was perfect, the people friendly, and there are more sights and attractions than can be seen in just two weeks. I found it interesting that there are so many from the Northeast who have moved to Arizona that they have their own “New England Club.”
The most-often heard remark was “What recession?” There appeared to be literally hundreds of houses under construction in Sun City West, with most of them already sold. There are so many Cadillacs seen on the streets that it should be designated as the official state car. Why, Aunt Fanny, I believe that there are as many Cadillacs in Sun City as there are pickups in Rockland.
Gasoline is cheaper, as low as 95 cents a gallon for unleaded; and many food items were much cheaper than here at home. You could get a good steak dinner for $7.95 that also included a country band and all the dancing you could stand. Great place, The Barn. The drummer in the band was from New Hampshire. The best meal we had was at Rawhide in Phoenix, a Western-style village that featured a hayride and a barbecue of steak and beans. This also featured country music.
I did notice, however, that Maine lobster at the supermarket cost $11.98 a pound.
We took in all the famous sights, including Grand Canyon—you have to see it to believe it—and Lake Havasu City, the state’s second leading tourist spot. This is where the London Bridge was erected in the desert and the Colorado River diverted to make the lake. By the way, the captain of the tour boat, Capt. Claude Beriau, is from Worcester, Mass. If you ever get there be sure and take his boat ride. Its great fun and very informative.
We also visited Montezuma Castle, which are centuries-old Indian ruins, and Biosphere 2, a scientific experiment to see if people can survive in an enclosed environment for two years. The giant greenhouse-like structure is the size of three football fields end-to-end. One of the eight scientists who will be involved with the experiment is Abigail Alling from Maine. She is in charge of the ocean and its species contained in the station.
Another favorite tourist attraction was Old Tucson, which is an actual movie studio built in the desert. It has been the location of hundreds of movie and television westerns. The “Young Riders” TV series was filmed here. The most recognizable spot for me was to stand in front of the old jail that was featured so many times on the Gunsmoke television series. I almost could see Festus standing out front.
There were many other sights and sounds too numerous to mention. But two exciting side trips out of Arizona were a visit to the glitzy and glamorous Las Vegas, and another to Nogales, Mexico and the culture shock of seeing children and old men begging on the streets.
Las Vegas is everything you ever heard it was. Rooms were $39 a night and the food is cheap. Steak and lobster was advertised for $6.95. One outside sign featured Maine lobster.
We went to a dinner show at the Tropicana, where the prime rib was tasteless and tough, but the show was terrific. You wouldn’t believe it, Aunt Fanny but the beautiful dancers in the show were topless. Shocked the devil out of me and wifemate. It was evident from the money we saw being dumped onto hundreds of slot machines and passed across gaming tables that nobody there had ever heard of any recession. As Mainers, wifemate and I were somewhat conservative. She spent about $3 in nickels, and when I hit a home run on the one-armed bandit for 200 quarters, and another for 150 we called it quits, almost. I sneaked back and lost about half of what I had won.
I can’t leave without mentioning that we went to Dan Quayle’s home town of Wickenburg to spend two hours of horseback riding in the desert. Quite an experience. Somewhat painful, but fun. Could not help but notice a sign there on a bridge going into town. It said “No fishing from the bridge.” It would have been impossible to begin with. There was no water. Dan couldn’t have had anything to do with this, could he?
We passed through several national forests on the way to the Grand Canyon. It was strange as there were no trees, just bushes, in most of them. There were some giant ponderosa pines at the Grand Canyon, but that’s all.
There was one sign along the highway that offered some good advice. It notified motorists that there was a federal prison nearby and warned drivers, “Do not pick up hitchhikers.”
All in all, Aunt Fanny, the trip was great fun. Expensive, but fun. I can’t wait to go back. All I need is a Cadillac.
 
  CHAPPED HANDS
 In Memory of My Mother
Doris Louise Blackman Merriam
 
My mother had chapped hands
Every winter
From doing the laundry
For nine
At some point in her life
An innovation came along
The Easy washer and wringer
Which helped immensely
But she had to hang out
All that cloth
Between porch and barn
On sunny days in winter
In the freezing cold
When we were old enough
We would trudge over
Pacific Street hill to Skim’s store
With a note for groceries
To keep all the human engines
Of 72 Mechanic Street going
Of course, now I feel guilty
For stealing an occasional quarter
From the lunch money for the movies
But I’m so grateful
To both mother and father
Using so much effort
To keep us alive and flourishing
Here in one of the most
Beautiful spots on earth and ocean
No matter the cost to  mother’s
Beautiful hands
 
Kendall Merriam,  Home, May 9, 2013 10:52 AM
Listening to Phyllis dressing
 
MEMORIAL MOON
 
                             For Kristen
 
                   I don’t want to talk
                   About soldiers
                   Though I was one
                   No cannons
                   No fireworks
                   Just this single lantern
                   Tied to God’s finger
                   Which he moves around
                   Like a celestial yo-yo                
                   Low and shining
                   Water calm
                    Almost a silent affection
                   Do you think our poems
                   Will be forgotten
                   I keep running into people
                   Who say they love the moon
                   But if that is true
                   Why aren’t
                   A thousand editions
                   Demanded
                   Across the world
                   Now frail clouds
                   Over the Mussel Ridges
                   Obscuring our friend slightly
                   But good to see again
                   A sign we are alive
                   And loving the earth
                   From mountain top to sea’s breaches
 
                   Kendall Merriam, Home 5/26/13  10:57 PM
                   Listening to a distant television
 
THE GETTYSBURG ADDRESS
 
For my brother Robert
 
At the hall of the Grand Army of the Republic
where a bank sits now
each Memorial Day
there was oratorical splendor
veterans, politicians
but the most important was the delivery
of the Gettysburg Address
by a high school senior
one year my brother, Robert
was chosen
I do not remember him having
a loud voice around the house
but he was president of his class
small, slight
commanding some spirit
more than the Baptist Church
prepared him for
that May day was warm and sunny
a fair sized crowd
gathered around the porch of the G.A.R.
I don’t remember any loudspeaker
traffic was light on the holiday
so when my brother
recited Lincoln’s Holy Words
all could hear
there were tears
from local citizens
knowing how many from Rockland
shed blood in that national catastrophe
I am a sometime war poet
who cannot bring myself to read much
about those bloody fields
on the borderlands
it certainly was no “Civil” war
many still celebrate it
North and South
why did God demand so much
to bring freedom to the oppressed
African-American citizens
it is beyond comprehension
fields were littered with
bodies of men and horses
Traveler indeed!
what were the bands of superiority
that challenged humans and humaneness
even though Maine
contributed more men
proportionately
it is only now
lovely faces are arriving in Rockland                
enriching this tiny city
how fortunate we are finally
to hear the fruition of that paragraph
my brother spoke so many years ago
 
Kendall Merriam Home   May 5, 2013  10:37 PM
Listening to the “Best of the Gypsy Kings”
 
THE LEGACY
                   For Marshall and Danny Merriam
 
                   Gray seas today, boding rain
                   Maybe an Easterly
                   No worry in the lobster yacht
                   No worry on the 900 footer
                   In the Gulf
                   Ships bring father and son together
                   A trade ancient and new
                   Not many now under the American flag
                   The work is fraught with danger
                   A loose tripod just down the street
                   The fire of drilling
                   Every precaution is taken
                   Much of the sea year is pleasant
                   Except when it isn’t
                   Poseidon demands much from Odysseus
                   Up to the days of sea horses
                   Who do the work of keeping our
                   Expanding population
                   Fed and fueled
                   Spray gives the salt of longevity
                   So many losses out of Rockland
                   Ships and schooners, johnny wood boats
                   But father and son
                   Have no hesitation
                   In going out
                   Calling on family need, personal need
                   We say silent prayers
                   At each gust on a blowy day
                   We also offer pleas
                   For wood, plastic, steel
                   That each hull hold, each engine
                   Drive the prop properly
                   We cannot abide losses
                   Of any rank, by any wind
                   The music of wind and wave is so enticing
                   We hear it here at the Head of the Bay
                   Where the father was inundated
                   With the thirst of plowing the waters
                   And now the son rides a ship
                   Of giant size trying to find oil
                   We trust they are protected
                   For a long maritime life
                   Braving the oceans for centuries
 
                   Kendall Merriam,  Home, May 19, 2013  4:05 PM
                   Listening to a CD by Dramtreeo  “Waterside”
                   And a compilation of world music by Rebecca Hill
 
THE ROSE
                              For Meg
 
                   She works on her knees
                   Trimming, weeding, adding
                   Flowers to the landscape
                   Of her husband’ s long love
                   Of the sea
                   She represents all the wives
                   Waiting for ships and schooners
                   To round Owls Head Light
                   In a fair breeze
                   Vessels with a paying cargo
                   She never mentions it
                   She just prays
                   That the Captain and all his men
                   Are safe and hearty
                   After facing all the seas’s
                   Mysterious Gods and Goddesses
                   Who work by whim
                   She holds tight to earth
                   Caring for a row of roses
                   That give courage and beauty
                   No hat but her
                   Golden crown of sea gold
                   Brought from
                   Madagascar or Ceylon
                   How the brilliant sky and ocean
                   Match her will
                   For caressing the earth
                   On this day
                   With a hint of summer
                   Edged by an afternoon Southwest
                   That comes nearly every day
                   It tangles her hair
                   A breeze off the harbor
                   Where so many ships were built
                   Sailed and returned
                   When not caught by storm, sleet, fog
                   Can the scent of roses
                   Guide all boats into port
                   As much a lifesaver
                   As any horn or light
                   Is that why she works so hard
                   To please men and God
                   Who walk dangerous and beautiful waters
 
                   Kendall Merriam, Home,   May 16, 2013 1:37  PM
                   Listening to the Allman Brothers