page [51] 25 Jul 1901 (seq. 53)

OverviewTranscribeVersionsHelp

Here you can see all page revisions and compare the changes have been made in each revision. Left column shows the page title and transcription in the selected revision, right column shows what have been changed. Unchanged text is highlighted in white, deleted text is highlighted in red, and inserted text is highlighted in green color.

5 revisions
Judy Warnement at Aug 17, 2022 02:59 PM

page [51] 25 Jul 1901 (seq. 53)

51
Grindstone Neck, Winter Harbor, Me.
1901
July 25

A glorious clear bracing day, with some haze in the
afternoon. The mercury went over to 50 degrees last night.
59 degrees, 8.30 A.M.; 66 degrees, 2 P.M., 62 degrees, 7 P.M., 58 degrees, 10 P.M.

My Bird Talk came off this morning at 11 o'clock on
the beautiful north piazza of Mrs. Duff. All called it
a great success. Over sixty were present including
ladies and gentlemen and a number of children. I was
told that children had never attented these lectures before
and that from fifteen to twenty five or thirty was the
usual number present. I had 45 skins that I
brought up from the Museum (W.B.'s) representing
the principal birds of my talk. I was very
pleasantly introduced by Mrs. Duff and I talked
informally for an hour and a half, using the
specimens for illustrations. I thoroughly enjoyed it
all myself, and when I finished the people
clustered about me asking questions. I showed
the Rhode Island Tern card and [Cebapmaus?]
colored pictures of Birds and Mrs. Eckstorm's
Bird Book.

Before the talk Mrs. Duff showed me her "Canon"
a strip of ground covered with a natural growth of
trees between the driveway & road, about 15 yards wide
running to a point at each end. It is in a
depression and is filled with native growth largely
introduced by Mrs. Duff. It is a beautiful spot
of nature.

This afternoon I drove with Mrs. Duff and
May along the road towards Gouldsboro. Miss Moore
Miss Houston & Miss Bliss followed in another carriage.
We got out at a wood and walked through a

page [51] 25 Jul 1901 (seq. 53)

51
Grindstone Neck, Winter Harbor, Me.
1901
July 25

A glorious clear bracing day, with some haze in the
afternoon. The mercury went over to 50 degrees last night.
59 degrees, 8.30 A.M.; 66 degrees, 2 P.M., 62 degrees, 7 P.M., 58 degrees, 10 P.M.

My Bird Talk came off this morning at 11 o'clock on
the beautiful north piazza of Mrs. Duff. All called it
a great success. Over sixty were present including
ladies and gentlemen and a number of children. I was
told that children had never attented these lectures before
and that from fifteen to twenty five or thirty was the
usual number present. I had 45 skins that I
brought up from the Museum (W.B.'s) representing
the principal birds of my talk. I was very
pleasantly introduced by Mrs. Duff and I talked
informally for an hour and a half, using the
specimens for illustrations. I thoroughly enjoyed it
all myself, and when I finished the people
clustered about me asking questions. I showed
the Rhode Island Tern card and [Cebapmaus?]
colored pictures of Birds and Mrs. Eckstorm's
Bird Book.

Before the talk Mrs. Duff showed me her "Canon"
a strip of ground covered with a natural growth of
trees between the driveway & road, about 15 yards wide
running to a point at each end. It is in a
depression and is filled with native growth largely
introduced by Mrs. Duff. It is a beautiful spot
of nature.

This afternoon I drove with Mrs. Duff and
May along the road towards Gouldsboro. Miss Moore
Miss Houston & Miss Bliss followed in another carriage.
We got out at a wood and walked through a