Penobscot Marine Museum
Penobscot Marine Museum
  • Видео 234
  • Просмотров 176 992
Kosti Update
This selection of Kosti Ruohomaa's photos provides an overview as we near the end of the project.
Просмотров: 40

Видео

Maritime & Maine Topics Author Series-Janna Smith
Просмотров 793 месяца назад
This is a recording of a Zoom presentation on February 8th, 2024. Janna Smith will discuss When the Island Had Fish: The Remarkable Story of a Maine Fishing. Community Fishing has been a central part of life on the island of Vinalhaven for over 4,000 years. For her book, Janna interviewed many living fishermen and fishing families, and spent many hours in the island historical society reading d...
What Happens to the Boat?
Просмотров 173 месяца назад
Participants in the Penobscot Marine Museum's April break Mini Camp, "Sea Monsters & Shadow Boxes," put together the stories in this video. They divided into two teams and each team received the same set of black and white images. They could color them, add to them, and put them in whatever order they wanted. Fun!
Maritime & Maine Topics Author Series-Penny West
Просмотров 384 месяца назад
This is a recording of a live Zoom program presented on February 1, 2024. Penny West will discuss London Letters Home of an American Apprentice Preparing for the Far East Tea Trade, Gus Farley, Jr. (1844-1899). The talk will present a glimpse of the four years Gus spent in London apprenticing as a tea taster, preparing to join his cousins’ firm of Augustine Heard & Co. in China - 1861-1865. Gus...
Maritime & Maine Topics Author Series-Mark Borton & Moondoggle
Просмотров 744 месяца назад
This is a recording of a live Zoom program presented on January 18th, 2023. Author Mark Borton will reveal the full story that is documented in his new book, Moondoggle: Franklin Roosevelt and the Fight for Tidal-Electric Power at Passamaquoddy Bay. “Quoddy” was to be built off the coast of Maine and New Brunswick and would generate enough electricity to power much of New England. It was part o...
A Mr. Ropes Tall Tale
Просмотров 1684 месяца назад
This is a recording created during the February 2024 Tall Tales & Fish Stories Camp at Penobscot Marine Museum. For information on upcoming children's camps and other programming, visit penobscotmarinemuseum.org. Campers started with a true story about Mr. Ropes the cat who sailed from Boston, Massachusetts to Buenos Aires, Argentina in 1892. They then re-wrote the story using their imagination...
Stories from the Spirits of Sea-Goers IV
Просмотров 298 месяцев назад
The people of Searsport and Penobscot Bay have a long history of going to sea. In letters, diaries, logbooks, photos, newspaper articles, and stories passed down through generations, they recorded their experiences. Quiet days, adventure, tragedy, and heroism each take their turn. This fourth installment of “Stories from the Spirits of Sea-Goers” features tales based on true experiences and rec...
Ripped from the Headlines: Tales of Life on the Bay & Summer People (recorded version)
Просмотров 408 месяцев назад
For those that live here and for those that visit, daily life on Penobscot Bay is unique. Over the years, newspaper articles have recorded some of the ups and downs. The following portrayals by Penobscot Marine Museum staff and volunteers are based on true stories in newspaper accounts. These are recorded from the in-person event on June 29th, 2023. Take a deep dive into the sea-goers life with...
Photographer Sam Murfitt looks at his portrait of Maine boatbuilder Peter Kass
Просмотров 1529 месяцев назад
Photographer Sam Murfitt has spent most of his life connected with the water-while making photographs, building boats, and working for fishing publications. For decades, he has photographed fishermen, their work, and their boats, and in that work, has come to see their way of life as finite and fleeting. His images document that lifestyle and offer a window into Maine’s working waterfronts and ...
From the Archives - Did the ship's log record the birth of the Captain's son?
Просмотров 15910 месяцев назад
This is a short excerpt from the upcoming Member Monday Program The Colcord Collection with Cipperly Good and MP Bogan. Joanna Carver Colcord and her brother Lincoln Ross Colcord were influential locally, nationally, and internationally in the first half of the Twentieth Century. Although we love them for co-founding Penobscot Marine Museum with other children of sea captains, each made huge co...
Artist Talk: Pim Van Hemmen Discusses In Extremis | Historic Ships in America
Просмотров 106Год назад
This is a recording of a hybrid program presented live on June 15, 2023. In conjunction with his photography exhibit, In Extremis: Historic Ships in America, photographer Pim Van Hemmen will give an illustrated talk. His photographs, printed very large on aluminum, are stunning to say the least. They provide the viewer with the sense of scale and age of these ocean faring vessels. Each of the s...
Maine Fisheries 101
Просмотров 46Год назад
This is a recording of a live Zoom program on June 1st, 2023
Close up of Tatted Bonnet
Просмотров 177Год назад
In 1999, Phyllis Poor of Belfast, Maine donated her mother-in-law’s wedding dress to Penobscot Marine Museum along with a pair of shoes and a tatted lace bonnet that were presumably also from the wedding. This video is a close look at the tatted bonnet (PMM #1999.9.4) Wealthy Pendleton Nichols’ wedding to Frederick R. Poor took place on January 2nd, 1907, at the home of her parents at 40 High R...
Wealthy P Nichols Tatting and Life at Sea
Просмотров 194Год назад
This is the recording of a live Zoom program presented on February 16th, 2023. On Wednesday Evening, January 2nd, 1907, Miss Wealthy P. Nichols was united in marriage to Frederick R. Poor, a Belfast businessman. Her wedding gown is now in the collection of the Penobscot Marine Museum as well as her shoes and a tatted lace bonnet. Wealthy’s father was a Searsport sea captain and she spent much o...
Fog & Ice Speaker Series - Fog In The Penobscot Marine Museum Photo Archives
Просмотров 98Год назад
This is a recording of a live Zoom program on February 9th, 2023. It will come as no surprise that Maine is one of the foggiest states in the country. In fact, Mistake Island, off of Jonesport, is the 5th foggiest spot in the US, with more than 1,600 hours of fog per year. The science of fog states it forms when two ground level air masses meet and condense to form a low-lying cloud. It’s not t...
Fog & Ice Speaker Series - Fog Along The Maine Coast With Meteorologist Mike Clair
Просмотров 78Год назад
Fog & Ice Speaker Series - Fog Along The Maine Coast With Meteorologist Mike Clair
Fog & Ice Speaker Series - Mainers on the Titanic
Просмотров 32Год назад
Fog & Ice Speaker Series - Mainers on the Titanic
Ripped from the Headlines: Tales of Bravery, Shipwrecks, & Courage at Sea Round 2 (recorded version)
Просмотров 102Год назад
Ripped from the Headlines: Tales of Bravery, Shipwrecks, & Courage at Sea Round 2 (recorded version)
Stories from the Spirits of Sea Goers III
Просмотров 84Год назад
Stories from the Spirits of Sea Goers III
Up Close Look at a Victorian Hair Wreath
Просмотров 57Год назад
Up Close Look at a Victorian Hair Wreath
Picturing Penobscot Bay Artist Panel
Просмотров 652 года назад
Picturing Penobscot Bay Artist Panel
Peek into Paintings - AUGUSTINE KOBBE - Part 4 The captain and his family
Просмотров 802 года назад
Peek into Paintings - AUGUSTINE KOBBE - Part 4 The captain and his family
Peek into Paintings - AUGUSTINE KOBBE - Part 3 Voyages Across the Atlantic
Просмотров 472 года назад
Peek into Paintings - AUGUSTINE KOBBE - Part 3 Voyages Across the Atlantic
The Chart Collections at Penobscot Marine Museum
Просмотров 1422 года назад
The Chart Collections at Penobscot Marine Museum
Peek into Paintings - AUGUSTINE KOBBE - Part 2 Let’s take a look
Просмотров 452 года назад
Peek into Paintings - AUGUSTINE KOBBE - Part 2 Let’s take a look
Peek into Paintings - AUGUSTINE KOBBE - Part I What do you see in this painting?
Просмотров 292 года назад
Peek into Paintings - AUGUSTINE KOBBE - Part I What do you see in this painting?
Peek into Paintings - Ocean Chronicle - Part 5 in Martha Nichols’ Words
Просмотров 392 года назад
Peek into Paintings - Ocean Chronicle - Part 5 in Martha Nichols’ Words
Peek into Paintings - Ocean Chronicle - Part 4 Written Aboard the FRANK PENDLETON
Просмотров 672 года назад
Peek into Paintings - Ocean Chronicle - Part 4 Written Aboard the FRANK PENDLETON
Peek into Paintings - Ocean Chronicle - Part 3 Newspaper aboard the FRANK PENDLETON
Просмотров 222 года назад
Peek into Paintings - Ocean Chronicle - Part 3 Newspaper aboard the FRANK PENDLETON
Peek into Paintings - Ocean Chronicle - Part 2 Let’s take a look
Просмотров 232 года назад
Peek into Paintings - Ocean Chronicle - Part 2 Let’s take a look

Комментарии

  • @joeswampdawghenry
    @joeswampdawghenry 15 дней назад

    Cheers!!💐💐💐💐😁🎈🎈🎈🎈⛵⛵⛵🚤🚤🚤🚣🚣🚣🚣

  • @Prevailingbucket
    @Prevailingbucket Месяц назад

    Unfortunately, the “Hero” is no longer with us. Sank at its mooring in Washington state after considerable neglect and was dismantled and disposed of. 😔

  • @nhaynguyenminh6272
    @nhaynguyenminh6272 2 месяца назад

    hola

  • @jeremydow1432
    @jeremydow1432 2 месяца назад

    Had one of his " Instant Boat" books for years : nice to see him " live". Another great old boatman gone to greater waters.....

  • @Justhings332
    @Justhings332 3 месяца назад

    “Orca” The boat from Jaws was a Novi Cape islander converted originally from when it was called the warlock. I don’t know who the builder was but it was used in 1974 for the filming of Jaws.

  • @americanrambler4972
    @americanrambler4972 3 месяца назад

    Very interesting and entertaining.

  • @YoouTubeSEOExpert
    @YoouTubeSEOExpert 4 месяца назад

    I found some issue your channel: No Keywords/Hashtags in your videos, Some Keywords/Hashtags in your channel Tag area, Description not optimize and have more issue. Do RUclips SEO and increase more view.

  • @user-bv3pu1bx4t
    @user-bv3pu1bx4t 4 месяца назад

    I don't think that's a gaff. More likely for handling timber / logs.

  • @leecarlson9713
    @leecarlson9713 6 месяцев назад

    And it most likely was a man who designed the clothing and bustles (think the French couturier Worth during the Regency Period)! You can’t tell me that any woman willingly designed such an instrument of torture called the corset!

    • @TheSewphisticate
      @TheSewphisticate 5 месяцев назад

      While popular media certainly sensationalized corsets and corset-wearing, creating a plethora of myths ranging from regular fainting beauties to rib-removal, we assure you the intended purpose of corsets was much more practical. As boned support garments, corsets were much like the modern brassiere and intended to support the bust and back for a full day’s work. When fashions required wearing multiple, heavy skirts, corsets also distributed the weight and kept waistbands from digging into a woman’s side. They could provide gentle shaping to the figure as well, again like our modern elastic shapewear, but the reduction was minimal and additional padding was employed to create the illusion of smaller waists. When custom-fit to the wearer, corsets should be comfortable! Occasionally, women could have tight-laced, but that was reserved for special occasions, (think like wearing stilettos today), and only reduced the figure by a few inches - too much strain on a corset would break the garment, before it harmed the wearer!

    • @issness_god
      @issness_god 2 месяца назад

      Fumin at the patriarchy threw me Gregg's at pet pigeon ralfie

  • @sandrajones2184
    @sandrajones2184 6 месяцев назад

    I own a Osmond Beal designed boat built by H&H. Owned one wooden boat before that built on Orrs Island. The hulls built today wood or fiberglass as lobster/ fishing boats are capable, seaworthy,money making vessels. I love mine. Thank you to all the builders,designers and finishers for these vessel and also the ones that unfortunately have passed, I am partial to Beals Island designs just wished I could met Osmond Paul J. Cundys Harbor

  • @jensschroder8214
    @jensschroder8214 6 месяцев назад

    I know the capstan of tape recorders and cassette players. The capstan is the shaft that determines the speed of the tape.

  • @gregoneil2036
    @gregoneil2036 7 месяцев назад

    Fair enough.

  • @mikepierce1724
    @mikepierce1724 8 месяцев назад

    Danny backmen built his own boats he was best wood worker on The planet!!!!

  • @davidgrim5990
    @davidgrim5990 10 месяцев назад

    I think the culture was different then. They had a very professional idea of what should or should not be in the log book. I'm sure marriages would also not be in the log book. Only thing I think they might have included was the death of a passenger.

    • @PenobscotMarineMsm
      @PenobscotMarineMsm 10 месяцев назад

      Yes, the logbook was the official record of the voyage and many stick to professional observations. However, some logs (and charts!) in our collection do include personal experiences, such as the leather-bound logbook of the ship STATE OF MAINE from September 6, 1896-April 17, 1898 kept by Henry Griffin Curtis. It includes the ship leaking badly in a gale, not making progress across the equator, son George is on board and catching fish, has purple stamp "* Opened. Crew. Beef *", celebrating his 46th birthday, Manila stowaways, sending mail ashore by bumboatmen, steward confronted mate with a knife, adventures of daughter Hope and Miss Gordon (may be Grace Gordon, his second wife) making desserts and being seasick, and Hope's 16th birthday.

  • @toddlong8672
    @toddlong8672 11 месяцев назад

    I sure miss Phil, and Harold. The world's not the same without them

  • @novicehistorian4006
    @novicehistorian4006 11 месяцев назад

    One of my great grandfathers helped build this ship. I found him on ancestry. 👍😃

  • @assateaguecottage8378
    @assateaguecottage8378 11 месяцев назад

    This was great, thank you

  • @robertbamford8266
    @robertbamford8266 Год назад

    Fabulous lecture. Fabulous lecturer. What a treat! And I suspect he is just scratching the surface.

  • @devenjudd6411
    @devenjudd6411 Год назад

    That’s my grandmas brother ! Jimmy.

  • @brinkee7674
    @brinkee7674 Год назад

    I think John's Bay built a wooden boat for I guy I was renovating a couple homes for on Greening Island at Southwest Harbor back in the late 80's. It was a beautiful lobster style boat but decked out inside, powered with a Volvo IB. It was never to be used as a lobster boat when this guy owned it except for the few traps I pulled. I thought he paid to much @ $200k but she was something special that is for sure.

  • @dc-wp8oc
    @dc-wp8oc Год назад

    Stand and row. Who would have thought.

  • @rideswithscissors
    @rideswithscissors Год назад

    I lived on a boat in the 70s-80s that was built in '46 at the Sample yard in Boothbay. While it had more cabin space and headroom, it had lines similar to some of these boats. It was built for a family named Bradley, and they were tall.

  • @cwenzel6950
    @cwenzel6950 Год назад

    Thank you for providing this recording of your presentation. My internet service is not the best in the rural area where I live, so Zoom is often very frustrating. Your voice is clear and easy to understand. The enlarging of the photographs was especially appreciated. My husband and I travel to Maine often and find it to be one of our favorite vacation areas. Hope to have the opportunity to participate in some of the Fiber College events soon now that I'm retired. Looking forward to the presentation on March 2nd.

    • @PenobscotMarineMsm
      @PenobscotMarineMsm Год назад

      Thank you for your kind words! We totally understand unreliable internet, which is one of the reasons we love being able to record presentations and put them on RUclips! We hope you stop by Penobscot Marine Museum next time you find yourself in the area.

  • @ryheartrainbow540
    @ryheartrainbow540 Год назад

    Love Hiroshige

  • @shauneaton5365
    @shauneaton5365 Год назад

    Terminator was run by Sid Eaton from stonington hell yea aj 28 boat he’s had them for a long time.

  • @dspondike
    @dspondike Год назад

    Thanks! One of my very favorite boats. I got to sail on the Endeavor out of Nantucket for several summer vacations back in the 90s.

  • @haisamjab
    @haisamjab Год назад

    So wise people

  • @mikelewis6629
    @mikelewis6629 2 года назад

    As I watch the video, I'm looking around at all the models on his workbench, each one a work of art, and an investment of many, many hours of very careful, meticulous craftsmanship. And I expect he took up model making after a lot of years of building full-sized boats. Quite a man.

    • @PenobscotMarineMsm
      @PenobscotMarineMsm 2 года назад

      Thanks, Mike. Many of Dynamite's models are now at the Penobscot Marine Museum. You can find them in our database and also see them on exhibit! penobscotmarinemuseum.pastperfectonline.com/bycreator?keyword=Payson%2C%20Harold

  • @rileybeal4151
    @rileybeal4151 2 года назад

    That Riley Beal is who I'm named after

  • @orig66Super
    @orig66Super 2 года назад

    Not a bad gig.

  • @joebrouillard565
    @joebrouillard565 2 года назад

    Extordanary project, testament to the people of Maine and the volunteer’s character!

  • @faithcampbell5331
    @faithcampbell5331 2 года назад

    I am trying to envision a bird's eye view of the deck with the geographical markers noted by the Captain. There might be the basis for a "children's activity". An outline might be provided and various locations mentioned could be labelled and then discussed.

  • @MommaPoet1
    @MommaPoet1 2 года назад

    Thanks! That was a fascinating presentation!

  • @robertbamford8266
    @robertbamford8266 2 года назад

    Interesting. The photo of the ship in dry dock puts an interesting perspective on the size of the ship. Makes me wonder about the size of the Hesper and Luther Little beached in Wiscasset as I remember them from the 1950s. We would see them over the years as we drove over the Highway 1 bridge.

  • @orig66Super
    @orig66Super 2 года назад

    And going to the DMV to register that boat was a pain in the @&! back in those days. It took two weeks by horse and buggy to get to the DMV office in Boston.

  • @orig66Super
    @orig66Super 2 года назад

    Nowadays it’s just easier to watch ‘Inside Edition’ on TV.

  • @orig66Super
    @orig66Super 2 года назад

    Nowadays it’s just easier to watch ‘Inside Edition’ on TV.

  • @robertbamford8266
    @robertbamford8266 2 года назад

    Some interesting discussions elsewhere on pennant (pendant) and flag direction in paintings of sailing ships underway.

  • @mikepierce1724
    @mikepierce1724 2 года назад

    You talk about Backman well Danny Backman built 2 of his own 39 and 44 . His son Freddy used his uncles boat the plumestella. For a long time .Danny had 5000 dollars of lumber in the yard for awhile then he started that pile is 44 foot beautiful boat got windshield wipers

  • @Theoriginalbigbrillo
    @Theoriginalbigbrillo 2 года назад

    Thank you Tootsie and Alan Beal Senior , for looking after me and giving me shelter during that lovely summer of 1988 , I'm my heart forever ♥ ❤ ❤❤

  • @boomerdepp1456
    @boomerdepp1456 2 года назад

    Great presentation by the legendary master boat builder. The highest mark of 4 in the US Navy is defined as outstanding - and that's how I'd rate this video.

  • @robertbamford8266
    @robertbamford8266 2 года назад

    Priceless stories. Pile of cedar. Time on his hands. What better than to build another peapod? Thanks for the wonderful videos.

  • @robertbamford8266
    @robertbamford8266 2 года назад

    Didn’t have to carry fish home. But relatives in Tenants Harbor who were lobsterman would drop off a few lobster on their way home. I didn’t know lobster was an expensive delicacy until I was a teenager and went to buy a lobster at the market in Boston.

  • @charlestosi5199
    @charlestosi5199 2 года назад

    Visited his shop years ago while at Wooden Boat School. Brilliant, innovative man.

  • @PenobscotMarineMsm
    @PenobscotMarineMsm 2 года назад

    NOTE: **Please visit **ruclips.net/video/eyF-YOacLpw/видео.html** for an updated video with good graphics.**

  • @robertbamford8266
    @robertbamford8266 2 года назад

    Great repurposed (or invented) tools. Hope one of the future clips (or the assembled film) shows the process of bending the frames in place - and riveting them.

  • @robertbamford8266
    @robertbamford8266 2 года назад

    Years of work condensed into 40 minutes. Quite an undertaking! Thanks for the video.

  • @robertbamford8266
    @robertbamford8266 2 года назад

    I wondered about the flurry of short , semi-related clips. Found they are a bit like potato chips. Keep them coming!

    • @PenobscotMarineMsm
      @PenobscotMarineMsm 2 года назад

      Thanks Robert! “Peapods of the Maine Coast” is a series of 50 interviews with individuals who have a knowledge of the Peapod. The project was originally released in 2005 as an interactive DVD by filmmaker Juliet Brown and this is its public release. Juliet was inspired to interview these builders after building a Matinicus Island Peapod herself at the Apprenticeshop of Rockland in 2000. Every Friday we will be releasing additional videos into the “Peapods of the Maine Coast” playlist on the Penobscot Marine Museum RUclips channel.

  • @530eman
    @530eman 2 года назад

    So, so wish I had gotten into boat building as a young man…

  • @orig66Super
    @orig66Super 2 года назад

    I’ll have to tell you someday about what happened when we visited the library in San Francisco.