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Lubec, Maine

A Border Town Shaped by the Sea

Lubec's 1911 Centennial Celebration

(Page 2 of 2) Print Version 

Residents of more modest dwellings also manifested muncipal devotion with streamers, stars, and stripes.

Centennial decor, Lubec, 1911
Centennial decor, Lubec, 1911
Lubec Historical Society

Clicking on and zooming in on the printed program, reproduced below, shows all activities, events, and even the names of the prominent business leaders of Lubec who directed the Centennial Committee.

Centennial program, Lubec, 1911
Centennial program, Lubec, 1911
Lubec Historical Society

Use of the zoom tool to read Monday's schedule, upper left of the program, lists a Automobile Hill Climbing Contest at 3:30 PM. The winner of ther "slow" high gear climb was Carleton Pike, who won the trophy shown below.

Centennial Trophy, Lubec, 1911
Centennial Trophy, Lubec, 1911
Lubec Historical Society

Though activities commenced on Monday, July 3, the photo below of upper Water Street likely was taken on Tuesday the 4th. Zoom in to see the uniformed individuals on the lower left, possibly members of one of the many bands. Note that the water of Johnson Bay beyond the end of the street is not visible, probably a result of fog always common in Lubec even during midsummer.

Centennial Celebration, Lubec, 1911
Centennial Celebration, Lubec, 1911
Lubec Historical Society

Here’s a view looking southwest on Water Street at its junction with School Street. The towered corner building housed the Post Office in 1911 (and for many years afterward), was also proudly deocorated for the grand celebration.

Stars and Stripes Throughout Lubec
The recently constructed Knights of Pythias Hall on Pleasant Street bordered Monument Lot with its share of streamers. The Order of Knights of Pythias is an international, non-sectarian fraternal order, established in 1864 in Washington, DC.

Behind the Pythias Hall stood the two-story gabled structure which long housed Lubec firefighting apparatus. It too bore appropriate patriotic bunting.

The bandstand, a prime gathering place for the public in an era larded with local musical organizations, stood at Main and Pleasant Streets, as does the much-rebuilt gazebo as of 2010.

Church and School Streets, on top of the hill which surmounts the village area of Lubec, was home to Lubec School for about a century. In 1911 this building housed both the elementary and high schools. Click on the photo and zoom in to view the outsized portraits of Maine Governor Plaisted, left, and the late Maine elder statesman James G. Blaine. At the extreme right of the school photo note the roof corner of Columbian Hall, which appears in the righthand photo also richly decorated.

Below, two welcome arches graced the exultant streets of Lubec This arch near the corner of Commercial and Pleasant Streets welcomed visitors who arrived via the ferry wharf at the camera’s rear. Click on the picture then read the text telling of the portion of this structure which still exists as of 2011.

The other arch guarded Bayview Street alongside Main.

A Centennial Mystery
The German namesake city sent more than a congratulatory telegram in 1911, for the Lubec Herald reported on “a huge express package which contained a magnificent engraving of Lübeck, Germany, in the Sixteenth Century. This engraving, which is eleven feet long by three feet wide is handsomely framed in dark oak and reinforced with brass stays. It shows the ancient town, with its waterfront and cathedrals, its quaint German architecture and sharp-roofed houses, its odd-looking boats and winding streets...The large engraving is accompanied by two smaller framed pictures, showing views of the town today...the town feels highly honored and grateful to its godmother for such an interest as the gift of these articles evinces.”
The artwork was promptly displayed in the window of Centennial Headquarters, the C.H. Clark Department Store (later Unobskey’s) on Water Street. Clicking on this picture then zooming in reveals the eleven-foot framed etching across the bottom of the wide window, with what appear to be two buckets and a presentation cup in front. The two smaller art pieces rest higher, partially obscured by the semi-circular bunting.

What became of these three magnificent pieces? A 1937 newspaper item states that the art went into the new 1911 bank. Since then, no trace. The brick edifice, at Water and Main Streets, still stands as of 2010, but no one seems to know what happened to the gift from Lübeck. The Lubec Herald also reported that “Souvenirs of the package in the form of nails, splinters of wood and bits of the lettering are eagerly sought for as relics of our hundred year remembrance.” None of these fragments has surfaced as of February, 2010.

The Ceremony on July 4
Jacob Pike's personal diary for July 4 says that the day "came in calm and fine, later warm," clearly excellent weather for the ceremony. According to the Lubec Herald’s front page for Wednesday, July 12 (no issue was published on July 5th), ““One of the features of the day was a Living Flag with 225 children on a specially built stand on Monument Lot.” Click on the photo below and zoom in to see the youngsters on the upper left holding their stars and singing patriotic songs.

Centennial Living Flag, Lubec, 1911
Centennial Living Flag, Lubec, 1911
Lubec Historical Society

“Here was also the address by Dr. Anton Marquardt of Colby College (in Waterville, Maine), formerly of Lübeck University, Germany,” continued the Herald coverage. “His address, as well as that of Judge Mahar of Augusta, Maine, was an eminently fitting speech, in which he paid a compliment to the people of the town in their efforts to fittingly celebrate their anniversary of establishment as a town.”
In conclusion Miss Evelyn Pike unveiled a black granite tablet. The monument is on the Pleasant Street edge of the park, and reads “Lubec Incoporated June 21 1811 Commemorated June 21 1911. Eighteen-year-old Evelyn was daughter of Bion Moses Pike, owner of the Lubec Sardine Co., who had donated the land to the town for the Civil War Soldiers’ monument. Click on the photo below then zoom in left center and see her lifting the veil off the tablet.

Centennial Monument, Lubec, 1911
Centennial Monument, Lubec, 1911
Lubec Historical Society

The day concluded with a fine parade, more athletics and concerts, and a “Grand Pyrotechnic Display” as dusk settled at 8:30.