MF 082 C. Richard K. Lunt Collection
This collections consists of two series. The first is a series of interviews [NA
245, 2842-2850] conducted by Richard Lunt in 1963 and 1964 which served as the
basis for Lunt’s University of Maine M.A. thesis. Some material was also
published as Jones Tracy: Tall Take Teller from Mount Desert Island (Northeast
Folklore, Vol. X). Interviewees recorded on tape include: Chauncey Somes, Ralph
Tracy, Laurie Holmes, John Carroll, Robert Smallidge, George Tracy Reed, Lydia
Storer, Clark Manring, Gus Phillips, and Phillip and Charles Carroll. The
accession envelop contains brief listings of tape contents and topics discussed
but interviews are not transcribed. Material appears to include many hunting and
fishing stories, some genealogy of the Tracy family and other folklore and local
history.
The second series [NA 582, 2827-2837], conducted by Lunt in 1970, relate to boat
building and were done in preparation for his doctoral dissertation.,
Lobsterboat Building on the Eastern Coast of Maine: a comparative study, Indiana
University, 1975. These interviews are fully transcribed. Interviewees include
Ronald Rich, Southwest Harbor; Malcolm McDuffy, Bernard; Len Pierce, Southwest
Harbor; Clarence Harding, Bernard; Oscar Smith, Jonesport; Ralph Stanley,
Bernard; James. E. Beal, Jonesport; Erwin Alley, Jonesport; Harold Gower,
Jonesport; Alvin Beal, Jonesport; Bert Frost, Jonesport; Richard Alley,
Jonesport; Harry Beal, Jonesport; Clinton Beal, Jonesport; and Raymond Bunker,
Southwest Harbor.
Series I Jones Tracy
245 Chauncey Somes, interviewed by Richard Lunt on September 21, 1963. 2 page
index. Somes discusses hog swapping; the first telephone is Somesville; and
tells stories told by and about Jones Tracy, including stories about Ben
Bordeaux’s cattle; the Balm of Gilead tree; Orville Bartlett and the bull; the
minister and the rug; Ben Bordeaux and the mackerel; Richardson and the fish
skins; and a city feller bear hunting. The first side of T 236 includes an
edited copy of the interview with Somes recorded on side one of T 235. One of a
series of interviews conducted by Richard Lunt in 1963 and 1964 which served as
the basis for Lunt’s University of Maine M.A. thesis. Some material was also
published as Jones Tracy: Tall Tale Teller from Mount Desert Island (Northeast
Folklore, Vol. X). T 235 (side one) and T 236 (side one).
2842 Ralph Tracy, interviewed by Richard Lunt on September 21, 1963. One page
index. Tracy tells stories told by and about Jones Tracy, including Jones
shingling on fog; apple tree that bore battleships; Frank Thompson and the deer
up the tree; Ben Bordeaux and pipe; also forerunners, boat superstition. The
first side of T 236 includes an edited copy of the interview with Tracy recorded
on side two of T 235. One of a series of interviews conducted by Richard Lunt in
1963 and 1964 which served as the basis for Lunt’s University of Maine M.A.
thesis. Some material was also published as Jones Tracy: Tall Tale Teller from
Mount Desert Island (Northeast Folklore, Vol. X). T 235 (side two) and T 236
(side one).
2843 John Carrol, interviewed by Richard Lunt, September 28, 1963. One page
index. Carroll tells stories told by and about Jones Tracy, including the bung
hole story; a story about being chased by a bear; and a story about Jones Tracy
and Frank Thompson getting liquor from a doctor in Bar Harbor during
Prohibition. One of a series of interviews conducted by Richard Lunt in 1963 and
1964 which served as the basis for Lunt’s University of Maine M.A. thesis. Some
material was also published as Jones Tracy: Tall Tale Teller from Mount Desert
Island (Northeast Folklore, Vol. X). T 236 (side two).
2844 Robert Smallidge interviewed by Richard Lunt, September 28, 1963, at
Smallidge’s home in Northeast Harbor, Maine. One page index. Smallidge talks
about Sally Somers, her background and powers; Sally’s marriage; Sally’s
familiar (a cat); first settlers on Fernald’s point; Jones Tracy’s dance hall.
Also tells stories about Jones Tracy, including story about the porgy kettle and
the mosquitoes; various hunting stories; making wooden decoys. Discusses John
Brown stories, and tells two, which he says antedate Jones Tracy stories. One of
a series of interviews conducted by Richard Lunt in 1963 and 1964 which served
as the basis for Lunt’s University of Maine M.A. thesis. Some material was also
published as Jones Tracy: Tall Tale Teller from Mount Desert Island (Northeast
Folklore, Vol. X). T 236 (side two).
2845 Laurie Holmes, interviewed by Richard Lunt, October 19, 1963, in Northeast
Harbor, Maine. One page index. Holmes tells a variety of stories about Jones
Tracy, including squash seeds big as snowshoes; Jones shoots deer around curve
of mountain by bending rifle barrel; mosquitoes and the kettle. Also talks about
muzzle loaders and hunting deer on Mount Desert Island; book on folk medicine;
Ben Bordeaux’s origin; and poaching. One of a series of interviews conducted by
Richard Lunt in 1963 and 1964 which served as the basis for Lunt’s University of
Maine M.A. thesis. Some material was also published as Jones Tracy: Tall Tale
Teller from Mount Desert Island (Northeast Folklore, Vol. X). T 237 (side one).
2846 Grace Tracy Reed, interviewed by Richard Lunt, October 20, 1963, on Mount
Desert Island, Maine. One page index. Reed reminisces about Jones Tracy; Tracy’s
house; time when a man took Tracy’s land; Ben Bordeaux; how and when Jones Tracy
told stories; Tracy’s rheumatism; his mother’s folk medicine; Tracy’s family and
obituary. One of a series of interviews conducted by Richard Lunt in 1963 and
1964 which served as the basis for Lunt’s University of Maine M.A. thesis. Some
material was also published as Jones Tracy: Tall Tale Teller from Mount Desert
Island (Northeast Folklore, Vol. X). T 237 (side two).
2847 Lydia Storer, interviewed by Richard Lunt, 1963. 2 page index. Storer
discusses the genealogy of the Tracy family, with special reference to Jones
Tracy, from the 1800s to the 1960s. One of a series of interviews conducted by
Richard Lunt in 1963 and 1964 which served as the basis for Lunt’s University of
Maine M.A. thesis. Some material was also published as Jones Tracy: Tall Tale
Teller from Mount Desert Island (Northeast Folklore, Vol. X). T 237 (side two)
and T 238 (side one).
2848 Clark Manring, interviewed by Richard Lunt, 1963. 3 page index. Manring
talks about Jones Tracy, his birth, his hunting philosophy; bible knowledge; his
health and his mother’s folk medicine; sources for his stories; “regular” vs.
joke stories; origin of Jones’ name; schooling; others who listened to Jones’
stories; other storytellers on Mount Desert Island; . Manring also tells stories
told by and about Jones Tracy, including: rain storm stories; Frank Thompson and
gun kicking; deer shot around mountain; fog shingling; patting bullets along; 3
deer at one shot; getting liquor from a doctor during Prohibition; fishing on a
bicycle; hat in road story; catching deer with finger; bung hole story; bear
turned inside out; Steve Sargent and Jones story; and throwing fish over
hacmatac tree. One of a series of interviews conducted by Richard Lunt in 1963
and 1964 which served as the basis for Lunt’s University of Maine M.A. thesis.
Some material was also published as Jones Tracy: Tall Tale Teller from Mount
Desert Island (Northeast Folklore, Vol. X). T 238 (side two) and T 239 (side
one).
2849 Gus Phillips, interviewed by Richard Lunt, 1963, in Northeast Harbor,
Maine. 1 page index. Phillips tells stories about Jones Tracy, including story
about Tom Petter and the milk bottle; about finding cave in cliff; bunghole
story; shooting two foxes; fog shingling; and the bear and baseball on Brown’s
Mountain. Also four stories about Greenfield. Also talks about Tom Petter;
forest fire 98 years before 1947 fire. One of a series of interviews conducted
by Richard Lunt in 1963 and 1964 which served as the basis for Lunt’s University
of Maine M.A. thesis. Some material was also published as Jones Tracy: Tall Tale
Teller from Mount Desert Island (Northeast Folklore, Vol. X). T 239
2850 John, Phillip, and Charles Carroll, interviewed by Richard Lunt, January 3,
1964, at John Carroll’s home. 4 page index. John Carroll and his sons Phillip
and Charles, talk about Jones Tracy; as a storyteller; his health; sources of
his stories; lumber camps; and the number of stories Jones Tracy knew. Also tell
stories told by Jones Tracy, including stories about deer hunting; getting
liquor from Dr. Morrison during Prohibition; success in hunting by shooting in
curves by bending the barrel of the gun; apple tree that grew battleships;
leathery ice story; shingling the fog; and stories about George Kelly. One of a
series of interviews conducted by Richard Lunt in 1963 and 1964 which served as
the basis for Lunt’s University of Maine M.A. thesis. Some material was also
published as Jones Tracy: Tall Tale Teller from Mount Desert Island (Northeast
Folklore, Vol. X). T 240
Series II Boat Building
582 Ronald Rich, interviewed by Richard Lunt, January 8, 9, and 10, 1970, in
Southwest Harbor, Maine. 95 page transcript. Tape: T 308 - T 310
Session One, January 8, 1970: Rich talks about family history; father and
grandfather as sea-faring men and boat builders; finding work during the Great
Depression; other boat-builders on Mount Desert Island, including Chester
Clements, Henry Hinckley, Robert Rich, and Raymond Bunker; design of a powerboat
from the early 1900s; designs of the first fishing boats he built; boat-building
during World War Two; his life history as a boat-builder; building fishing
boats, draggers, lobster boats, and pleasure boats; prices for boats; and his
diabetes.
Session Two, January 9, 1970: Rich discusses a list of the names of people he
built boats for between the 1940s and the 1960s(list not included in accession);
design of fishing, lobstering and pleasure boats; geographical distribution of
boats; differences in boat design along the Maine coast; advantages and
disadvantages of various designs; learning to build boats; construction
techniques; boat-building terminology; sails on powered lobster boats; and the
death of Alston Beal and others lost at sea.
Session Three, January 10, 1970: Topics include boat design and performance
characteristics; terminology applied to various parts of boats; Bertram, Beals
Island, and Jonesport boats; Ray Hunt's boats; desirable characteristics for a
lobster boat; changes in boat designs; Rich's and Bunker's boats.
2953 Malcolm McDuffy, interviewed by Richard Lunt, January 10, 1970. 18 page
transcript. McDuffy talks about the history of lobster boat designs;
geographical variations of hull designs along the Maine coast; transition from
sails to engines; changing use and configurations of engines over time;
influence of automobile development on boat engines; influence of changing
engine configurations on boat design; and international variations in boat
designs. T 311
2984 Robert Rich interviewed by Richard Lunt, January 16, 1970. 40 page
transcript. Rich discusses family history in the boat-building business and the
coasting trade; learning to build boats; designing boats; history of lobster
boat designs; designing for various characteristics; geographical variations in
boat designs along the Maine coast; lobstermen's preferred design
characteristics; economics of boat design and construction; types of wood used;
construction methods; switch from building work boats to building pleasure
boats; future of wooden boats; and compares boats built by Raymond Bunker and
Chester Clements. T 312 - T 313
2955Len Pierce, interviewed by Richard Lunt, January 19, 1970. 20 page
transcript. Pierce talks about entering the lobstering industry after World War
Two; design characteristics of his first boat; selection of lobster fishing
grounds; seasonal aspects of lobstering; Raymond Bunker's boats; desirable
design and performance characteristics for a lobster boat; gas vs. diesel and
automobile vs. boat motors; Jonesport boats and the culture surrounding them;
boat maintenance; shrimping; duck and deer hunting; interior design of lobster
boats; and keeping warm. T 313
2956Clarence Harding interviewed by Richard Lunt, January 21, 1970. 21 page
transcript. Harding discusses how he got into lobstering; design characteristics
of his boats; fire extinguishers; buying and selling boats, 1910s-1940s; summer
work; Jonesport boats vs. others on the Maine coast; origin of double-ended
lobster boats; sail boats; seasonal aspects of lobstering; bait; territory and
trap wars; daily schedule and hours of work. T 313
2957Oscar Smith, interviewed by Richard Lunt, March 21, 1970. 33 page
transcript. Smith discusses boat-building, 1940-1970; design and size
characteristics of boats; engines used; prices; building techniques; effect of
lobster-boat racing on design; materials used; building and carpentry
techniques; fiberglass vs. wooden boats; and paint colors. T 314
2958 Ralph Stanley, interviewed by Richard Lunt, January 20, 1970. 41 page
transcript. Stanley talks about boat models (types) 1910s; design changes that
resulted from use of motors; Friendship sloops; his lifetime of building lobster
boats and Friendship sloops, post-1950; desirable design and performance
characteristics for a lobster boat; economics of running a boat and boat
construction; changes in lobster boat design over time; fiberglass; techniques
of building boat models and materials used; and the process of drafting boat
designs. Also discusses photographs not included in accession. T 314
2959 James E. Beal, interviewed by Richard Lunt, March 18, 1970. 38 page
transcript. Beal, born in 1887, talks about wooden ship building in New
Hampshire; lobstering in a Friendship sloop; early boat engines; early
motor-powered lobster boats; eel grass; purse seining for herring and sardines;
cross-handed row boats for lobstermen and college competitions; yawl boats;
sardine factories (canneries); herring fishing, scaling, salting, and smoking;
long-lining for fish; evolution of stern types in lobster boats; and monk fish.
Also discusses photographs and maps not included in accession.
T 315
2960 Erwin Alley, interviewed by Richard Lunt, March 23, 1970. 52 page
transcript. Alley discusses lobster fishing grounds; winter lobstering;
economics of lobstering; daily tasks; tools and materials needed; injuries;
desirable design and performance characteristics for a lobster boat, with
examples; economic aspects of lobstering; materials and techniques of boat
construction; pilot house characteristics and construction; prices of boats; and
engine adaptation. T 316
2961 Alvin Beal, interviewed by Richard Lunt, March 25, 1970. 42 page
transcript. Beal talks about history of boat building on Beals Island;
torpedo-stern vs. square-stern boats; boat-builders in the Beals Island and
Jonesport areas, including Will Frost, Harold Gower, and Eddie Beal; his life's
work as a boat-builder and lobsterman; design characteristics of his boats;
materials and techniques of boat construction; tools; desirable design and
performance characteristics for a lobster boat; changes in Jonesport model
boats; prices of boats; and tourists. T 317
2962 Harold Gower, interviewed by Richard Lunt, March 27, 1970. 52 page
transcript. Gower discusses his personal history, lobstering and boat building;
history of boat-building in Jonesport and Beals Island, 1930s-1960s; building
boats in Nova Scotia; torpedo-stern vs. square-stern boats; lobstermen's
changing views on width of their boats; prices of boats; differences between
shrimping boats and lobster boats; fiberglass; availability and quality of
different types of wood used in boat building; racing yachts; and techniques and
materials used in boat construction. Also discusses photographs not included in
accession. T 318
2963 Bert Frost, interviewed by Richard Lunt, March 20, 1970. 49 page
transcript. Frost talks about his boyhood in Nova Scotia and his father's
lifetime there, including boat characteristics, singing; transition from sail to
motorized boats; characteristics of a Nova Scotia type lobster boat (Novie
boats); move to Beals Island in 1912; history of boat designs in Beals Island
area; characteristics of these changing boat designs; return to Nova Scotia
during World War One; return to Jonesport after the war; first square-stern
boat, 1924; rum-running boats; Jonesport lobster boat races; how to use
fiberglass; canoes; converting a sail yacht to a dragger during World War Two;
design characteristics lobstermen want in their boats, Jonesport vs. New Jersey;
sources for lumber and hardware; and boat buyers from out of state. Frost and a
visitor debate design choices in boats; performance and durability of various
materials, different wood; and seaworthiness of various designs. T 319
2964 Richard Alley, interviewed by Richard Lunt, April 1, 1970. 27 page
transcript. Alley discusses his career as a boat-builder; how he got started;
desirable design characteristics and their relationship to performance;
popularity of various designs; characteristics of different builder's boats,
especially variations in sheer; economic aspects of boat-building, payment and
material costs; construction techniques; tools; shrimping boats; racing;
decreasing use of the riding sail; and how to spile a plank.
T 320
2965 Harry Beal, interviewed by Richard Lunt, March 31, 1970. 49 page
transcript. Beal discusses lobster fishing; placing the traps; when lobsters
shed and how shedding affects catches; not taking female lobsters with mutilated
tails; trap design; effect of weather on trap-hauling ability; necessity for a
different boat design to work further out to sea; where he and others fish;
geographic distribution of lobster boat types; design characteristics he likes
in his boats; round vs. square traps; trap design and construction; parts of
traps and their and function; knitting trap heads; boat-builders in the
Jonesport-Beals area; lobster boat races; and engine performance
characteristics. Tells story about Barney Beal, folk hero and strong man; and
other folk tales, including ghost hitchhiker, town character; talks about
entertainment before television. T 321
2966 Clinton Beal, interviewed by Richard Lunt, April 4, 1970. 29 page
transcript. Beal talks about his great grandfather Barney Beal, a regional folk
hero; Barney's size and temperament; involvement in kiln wood business; where to
find Barney's grave; how Barney died; Manwaring Beal's original settlement of
Beal's Island. Beal also discusses his boat-building career; desirable design
and performance characteristics of a lobster boat; sources for his original
model and how it has changed; where he sells his boats; geographical variations
in boat design, especially heaviness of timbering; construction techniques;
changes in boat-building business; fiberglass boats; and how he got started in
the business. T 322
2967 Raymond Bunker, interviewed by Richard Lunt, August 16, 1974. 2 page index.
Bunker discusses early boat-builders on Mount Desert and Cranberry Islands;
change from double-enders to square stern boats; development of boat engines;
how he got started in the boat-building business; how he designs; desirable
design characteristics; types of sterns; Jonesport boats; racing; construction
techniques and materials; and tools. T 323