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Access Wayside: Saved for Future Generations

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The following press release was published by the U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service on Aug. 17. It is reproduced in full below.

Access Acadia: Inclusive Descriptions of Park Destinations

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LINK TO WAYSIDE IMAGE IN NPGALLERY

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LINK TO RECORDED AUDIO DESCRIPTION

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Access Wayside: Saved for Future Generations

An audio description is provided for "Saved for Future Generations," an interpretive wayside at Acadia National Park.

Date created:

08/17/2023

Audio Transcript

At the edge of the Cadillac Summit Loop Road, a wayside exhibit features a panel angled atop a rectangular stone base.

The exhibit's title, "Saved for Future Generations," appears over a historic photograph of George B. Dorr talking with Secretary of the Interior Franklin Lane in 1917 atop Cadillac Mountain. "I would see what I could do to get the summit of Green Mountain - Cadillac now - the one outstanding tract upon the Island or the whole neighboring coast to secure and protect if possible." - George B. Dorr, The Story of Acadia National Park, 1942

Text reads: "Inspired to protect the beauty and diversity of Mount Desert Island from encroaching development, a passionate group of local and summer residents waged a campaign to conserve this landscape for public use." They "encouraged individuals to donate tracts, purchase lands, and seek federal protection. They succeeded in establishing the first eastern national park - one of the few created almost entirely of land donated to the federal government."

More text lists major events in Acadia's history:

1903: George B. Dorr and Charles W. Eliot organize Hancock County Trustees of Public Reservations to acquire parcels of land on Mount Desert Island.

1908: Eliza Homan makes the first major donation with a gift of The Beehive and Bowl on Champlain Mountain.

1908 to 1911: The summit area and most of the north, east, and west slopes of Cadillac Mountain are protected by the Trustees.

1916: Sieur de Monts National Monument is established.

1917 to 1940: John D. Rockefeller Jr. builds over 50 miles of carriage roads in the park and donates them to Acadia.

1919: Sieur de Monts National Monument becomes Lafayette national Park, the first eastern national park.

1929: Lafayette National Park is renamed Acadia, a historic name for this region. Schoodic Peninsula is donated to the park.

1932: Construction of the Cadillac Mountain motor road is completed.

1971: The first conservation easement is conveyed to the park. Today, conservation easements protect over 12,000 acres of private land around Acadia National Park.

1986: Friends of Acadia is established as a nonprofit membership organization benefiting Acadia through philanthropy and volunteerism.

1999: Island Explorer propane-powered shuttle bus service begins, reducing pollution and congestion.

2011: The former US Navy base in Winter Harbor, Maine, is renovated and reopened as the Schoodic Education and Research Center in Acadia National Park.

Access Wayside: Saved for Future Generations

An audio description is provided for "Saved for Future Generations," an interpretive wayside at Acadia National Park.

Date created:

08/17/2023

Source: U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service

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