Contributed by Penobscot Marine Museum
Description
The Mountain Ash Inn operated from the 1920s to the 1950s. Miss Lennamon, who owned the inn, had cottages built behind it for her friends to rent.
She designed the cottages with particular people in mind; one had an ell to accommodate a concert pianist's grand piano. Each cottage had a name.
The property had a salt-water pool and tennis courts. Meals were served on white tablecloths in the inn.
The few remaining cottages were private residences in 2014, and the main inn building became the dormitory for the Wooden Boat School. The center of the complex is the Town Green.
Summer colonies at Flye Point and Haven also were popular vacation destinations in Brooklin. The Haven Colony, at Center Harbor where the steamboat came in, was started in the late 1800s with a boardinghouse owned by Noah Tibbetts, a Brooklin native who worked for the U.S. Pension Office in Washington for 48 years.
In the early 1900s he built a number of cottages, which he rented with all services for $5 to $7 a week. They were later sold as summer homes. Many of the summer people, among them John Wesley Powell, came from Baltimore and Washington.
Descendants of the some early rusticators continue to come to the Haven Colony every summer.
About This Item
- Title: Mt. Ash Inn Cottages, Brooklin, ca. 1930
- Creator: Eastern Illustrating & Publishing Company
- Creation Date: circa 1930
- Subject Date: circa 1930
- Location: Brooklin, Hancock County, ME
- Media: Glass Negative
- Dimensions: 12.75 cm x 17.75 cm
- Local Code: LB2007.1.104509
- Collection: Eastern Illustrating & Publishing Co.
- Object Type: Image
Cross Reference Searches
Standardized Subject Headings
- Photographs--Maine--Brooklin
- Postcards--Maine
- Eastern Illustrating & Publishing Company
- Hotels--Maine--Brooklin
People
For more information about this item, contact:
Penobscot Marine MuseumPO Box 498, 5 Church Street, Searsport, ME 04974
(207) 548-2529
Website
This Item is protected by copyright and/or related rights. No Permission is required to use the low-resolution watermarked image for educational use, or as allowed by the applicable copyright. For all other uses, permission is required.
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