features the history and culture of
Maine's native people, the
Wabanaki. The town of Bar Harbor was founded on the northeast shore of
Mount Desert Island, which the
Wabanaki Indians knew as
Pemetic, meaning "range of mountains" or "mountains seen at a distance." The Wabanaki seasonally
fish,
hunt and gather berries, clams, and other shellfish in the area. They speak of Bar Harbor as ''Man-es-ayd'ik
("clam-gathering place") or Ah-bays'auk
("clambake place"), leaving great piles of shells as evidence of this abundance. In early September 1604, French explorer Samuel de Champlain ran aground on a rock ledge believed to be Egg Rock, just off Otter Cliffs, and when he came ashore to repair his boat he met local natives. Champlain named the island Isles des Monts Deserts'', meaning "island of barren mountains"—now called Mount Desert Island, the largest island in Maine. In 1761,
Abraham Somes established the first European village on Mount Desert Island, naming it
Somesville. Also named for him is Somes Sound, the only naturally occurring
fjard on the East Coast of the US. Bar Harbor itself was incorporated as Eden on February 23, 1796. Early industries included fishing,
lumbering and
shipbuilding. With the best soil on Mount Desert Island, it also developed
agriculture, with a main focus on
dairy. In the 1840s, its rugged
maritime scenery attracted the
Hudson River School and
Luminism artists
Thomas Cole,
Frederic Edwin Church,
William Hart and
Fitz Henry Lane. Inspired by their paintings, journalists, sportsmen and "rusticators" followed.
Agamont House, the first hotel in Eden, was established in 1855 by Tobias Roberts. Birch Point, the first summer estate, was built in 1868 for
Alpheus Harding. On March 3, 1918, Eden was renamed Bar Harbor, after the
sand bar, visible at low tide, which leads across to
Bar Island and forms the rear of the harbor. The name would become synonymous with elite wealth. It was the birthplace of
vice-president Nelson Rockefeller.
Margaret Todd. Bald Porcupine Island is beyond the pier and the
Bar Harbor Inn is to the right. Bar Harbor was also used for naval practices during
World War II. More specifically, Bald Porcupine Island (one of the five
Porcupine Islands) was used to as a target for live
torpedoes. In October 1944, the submarine fired 12 live torpedoes at the island. Of those fired, one failed to explode on the first attempt but was later detonated by the twelfth torpedo. In 1996, the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers surveyed all 30 acres of Bald Porcupine Island for
unexploded ordnance. Nine were found. Many influential people have called Bar Harbor home for at least part of the year.
John D. Rockefeller Jr., son of
John D. Rockefeller of
Standard Oil Co., donated about one-third of the land in Acadia National Park and built the carriage roads that are used for hiking and biking.
J. P. Morgan owned a house that is adjacent to the town.
Cornelius Vanderbilt built "
cottages" in Bar Harbor, while the
Astor family owned hotels and cottages in Bar Harbor and the surrounding areas.
Roxanne Quimby, co-founder and CEO of
Burt's Bees, has a home near Bar Harbor.
Martha Stewart owns property in nearby Seal Harbor and frequents Bar Harbor.
Mount Desert Island fire In mid-October 1947, Maine experienced a severe
drought, seeing only half of its usual rainfall. and it was not declared out until mid-November. This was
one of several wildfires in the state that year. Nearly half the eastern side of Mount Desert Island burned, including 67 "cottages"—nearly one-third of the 222 cottages that stood at the time. (Many were empty or for sale; only 135 were occupied that summer.) Five historic grand hotels were also destroyed. These were
Agamont House (Main Street), Hamor House (Main Street at Cottage Street), Belmont Hotel (Mount Desert and Kebo Streets), Malvern Hotel (Kebo Street) and the DeGregoire Hotel (Eden Street at West Street). The Building of Arts civic building, on Kebo Street at Cromwell Harbor Road, also perished. Over of Acadia National Park were destroyed. The town's business district was spared, including Mount Desert Street, where several former summer homes within a
historic district listed on the
National Register of Historic Places operate as inns. ==Geography==