Digital Archives

Showing 1101 - 1150 of 4423 Items

Statement gathered at Sipayik-Pleasant Point, Maine, June 18, 2014

Date: 2014-06-18

Creator: Brian Altvater, Sr., Dale Mitchell, Stephanie Bailey, Ed Basset

Access: Open access



Statement gathered in Bangor, Maine, July 30, 2014

Date: 2014-07-30

Creator: Francis Joseph, Jr., Juanita Grant, Terri Elder, Tonisha Bassett, Allan Sockabasin

Access: Open access



Interview with Floyd Harding by Mike Hastings

Date: 2008-09-27

Creator: Floyd L Harding

Access: Open access

Biographial Note

Floyd L. Harding was born on August, 26, 1923, in Albion, Maine. His father was a rural mail carrier and his family lived and ran a small family farm. He is one of twelve children (10 boys and 2 girls). He attended Bessey High School in Albion and Colby College. He served in the Army for three years, where he was taken prisoner-of-war. In 1949, he received his law degree from Boston University; he then moved to Presque Isle, Maine, and has practiced law there ever since. He worked for the Maine Potato Growers as assistant general counselor from 1950-1954 and established his own practice in 1954. He served three terms on the Maine state Senate (his wife ran one of his campaigns). He and his wife raised nine children.

Summary

Interview includes discussions of: parental political leanings and the naming of their son Warren; Harding’s experience as a prisoner-of-war in Dresden during World War II; his work for the Potato Board; family law in Presque Isle; the Democratic Party’s development in Maine; serving as a state senator and as majority leader; the “car beside the road” analogy for progressive policy; Mitchell’s cow joke; the contrast between Mitchell and Muskie; Loring Air Force Base closure and its transition to various civilian uses; the founding of Northern Maine Community College; taking issue positions during a campaign and how Mitchell learned from Harding; and Mitchell as an advocate for Maine.


Interview with Gerard Goldstein by Mike Hastings

Date: 2009-02-20

Creator: Gerard D Goldstein

Access: Open access

Biographial Note

Gerard Goldstein was born August 30, 1932, in Boston, Massachusetts, to Bernard and Tilly Jepsky Goldstein. His father’s family immigrated from Russia in the early 1900s and his father owned a shoe factory. His mother’s family were also Russian immigrants and were involved in the paint and wallpaper business. Gerard grew up in Lynn, Massachusetts, and attended Lynn English High School. He and George Mitchell were both in Bowdoin College’s class of 1954. While at Bowdoin, Goldstein played on the football team and was a member of ARU (All Races United) fraternity. He earned his law degree from Harvard Law School. He specializes in real estate law and is also involved in various philanthropic activities through the local Jewish community, Temple Emmanuel in Marblehead, and the Retina Foundation.

Summary

Interview includes discussions of: the Goldstein family history of immigrating from Russia and Romania; attending Lynn English High School in the late 1940s; the process of selecting a college and choosing Bowdoin College; football at Bowdoin; favorite professors; the social scene at Bowdoin and the All Races United fraternity; ROTC; Harvard Law School; Karen Mills’s appointment to the Small Business Administration; the ongoing connection with Bowdoin alumni; George Mitchell at Bowdoin; Goldstein’s connection to Mitchell through legal work in Maine; Goldstein’s real estate business; Mitchell’s new appointment as special envoy to the Middle East; Goldstein’s trips to Israel and involvement in Jewish philanthropic organizations; his work with the Retina Foundation and Schepens Eye Research; steroids in baseball controversy; and the influence of a Bowdoin education on later life.


Interview with Robert Hazzard by Andrea L’Hommedieu

Date: 2009-08-31

Creator: Robert 'Hap' Hazzard

Access: Open access

Biographial Note

Robert Hazzard was born in Gardiner, Maine, in 1932 to Robert and Margaret (Wyman) Hazzard. His parents owned and operated a shoe factory while he was growing up. He attended local schools, Deerfield Academy, and was active in athletics. He was graduated from Bowdoin College in 1954 in the same class with George Mitchell, playing collegiate basketball and tennis. After graduation he worked as a CPA in Portland, Maine, where he occasionally continued to play tennis with Mitchell.

Summary

Interview includes discussion of: Hazzard’s childhood; meeting George Mitchell as a freshman at Bowdoin College; playing basketball and tennis with GJM; and Bowdoin College in the 1950s.


Interview with Barry Valentine by Andrea L’Hommedieu

Date: 2008-08-11

Creator: Barry L Valentine

Access: Open access

Biographial Note

Barry Lee Valentine was born September 12, 1943, in Emporia Kansas. He grew up in York Harbor, Maine, attended York High School, and received a degree in engineering from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. During college he took part in ROTC and after graduation joined the Air Force, serving as a pilot in Vietnam. He left the Air Force in 1972 and returned to Maine, where he helped run an airfield and became involved in politics because a neighbor ran for a seat in the Maine state legislature. He was the York county coordinator for the Maine public power campaign and then joined George Mitchell’s 1974 gubernatorial primary campaign, serving as a scheduler and driver. That fall he ran unsuccessfully for state Senate. He worked in Augusta, Maine, as a staffer for the state House majority leader. In 1976 he made a successful bid for a seat in the state legislature. In 1979 he became a district manager for the 1980 census. He worked in aviation, managing the Portland Jet Port, serving as the regional vice chairman of the National Association of State Aviation Officials, and as chairman of the Airports Committee. Then in 1992 he began work as a staffer for Senate Majority Leader Mitchell on the Senate Select Committee on POW/MIA Affairs. After the committee completed its work, Valentine became an administrator at the FAA during the Clinton administration. At the time of this interview he was semi-retired.

Summary

Interview includes discussion of: family and educational background; Valentine’s love of flying; Air Force and Vietnam; working on Neil Rolde’s 1972 campaign; the Maine public power referendum; working for George Mitchell in the 1974 gubernatorial campaign; an anecdote about a mill worker who wanted to know what Mitchell would ‘do about them women’ who were getting jobs on the mill floor; Barry’s insights as scheduler/driver; Mitchell’s position on two Democratic planks – gay rights and amnesty for those who avoided the draft – and an anecdote explaining his position to four truckers at a Bangor truck stop; Barry’s running for state senate in 1974 and winning election to the state legislature in 1976; the 1980 census; Mitchell’s 1982 campaign; working on the Senate Select Committee on POW/MIA Affairs; the 1992 presidential election; and Mitchell’s commitment to his beliefs even when they were politically unpopular.


Interview with Jenna Burton (Class of 1994) by Emma Kellogg

Date: 2019-05-31

Creator: Jenna Burton

Access: Open access

Jenna Burton (Class of 1994) describes the process of making friends through Hyde Hall and the sailing team. She also speaks about her experience being part of the Kappa Sigma fraternity and becoming its first female president. Burton reminisces about the hurdles and triumphs of starting the women’s rugby team and discusses the camaraderie and support she found within the team. Additionally, Burton talks about her on-campus job as a Resident Assistant, her Biology major, and reflects on working with Safe Space to critically examine the College’s sexual harassment policy. Finally, she touches on some of her favorite memories, like long brunches in Thorne Dining Hall and broom hockey on the quad.



Museum of Art Publications
Digitized collection catalogues, exhibition catalogues, and more from the Bowdoin College Museum of Art.


Interview with Katharine Watson by Edgar Allen Beem (8)

Date: 2023-04-17

Creator: Katharine Watson

Access: Open access



Interview with Katharine Watson by Edgar Allen Beem (3)

Date: 2023-03-17

Creator: Katharine Watson

Access: Open access



Bowdoin Orient, v. 21, no. 13

Date: 1892-02-03

Access: Open access



Bowdoin Orient, v. 24, no. 12

Date: 1895-01-23

Access: Open access



Bowdoin Orient, v. 27, no. 14

Date: 1898-02-16

Access: Open access



Bowdoin Orient, v. 27, no. 9

Date: 1897-11-10

Access: Open access



Bowdoin Orient, v. 22, no. 11

Date: 1892-12-14

Access: Open access



Bowdoin Orient, v. 25, no. 5

Date: 1895-07-03

Access: Open access

Commencement Number


Bowdoin Orient, v. 25, no. 12

Date: 1896-01-22

Access: Open access



Bowdoin Orient, v. 25, no. 10

Date: 1895-11-27

Access: Open access



Bowdoin Orient, v. 21, no. 15

Date: 1892-03-02

Access: Open access



Bowdoin Orient, v. 27, no. 10

Date: 1897-11-24

Access: Open access



Bowdoin Orient, v. 10, no. 7

Date: 1880-10-13

Access: Open access



Bowdoin Orient, v. 13, no. 8

Date: 1883-10-31

Access: Open access

includes frontmatter


Bowdoin Orient, v. 16, no. 5

Date: 1886-07-07

Access: Open access

front matter; Commencement Number


Bowdoin Orient, v. 17, no. 13

Date: 1888-02-08

Access: Open access



Bowdoin Orient, v. 12, no. 6

Date: 1882-07-12

Access: Open access

includes frontmatter; "Commencement Number" issue


Bowdoin Orient, v. 15, no. 14

Date: 1886-02-17

Access: Open access

includes frontmatter


Bowdoin Orient, v. 18, no. 7

Date: 1888-10-17

Access: Open access



Bowdoin Orient, v. 18, no. 2

Date: 1888-05-16

Access: Open access



Bowdoin Orient, v. 19, no. 3

Date: 1889-05-22

Access: Open access



Bowdoin Orient, v. 26, no. 13

Date: 1897-02-03

Access: Open access



Bowdoin Orient, v. 27, no. 1

Date: 1897-04-28

Access: Open access



Bowdoin Orient, v. 29, no. 11

Date: 1899-10-05

Access: Open access



Bowdoin Orient, v. 20, no. 13

Date: 1891-02-04

Access: Open access



Bowdoin Orient, v. 24, no. 4

Date: 1894-06-20

Access: Open access

Ivy Number


Bowdoin Orient, v. 24, no. 2

Date: 1894-05-16

Access: Open access



Bowdoin Orient, v. 27, no. 13

Date: 1898-02-02

Access: Open access



Bowdoin Orient, v. 29, no. 6

Date: 1899-05-25

Access: Open access



Bowdoin Orient, v. 2, no. 2

Date: 1872-05-06

Access: Open access



Bowdoin Orient, v. 1, no. 16

Date: 1872-03-11

Access: Open access



Bowdoin Orient, v. 14, no. 1

Date: 1884-04-30

Access: Open access

includes frontmatter


Bowdoin Orient, v. 16, no. 1

Date: 1886-04-28

Access: Open access

front matter


Bowdoin Orient, v. 15, no. 4

Date: 1885-06-17

Access: Open access

includes frontmatter


Bowdoin Orient, v. 10, no. 1

Date: 1880-04-28

Access: Open access



Bowdoin Orient, v. 51, no. 1

Date: 1921-09-28

Access: Open access

Note there are two volumes of the Bowdoin Orient assigned numbered 51. The first comprises issues no. 1-10, April-June 1921. The second comprises issues no. 1-23, September 1921-March 1922.


Bowdoin Orient, v. 53, no. 10

Date: 1923-06-21

Access: Open access

Commencement Number


Bowdoin Orient, v. 53, no. 6

Date: 1923-05-16

Access: Open access



Bowdoin Orient, v. 9, no. 16

Date: 1880-03-17

Access: Open access



Bowdoin Orient, v. 9, no. 13

Date: 1880-02-04

Access: Open access



Bowdoin Orient, v. 4, no. 10

Date: 1874-11-25

Access: Open access