VIS preserves the legacy built by summer and year-round residents

History

Summer and year-round residents founded the Seal Harbor Village Improvement Society in 1900 to ensure a healthy, pleasurable, high quality of life for their community. Early tasks included testing milk and drinking water supplies, cleaning the beach and creating spaces for recreation. The gems of their labors and generous contributions remain for us to enjoy: eight miles of paths through balsam-scented woodlands, tumbling brooks, and crystal-blue ponds and the Village Green. Early residents foresaw the need for community space and in the 1920s, John D. Rockefeller Jr. worked with the VIS and other residents to create the Village Green.

America’s first female landscape architect, Beatrix Farrand (1872-1959), was on hand to help. Best known for her design work for the White House, Yale and Princeton Universities, Rockefeller’s “Eyrie” and other private estate gardens, Farrand’s work in Seal Harbor and Acadia National Park is ours to appreciate. Farrand worked with the VIS to replace the old Glencove Hotel with a sweeping lawn framed by shade trees; across the street, she created a small almond-shaped park encircled with sweet-smelling beach roses. Today, these spaces host community celebrations, informal picnics, and a peaceful refuge from today’s busy world.