List of people from Bangor, Maine

The following list includes notable people who were born or have lived in Bangor, Maine.

Architects and engineers

Artists

Artist Waldo Peirce (left), with brother and art-historian Hayford Peirce (right) and wives, before a night at the Bangor Opera in the 1930s
  • Waldo Peirce, painter and bohemian. He was a confidante of Ernest Hemingway and was from a prominent Bangor family.
  • Jeremiah Pearson Hardy (1800–1887), portrait painter. He apprenticed under Samuel Morse, lived and worked in Bangor for most of his career, sustained largely by the patronage of lumber barons.[5] His children Anna Eliza Hardy and Francis Willard Hardy, and sister Mary Ann Hardy, were also part of a 19th-century circle of Bangor painters. Other members of this circle included Florence Whitney Jennison and Isabel Graham Eaton, who was also an author.[6]
  • Walter Franklin Lansil, studied first under Hardy, and then at the Académie Julian in Paris. He established a studio in Boston and became a celebrated landscape and marine artist.
  • Frederic Porter Vinton (1846–1911), left Bangor at age 14 for Boston, where he became that city's most sought-after portrait painter—producing over 300 canvases—and one of the original members of the Boston School. He studied in Munich and with Leon Bonnat in Paris, as well as with William Morris Hunt.
  • Helena Wood Smith (1865–1914), member of the artists' colony at Carmel-by-the-Sea, California, was murdered there by her lover, Japanese photographer George Kodani. She was the sister of novelist Ruel Perley Smith.[7]
  • Echo Eggebrecht, painter from New York, also a Bangor native.

Athletes

Authors

Stephen King's house

Civil servants

Clergymen and missionaries

Rev. Jehudi Ashmun, a founder of Liberia

Defendants and detainees

Diplomats

Congressman, diplomat, and Hawaiian government official Elisha Hunt Allen with wife Mary

Inventors

John B. Curtis, the inventor of chewing gum
  • Melville Sewell Bagley, invented an aperitif named Hesperidina, using the peels of bitter oranges, which became the national liquor of Argentina. It is still produced, with his image on every bottle
  • John B. Curtis, commercial Chewing gum was invented in Bangor in 1848 by Curtis. Curtis marketed his product as "State of Maine Pure Spruce Gum".[25] He later opened a successful gum factory in Portland, Maine. Coincidentally, Bangor-born Frank Barbour, who became a director (and later chairman of the board) of the Beech-Nut Packing Company, would launch that company's famous chewing gum line in 1910
The MOS 6502 Microprocessor, designed by Chuck Peddle in 1975

Journalists

  • Margherita Arlina Hamm, spent part of her childhood in Bangor, was a pioneering female journalist who covered the Sino-Japanese War and Spanish–American War for New York newspapers, sometimes from the front lines. She was also a prolific author of popular non-fiction books. A suffragette, she was nonetheless a defender of American imperialism, chairing the pro-war "Woman's Congress of Patriotism and Independence" and writing an heroic biography of Admiral George Dewey[27]
  • Ralph W. 'Bud' Leavitt Jr. longtime columnist and editor for The Bangor Daily News. Born in Old Town, Maine, Leavitt became a cub reporter at The Bangor Daily Commercial at age 17 in 1934. Following the Second World War, Leavitt signed on with The News, where he filed, during the course of his career, 13,104 columns devoted to the outdoors, and where he served for many years as executive sports editor. Leavitt also hosted two long-running TV shows about the outdoors on Maine television
  • Kate Snow, born in Bangor on June 10, 1969

Judges

Physicians and nurses

  • Charlotte Blake Brown (1846–1904), pioneering female physician who co-founded what became Children's Hospital of San Francisco in 1878, with an all-female staff and board of directors. In 1880 she also founded the first nursing school in the American West. Children's Hospital merged with another institution to become California Pacific Medical Center in 1991
  • Elliott Carr Cutler (1888–1947), son of a Bangor lumber merchant,[28] became Chairman of the Dept. of Surgery at Harvard Medical School and a pioneer in cardiac surgery, inventing a number of important techniques and publishing over 200 papers. He was elected President of the American Surgical Association, and later became surgeon-in-chief at Brigham Hospital in Boston. During the Second World War he was Chief Surgical Consultant in the European Theatre of Operations with the rank of Brigadier General. Another Bangor-born Harvard Medical School professor, Frederick T. Lord, was a pioneer in the use of serum to treat pneumonia, and was elected President of the American Association of Thoracic Surgery
  • Harrison J. Hunt, surgeon on the Crocker Land Expedition to the Arctic in 1913–1917, and the first to return to civilization with news of his fellow explorers, who had been trapped in the ice for four years. Hunt escaped after a grueling four-month dog-sled journey accompanied by six Inuit. He spent the rest of his career working at the Eastern Maine Hospital in Bangor, and authored the book North to the Horizon: Arctic Doctor and Hunter, 1913–1917 (Camden, Me: 1930). He is credited with finding the major biological specimens returned by the expedition—eggs of the red knot, which established its migration pattern between Europe and northern Greenland[29]
  • Georgia Nevins (1864–1957), nurse, nurse educator, hospital administrator, American Red Cross leader, born in Bangor
  • Mabel Sine Wadsworth (1910–2006), birth control activist[30]

Scholars

Show business/Entertainment

Singers, musicians and songwriters

Singer-songwriter Howie Day

Soldiers and sailors

Charles Boutelle

Statesmen

Cohen and President Clinton at The Pentagon, September 1997

Other

References

  1. ^ James H. Mundy and Earle G. Shettleworth, The Flight of the Grand Eagle: Charles G. Bryant, Architect and Adventurer (Augusta: Maine Historic Preservation Commission, 1977).
  2. ^ Deborah Thompson, Bangor, Maine, 1769–1914: An Architectural History (Orono: University of Maine Press, 1988).
  3. ^ Francis Hector Clergue: The Personality Archived 2005-12-01 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved June 29, 2008.
  4. ^ Edward Austin Kent in Buffalo New York Archived 2004-12-24 at archive.today, by Bill Parke. Accessed Feb. 5, 2008.
  5. ^ Matthew Baigell, Dictionary of American Artists and Peter Falk, Who was Who in American Art.
  6. ^ Diane Vastne and Pauline Kaiser, eds., The Hardy Connection: Bangor Women Artists, 1830–1960 (Bangor: Bangor Historical Society, 1992).
  7. ^ "Artist Reported Murdered was a Former Bangor Girl", Lewiston Daily Sun, Aug. 24, 1914.
  8. ^ "Cahners, Norman : Jews In Sports @ Virtual Museum". Jewsinsports.org. June 5, 1914. Retrieved August 15, 2012.
  9. ^ New York Times obituary of Norman L. Cahners, March 18, 1986.
  10. ^ "Bangor woman in upcoming 'The Ultimate Fighter' series". BangorDailyNews.com. September 8, 2014. Retrieved May 2, 2019.
  11. ^ New York Times, Jan. 8, 1995, Section 8, p. 6; ibid, Aug. 21, 1994, Section 8, p. 4.
  12. ^ Obit of Mabel Blodgett, Berkshire (Mass.) Eagle, June 8, 1959, p. 19.
  13. ^ Maine Writer's Index, Owen Davis[permanent dead link], retrieved 14 January 2008.
  14. ^ Joel Myerson, "A Calendar of Transcendental Club Meetings" American Literature 44:2 (May 1972).
  15. ^ Edmund Pearson, Dime Novels: Or, Following an Old Trail in Popular Literature (Boston: Little Brown, 1929); New York Times, Aug. 23, 1902, BR8, "The Spiritual Massage" and ibid, "Books and Men", July 26, 1902, p. BR12 (summarizes extensive interview with Sawyer published in The Bookman, v. 15, no. 6, Aug. 1902); Eugene T. Sawyer, History of Santa Clara County, California (Historic Record Co., 1922), p. 372.
  16. ^ New York Times obit, July 31, 1937, p. 15.
  17. ^ New York Times, May 6, 1989.
  18. ^ Frederick Freeman, A Plea for Africa (1837), p. 226; American Education Society, American Quarterly Register (1842), pp. 29-30.
  19. ^ Carl Max Kartepeter, The Ottoman Turks: Nomad Kingdom to World Empire (Istanbul, 1991) pp. 229-246.
  20. ^ Paul T. Burlin, Imperial Maine and Hawaii: Interpretive Essays in the History of 19th-Century American Expansionism (Lanham, Maryland: Lexington Books, 2006).
  21. ^ "St. John's Church: A History and Appreciation". Archived from the original on September 17, 2009. Retrieved March 28, 2008.
  22. ^ John Bapst (Johannes Bapst) Catholic Encyclopedia, Retrieved June 20, 2008.
  23. ^ John B. Buescher, The Other Side of Salvation: Spiritualism and the 19th Century Religious Experience (Boston: Skinner House, 2004).
  24. ^ Benjamin Franklin Tefft Archived 2010-12-26 at the Wayback Machine Obituary. Retrieved February 10, 2008.
  25. ^ Gorton Carruth, The Encyclopedia of American Facts and Dates (Crowell, 1956) p. 223.
  26. ^ Development of Radar SCR-270 Archived January 13, 2009, at the Wayback Machine Arthur L. Vieweger & Albert S. White. Retrieved June 1, 2008.
  27. ^ Wayne Reilly, "What's a Woman to Do?" Bangor Daily News, Mar. 1, 2008.
  28. ^ His father was George Chalmers Cutler and his brother, Robert Cutler, the first U.S. National Security Advisor (see Robert Cutler, No Time for Rest [Boston: Little Brown, 1966], pp. 1–18). For his connection to the Carr family of Bangor see Francis Carr.
  29. ^ New York Times, June 21, 1917, p. 6; Pittsburgh Press, September 23, 1917.
  30. ^ "Mabel (Sine) Wadsworth". Bangor Daily News. September 25, 2008. Retrieved February 26, 2016.
  31. ^ Marilyn Bailey Ogilvie and Joy Dorothy Harvey, Biographical Dictionary of Women in Science (Taylor & Francis, 2000), p. 25.
  32. ^ The Twentieth Century Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans: Volume II (1904).
  33. ^ Thomas W. Goodspeed, "Albion Woodbury Small", The American Journal of Sociology 32:1 (July 1926).
  34. ^ William D. Williamson, History of the State of Maine (Hallowell Me., 1832).
  35. ^ Bennington Banner (Vt), September 16, 1965, p. 2.
  36. ^ Obit., New York Times, Oct. 24, 1917.
  37. ^ "E.A. Eberle Theatre Credits". Broadwayworld.com. October 23, 1917. Retrieved August 15, 2012.[permanent dead link]
  38. ^ Des Moines Leader, Oct. 18, 1901, p. 5.
  39. ^ List of people from Bangor, Maine at IMDb Retrieved June 9, 2008.
  40. ^ New York Times obit., Aug. 11, 1909, p. 7: Aug. 13, 1909, p. 7; Deseret News, Jan. 25, 1901, p. 4.
  41. ^ List of people from Bangor, Maine at IMDb Retrieved June 9, 2008.
  42. ^ List of people from Bangor, Maine at IMDb Retrieved June 9, 2008.
  43. ^ Stewart, Jason (January 16, 2023). "Did you know Priscilla Presley lived in Bangor for a short while?". i95rocks.com.
  44. ^ List of people from Bangor, Maine at IMDb Retrieved June 9, 2008.
  45. ^ List of people from Bangor, Maine at IMDb Retrieved June 9, 2008.
  46. ^ List of people from Bangor, Maine at IMDb Retrieved June 9, 2008.
  47. ^ MRS. ROBINSON-DUFF VOCAL TEACHER, DIES: Mary Garden, Mary McCormic, Nora Bayes and Other Stars Were Among Her Pupils. May 12, 1934. p. 16. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  48. ^ Air Force Link Biographies: Donald Norton Yates Retrieved June 1, 2008.
  49. ^ Kestenbaum, Lawrence. "Spiritualist Politicians". The Political Graveyard. Retrieved August 15, 2012.
  50. ^ Bernard S. Katz et al., Biographical Dictionaries of the United States Secretaries of the Treasury, p. 13.
  51. ^ Progressive Men of Minnesota (Minneapolis, 1897), p. 33.
  52. ^ History of the Arkansas Valley, Colorado (Chicago, 1881), p. 324.
  53. ^ "Ambureen Rana". Ballotpedia. Retrieved January 19, 2024.
  54. ^ "Laura Supica". Ballotpedia. Retrieved January 12, 2024.
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