Memories of
Dr. Currier McEwen
Dr. Currier McEwen celebrated his 96th birthday on
April 1, of this year (1998). Dr. McEwen is not a Harpswell native, but he
started coming to Harpswell in July 1902 at the age of three months.
Dr. McEwen's full name is Osceola Currier McEwen.
His first name, which is an Indian name, has an interesting story. Back
when his great-grandfather was around, the chief of the Seminoles was
taken prisoner in the Everglades where he was supposed to be on a peace
talk. Dr. McEwen's great grandfather was so upset that he named his son
after the Indian Chief, Osceola. After that, Dr. McEwen was named for his
grandfather so he became Osceola Currier McEwen
Dr. McEwen had a father, mother, and sister. His
father's name was George Floy McEwen, his mother was Mary Antoinette
Currier. His sister was Edith and she married a man named Dorian.
When Dr. McEwen first came to Harpswell, he was
three months old and it was 1902. Before Dr. McEwen was born, his
grandfather was sailing. He sailed to Portland. There he took a steamboat
to Harpswell.
He saw Auburn Colony being built. Meanwhile, his
daughter Dr. McEwen's mother, wanted to go to college but her parents
wouldn't let her. She was very upset over this so she started coming to
Harpswell because it was a quiet peaceful place.
When Dr. McEwen was a child he lived in a small
house next to the tennis courts near Auburn Colony. They had no
electricity. They had no running water. They had no vehicles. There were
kerosene lamps and candles. A pump was next to the house. One of Dr.
McEwen's jobs was to go to the pump and fetch some water everyday.
Except for three years during World War II, Dr.
McEwen came to Harpswell every summer. He settled here in 1970.
The family had two ways of getting to Harpswell.
One was to take a horse and carriage to New York City. Then in New York
City you would get on the Bar Harbor Express. In the morning you would be
in Portland. Then you would take a steamboat to Harpswell. The other way
was to take a steamship from New York. The steamships were called
Northland and Northstar.
On Harpswell Neck there were two steamboat wharves.
One was right by what is now Merriman's wharf. The other was at Lookout
Point. When the steamboats came in it was always a big social event.
Back in the early 1900's, the roads were horrible.
They were rough, rocky, hard, muddy, and bumpy. If anyone tried to drive
on them, it would d be very hard.
Dr. McEwen remembers three of the big hotels that
used to be in Harpswell. One was the Merriconeag House, which was near the
end of South Harpswell close to the steamboat wharf. There was also the
Hotel Germania. The third hotel was Ocean View Hotel. There were other
hotels on other parts of Harpswell Neck. In addition to all these, there
were also boarding homes.
The hotels they had back then were very simple.
They had no bathrooms, as we know them and no plumbing. At Dr. McEwen's
home they got their water from a pump and they had outhouses.
The food in the boarding homes was very good. Dr.
McEwen remembers that the cooks “were wonderful.”
Back then people in Harpswell threw garbage
overboard off a cliff. It was done this may until sanitary laws were
passed.
When automobiles were invented and roads were
better people began to travel more. They didn't need as many hotels. So
hotels began to close.
Auburn Colony was started in the 1800's by a group
of people from Auburn, Maine. They paid to have cottages built. They also
built a dining room where they ate The McEwen family ate there a lot.
When Dr. McEwen was a child, he had very active
life. He had no jobs during the summer as a teenager. When he played, he
always played with other young people. They would swim, play tennis, and
ride in their boats. The teenagers used to go to the dance hall that was
in Harpswell, and they would go to the bowling alley that used to be here.
There were two bowling alleys. One was across from
the store at South Harpswell and under the dance hall. The other one was
at Auburn Colony. They were very poorly made, but the kids had fun anyway.
When Dr. McEwen was a child he was friendly with
some of the year round Harpswell people. He often went to the Hamiltons.
They were farmers. Horace Lubee and Dr. McEwen were very close friends.
For work they would help with the haying by jumping around on top to pack
it down so they could put more on. He thought that it was fun work.
Dr. McEwen loved coming to Maine. He thought about
it all year round. He liked to sail, fish, and swim. He loved all of it
except for the very cold water. But after swimming his mother made hot
gingerbread for him and his sister.
The difference in Harpswell now and then was that
people didn't move around as much. The roads were bumpy, muddy, and bad.
Automobiles weren't around yet. Everyone knew each other. Dr. McEwen
enjoyed the lovely old homes.
Dr. McEwen attended high school in Newark, N.J. He
attended college at Wesleyan University and went to medical school at New
York University. After receiving his M.D. degree in 1926, he spent two
years at Belleview Hospital as an intern. He became interested in becoming
a medical teacher and spent four years at Rockefeller Institute for
Medical Research. He then went back to N.Y. University and became
assistant dean of the medical school. At age 35 he was made dean and
stayed there for eighteen years.
Dr. McEwen came to Harpswell every year of his life
except for three years during World War Two when he was in Europe. Dr.
McEwen had four children. Their names are Anne, Matilda, Cathy, and one
boy Ewen. Now he has six grandchildren.
In 1970 when Dr. McEwen retired to live in
Harpswell he started seeing private patients at Regional Hospital. He was
68 then. He kept on until the age of 86. Dr. McEwen wanted to live in
Harpswell because he thinks, “it's the best place in the world.” Once
when he was flying back from Saudi Arabia, he woke up and looked down and
he realized he was over Bath. Then he really woke up knowing that he would
soon be over Harpswell. He looked at Harpswell and decided that it was
more beautiful than any place in the world.
Dr. McEwen said, “Memories are vivid and all my
days in Harpswell have been a delight.” The major thing that he misses
now is the sailing. Dr. McEwen's first boat was small. He used a clothes
pole for a mast and a sheet for a sail.
Dr. McEwen said, “When I was in Harpswell, rain
or shine, there was hardly a day that went by when I wasn't in a boat.”
Dr. McEwen says that the standards of living are better today than in the
past. When he thinks about his early days in Harpswell, he says “ But in
those old days I think we were as happy and comfortable as we are
today.”
|