Small Treasures in the LuEsther T. Mertz Library
Posted in From the Library on March 17 2017, by Jane Lloyd
Jane Lloyd is a volunteer in the LuEsther T. Mertz Library of The New York Botanical Garden.
![Thuya-Lodge-bookplate-by-Jane-Lloyd-December-2016[1]](https://www.nybg.org/blogs/plant-talk/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/Thuya-Lodge-bookplate-by-Jane-Lloyd-December-20161-225x300.jpg)
Joseph Henry Curtis (1846-1928) began to summer at Northeast Harbor on Mount Desert Island on the Maine coast in the 1870’s and later he bought a property on the slope of a mountain near Northeast Harbor, becoming one of the first summer residents of a growing summer colony of wealthy families. Curtis spent the rest of his life turning his property into a mountainside park, building a trail with granite stairways and scenic lookouts ascending the steep slope to a board-and-batten cottage that he named Thuya Lodge after the local white cedar tree, Thuja occidentalis. In 1905 Curtis created a trust to maintain his estate as a public trust for the local community; when he died his friend Charles Savage became director of the trust.