Interview of Andrew Herrick
Herrick-Andrew-7-Feb-1991-final.mp3
Accession #:
Title:
Interview of Andrew Herrick
Subject:
Description:
A woman interviews Andrew Herrick, who begins by listing off al his male ancestors from memory. The earliest Herrick came to America around the Revolutionary War and built a log cabin at the head of Somes Sound, but he did not stay. The first Herrick to stay was Isaac who ran a tide mill in Southwest Harbor. Andrew grew up in the house that Isaac built. He served in the Army during the first World War for the final 18 days of the war, though even those were grueling and horrifying. After service, he returned to marry Hulda Hodgkins, with whom he had a daughter. Andrew drove a truck for a gas company, living in Bar Harbor and Ellsworth but was forced to stop that work in 1952 following a shoulder injury. He has many stories from his time in Southwest Harbor; the first car in the town, Beech Mountain priginally being called Herrick Mountain, finding bootleg booze in Summer People's houses. He talks about his ancestor William Herrick who was feared by the British. Andrew also had several stories about Billy Tot, a man who worked as a cabin boy for Captain Norwood and eventually lived a primitive life on the edges of society near Southwest Harbor.
Address:
338 Main Street
Place:
Southwest Harbor
State:
ME
Country:
USA
Date:
February 7, 1991
Source:
Rights:
Citation
“Interview of Andrew Herrick,” Southwest Harbor Public Library, accessed November 22, 2024, https://demo.digitalarchive.us/items/show/12866.Item 16714