Marshwood long jumper Anna Jennings, right, is embraced by teammate Sydney Leveille after setting the Class A record in the long jump (18-7) Saturday in Bangor. (Rich Abrahamson/Staff Photographer)
Purchase this imageMarshwood’s Anna Jennings launches herself to a meet-record distance of 18 feet, 7 inches in the long jump Saturday at the Class A championship meet in Bangor. (Rich Abrahamson/Staff Photographer)
Purchase this imageWaterville No. 1 singles player Piper Hamilton smashes a backhand Monday during her match with Presque Isle’s Alice Korzekwa during the Class B North regional final at Colby College in Waterville. (Rich Abrahamson/Staff Photographer)
Purchase this imageCarmen Casella, 7, and her dad Frank Casella, of Bangor, watch the monitor as election results are reported Tuesday during GOP candidate for governor Bobby Charles’s election party at Dysart’s Restaurant Broadway in Bangor. (Rich Abrahamson/Staff Photographer)
Purchase this imageNatasha Clarke, left, chats with her daughter Maeve Clarke, 2, while filling out her ballots Tuesday at The Boys & Girls Clubs of Kennebec Valley in Gardiner. Maeve stood patiently, but moved her hands around because, her mom explained later, she was trying to sing “The Wheels on the Bus” while she waited. Natasha said while Maeve is too young to know what voting is, taking her to the polls sets a good example for her to model when she’s old enough to vote. Also, they didn’t have daycare, so they went to the polls together. (Joe Phelan/Staff Photographer)
Purchase this imageA voter fills in a theirs ballots Tuesday June 9, 2026 at the Manchester firehouse in Manchester. (Joe Phelan/Staff Photographer)
Purchase this imageNathaniel Eaton and his dog Sox, a 2-year-old lab-pit bull mix, listen to country music in the shade Wednesday while hosting a plant sale at their Water Street home in Waterville. Eaton said there were 25 different plants ranging in price from up to . (Rich Abrahamson/Staff Photographer)
Purchase this imageCony’s Wyatt McKinney slides head first into home and scores a run against Gardiner Wednesday during a Class B North quarterfinal at Morton Field in Augusta. (Rich Abrahamson/Staff Photographer)
Purchase this imageA bee climbs on a lupine flower Wednesday in a field beside Richmond transfer station at 150 Lincoln St. in Richmond. The large field is full of brightly colored purple, pink and white lupine blossoms that are drawing lots of bees to them. (Joe Phelan/Staff Photographer)
Purchase this imageFalmouth doubles partners Cici Benson, left, and Helena Nelson offer each other encouragement before a match against Brunswick in the Class A girls tennis state final Wednesday at Bates College in Lewiston. (Anna Chadwick/Staff Photographer)
Purchase this imageEllie the elm tree towers above Castonguay Square Thursday in downtown Waterville. The-150-year old tree, which has succumbed to disease, scheduled to be cutdown. The Paul J. Schupf Art Center is at right. (Rich Abrahamson/Staff Photographer)
Purchase this imageSkowhegan fire Capt. Rick Caldwell, center, confers with other firefighters Thursday as Caldwell worked his last shift with the department. Caldwell, 65, is retiring after a 31 year career with the Skowhegan Fire Department. Pictured with Caldwell is from left is Skowhegan Fire Chief Ryan Johnston, Deputy Chief Anthony Barton, former Skowhegan firefighter Joe Almand and firefighter Shawn Enright. (Rich Abrahamson/Staff Photographer)
Purchase this imageBrunswick’s Solveig Ledwick celebrates a goal with her teammates in the final minutes of a Class B quarterfinal Thursday in Augusta. (Anna Chadwick/Staff Photographer)
Purchase this imageBrunswick’s Nataleigh Cantrell makes a pass over Cony’s Ashley Olson Thursday during a Class B quarterfinal in Augusta. (Anna Chadwick/Staff Photographer)
Purchase this imageBrunswick coaches react Thursday to a goal that put the Dragons up 9-7 over the Cony Rams in a Class B girls lacrosse quarterfinal in Augusta. (Anna Chadwick/Staff Photographer)
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Rich is a career photojournalist and writer who got his start in newspapers in 1987 at the Fort Morgan Times in Colorado. His appreciation for photography and stories began as a kid while watching slide…
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Anna is a 2023 graduate of Thomas College in Waterville where she received her Master’s in Business Administration and her undergraduate degree in Interdisciplinary Studies with a focus in marketing…
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Joe Phelan is an award winning journalist who makes photos and videos around the capital area for the the Kennebec Journal, Morning Sentinel and the other Masthead Maine publications. Joe’s first journalism…
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Maine folks are being harassed with political ads. We are all sick and tired of the mostly mean-spirited rhetoric appearing constantly in ads, mail and by phone from traditional and super PACS, dousing us with propaganda.
Trust me when I say that we are well aware of how our representatives serve Maine. Their actions or inactions speak volumes.
Here is an impressive action that should be implemented. Make itmandatorythat all out-of-state campaign spenders, who throw obscene amounts of money on political ads regarding Maine candidates, hence disturbing our peace and privacy, must spend the equal amount directly on the people of Maine, who are literally struggling with various affordability crises (too many to list, but felt daily).
Money is no object during an election year, when they want our full attention. If they invested in Maine folks, instead of bombarding us with ads that we ideally tune out, that might get our attention. We are witness to millions of dollars being thrown at ads, as Maine struggles. And that is all we notice.
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Maine Democratic Senate nominee Graham Platner is denying a new allegation of sexual assault, an explosive development injecting tumult into a race that is central to the Democratic Party’s path to winning back the Senate. Despite the denial, Platner said in a video that he is taking “time to reflect on the best path forward” with his candidacy. July 6, 2026
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It’s accessible only by boat and is being sold furnished.
012 Long Island in Georgetown, Maine, is on the market for $3.85 million. Andy Connors
By Regina Cole
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2 minutes to read
Gilbert Head, at the southern end of Long Island in Georgetown, Maine, includes a beautifully kept Federal house, another house that has served as an artist’s studio, a private deep-water dock and pier built of Deer Isle granite, a spacious boat house, and hiking trails on 25 acres of one of Maine’s surpassingly beautiful mid-coast islands. It is a historic site at the mouth of the Kennebec River for sale for $3,850,000. Along with the natural beauty of a Maine island, it has privacy as it’s accessed by water only.
012 Long Island is the Federal-style house. – Andy Connors
Built in 1837, the 3,346-square-foot main house has the dignified hallmarks of the Federal style: simple rectangular massing topped by a hipped roof, a pedimented entry flanked with side lights, wide-plank pumpkin pine floors, and gracefully proportioned rooms featuring original woodwork.
There are five bedrooms (including a first-floor primary bedroom with an ensuite bathroom) and three full bathrooms, two fireplaces, and a large eat-in kitchen. While the kitchen is equipped with modern enmities like granite countertops, a farmhouse sink, an electric cooktop, twin dishwashers, and a large central island, it retains historic charm with a turn-of-the-20th-century cast iron cookstove, beaded-board wainscoting, and a fireplace with original Federal styling.
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The view from the foyer. – Andy ConnorsThe front entrance. – Andy Connors
The separate house known as the Studio is a one and one-half story farmhouse. Its interior is unfinished, but while it presents a building project, it retains many original features, including old flooring, wainscoting, the stairs, and fireplace surrounds. The structure includes a new roof and chimney.
The current owners, who bought the property in 2000, made significant improvements, including the kitchen updates. They built the dock, a new post-and-beam barn, a new gravel road to the dock, installed a new septic system, drilled a new well, put standing-seam metal roofs on both houses, and brought power to the island via an underground cable.
The house has two fireplaces. – Andy ConnorsThe kitchen. – Andy ConnorsThe dining area. – Andy ConnorsThe living room. – Andy Connors
While the main house has the comforts and amenities of modern life, it is surrounded by mementoes of the past, including old stonework, perennial gardens, an ancient orchard, and waterfront meadows. A large stone bears a plaque installed in 1934 by descendants of the original settlers, John and Joanna Spinney, who moved here with their nine children in 1753.
Notable past owners were Stephen and Elizabeth Etnier, who bought the property in 1935. He was a well-known artist; she wrote “On Gilbert Head” about their life on the island. Although the Spinneys and their descendants farmed and fished here year-round, Gilbert Head served as a vacation home for the Etniers and for the two owners who have held the property since Elizabeth Etnier died in 1994.
One of five bedrooms. – Andy ConnorsOne of five bedrooms. – Andy ConnorsOne of three bathrooms. – Andy Connors
From here, residents can take a boat to a number of public landings in Bath, Phippsburg, Georgetown, or Popham Beach, but the property includes deeded access to a dock in Georgetown.
The house is to be sold furnished, and the barn and boathouse are full of the things you need on an island, including a John Deere all-wheel tractor and mower. Gilbert Head is essentially turnkey — all you need is a boat to get there.
Poe Cilley of Vitalius Real Estate Group has the listing.
The house has private dock. – Andy ConnorsThe Studio comes with the property. – Andy ConnorsThe interior of the Studio is unfinished. – Andy ConnorsLong Island is in Georgetown, Maine. – Andy Connors
Regina Cole writes about architecture and design for national and regional publications, with a specialty in historic architecture and the history of the decorative arts.
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