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George Bucknam Dorr: from Jamaica Pond to Commonwealth Avenue

George Bucknam Dorr, known as the “Father of Acadia”, was the founder of the oldest national park east of the Mississippi River. The roots of George B. Dorr's land conservation achievements are deeply embedded on the Jamaica Pond shoreline where he was born in 1853. Childhood exposure to other Massachusetts landscapes also shaped his later success on the mid-Maine coast. Throughout Dorr's life, notables with attachments to Jamaica Plain--Charles S. Sargent, Edith Wharton, Francis Parkman, Ellen Swallow Richards, Henry & Charles P. Bowditch, Margaret Fuller, and Charles Eliot--kept the Father of Acadia National Park tethered to the place where he spent the first decade of his life.

This talk will be given by Ronald H. Epp, Ph.D., the author of Creating Acadia National Park: The Biography of George Bucknam Dorr. Epp is a historian and professor of philosophy who has spent the last two decades researching the Massachusetts families that influenced the development of conservation philanthropy. 

This program is free and open to the public. Light refreshments will be served and books will be available for purchase. Co-sponsored by the Jamaica Plain Historical Society and the Arnold Arboretum.

Jamaica Plain Historical Society
Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts 02130


Image from Harvard Magazine