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Mac Smith “Plain Madeleine: Mrs. John Jacob Astor in Bar Harbor”

  • Northeast Harbor Library & Zoom 1 Joy Road Mount Desert, ME, 04662 United States (map)

Join author and historian Mac Smith for a discussion and signing of his latest book “Plain Madeleine: Mrs. John Jacob Astor in Bar Harbor” documenting Madeleine Astor’s life and the Astor presence in Bar Harbor,  putting her story in the context of Bar Harbor's Golden Age.

The program will be offered in person and via Zoom. Register Here

The story of Madeleine and Colonel John Jacob Astor is very much part of the story of Bar Harbor. The relatively poor Madeleine Force met Colonel Astor, the third richest man in the United States, in Bar Harbor in 1910. The vicious scandal after their wedding caused the newlyweds to board the Titanic to return to America; the ensuing tragedy would claim the life of the colonel.

Madeleine Astor returned to Bar Harbor after the Titanic disaster, where all eyes were on her, and where she was triumphant in claiming the role of social leader. In 1916, she remarried in the center of Bar Harbor, and gave up everything Astor. Following 17 years of her second marriage, Madeleine, now in her 40s, is married a third time, to a penniless young boxer, and her name was erased from the Social Register, dying a lonely figure in her 40s. In telling Madeleine's story, the story of a changing Bar Harbor is also revealed.

Copies of “Plain Madeleine” will be available to purchase the night of the event.

A Navy veteran of the first Gulf War and former reporter for The Bar Harbor Times, Mac Smith lives in Stockton Springs, Maine, in the village of Sandy Point. He is the author of several books of Maine history, including Mainers on the Titanic, Peyton Place Comes Home to Maine, Siege at the Statehouse, and Disaster at the Bar Harbor Ferry.

This program is a collaboration between the Northeast Harbor Library and the MDI Historical Society.

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The Mount Desert Island Committee for Peace, 1962-1966 with Patrick Callaway

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A History of Housing with Thoughts for the Future