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Antiqueman's Diary:
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MAINE BOOKS:Backyard Maine: Essays by Edgar Allen BeemNewCranberry, The: Hard Work and Holiday SauceNew From Indian Island to Omaha Beach: Charles Shay, Penobscot Indian War HeroNew Land in Between, The: The Upper Saint John Valley, Prehistory to World War INew Live Yankees: The Sewalls and Their ShipsNew Maine in the World: Stories from Some of Those from Here Who Went Away New New Mainers: Portraits of our Immigrant NeighborsNew A1 Diner America’s Kitchens Antiqueman's Diary Camera's Coast, The Catboat Era, The Changing Maine Coastal Companion Confluence: Merrymeeting Bay Continental Liar from the State of Maine Day's Work, A (Vol. I) Day's Work, A (Vol. II) Doryman's Day, A Down on the Island, Up on the Main Downeast: A Maritime History of Maine Eminent Mainers Fly Rod Crosby In the Shadow of the Eagle Interrupted Forest, The Islands of the Mid-Maine Coast, Vol. I Islands of the Mid-Maine Coast, Vol. II Islands of the Mid-Maine Coast, Vol. IV Journalism Matters Just One More Thing, Doc Letters from Sea Life Between the Tides Little Pine to King Spruce Maine Hamlet, A Maine Made Guns & Their Makers Maine's Visible Black History North by Northeast Not Your Average Bear Old Town Canoe, The On Wilderness One Man's Meat Patriarch of Maine Shipbuilding Place on Water, A Rangeley and Its Region, The Red right Returning Rediscovering S. P. Rolt Triscott Remarkable Americans Same Great Struggle, The Sea Struck Sharing the Ocean Shipyard in Maine, A Snow Squall That Yankee Cat Turnaround Unsettled Future, Unsettled Past Upriver Passamaquoddy, An Voyage of Archangell, The Voyages: A Maine Franco-American Reader While You're Here, Doc Wilderness Partners Wood and Canvas Canoe, The Worthy of the Sea |
This charming little memoir is a turn-of-the-century Antiques Roadshow with the gentleman who proclaimed himself Maine's first antique dealer. As an enterprising twenty-six-year-old, Fred B. Tuck set up shop in Kennebunkport's Union Square in 1893 hoping to capitalize on the popularity of the Kennebunks as a summer destination for people of means. At one point he ran two shops in Kennebunkport, offering furnished period showrooms at one location, and at the other antiques combined with a soda fountain dispensing "the best of soda with pure fruit flavors," and for many years he had a shop in Union Square, on Hovey's Wharf, or later on Route One in Kennebunk. Tuck made frequent buying trips through New England and the South, where he sometimes opened a winter shop for the season. He took delight in tracking down leads for old furniture and other items and relished the stories that went with them, recalling them in perfect detail. When there wasn't enough stock to satisfy customer demand for "colonial relics," Tuck and his staff were quite creative with reproductions or their "improvements" to existing pieces. Their expert refinishing and upholstering services would cause tears today on the Antiques Roadshow. Tuck's entrepreneurial bent also led him to develop "historical" postcards, jigsaw puzzles, and scrapbooks; bottled water in patriotic red and blue bottles; and a patented moth-proof garment bag! The late Dean A. Fales, Jr., a furniture historian and the author of American Painted Furniture: 16601880, unearthed a transcript of Tuck's "diary" in a secondhand shop and, intrigued by Tuck's life, undertook further research and gave several illustrated lectures about him. His wife, Martha G. Fales of Kennebunk, has provided a new introduction, and Earle G. Shettleworth, Jr., director of the Maine Historic Preservation Commission, has written an afterword that acquaints us with some of Tuck's successors in the world of Maine antiques, beginning with Shettleworth's first foray into an antique shop at the age of six. The painting on the cover shows Tuck himself, in The Country Auction by Abbott Graves, courtesy of Graves Memorial Library.
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