Thanks! It looks to me like a typo and I anticipate that the NRHP official name should have no apostrophe or a differently placed one, but it is hard to say what the official name is without a copy of the NRHP application. The NRHP infobox in the article has also been revised to show "All Souls Chapel" for now. This will be included in the next batch of items to be reported to the National Register.
doncram (
talk)
20:06, 20 March 2009 (UTC)reply
Kennebec River Light Station has several issues. First, it's known officially by the
USCG as the
Doubling Point Range Lights, which is far more specific on a river that has half a dozen lights. Second, its address is shown as "Fiddler Reach". That's not good -- the lights are
range lights, which show vessels the way up the river. The river turns 90° to the west there and Fiddler Reach is the stretch to the west, not the stretch covered by the range (which does not have a specific name). Finally, it's shown in
Bath, but it's actually in
Georgetown. I'll add a NRHP cite to the
Doubling Point Range Lights and
Doubling Point Light articles which I created today. Should the listing at
National Register of Historic Places listings in Sagadahoc County, Maine be changed or piped -- I don't know the protocol when the actual name differs so much from the NRIS name?
Jameslwoodward (
talk)
21:35, 5 August 2009 (UTC)reply
While doing the lighthouses in Maine (see above), I noted the listing for the Tugboat "SEQUIN". It should be "SEGUIN", as she's named after the island at the mouth of the Kennebec River (on which the tug was based most of her life). See both the web site cited on the NRIS listing (www.nr.nps.gov/Red Books/69000013.red.pdf) and this (
http://www.mainemaritimemuseum.org/uploads/rich_text_editor/23sacr2.jpg) from the web site of her current owner, the Maine Maritime Museum in Bath.
Jameslwoodward (
talk)
21:35, 5 August 2009 (UTC)reply
Samuel Penney House is an historic house at 78 Maple Street in Mechanic Falls, Maine. NRIS mis-identifies this as being in Mechanics Falls (with an S), while properly identifies several other properties in Mechanic Falls.
doncram (
talk)
14:28, 8 February 2009 (UTC)reply
Thanks! It looks to me like a typo and I anticipate that the NRHP official name should have no apostrophe or a differently placed one, but it is hard to say what the official name is without a copy of the NRHP application. The NRHP infobox in the article has also been revised to show "All Souls Chapel" for now. This will be included in the next batch of items to be reported to the National Register.
doncram (
talk)
20:06, 20 March 2009 (UTC)reply
Kennebec River Light Station has several issues. First, it's known officially by the
USCG as the
Doubling Point Range Lights, which is far more specific on a river that has half a dozen lights. Second, its address is shown as "Fiddler Reach". That's not good -- the lights are
range lights, which show vessels the way up the river. The river turns 90° to the west there and Fiddler Reach is the stretch to the west, not the stretch covered by the range (which does not have a specific name). Finally, it's shown in
Bath, but it's actually in
Georgetown. I'll add a NRHP cite to the
Doubling Point Range Lights and
Doubling Point Light articles which I created today. Should the listing at
National Register of Historic Places listings in Sagadahoc County, Maine be changed or piped -- I don't know the protocol when the actual name differs so much from the NRIS name?
Jameslwoodward (
talk)
21:35, 5 August 2009 (UTC)reply
While doing the lighthouses in Maine (see above), I noted the listing for the Tugboat "SEQUIN". It should be "SEGUIN", as she's named after the island at the mouth of the Kennebec River (on which the tug was based most of her life). See both the web site cited on the NRIS listing (www.nr.nps.gov/Red Books/69000013.red.pdf) and this (
http://www.mainemaritimemuseum.org/uploads/rich_text_editor/23sacr2.jpg) from the web site of her current owner, the Maine Maritime Museum in Bath.
Jameslwoodward (
talk)
21:35, 5 August 2009 (UTC)reply
Samuel Penney House is an historic house at 78 Maple Street in Mechanic Falls, Maine. NRIS mis-identifies this as being in Mechanics Falls (with an S), while properly identifies several other properties in Mechanic Falls.
doncram (
talk)
14:28, 8 February 2009 (UTC)reply