Donna in Port Huron, MI, at the Majestic Theater, January 2-3, 1926

A Two-Day Engagement on Michigan’s Eastern Vaudeville Route

Vaudeville News of 11 December 1925 indicated that,”Donna Darling and Girls have finished their western tour and are going to spend Christmas at Miss Darling’s home in Detroit, Mich.” There is a possibility she played at the Miles Orpheum Theatre in Detroit over the New Year (Dec 28-Jan 1), but I’ve not been able to confirm that venue. In either case, she and “Her Girls” headed the 60 miles north to Port Huron, Michigan, to play at the Majestic Theatre for two days, starting Saturday, January 2nd, 1926.

The Shows

Advertisement for the Majestic Theatre showing Donna Darling and her Girls playing.

At the Majestic that week were two movies and five vaudeville acts.

  • Movies: Ben Turpin in “Raspberry Romance” and The Spats in “Rubberneck.”
  • Vaudeville: Vander & Haighe – Artists De Luxe
    • Vance & Allen – “Mary”
    • Moore and Horton – “The Waiter and The Dumb Waiter”
    • Three Harmony Pals
    • Donna Darling and Her Girls

I haven’t found any reviews or other information about the Vaudeville.

Majestic Theatre

photo of the Majestic Theatre with its marquee.

The Majestic was a legitimate vaudeville and motion-picture house. In the mid-1920s, it featured silent movie shorts and vaudeville acts that were suitable for family audiences. Bookings were handled by the Bijou Amusement Company, which controlled and booked multiple houses. They typically booked short, two or 3-day engagements, so Donna’s 2-day engagement was usual. This type of booking was supplemented by vaudeville. Seating capacity: Lower floor, 549; Balcony, 419; Gallery, 500; Boxes, 24, Theatre on Ground floor[i].

History of the Theater

Opened in 1906, the Majestic Theatre was one of Port Huron’s principal amusement houses during the height of the vaudeville era. For two decades, it presented a steady stream of professional touring acts, later transitioning to motion pictures as live vaudeville declined. By the time “Donna Darling and Her Girls” appeared there in January 1926, the Majestic was a mature, well-established theatre serving both local audiences and cross-border patrons. The theatre closed in 1952 and was demolished several years later.[ii] Today, it the site is a walkway and parking lot.

Site of the Majestic Theatre, Port Huron, Michigan.
Opened in 1906 and demolished in the late 1950s, the Majestic once stood at this location as one of the city’s principal vaudeville and motion-picture houses. Today, the site is occupied by a pedestrian walkway and parking area, with no visible trace of the former theatre.

Specifications for the Majestic Theatre, Port Huron, MI [iii]

The following specifications provide a sense of the Majestic Theatre’s physical scale and technical capabilities, offering insight into the type of productions it could accommodate during the height of the vaudeville era.

  • Proscenium opening: 34×30 ft
  • Front to back wall: 36 ft
  • Between side walls: 75 ft
  • Apron 5 ft
  • Between fly girders: 45 ft
  • To rigging loft: 56 ft
  • To fly gallery: 24 ft
  • 12 Dressing rooms

Endnotes

[i] Book – The Julius Cahn–Gus Hill Theatrical Guide 1913-1914.
[ii] CinemaTreasures.org – Majestic Theatre, 512 Grand River Avenue, Port Huron, MI 48060.
[iii] Book – The Julius Cahn–Gus Hill Theatrical Guide 1913-1914.

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Photos from the Past – New England Scenes & a Scarborough Graduate.

SHS Photo Collection – Part 009
By Don Taylor

The Scarborough Historical Society has an extensive collection of photos. Today, I look at a mix of four pictures from that collection. There are three places, and one is a graduate of Scarborough High School.


Maine, Northport, Park Row, circa 1881-1891.

Photo of many similar cottages leading down towards the ocean.

Photographer: Photographic Studio of W. C. Tuttle, (1881) Belfast, Maine.
Inscription:
Park Row, Northport
Description: This photograph shows a row of nearly identical wooden cottages arranged along a gently curving dirt road on a wooded shoreline, typical of a late-19th-century summer resort or cottage colony. Beyond the cottages, a sailing vessel is visible offshore.

Research:

  • The 1881 date on the back indicates the photo was taken after that date.
  • About 1891, W. C. Tuttle & Son began operating, suggesting the photo was taken before that date.
  • Google Maps shows that many of the cottages are still there across from Ruggles Park on Park Row in Northport, Maine.

Maine, Mount Desert, Green Mountain Railway, circa 1884.

photo of a railroad track leading downhill towards the ocean.

Photographer: B. Bradley, Bar Harbor, Me.
Inscription: Bar Harbor- Mt. Desert
(?) A Niles Grand Central, Sept 12 84
Description: Labeled Photo: “51. Green Mountain Railway, Mt. Desert, Me.”
Research:

  • B. Bradley was a photographer in Bar Harbor from the 1870s into the 1880s. Circa 1891, his son was added to the business name.
  • The inscription on the back of the photo, “Sept 12, ’84,” indicates the photo was taken before that date.
  • The Maine Memory Network states that construction on the Green Mountain Railway began in February 1883.[i]

Massachusetts, Chelsea – “Old Pratt House” c 1884.

Photo of an old saltbox home.

Photographer: Halliday’s Photographs, of Historic Buildings, 283 Washington St., Boston, Mass.
Inscription: Old Pratt House, Chelsea, Mass, where Washington stayed overnight.
Description:
A badly faded photo of a weathered saltbox farmhouse. The structure is two-story with a central chimney, suggesting late 18th– or early 19th-century construction.

Research:

  • Halliday’s Photographs of Historic Buildings operated at 283 Washington Street from 1883 to 1885.
  • There are several other “Pratt Houses.”
    • The Ireland-Way-Pratt House has similar window and fireplace placements.
    However, it has a very different roofline, with a 3rd-story dormer. The Caleb Pratt House is very different, with different fireplace placements and a different roof.
    • Local Chelsea tradition holds that George Washington stayed at the Old Pratt House in Chelsea. The original Pratt mansion was demolished in 1855.

So, this (circa) 1884 photo must either be a photo of a photo or a photo of one of the several other “Old Pratt Houses” in Chelsea.


Judith Roy, SHS Class of 1961.

Graduation photo of a young woman.

Photographer: Wendell White Studio
Inscription:
Judy alias Tiger
Description:
Apparent High School Graduation Photo.
Research:

  • The 1961 Scarborough High School yearbook shows the same photo of Judy.
  • Judith passed August 23, 2022.[ii]

I added this photo to SHS Photos – 2025 on Ancestry.com.


Endnotes

[i] Maine Memory Network – Mount Desert Island: Shaped by Nature. Image 7 “Green Mountain Rail Road track, Bar Harbor, ca. 1890 (item 21722) description.

[ii] Hobbs Funeral Home Obituary Judith Roy.

Posted in Vintage Photos, Maine History, SHS Photo Collection | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Faces and Places of the Kinney Family, 1933–1939

Linwood Dyer Collection, Part 087
Eastman Negative Album #2025.02.42
By Don Taylor

As part of my ongoing work with the Linwood Dyer Collection, I recently encountered an Eastman Negative Album containing 100 original envelopes, nearly half of which held film negatives. Many of these negatives were larger than standard—measuring approximately 3½ × 4½ inches—and required special handling during digitization.

Many of the photos in this album document things like a visit to Quebec, and the backyard of a house during the winter or spring, and are not of particular interest. However, many of the negatives document friends and family of Margaret Cogswell Kinney. Margaret was born in 1911 in Portland, Maine, and died in Portland in 1995. As with all my work, my goal is to reconnect these historical photographs with descendants who may never have seen these images of their ancestors. The Scarborough Historical Society preserves the original negatives within the Linwood Dyer Photo Collection.


37 Ship Channel Rd.

Home of Philip & Marion Hinkley, 1933.

This photo envelope is labeled “37 Ship Channel RD, 1933. This 2,896 sqft home that was built in 1920 is still there.[i] The 1937 Portland City Directory,[ii] indicates that Philip E and Marion Hinkley lived at that address. Philip was Margaret Kinney’s maternal uncle, so a photo of the house makes sense.


Louise Kinney.

1937 & 1938.

Envelopes 13, 23. and 25, include photos of a young woman. In one photo, Louise is sitting on a short stone wall. In Spring 1938, she is sitting on the stairs to a house, and in another 1938 photo, she is sitting in an Adirondack Chair. The “Spring 1938” photo has no name; however, the other two photos are labeled “Louise, 1937” and “Louise, 1938” respectively. Based on other images, I am sure these are all photos of Margaret’s sister, Louise Kinney. Louise would have been 23 and 24 years old in 1937 and 1938.

Louise 1937
Louise Spring 1938
Louise Summer 1938

Portland Head Light.

Spring 1938

This black-and-white photograph depicts Portland Head Light at Cape Elizabeth, Maine, viewed from the landward side. The tall, conical stone lighthouse dominates the center of the image, its whitewashed masonry rising to a dark lantern room encircled by a metal gallery. The keeper’s house stands to the left.

To the right of the tower are several low service buildings, including one fitted with a fog signal apparatus, with piping and horn visible on the roof. Patches of snow remain on the ground, suggesting the photograph was taken in late winter or early spring. A person stands near the base of the tower, providing scale and emphasizing the lighthouse’s height.


Trolley 211, Spring St.

Winter-Spring 1938-39

This black-and-white photograph shows the front end of an electric streetcar numbered 211, photographed at close range. The destination sign above the windshield reads “Spring St.”, indicating its route in Portland, Maine. Overhead trolley wires are clearly visible, confirming it as an electrically powered car.

The motorman stands at the open doorway on the right side of the image, wearing a uniform cap and coat, and looking toward the camera. The streetcar’s rounded front windows reflect bare tree branches, suggesting the photograph was taken in late winter or early spring. A metal safety gate and chain are visible at the lower front of the car.


Mildred Goudy, Portland, ME

Winter-Spring 1938-39

This photograph shows the harbor vessel Mildred Goudy afloat in Portland Harbor. The vessel has a flat-decked, rectangular hull characteristic of a lighter, a type of workboat used for cargo handling and general harbor service. The vessel’s name, Mildred Goudy – Portland, is clearly painted across the stern.

Several men are visible on deck, dressed in work clothing and caps, engaged in routine operations. A tall mast supports rigging and block-and-tackle equipment, indicating the vessel’s role in lifting or transferring heavy loads. A rowboat is tied alongside, likely used for short trips between the lighter and shore or nearby vessels.

During the 1930s, the Mildred Goudy was used to deliver supplies to some of the islands, used as a fishing boat, and as a diving platform. The May 4, 1939, Portland Evening Express[iii] included a similar photo of the ship when it was acting as a diving platform to repair a submarine water-main break.


Conclusion

These photographs provide a valuable visual record of the Margaret Kinney family of Portland and South Portland, Maine:

  • Sister: Louise C Kinney (1914–1993)
  • Uncle: Philip Edward Hinkley (1881–1962)

They also provide images of a Portland area lighthouse, a trolley car, and a “lighter” ship. All photos are from the Scarborough Historical Society,“Linwood D. Dyer Collection, Eastman Negative Album, #2025.02.42.


Connection Invitation

I would be delighted to hear from anyone who recognizes these individuals as their ancestors—especially if these represent previously unseen images of your family members. Also, if you can add any additional stories regarding the Trolley car or the Mildred Goudy, I’d love to hear your stories. You are welcome to incorporate these photographs into your own research, with proper credit given:
Photo Courtesy: Scarborough Historical Society, Linwood D. Dyer Collection.


Endnotes

[i] Zillow – 37 Ship Channel Rd, South Portland, ME 04106.
[ii] Ancestry – U.S., City Directories, 1822-1995 – Portland, Maine, City Directory, 1937.
[iii] Newspapers.com – Portland Evening Express, May 4, 1939, page 1.

Posted in Linwood Dyer Collection, Photo Identification, Maine History | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Taylor – Surname Saturday

From Colonial New England to Industrial-Era Michigan

Montran-Barber-Blackhurst-Taylor Line
Brown-Sanford-Parsons-Taylor Line
By Don Taylor

Name Origin[i]

Family Search and Ancestry both indicate that Taylor is an occupational name for a tailor. It comes from Anglo-Norman French Middle English taillour. It is extremely common in Britain and Ireland. 

Geographical

In the world, there are over 1.5 million people with the surname Taylor. It is most prevalent in the United States and most common in the Turks and Caicos Islands.

In the US, it is most prevalent in Texas, California, and Florida.

My Direct Taylor Ancestors

Because my biological father was a Roberts, I have no immediate Taylor Ancestors; however, my research has uncovered three likely Taylor Ancestors.[ii]

Montran Line

Brown Line

  • Great-grandfather: Arthur Durwood Brown (1869-1928)
  • 2st Great-grandmother: Marion Sanford (1846- c. 1895)
  • 3rd Great-grandmother: Mary E Parsons (1828-1888)
  • 4th Great-grandfather: Chester Parsons (1799-1887)
  • 5th Great-grandfather: John Parsons, Jr. (1764-1813)
  • 6th Great-grandfather: John Parsons (1737/38-1821)[ii]
  • 7th Great-grandfather: Timothy Parsons (1695-1772) [iii]
  • 8th Great-grandmother: Rhoda Taylor (1669-1758) [iv]
  • 9th Great-grandfather: John Taylor (1641-1704) [v]

My Taylors in History

Fanny (Taylor) Blackhurst lived through England’s industrial collapse after the Napoleonic Wars, emigrated during one of Britain’s great working-class population displacements of the 1840s, resettled along America’s key migration corridors in New York and Michigan, and spent her later life in a Union state transformed by the Civil War and railroad-driven industrial growth.

Rhoda Taylor (1669–1758) was born in Northampton, Mass., during the height of early New England settlement, spent her married life in Durham as the colonies matured through frontier warfare, including King William’s War and Queen Anne’s War, and died just as the generation that would lead into the American Revolution was coming of age.

John Taylor (1641–1704) lived his entire adult life in Northampton, England, during the formative years of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, witnessing both the steady expansion of Puritan frontier settlement and the devastation of King Philip’s War, one of the most violent conflicts of early New England history.

Locations of my Taylor Ancestors

John Taylor (1641–1704)[vi]

  • England, Northampton — Birthplace (probable immigrant)

Rhoda (Taylor) Parsons (1669–1758) [vii]

  • Connecticut Colony, Durham — Married life, death, and burial
  • Massachusetts Colony, Northampton — Birthplace

Fanny (Taylor) Blackhurst (1806–1889) [viii]

  • England — Birth country
  • England, Yorkshire, Kingston upon Hull — Residence (1841)
  • England, Yorkshire, Rotherham — Marriage location
  • England, Yorkshire, Sheffield — Residence(1828)
  • United States, Michigan, Calhoun, Albion — Burial place
  • United States, New York, Calhoun, Auburn — Residence (1850, 1855)
  • United States, Michigan, Calhoun, Sheridan — Residence (1860–1880)

Sources


Endnotes

[i] Common surname origins include:

  • Occupations (such as “Taylor”
  • Physical characteristics (such as “Short”)
  • Places or landmarks (such as “Hill”)
  • Patronymics, derived from a father’s name (such as Johnson from ”son of John”).

[ii] I have not had the opportunity to personally research these individuals. As such, their names and dates are tentative and/or speculative.
[iii], [iv], [v], [vi], [vii], & [viii] Ibid.

Posted in Massachusetts Genealogy, Brown-Montran, Parsons, Montran, Surname Saturday, Sanford | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Faces from the Past – Catlin, Hinkley, & Kinney

Linwood Dyer Collection, Part 086
Album #2025.02.42
By Don Taylor

As part of my ongoing work with the Linwood Dyer Collection, I recently encountered an Eastman Negative Album containing 100 envelopes, nearly half of which still held their film negatives. Many of these negatives were larger than standard—measuring approximately 3½ × 4½ inches—and required special handling during digitization.

The photographs in this remarkable album appear to document friends and family of either Margaret Cogswell Kinney or her sister, Louise Kinney. Margaret was born in 1911; Louise in 1914. Both sisters were born in Portland, Maine, and both later died there—Louise in 1993 and Margaret in 1995. As with all of my Photo Identification work, my goal is to reconnect these historical photographs with descendants who may never have seen these images of their ancestors. The Scarborough Historical Society preserves the original negatives within the Linwood Dyer Photo Collection.


1. Ernest Cogswell Kinney & Eleanor Tinsdale Hinkley
Wedding – June 9, 1909

Photo of Father-Ernest-C-Kinney-Eleanor-T-Hinkley-Wedding-June-9-1909

The first image in the album is labeled “Mother & Father, Wedding, June 9, 1909.” While the generic identification was initially concerning, previous research within the Linwood Dyer Collection quickly confirmed that Ernest Cogswell Kinney and Eleanor Tinsdale Hinkley were married in Portland, Maine, on that exact date. Additionally, earlier identified photographs of Ernest closely match the groom in this image.

Ernest Cogswell Kinney was born in April 1879. His bride, Eleanor Tinsdale Hinkley, was born in Portland on 6 July 1871. Together, they had two daughters, Margaret and Louise. Later envelopes in the album labeled “Louise” strongly suggest that the album originally belonged to Margaret.


2. Second Wedding View
Envelope 2 – June 9, 1909

A second, somewhat blurred photograph labeled “Mother & Father, Wedding, June 9, 1909” appears in the following envelope. This image shows Ernest in profile, gazing toward Eleanor. Due to its poor clarity, that image is not reproduced here.


Photo of Eleanor (Hinkley) Kinney, c. 1909.

3. Eleanor Tinsdale Hinkley
California – 1909

This photograph is identified as “Mother, California, 1909.” It shows a young woman standing alone against a foggy background. The image has been carefully cropped and included both here and within my Linwood Dyer Collection on Ancestry.


Photo of Louise Kinney standing, circa 1907.

4. Louise Victoria (Catlin) Kinney
1907

Identified as “Mrs. Kinney – 1907,” this outdoor portrait of an older woman clearly depicts Ernest Cogswell Kinney’s mother, Louise Victoria Catlin Kinney. She would have been approximately 66 years old at the time the photograph was taken—about two years before she died in 1909. Her husband, Ernest Lord Kinney, died in 1890, making the “Mrs. Kinney” designation entirely appropriate.

According to Find A Grave, Louise had at least three siblings: Clara, George, and Elizabeth.


Photo of Elizabeth Catlin, circa late 1900s.

5. Miss Elizabeth Catlin
Circa 1908

This undated image shows a middle-aged woman and appears to date to the same period as the other photographs in the album. Louise Victoria Catlin is known to have had a sister named Elizabeth, making it highly likely that this photograph represents Miss Elizabeth Catlin around 1908.


Photo of Ernest Kinney, probably before 1908.

6. Ernest Cogswell Kinney
Before 1908

This portrait is labeled “Ernest C. Kinney, before 1908.” Ernest was born in April 1879 and died on 13 February 1947. Records indicate he moved to Portland around 1909, suggesting this photograph was likely taken while he was still residing in New York.


Conclusion

Together, these five photographs provide a valuable visual record of the immediate ancestry of Margaret Cogswell Kinney:

  • Father: Ernest Cogswell Kinney (1879–1947)
  • Mother: Eleanor Tinsdale Hinkley (1871–1943)
  • Paternal Grandmother: Louise Victoria Catlin (1841–1909)
  • Great-Aunt: Elizabeth Wing Catlin (d. 1923)

All five images have been uploaded to my “Linwood Dyer Collection via Scarborough Historical Society” family tree on Ancestry.


Connection Invitation

I would be delighted to hear from anyone who recognizes these individuals as their ancestors—especially if these represent previously unseen images of your family members. You are welcome to incorporate these photographs into your own research, with proper credit given:
Photo Courtesy: Scarborough Historical Society.

Posted in Linwood Dyer Collection, Photo Identification, Genealogy Research | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment