Flash Light scene

From collection Charles Coombs Collection

Flash Light scene

Flash Light scene: Odd Fellows on Jan. 12, 1894: Participants are all engaged in one of Miss Farmer's famous cookery classes and are (l-r) Messrs. Greenlaw, Dyer, Wescott, Keene, Carter, Crabtree, Hutchins, Cross, Leonard, Marriner. Charles R. Coombs of Belfast was an odd sort of fellow. Not on account of his passion for photography and his ability to record some of the most memorable, candid scenes in turn-of-the-century mid-coast Maine, but because of his ability to perform a variety of occupations practically simultaneously. Want some furniture? Coombs could like the finest maple table for you. Need to mount your prized moose? He specialized in taxidermy at his shop on Main Street. And by 1894, when he captured this jovial bunch preparing a feast, he could also claim to be one of the only photographers to set up shop at the head of Penobscot bay. But Coombs and the ten men he discovered peeling apples, munching on treats and crackers and sampling cider around this wooden table were actually odd by definition - they were all members of the fraternal group known as the International Order of Odd Fellows. Dedicated to furthering "Friendship, Love and Truth" this benevolent group had gotten its name because its original members were considered "odd" for pursuing the betterment of mankind in the seventeenth century. Remarkably, the Odd Fellows are still active worldwide today. Coombs' Waldo County chapter had been formed in 1878 and almost instantly betrayed its "friendship and love" mission by clashing with the existing Belfast chapter, but after a series of lawsuits Coombs' group emerged as the chapter of record. The largest fraternal order of the day, the Odd Fellows set about building a meeting house that matched their stature, and in 1889 they completed the Odd Fellows Hall on Main Street in Belfast. Four stories tall, 60 feet long and 104 feet deep, the building was the largest building in the city and boasted such amenities as steam heat and electric lights, at center, though the stub of a gas lamp fixture at upper right reveals that the Odd Fellows were not entirely reliant upon this new technology. Within their great hall (the first two floors were occupied by an apothecary, and lawyers' and physicians' offices), the Odd Fellows held meetings, lectures and celebrations. Who knows if the bundled gents shown here, including the Odd Fellows' grand marshal William K. Keene, fourth from the left, are all engaged in one of Miss Farmer's famous cookery classes. And yet, somehow, it seems that her culinary instructions seeped into the plaster of these walls, as today, in this very same building, the restaurant Chase's Daily is creating delicious food from the freshest ingredients.

Details

LB2000.52.121