JOYCE BUTLER
P.
O. Box 94
5 Durrell’s Bridge Road
Kennebunk, Maine 04043
207-985-4878
June 6,
2015
TO: Whom it may concern
RE: Kennebunkport
Land Trust proposal for
use of the former Olde Grist Mill restaurant site, Mill Lane
I am writing to affirm my objections (see my 9/17/2014 e-mail to Tom
Bradbury) to the KLT’s proposal to erect an imported—from Texas ?—gristmill on the site. Although I am not a resident of Kennebunkport,
as the author of Kennebunkport: The
Evolution of an American Town, 1603-2003, which was published in 2013, I
assume my interest in this matter is justified.
Also, to further justify my interest, I can tell you that I lived from
1959 to 1962 in the former Clemmie Clark house that then stood on the rise of
land next to the mill/restaurant; thus, I am familiar with that section of
Kennebunkport and have a sense of the negative impact on the surrounding
neighborhood of what will essentially be a tourist attraction.
I have been assured by Mr. Bradbury that the Trust has
the money to carry through this project; but, having the money to do
something does not mean it should be done.
As a member of the Trust, it seems to me the money would be better spent
on preserving more open space in Kennebunkport
and maintaining the various properties the Trust already owns, including a
number of buildings.
It seems to me that if the Trust wishes to direct
attention to the history of the Mill
Lane site this could be done with a modest billboard
or plaque on a monument with a photo of the Perkins gristmill and text
describing its history. Also, if the
Trust wishes to educate the public on how a gristmill works this could be done
with a slide/power point program at its headquarters building or perhaps at the
Community House on Temple Street.
The importance today of the Mill Lane site is in the views and access
to the river it provides. Both amenities
are sorely needed.
I am also seriously concerned about the negative impact
of the Trust’s plan, even in its scaled down version, on the
surrounding neighborhood and its residents’ quality of life. This has been clearly spelled out by them and
does not need reiteration here; but, I
ask, at what point does the quality of life of residents of Kennebunkport take precedence over the
entertainment of tourists?
The negative impact of tourism on Kennebunkport’s river village is already
clear. Some residents on Maine Street have
planted rows of tall evergreen trees between their house lots and the street
where tourists drive and park their cars and the sidewalks where they
walk. Without these barriers peace and privacy
is lost; with them a once handsome streetscape and a sense of neighborliness
are destroyed. Also, access by
year-round residents to Dock
Square businesses, to churches, and to the Graves Library is problematical during the tourist season,
which no longer ends on Labor Day.
It is my fervent hope that town officials and the
leadership of the KLT will listen carefully to their constituents’ objections
to the proposed plan for the Mill
Lane site and instead will preserve it as it now
is for the benefit of all. To quote the
Trust’s own motto, “Together we can do great things.”
Sincerely,
Joyce Butler
(Mrs. G. Robert Butler)