Our tour guide had a subtle knowing smile. She reminded us the state of Maine — often reduced to lobster rolls and postcard-worthy lighthouses — often keeps a destination under wraps — a scenic landscape which ranks among the most visited national parks in the United States.
Acadia National Park, perched along the area’s serrated coastline, warmly welcomes more than three million visitors each year without ever losing the air of quiet refuge.
Sprawling across expansive Mount Desert Island, plus extensive parcels of Isle au Haut, and the Schoodic Peninsula, Acadia refuses to stay neatly on land. It crosses a forest and an ocean and again returns to stone — it boldly breaks basic conventions on what a typical park can and should be.
Long before the pioneering roads were carved, this wide territory belonged to the Wabanaki Confederacy — “People of the Dawnland” — composed of the Maliseet, Mi’kmaq, Passamaquoddy, Abenaki and Penobscot nations. Inhabitants have lived here, historians say, for at least 12,000 years. They regard Mount Desert Island as Pemetic, meaning, range of mountains. The island remains central to their ancestral homeland and stewardship to this day.
In fact, even the park’s name carries their imprint. The Mi’kmaq word akadie, or piece of land, became l’Acadie under French explorers and eventually Acadia in English!
Acadia joined the federal register in 1916 as Sieur de Monts National Monument, and was later known as Lafayette National Park. In 1929, it adapted its present name.
The natural preservation owes much to the “Father of Acadia National Park,” George B. Dorr, and 40-year Harvard University president Charles W. Eliot, who foresaw the threat of unchecked development and devoted their precious resources to conservation. Philanthropist John D. Rockefeller Jr. eventually partnered with the illustrious duo in their laudable efforts to reshape access to the park without restructuring the land itself.
As we toured the grounds, we encountered a trace of this earlier world in a Penobscot birch bark wigwam. The semi-permanent domed structure, resembling a tent at first glance, once served as a family home and is today transformed for ceremonies.
The moment we encountered curious rock formations, we soon learned that between 1915 and 1940, Rockefeller financed and directed the construction of an elegant network of carriage roads. Designed to faithfully follow the mountains’ natural contours, they were lined with decorative plantings by famed landscape architect and gardener Beatrix Farrand. It was supplemented, whenever necessary, by stone-faced bridges. Today, some 45 miles of these paths remain within park boundaries, edged with granite coping stones nicknamed “Rockefeller’s Teeth.”
Moving through the park, geology was the focus. Cadillac Mountain’s pink granite bore dark veins of diabase from later volcanic episodes. On the Schoodic Peninsula we sighted various boulders in spots they could never naturally reach. We were then informed: glaciers more than a kilometer thick pressed over these mountains, carrying boulders southward before abandoning them where they pleased. One such migrant, Bubble Rock, now balances improbably near a cliff edge, a glacial erratic suspended between gravity and legend. We held our breaths as we passed by this unique sight — you must not miss.
At Bass Harbor, the all-white lighthouse stood firm above Blue Hill Bay, its white silhouette registered as a historic landmark. Farther along, the Somes Sound grandly settled between mountains. Often described as the only fjord on the eastern seaboard, it is technically a fjard — smaller by definition, but no less commanding. Anchored boats slowly drifted across its mirrored surface, their moored reflections dissolving into ripples with every shift of wind.
The not-so-easy-to-ascend Cadillac Mountain, named after French explorer Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac, brought us to the park’s highest point. Known for catching the nation’s earliest sunrise during certain seasons, the summit offered a panoramic view toward the Schoodic Peninsula and Southwest Harbor.
Through our “May we stop and catch our breath?” exploration, we witnessed life unfold our very own eyes. Our patient and energetic tour guide pointed out tiny subalpine plants clung to granite joints near the peaks, while gnarled spruce and fir withstood relentless wind above forests of maple, oak and beech.
We were shocked to find out wetlands covered more than a fifth of the park. “It was the home of cattails, sedges and carnivorous pitcher plants, along with bladderworts that trap insects underwater. These marshes likewise sheltered waterfowl and amphibians, and provided feeding grounds for moose, white-tailed deer, river otters, beavers, porcupines and long-tailed weasels,” she added.
Offshore, humpback whales occasionally were spotted to breach the surface!
As we wrapped up our visit, on the Schoodic Peninsula, the former naval base has become the Schoodic Education and Research Center. Operated by the National Park Service and the Schoodic Institute, scientists continue to study ecosystems, teachers refine their practice; and students learn to read the language of tides, trees and stone.
Visitors engage with Acadia on their own terms — cross-country skiing in winter, climbing and hiking across rugged terrain in autumn, kayaking and canoeing along the coast in summer, or horseback riding over carriage roads in spring.
Some come for invigorating motion, others for serene stillness. The park is not simply an Instagram target. Individuals pay pilgrimage here for continuity: from Wabanaki stewardship to granite shaped by ice, from Rockefeller’s roads and bridges to modern research laboratories.
When we finally drove away, rain tapping lightly on the windshields, we were certain Acadia was less of a terminus and more like an inheritance — passed carefully from one generation to the next, asking only to be noticed and protected.