So, I recently bought a photograph of Sandy Creek. It’s big, 16x20 in a nice frame. It shows the depot with a short passenger train headed by locomotive Number 1, the mills and other buildings that were there after the railroad opened. I believe it was taken in 1883. There is a man standing in the depot doorway who I am certain is Seth Berry, owner of the mills and also station agent at Sandy Creek. I wanted to try and find out more about the activities at Sandy Creek so I started searching the Bridgton News for any reference to Seth Berry. Among the items I found was a follow up to the article Bruce posted, dated September 17, 1897, which states that Seth Berry completed the new station at Barnard’s Road. So here we are again. Where was that? Seth Berry built both the Sandy Creek and Perley’s Mills depots and their designs were practically identical. And they were built when the railroad was constructed. So they would’ve already existed in 1897. So was Barnard’s Road at South Bridgton or Ingalls? Or was it at Kennet’s? I guess I should search the Bridgton News for other references to Barnard’s Road.
Something else caught my eye in the Sandy Creek photo. One of the buildings near the tracks on the Mill side has an apothecary symbol on it. That caused some head scratching on my part. Then I found a note in the Bridgton News dated 1898 which told of the 14x28 addition Seth Berry was constructing on his Union Store at Sandy Creek. The building with the apothecary symbol must be the store.
Seth Berry was a very active fellow. Besides running the mill that produced lumber, shingles, laths, and other wood products, he was Station Agent at Sandy Creek, was later postmaster there, owned the store and a blacksmith shop, ran a farm, and built a number of buildings in the area. He died in 1904 and the Mills gradually shut down but in 1909 Mains & Dolley was using one of the mills to make baseball bats. These were probably shipped out by rail.
It’s all gone now and that area is Sandy Creek Park. The old mill foundations are all easy to find as well as the remains of the mill dam. A nice spot for a picnic.