Mark Stuart Kierstead

WATERVILLE – Mark Stuart Kierstead, 80, of Waterville, died on Feb. 27, 2025, after a long struggle with Alzheimer’s disease.

He was born in Peabody, Mass. on Dec. 8, 1944, during World War II. He was the single child of Emily Beatrice (Kelley) Kierstead, an artist, and William Fowlie Kierstead, a dentist. Bill was duck hunting in Maine the day his son was born.

Mark was raised in a Dutch Colonial in Waterville, built in 1918 by his grandfather Horton “Hank” W. Kierstead, a University of Maine-educated engineer. As a boy, Mark would canoe up Messalonskee Stream and then camp in his backyard, coming in only for supplies. In those days, children weren’t seen until dinner. Mark thrived in Waterville—he attended Coburn Classical Institute, played sports, and became fluent in French. His parents and a family friend arranged a charter flight to Europe in the 1950’s for the Sugarloaf Ski Club, which enabled the whole family to ski in the Alps, including young Mark, who learned to traverse steep inclines and practice his French. He graduated with honors from Coburn in 1963 and was admitted to Amherst College.

At Amherst, he majored in political science and was awarded his degree magna cum laude. He was named to Phi Beta Kappa for high academic achievements and served as Vice President of Kappa Theta social fraternity. He served for two years as an assistant to the noted historian Henry Steele Commager, who relied on Mark’s translation of Medieval French documents (and practical Maine skills). He married his high school sweetheart, Janet Scott, in Colby College’s Lorimer Chapel and was admitted to Yale Law School. He and Janet lived in a rented house by the ocean where Mark practiced sailing his own small boat. Mark drove a cab in New Haven and helped a local law firm represent the Black Panthers.

All was golden until tragedy struck. Janet gave birth to Ian, who was diagnosed with multiple disabilities. The marriage ended shortly after Ian’s birth with Mark assuming full custody of his son. Disillusioned, he left Yale University his senior year without graduating and returned to Maine to start building his own home on farmland in Canaan, becoming a pioneer in Maine’s back to the land movement.

He bundled his good-natured toddler son in a Volkswagen and drove to California, where he spurned legal work in favor of building houses, and worked on light shows for the Grateful Dead. He became a full-fledged hippie for about a year before returning to Maine and his own partially built house. An encounter with a young lawyer in Skowhegan’s legal clinic for the poor, Angus King (now Senator King), persuaded Mark to complete the one remaining paper necessary for his Yale law degree. Mark completed his paper and was awarded his J.D. degree from Yale Law School (Class of ’70). Upon passing the Maine bar, Mark embarked on a 47-year career in the practice of law and business.

At one point, he led a delegation to New York City to solicit a large donation from a TV network executive for a Maine nonprofit benefiting people with cerebral palsy. He chartered the plane and returned with the check in hand. He represented many Maine people with low incomes on a pro bono basis. Verdicts and Mark’s advice often changed the lives of people he represented, enabling them to buy homes, become educated, avoid prison, and become productive community members. He relished playing the role of a hick Maine lawyer with unsuspecting opposing attorneys from out of state and then beating them in court. He successfully litigated an appeal before the Maine Law Court (which is what the Maine Supreme Judicial Court is called in its appeal capacity) and won a record verdict for a client in Somerset County.

Mark completed building his home in Canaan, married again, and settled into a life of the practice of law, travel, alpine skiing, golf, sailing, gardening, mowing his fields, and appreciating nature. He volunteered with a local committee to prevent the further spreading of sludge on Canaan farmland decades before PFAS contamination became a prominent issue. He started a company in the late 1990s (Global Protein Products) that uses a nontoxic corn protein film to prevent seed rot in potatoes and maintain fresh produce when shipped. He traveled to farms and food processors all over the U.S. for several years selling this innovative product, which is used to this day.

In 1996, he met Jennifer Wilder Logan, and they married in 1999 with a blessing ceremony on the old Wilder family estate in Sulham, England. He was 54 years old. Jennifer brought two young daughters to the marriage, Eleanor and Jessamine. At his behest, Jennifer and the girls obtained their passports, and they all attended the Wilder family’s 500-year reunion in Pangbourne, England in 1997. When Ellie’s rowing prowess became known, she asked Mark to help her negotiate a rowing scholarship package to Stanford University, which he proudly did. He traveled to the Olympics in Beijing and in London to watch Ellie cross the finish line to win gold twice, but he did not attend her third gold win in Rio. He was pleased with Jessamine’s decision to attend college at the University of Aberdeen in Scotland, and although he was a lifelong Democrat, he was proud of Jessamine’s tenure working for Senator Susan Collins after college. He attended his stepdaughters’ weddings in Boothbay in 2015. Later, when struggling with the severe memory loss of Alzheimer’s disease, Mark remained cheerful and loving and enjoyed trips to Boston and northern Minnesota with Jennifer. He was predominantly cared for at home, until the last 19 months of his life.

Mark courageously climbed a mountain during his life, that of alcoholism. After his first experience of heart trouble in 2008, he vowed to stop drinking and succeeded in doing so with the help of AA and a skilled therapist.

He went on to live for over 16 more years, enjoying many more good times with his family and friends even as Alzheimer’s took hold. He eventually died from cardiovascular disease.

In May of 2024, Mark was one of 30 people in Maine honored at the annual Remember Me ceremony organized by the Maine Health Care Association, which he attended and enjoyed. State Senator Craig Hickman presented Mark’s biography.

Mark is survived by his wife Jennifer of Waterville; his son Ian, his stepdaughters Jessamine Pottle and Eleanor Dinares Cardenal, sons-in-law Jonathan Pottle and Carlos Dinares Cardenal; grandchildren Matilda and Renfrew Pottle and Guillermo, Alejandro, Casilda Dinares Cardenal and Jordan Dykema; cousins Stephanie Kierstead, True Kelley, Mark Kelley, Donald Saccone, Adelaide Whitaker; and brothers and sisters-in-law, Robert and Jennifer Wilder, Edward and Annette Wilder, and Thomas and Anne Wilder. Mark is missed by lifelong friends, among them, Richie Tory of Canaan, John Koons of Sidney, and Gail Sunderland of Andover, Mass.

A memorial service open to the public will be held May 3 at 2 p.m. at St. Mark’s Episcopal Church, 60 Eustis Parkway, Waterville, where Mark was a member.

Arrangements are under the direction and care of Gallant Funeral Home, 10 Elm St., Waterville. An online guestbook may be signed, condolences and memories shared at http://www.gallantfh.com.

Donations in his memory may be made to:

MaineGeneral’s

Alzheimer’s Care Center

154 Dresden Ave.

Gardiner, ME 04345

directed to its Activities Department for residents

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