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York County, Maine |
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Histories of Cities &
Townships |
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| Acton |
The area
of Acton was first settled in 1776 by Benpunm Kitnens,
Clement Steel, and John York. Acton was once part of
Shapleigh, but separated in 1830. |
| Alfred |
Abenaki
Native Americans called the area "Massabesic," meaning
"large pond," or "the place of much water." It was in
the western portion of a large tract of land purchased
from Indian chiefs Fluellin, Hombinowitt and Meeksombe
(also known as "Captain Sunday"), between 1661 and 1664
by Major William Phillips, an owner of mills in Saco
(which then included Biddeford). According to historian
Jim Brunelle, editor of the Maine Almanac, the price was
"two large blankets, two gallons of rum, two pounds of
powder, four pounds of musket balls, 20 strings of beads
and several other articles."
Simeon Coffin of Newbury, Massachusetts arrived in 1764
and lived for a time in a wigwam, although the first
permanent settlement took place in 1770. It was known as
the north parish of Sanford, until the community was set
off in 1794. Sawmills and gristmills operated by water
power at the streams. A log jail was built in 1803, with
a brick jail in 1869. The courthouse was built in 1806,
the year Alfred became the shiretown of York County. It
was incorporated as a town in 1808, named in honor of
King Alfred the Great. Land would be set off to Sanford
in 1828, and annexed from Waterboro in 1847. The
Rochester & Portland Railroad entered from Waterboro
in 1864, connecting to Rochester, New Hampshire in 1871.
More than 30 trains passed through Alfred daily between
1910 and 1920, but use would decline in the age of
automobiles. Passenger service ceased in 1949, with the
final train departing in 1961. In 1947, a severe drought
in Maine tindered wildfires in the town, burning 4,500
acres of woodland and 2
residences. Alfred Shaker
Village in c. 1915A Shaker religious community once
thrived in Alfred. In 1783, members of the Shaker Church
settled on the hill near Massabesic (now Shaker) Pond.
Others dubbed them the "Merry Dancers," because of their
ecstatic worship. "They were," as historian George J.
Varney writes, "at this time fanatical in religion and
intemperate in their
indulgences." Organized in
1793, Alfred Shaker Village practiced the religion's
celebate communal living, with equality among the sexes
and races. They built plain architecture and furniture,
honest expressions of their faith. At the movement's
height in the 1840s, Shakers operated nineteen utopian
communities scattered from Maine to Kentucky, and as far
west as Indiana. But among all the "societies," Alfred
Shaker Village in particular was noted for
"spiritualistic healing of the
sick." Shaker dance and
worshipOnly Sabbathday Lake Shaker Village in New
Gloucester survives under the control of the last few
Shakers. Some former communities operate today as
museums because, like Alfred Shaker Village, they closed
when the congregation dwindled. In 1931, the Alfred
property was sold to the Brothers of Christian
Instruction, who allow the Friends of Alfred Shaker
Village to operate a museum in one of the site's
original Shaker buildings. |
| Arundel |
The area
now known as Arundel, while sometimes referred to by
that name, was a part of Kennebunkport until 1915, at
which point it was named North Kennebunkport. In 1957,
following the publication of the Chronicles of Arundel
by Kenneth Roberts, the town was renamed to Arundel by
the state legislature. |
| Berwick |
Originally
part of Kittery, Berwick was settled in about 1631. It
was variously called the "Parish of Unity," "Kittery
Commons" or "Kittery North Parish." "Unity" (Berwick)
was populated with Scots prisoners of war captured at
the Battle of Dunbar in 1650, then force-marched to
Durham Cathedral in Durham, England. Tried for treason
for supporting Charles I rather than Oliver Cromwell,
the Lord Protector, they were shipped in a vessel called
"Unity" to Massachusetts, where they were sold into
slavery to work the Great Works sawmill until able to
pay for their freedom. George Gray, of Lanark, Scotland,
was among 150 prisoners who endured this ordeal, live to
fight and protect his family and his lands during the
King Phillips war and died in "Unity" (Berwick) in 1693.
His descendants would populate other areas of Maine,
notably Deer Isle and
Stonington. The community
was attacked by Indians in 1675 at the advent of King
Philip's War, and then through the French and Indian
Wars. In raids of 1690-1691, it was burned and
abandoned. It would be resettled in 1703 and called
"Newichawannock," its Abenaki name. In 1713, it
incorporated as "Berwick," the ninth oldest town in
Maine, named after Berwick-upon-Tweed, England. The
first schoolhouse in the state was built here in 1719.
Berwick was once considerably larger in size, but South
Berwick was set off in 1814, followed by North Berwick
in 1831. Lumbering was a principal early industry. In
the 19th century, Berwick enjoyed a symbiotic economic
relationship with Somersworth, New Hampshire, the mill
town to which it is connected by bridge across the
Salmon Falls River. |
| Biddeford |
Biddeford
is the site of the earliest recorded permanent
settlement in Maine. In the winter of 1616-1617, Richard
Vines, a physician, resided at "Winter Harbor," as he
called Biddeford Pool. In 1630, the Plymouth Company
granted the land to the south of "River Swanekaclocke,"
as the Saco River was then known, to Vines and John
Oldham. In 1653, the town, which then included both
sides of the river, was incorporated by the General
Court of Massachusetts as "Saco." That same year, Roger
Spencer was granted the right to build the first
sawmill. Lumber and fish became the community's chief
exports. In 1659, Major William Phillips of Boston
became a proprietor, and constructed a garrison and mill
at the falls. During King
Philip's War in 1675, the town was attacked by Indians.
Settlers withdrew to "Winter Harbor" for safety, and
their homes and mills upriver at the falls were burned.
In 1693, a stone fort was built a short distance below
the falls, but it was captured by the Indians in 1703,
when 11 colonists were killed and 24 taken captive to
Canada. In 1708, Fort Mary was built near the entrance
to Biddeford Pool. The town was reorganized in 1718 as
"Biddeford," after Bideford, a town in Devon, England
from which some settlers had emigrated. After the Fall
of Quebec in 1759, hostilities with the Indians ceased.
In 1762, the land northeast of the river was set off as
"Pepperellborough," which in 1805 would be renamed
Saco. Mills on Saco River in
c. 1910The first bridge across the Saco River was built
in 1767. The river divides into two falls that drop 40
feet, providing water power for mills. Factories were
established to make boots and shoes. Granite quarries
and brickyards operated, in addition to lumber and grain
mills. Major textile manufacturing facilities were
constructed along the riverbanks, including the Laconia
Company in 1845, and the Pepperell Company in 1850.
Biddeford was incorporated as a city in
1855. The mills attracted
waves of immigrants, most notably French-Canadian
workers from the province of Quebec. At one time the
textile mills employed as many as 12,000 people, but as
happened elsewhere in New England, the industry entered
a long period of decline. Today, only one textile
company, WestPoint Home, remains in Biddeford. The last
log drive down the Saco River was in 1943, with the last
log sawn in 1948. The prosperous mill town era, however,
left behind some fine architecture, in particular City
Hall and churches.
Biddeford's name is engraved near the top level of the
The Pilgrim Monument, in Provincetown, Massachusetts,
along with the names of some of the oldest cities and
towns in New England.
Biddeford's current mayor is Wallace H. Nutting, a
retired four-star General. He is serving his second
term, and is one of the few Republicans elected to
office in the city in recent history. |
| Buxton |
Buxton is
composed of five villages: Salmon Falls, Groveville, Bar
Mills, West Buxton, and Buxton Center. The town was
named by its first minister, Reverend Paul Coffin for
his former town of Buxton, England. Before that it had
been known as Narragansett. The site of the town was
once used as a garrison during the war against the
Narragansett Indians. An attempt to settle the area was
not made until 1750 when several men and their families
commenced a permanent settlement in Salmon Falls. Its
first school house was established by Reverend Silas
Moody in 1761. |
| Cape
Neddick |
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|
Cape Porpoise
1703 Casualty List |
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| Cornish |
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| Dayton |
The area
was once inhabited by the Sokokis (or Saco) Indians, who
hunted and fished along the Saco River. The old "Sokokis
Trail" is now Route 5, which passes through Dayton. In
1664, Major William Phillips purchased from the sagamore
the land which would become "Little Falls Plantation" --
today the towns of Hollis, Dayton and part of Limington.
In 1728, a stockaded fort which contained a trading post
was built a half mile below Union Falls. Called the
"Saco Truck House" or "Saco Block House," the garrison
was maintained throughout the French and Indian War
until the fall of Quebec in
1759. Settlers arrived in
1735, and lumbering became a principal industry. Logs
were rolled down the banks of the Saco River and floated
to sawmills at Saco. Nathaniel Goodwin established the
first local mill in 1782 at Goodwin's Mill, where falls
in Swan Brook drop 33 feet. A sawmill and gristmill were
erected at Union Falls (then called "Hopkinson's Mill")
in 1806. Tanneries were built, and land was cleared for
farms. In 1798, "Little Falls Plantation" was
incorporated as "Phillipsburg," in honor of Major
William Phillips -- until 1810. But considered difficult
to pronounce and write, the name was changed to
"Hollis." Then, in 1854, the southern part of Hollis
petitioned the state legislature to become a separate
town. Permission was granted, and the community was
named "Dayton" after Thomas Day, who submitted the
petition. In 1860, Dayton
voted to build at Union Falls a covered bridge, 112 feet
long and 18 feet wide, connecting to Buxton. The span
would be blown up in 1921 by the Clark Power Company, an
event filmed as part of a melodrama by the Pine Tree
Moving Picture Corporation of Portland. In October of
1947, after a dry summer, fire destroyed two-thirds of
Dayton, including 27 homes, 4 barns and the town hall.
In 1951, the Central Maine Power Company built a
hydroelectric dam between Salmon Falls and Union Falls,
submerging the scenic gorge. Once a community of dairy
farms, Dayton is now primarily residential. |
| Eliot |
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| Hollis |
The town
of Hollis was originally called Little Falls Plantation
encompassing the towns of Hollis, Dayton and part of
Limington. It was bought by Major William Phillips from
the town of Hobinowil and Mogg Hegon of the local
Sagamore Indian tribe in 1664. In 1728 a trading post by
an order from the General Court of Massachusetts was to
be constructed on the site to protect trade with the
Indians.It was made crudely of logs and equipped with a
cannon. Ten men and a sergeant garrisoned it. John and
Andrew Gordon tried to settle the land in 1754, but were
driven away by the Indians. On March 27, 1781, the first
recorded plantation meeting took place and Joseph
Chadbourne was elected Moderator. By 1790 the population
had grown to 607. The first vote for state office came
in 1791 and Littlefalls gave John Hancock 27 votes. In
1798 Littlefalls was incorporated into Phillipsburg,
named in honor of Major Phillips. The first town meeting
took place on September 27, 1798, at the home of Stephen
Hopkinson. The moderator was Joseph Chadbourne. In 1810
a committee was put together to rename the town, headed
by Colonel Isaac Lane and Captain Eben Cleaves. It was
finally decided upon the name Hollis. The reasoning
behind the name is not known; it is thought to have been
inspired by Hollis, New Hampshire, or possibly by the
Duke of Newcastle, whose family name was
Holles. |
| Kennebunk |
First
settled about 1620, the town developed as a trading and,
later, shipbuilding and shipping center with light
manufacturing. It was part of the town of Wells until
1820, when it incorporated as a separate town.
"Kennebunk, the only village in the world so named," was
featured on a large locally famous sign attached to the
Kesslen Shoe Mill on Route One. To the Abenaki Indians,
Kennebunk meant "the long cut bank," presumably the long
bank behind Kennebunk Beach. Kennebunk's coastline is
divided into three major sections. Mother's Beach,
Middle Beach or Rocky Beach, and Gooches Beach or Long
Beach. Separate from Kennebunk Beach is secluded
Parson's Beach, a quiet alternative to the summer
crowds. The town is a
popular summer tourist destination. Kennebunk contains
fine examples of early architecture, the most noted of
which is the "Wedding Cake House," a Federal-style
dwelling extensively decorated with scroll saw Gothic
trim. This was added to the house for his wife of many
years by George Washington Bourne late in his life, and
not as legend has it by a ship captain for a young bride
lost at sea. Local economy is tourism based. The
headquarters for the natural health-care product
manufacturer Tom's of Maine is located in Kennebunk.
Many residents commute to Portland, to New Hampshire,
and Massachusetts. The Lafayette Elm was a tree which
was planted to commemorate General Lafayette's 1825
visit to Kennebunk. The
Lafayette ElmThe Lafayette Elm became famous for its
age, size, and survival of the Dutch elm disease that
destroyed the hundreds of the other elms that once lined
Kennebunk's streets. The elm is featured on the town
seal. The restored Kesslen Shoe Mill has been renamed
the Lafayette Center. Kennebunk is also the home to two
of the states oldest banks. Kennebunk Savings Bank 1871
(Behind Saco & Biddeford Savings Inst. 1827 and
Bangor Savings Bank 1852) The Oldest Commercial Bank is
Ocean Bank 1854. |
| Kennebunkport |
Kennebunk
is known as the location of the summer home of former
U.S. president George H. W. Bush. It is the location of
Walker's Point, the summer residence of former U.S.
President George H. W. Bush, the father of President
George W. Bush. First built by Bush's grandfather George
Herbert Walker, it has been a family home ever since,
and has been owned by Bush since shortly after he became
Vice President in the 1980s. During his presidency, Bush
often invited world leaders, from Margaret Thatcher to
Mikhail Gorbachev, to Kennebunkport. In 2007, his son
George W. Bush invited Vladimir Putin (in June) and
Nicolas Sarkozy (on August 11). |
| Kittery
Point |
First
settled as early as 1623, the southern part of Kittery
was once called Champernowne's after Sir Francis
Champernowne, a prominent pioneer and landowner.
Nicholas Shapleigh built the first house in the area,
and Edward Godfrey established a trading post in 1632.
Early professions included fishermen, hunters and
trappers. Others harvested the region's abundant timber,
which was shipped to England or the West Indies. Kittery
was incorporated in 1652 when Maine became part of
Massachusetts Bay Colony.
The Pepperrells were a distinguished Kittery Point
family which established fisheries to supply the London
market. Its most famous scion was Sir William
Pepperrell. He became the first baronet in New England
for commanding a militia which defeated the French in
1745 at the Battle of Louisburg. His gambrel mansion of
1733 remains a landmark at Pepperrell Cove on the
Piscataqua River. After his death, his widow in 1760
built The Lady Pepperrell House, a noted Georgian
building formerly owned by Historic New
England. John Bray House in
1910, Maine's oldest surviving houseThe John Bray House,
built by a shipwright in 1662, is considered the oldest
surviving house in Maine. Recently threatened with
redevelopment, the building is instead being restored.
On land once owned by Sir William Pepperrell is a
Portsmouth Harbor defense called Fort McClary, built
opposite Fort William and Mary in New Castle, New
Hampshire. It is today Fort McClary State Historic Site
and features a blockhouse dating from 1844. In 1969, it
was listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Fort Foster, a later coastal defense, was built by the
federal government on 92 acres at Gerrish Island. Now
owned by the town of Kittery, Fort Foster Park provides
superb views of Portsmouth Harbor, Whaleback Lighthouse
and the Isles of Shoals, part of which belongs to
Kittery. At Seapoint Beach in the mid-20th century, the
Newcomen Society built a cluster of Tudor cottages as
its former summer retreat. |
| Kittery |
Settled
about 1623, Kittery was incorporated in 1647, and today
bills itself as "the oldest incorporated town in Maine."
It was named after the birthplace of a founder,
Alexander Shapleigh, from the manor of Kittery Court at
Kingswear in Devon, England. Shapleigh arrived in 1635
aboard the ship Benediction, which he co-owned with
another prominent settler, Captain Francis Champernowne.
Together with the Pepperrell family, they established
fisheries offshore at the Isles of Shoals, where fish
were caught, salted and exported back to Europe. Other
pioneers were hunters, trappers and workers of the
region's abundant timber. The settlement at the mouth of
the Piscataqua River was protected by Fort
McClary. Kittery originally
extended from the Atlantic Ocean inland up the Salmon
Falls River, including the present-day towns of Eliot,
South Berwick, Berwick and North Berwick. Located
opposite Portsmouth, New Hampshire, the town developed
into a center for trade and shipbuilding. After the
death of Sir Ferdinando Gorges, Lord Proprietor of
Maine, the province in 1652 became part of the
Massachusetts Bay Colony. In 1663, John Josselyn would
write: "Towns there are, are not many in this province.
Kittery, situated not far from Passacataway
(Portsmouth), is the most populous." During the
Revolution, the first vessels of the U.S. Navy were
constructed on Badger's Island, including the 1777
Ranger commanded by John Paul Jones. The Portsmouth
Naval Shipyard, the nation's first federal navy yard,
was established in 1800 on Fernald's Island (also called
Dennett's Island). Still in operation, it is connected
to the mainland by two bridges. The facility rebuilt the
Constitution, and built the Civil War sloop-of-war
Kearsarge. Seavey's Island was annexed and became the
site of the now defunct Portsmouth Naval
Prison. Kittery has some
fine early architecture, including the Sir William
Pepperrell House, built in 1733, and the Lady Pepperrell
House, built in 1760. The John Bray House, built in
1662, is believed to be the oldest surviving house in
Maine. Located at the John Paul Jones State Historic
Site on U.S. Route 1 is the Maine Sailors' and Soldiers'
Memorial by Bashka Paeff. Further northeast up the road,
the town has developed factory outlet shopping, very
popular with tourists. Kittery Point is home to Seapoint
Beach and Fort Foster Park, which was originally a
harbor defense. In 1996, the movie Thinner, based on the
1984 Richard Bachman novel Thinner, was filmed in
Kittery. |
| Lake
Arrowhead |
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| Lebanon |
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| Limerick |
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| Limington |
In 1668,
Francis Small traded goods with the Newichewannock tribe
of this area. Their Chief Wesumbe, also known as Captain
Sandy, was friendly with Small and warned him of a plot
against his life. A group of renegade tribesmen planned
on murdering Small instead of paying him with the furs
that were owed to him. Small escaped after watching his
house in what is now Cornish burn to the ground. The
Chief made up the loss by selling Small all the lands
bounded by the Great and Little Ossipee Rivers, the Saco
River, and the New Hampshire border. Known now as the
five Ossipee towns, the tract included all of Limington,
Limerick, Cornish (formerly named Francisborough),
Newfield, and Parsonsfield. This is the first mention of
Limington that is recorded in the York Maine County Land
Registry, and is on the wall of the registry, in Alfred,
Maine. The town of Limington
comprises the eastern portion of the lands between the
Saco and Ossipee Rivers watersheds, located in the very
northeastern part of York County, Maine. is slightly
over nine miles (14 km) long, with an average width of
five miles. It is bounded on the north by , on the east
by Standish, on the south by Hollis and Waterboro, and
on the west by Limerick Cornish. The Saco River forms
the boundary on the north and east sides while the
Little Ossipee it from Waterboro on the
south. The highest point in
Limington, Sawyer Mountain, rises 1,100 feet
(340 m) above sea
level. In 1884 the US. Geological Survey placed a stone
tower fifteen feet high upon its most prominent point.
Later the tower was struck by lightning and now only
scattered stones remain. There are seven ponds which
cover 1, acres of the town. Four of these, Boyd, Dole,
Foss and Sand Ponds, are in South Limington. remaining
three, Horn, Ward and Webster Ponds are in North
Limington. The town was a
part of Captain Francis Small’s purchase from Captain
Sunday, a chief of the region in 1668. In its earlier
settlement it was known as Little Ossipee Plantation,
which name it continued to bear until its incorporation
under its present name in 1792. In 1798 a tract of about
2,000 acres
(8 km²) was
annexed from Little Falls Plantation (Hollis); and in
1870, about 1,500 acres (6 km²) of land with the
inhabitants thereon, constituting about one twelfth the
valuation, was set off from Limington and annexed to
Limerick. The first settler was Deacon Amos Chase, who
removed here and commenced a mill in 1773, at the
location known as Chase's Mills, at the mouth of the
Little Ossipee River. Ezra Davis and Jonathan Boothby
followed him in 1774, and John MeArthur and Joshua Small
in 1775. Eminent among later residents have been Abner
Chase, Wingate Frost, Simeon Strout, Isaac Mitchell and
Arthur McArthur. The
first Congregational church was organized in 1789. The
first church was built in 1793, on the site of the
present house; it was enlarged and rebuilt in 1835. The
present first Free Baptist church was built in 1852. The
number of men furnished for the army in the war of the
Rebellion was 153. The sum paid out for war expenses was
$51,150, for a portion of which, however, the town was
reimbursed by the State. The
Limington Academy was incorporated in 1848. Its chief
founders were Arthur and James McArthur, Rev. J H.
Garmon, Dr. Samuel M. Bradbury, Gideon L. Moody, and
Isaac L. Mitchell. Among its valued teachers have been
Rev. Jonathan Atkinson, Rev. David Boyd, Hon. Samuel
Tappan, Isaac Mitchell, Arthur McArthur, Esq., James
Frost, Shadrach Boothby, Rev. Westcott Bullock, Thomas
Gilpatrick, and Richard Meserve, M.D., The town has
sixteen public schoolhouses, valued at $2,000. The
valuation of estates in 1870 was $567,808. In 1880 it
was $408,573. The population in 1870 was 1630; in 1880
it was 1431.
Other:
What is now Limington was originally only a tract of
land called Little Ossipee, after Ossapee, its
original Native American name. In 1773, Deacon Amos
Chase began the earliest settlement on the land. Dea.
Chase built a home on the eastern side of the plantation
where he found a waterfall, upon which he built the
town's first mill. Limington
was incorporated as a town in 1792. As the surface of
the land was rocky and broken, nearly 2,000 acres (8
km²) of land were annexed from the nearby plantation of
Little Falls. |
| Lyman |
The Town
of Lyman was incorporated under the name of Coxhall on
April 24, 1780. In 1803, on February 25, the name of the
town was changed to Lyman, in honor of Theodore Lyman,
Esquire. While the original
settlers are not known for certain, early records and
deeds mention the following: William and Jacob
Waterhouse (of Kennebunk, Maine), Love Roberts,
Alexander Grant, Thomas Lord, Jacob Rhoades, Benjamin
and Mark Goodwin (brothers who built one of the first
mills at Goodwins Mills, the only village in the town),
John Low (who served as Moderator and Town Treasurer),
John Burbank, Joseph Witten, James and William Brock,
Mark Ricker, Robert Cousens, Valentine Hill, and Gershom
Downs. |
| Newfield |
|
| North
Berwick |
North
Berwick was first settled about 1630 by fur traders. It
was originally part of Berwick until it separated and
incorporated in 1831. In the 1800s it had several mills,
which manufactured textiles, farm implements, stove
polish, shingles and clapboards, as well as toboggans
and sleds. The North Berwick Woolen Mill on the bank of
the Great Works River is an historic landmark, and was
used as a setting in the 1995 movie Jumanji. Its major
employers are a Pratt & Whitney aircraft engine
parts factory and overhaul facility, and Hussey Seating,
a manufacturer of seats for stadiums and other spectator
facilities. |
| Ogunquit |
Ogunquit,
which meant "coastal lagoon" to native Abenaki Indians,
was first a village within Wells, which was settled in
1641. The first sawmill here was established in 1686,
and shipbuilding developed along the tidal Ogunquit
River. Besides constructing schooners and brigs, local
shipwrights built the famous "Ogunquit
dory." At what was then
called Fish Cove, near the unnavigable Josias River,
fishing was a major livelihood. But the cove was
unprotected by a headland or breakwater from Atlantic
storms, so fishermen had to protect their boats by
hauling them ashore each night. Resolving to create a
safe anchorage, they formed the Fish Cove Harbor
Association, and dug a channel across land they
purchased to connect Fish Cove with the Josias River.
When the trench was complete, in roared the ocean, its
erosion helping to further widen the passage. The
resulting tidewater basin would be called Perkins Cove,
across which spans a manually-operated draw footbridge,
possibly one of the most photographed objects in
Maine. Ogunquit Beach in c.
1910With a 3 and a half mile beach of pale sand and
dunes forming a barrier peninsula, connected to the
mainland in 1888 by bridge across the Ogunquit River,
the weatherbeaten old village was discovered by artists.
It became a popular art colony and tourist area.
Particularly after 1898, when the Ogunquit Art Colony
was established, it was not unusual to see artists and
fishermen plying their respective trades around Perkins
Cove. To accommodate summer crowds, several grand
seaside hotels and inns were
built. Today, Ogunquit
remains a vibrant seasonal resort town, having separated
from Wells in 1980. Visitors often arrive from great
distances and in great numbers, some from Canada. Over
the years, Ogunquit has also become a destination for
gay and lesbian tourists, and features numerous
gay-owned and -operated hotels, restaurants and
bars. |
| Old
Orchard Beach |
The Old
Orchard Beach area began appearing in historical records
around the time of 1653. The area was first officially
settled in 1657 by Thomas Rogers, who dubbed it "The
Garden By The Sea". |
| Parsonsfield |
|
|
Saco
1703 Casualty List - Saco - York
Co.
clergy civil
military |
Granted in
1630 by the Plymouth Company to Thomas Lewis and Richard
Bonython, the town extended 4 miles along the sea, and 8
inland. Settled in 1631 as part of "Winter Harbor" {as
Biddeford Pool was first known), it included Biddeford.
It would be reorganized in 1653 by the General Court of
Massachusetts as "Saco," like the Sokokis (or Saco)
Indians who once hunted and fished along the Saco River.
The community would be incorporated in 1718 as
"Biddeford," the fourth town in Maine. The northeastern
bank separated in 1762 with the name "Pepperellborough,"
in honor of Sir William Pepperrell, a late proprietor.
It was renamed "Saco" in 1805, and incorporated as a
city in 1867. The settlement
would be attacked by Indians in 1675 during King
Philip's War. Settlers moved to the mouth of the river,
and the houses and mills they left behind were burned.
In 1689, it was again attacked, with some residents
taken captive. Hostilities intensified from 1702 until
1709, then again in 1723, when the town contained 14
garrisons. Nevertheless, the area became a center for
lumbering, with logs floated down the river from "Little
Falls Plantation" (now Dayton, Lyman, Hollis and part of
Limington), to be cut by sawmills at Saco Falls. In
1827, the community produced 21,000,000 feet of sawn
lumber. Sarah Fairfield
Hamilton Memorial in c. 1912On Factory Island, formerly
called Indian Island, the Saco Iron Works began
operation in 1811. A cotton mill was established in
1826, and a canal was dug through rock to provide water
power. Factory Island developed in the 19th century into
major textile manufacturing center, with expansive brick
mills dominating the Saco and Biddeford waterfronts.
That industry would fade in the 20th century,
particularly with the closure of the York Manufacturing
Company in 1958. The prosperous mill town era, however,
left behind much fine architecture. Saco has a
considerable collection of buildings in the Georgian,
Federal, Greek Revival and Victorian
styles. Saco is home to
Funtown Splashtown USA (an amusement park), and
Aquaboggan Water Park, as well as General Dynamics
Armament Systems (also known by its former name, Saco
Defense), a subsidiary of the defense contractor General
Dynamics; it builds primarily small arms weapons for the
U.S. military, such as the M60 machine gun. Saco sees
much tourism during summer months, due to its amusement
parks, Ferry Beach State Park and proximity to Old
Orchard Beach. |
| Sanford |
Sanford is
in the western portion of a tract of land purchased in
1661 from Abenaki Chief Fluellin by Major William
Phillips, an owner of mills in Saco. In 1696, Mrs.
Phillips willed it to her former husband's son, Peleg
Sanford, from whom the name is derived, although it was
first called "Phillipstown." Sanford would be
incorporated in 1768. Alfred was once the "North Parish"
of Sanford. The Mighty
Mousam River provided water power for mills. Following
the Civil War, Sanford developed into a textile
manufacturing center, connected to markets by the
Portland & Rochester Railroad. Factories were built
at both Springvale and Sanford villages. Products
included cotton and woolen goods, carpets, shoes and
lumber. In 1867,
British-born Thomas Goodall arrived, after selling a
mill in 1865 at Troy, New Hampshire which made blankets
contoured to fit horses. He established Goodall Mills,
manufacturing saddle blankets, carriage robes and mohair
plush for upholstering railroad seats. It would also
make "Palm Beach fabric," for summer suits and
draperies. The company's textiles were known for
brilliant and fast colors, and found buyers worldwide.
From 1880 to 1910, the mill town's population would
swell from 2,700 to over 9,000. In 1914, the Goodall
family built Goodall Park, a 784 seat roofed stadium,
now a treasured historic site. A statue of Thomas
Goodall was erected in Central Park, and has recently
been restored. Sanford Mills
in c. 1910In 1954, Burlington Mills, then the largest
textile firm, bought Sanford Mills. The latter closed,
leaving 3,500 unemployed. Local business owners began
traveling the northeast, convincing new employers to
move to the area. Life Magazine would call Sanford "the
town that refused to die." It now has diversified
industries, including the manufacture of aircraft
parts. In the 1960s, the
Federal Government offered money for urban renewal, to
rehabilitate aging or blighted districts. More than
thirty Sanford structures were razed. In Springvale,
three of four corners were leveled. Fortunately, fine
architectural examples from the flush mill era
survived. In 2003, a
proposal to build a $650 million casino in South Sanford
was rejected by Maine voters. The 362-acre development,
ostensibly owned by the Penobscot and Passamaquoddy
nations, would have encompassed 4,000 slot machines, 180
gaming tables, a hotel, a 60,000 square foot convention
center and an 18 hole golf course. Proponents argued
that it would add 4,700 permanent jobs and 25% of
revenue would be directed to the state. Detractors
predicted higher crime, traffic and an erosion of
Maine's quality of life. |
| Shapleigh |
Shapleigh
was incorporated as a town in 1785. It was named after a
man named Major Nicolas Shapleigh who died in 1682 by
his heirs. The
neighboring town of Acton was part of Shapleigh until
1830 when it separated. |
| South
Berwick |
Originally
a part of Kittery known as "Kittery Commons" or "Kittery
North Parish," what is now South Berwick was settled
about 1631 in the vicinity of Quampheagen Falls, at the
head of navigation on the Salmon Falls River. Here,
Ambrose Gibbens (or Gibbons) established a trading post.
The community was also be called the Parish of Unity due
to the peaceful disposition of its inhabitants. Its
original Pennacook Indian name was
Newichawannock. Berwick,
which then included South Berwick, separated from
Kittery and was incorporated in 1713. South Berwick, in
turn, separated from Berwick and was incorporated in
1814. In 1652, Richard
Leader established a sawmill on the Great Works River, a
tributary of the Salmon Falls River that takes its name
from his operation. During the 19th century various
mills were erected to utilize the water power of the
Salmon Falls and Great Works rivers. South Berwick
manufactured cotton and woolen textiles, plows and
cultivators, shoes, as well as sawn and planed
lumber. The town is home to
Berwick Academy, founded in 1791, a private
co-educational day school. |
| South
Eliot |
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| South
Sanford |
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| Springvale |
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| Waterboro |
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|
Wells
1703 Casualty List |
In 1622,
the Plymouth Company in England awarded to Sir
Ferdinando Gorges, Lord Proprietor of Maine, territory
which included the "Plantation of Wells." His young
cousin, Thomas Gorges, acting as deputy and agent, in
1641 granted settlers from Exeter, New Hampshire the
right to populate the land from northeast of the
Ogunquit River to southwest of the Kennebunk
River. With the death of the
elder Gorges, the Massachusetts Bay Company laid claim
to all of Maine. In 1653 Wells was incorporated, the
third town in Maine to do so, and named for Wells,
England. The Abenaki Indians had called it "Webhannet,"
which means "at the clear stream," a reference to the
Webhannet River. After 1675, inhabitants were
beleaguered through the French and Indian Wars, with
devastating attacks in 1692 and 1703. Native American
hostility, encouraged by the French, would end with the
Battle of Louisburg. Wells
originally included what is now Kennebunk. Kennebunk
seceded from Wells in 1820, the same year that Maine
became a state. Wells also included Ogunquit, which by
act of legislature in 1913 became a village within
Wells, and then in 1980 became a separate
town. Wells celebrated its
350th anniversary in 2003. |
| West
Kennebunk |
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| York
Harbor |
|
| York |
York is actually the fourth name that the
town has known. The earliest records refer to the
general area as Agamenticus, after the original
inhabitants. The first English settlers, having
come from the region of Bristol, England, lent that name
to the town until it became a chartered city under Sir
Ferdinando Gorges, who renamed it Gorgeana in
1642. The name York was appointed after the fall
of the Loyalists under Cromwell in 1652, commemorating
the town (York, England) in which Cromwell defeated the
King's forces. The center of
York Village was along Lindsay Road as York River was
the most important mode of transportation. After
the Abenaki Candlemas Day Raid of 1692, the town
reorganized itself on higher ground that evolved into
the present day center of religious, civic and
governmental functions. As
tourism developed in the late nineteenth century, more
and more of the town's tax dollars came from the
businesses and homes of the wealthy summer residents.
Although they sought the colonial quaintness of the
town, they also wanted the amenities of the cities:
public water, streetlights, sidewalks, paved roads,
electricity and libraries. The locals, however, had the
advantage of the vote, and farmers would not vote for
improvements at York Harbor or York
Beach. In 1901 York
Harbor and York Beach presented bills to the Maine
legislature requesting the creation of York Harbor
Village Corporation and York Beach Corporation. The
incorporation process allowed these sub-towns a certain
degree of self-government and a "refund" of 65 percent
of the taxes they paid to York, permitting such
independent services as fire, police, and highway
departments. York
Harbor Village Corporation developed the first zoning
ordinances in the state of Maine and was among the first
in the nation. Zoning held the rapid growth in check as
well as defined the types of businesses that were
considered appropriate. York Harbor Village Corporation
did not give up its autonomy until
1975. York Beach
Village Corporation was premier in bringing the
amenities of the city to York. The village boasted the
first sidewalks, streetlight, fire department, and
public sewage and water. York Beach Village Corporation
folded in 1977. Cape
Neddick, the residential suburb of York, was the last
section of York to be developed due to its geographic
remoteness from the town center. Lumbering operations
and its associated mills along Cape Neddick Josias
Rivers furnished employment. The name Cape Neddick is
one native place name that has survived and remained a
prominent landmark since contact, known first as a
navigational marker and today as the site of an
oft-photographed lighthouse.The English added the word
"Cape", but Neddick is believed to be an Algonkian word
meaning "solitary" and refers to the nubble of land
isolated from the
peninsula. | |
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