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Bicentennial
  • Published
    January 30, 2020

    On this date in Maine history: Jan. 30

    Jan. 30, 1649: The deposed King Charles I, whose forces were defeated in the English Civil War (1642-1651), is executed by beheading in London. Charles’ death essentially ends the dream of the family of Sir Ferdinando Gorges, who died two years earlier, of extending its control from the province of Maine to all of New […]

  • Published
    January 29, 2020

    On this date in Maine history: Jan. 29

    Jan. 29, 1890: U.S. House Speaker Thomas Brackett Reed, a Republican from Portland, takes action to end the “disappearing quorum” tactic used by House Democrats to prevent House business from being conducted. He marks members “present” even if they refuse to respond to a roll call. The procedure survives a court challenge and becomes part […]

  • Published
    January 28, 2020

    On this date in Maine history: Jan. 28

    Jan. 28, 1768: Moses Little and Jonathan Bagley, both of Newbury, Massachusetts, receive a grant for land around the falls on the Androscoggin River from the Pejepscot Proprietors. A condition of the grant is that 50 families live there in 50 houses by June 1, 1774. In the fall of 1770, Paul Hildreth becomes the […]

  • Published
    January 25, 2020

    The horrors of child labor is the focus of new Museum L-A exhibit

    'All Work and No Play' exhibit opening Jan. 30 features photos by ground-breaking photographer and sociologist Lewis Hine.

  • Published
    January 25, 2020

    The horrors of child labor is the focus of new Museum L-A exhibit

    'All Work and No Play' exhibit opening Jan. 30 features photos by ground-breaking photographer and sociologist Lewis Hine.

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  • Published
    January 24, 2020

    On this date in Maine history: Jan. 24

  • Published
    January 21, 2020

    On this date in Maine history: Jan. 22

    Jan. 22, 1981: Belgian-born novelist and essayist Marguerite Yourcenar (1903-1987), having lived for more than three decades in relative obscurity on Maine’s Mount Desert Island, attends a ceremony in Paris at which she becomes the first woman inducted into the prestigious Académie Française. Yourcenar is known best as the author of the novels “Memoirs of […]

  • Published
    January 21, 2020

    On this date in Maine history: Jan. 21

    Jan. 21, 1833: In Winthrop, Ezekiel Holmes (1801-1865) publishes the first issue of a long-running newspaper that eventually will become known as the Maine Farmer. Kennebec Journal co-founder Russell Eaton buys the newspaper in 1844 and moves it to Augusta, where it operates for another eight decades. Holmes, dubbed “the father of Maine agriculture,” also […]

  • Published
    January 20, 2020

    On this date in Maine history: Jan. 20

  • Published
    January 19, 2020

    On this date in Maine history: Jan. 19