The dramatic influx of southern New Englanders into the District of Maine in the 1770s is widely recognized but poorly understood. This article traces migration routes from Cape Cod to the Penobscot River valley. By 1770 farmlands on the Cape could no longer sustain an agrarian way of life that was important to many inhabitants. Choosing to change locations rather than occupations, families moved eastward and on the lower Penobscot River reproduced, as best they could, the world they left behind. This article explores the reasons for the uprooting, and the cultural, ideological, familial, and architectural links that bound the Cape Cod settlers to the “old country.” Maps were provided by the author
As the Maine back country was settled in the late eighteenth century, evangelical congregations were...
This article is an analysis of the influence of blacksmiths, and saw and grain millers on the develo...
The study of French-Canadian immigration is generally centered around New England ’5larger cities; s...
The article explores the origins of the Madawaska settlement in Northern Maine and provides an oppor...
In the late 1700s and early 1800s tens of thousands of people migrated from Southern New England (Ma...
This article discusses the impact of weather extremes on the people of New England in the eighteenth...
This article discusses the theory that previous discussions of the decline of Maine population in th...
There have been many accounts of individual settlements in Maine and a few histories of the State, b...
The history of cod fishing in the Gulf of Maine, particularly around Mount Desert Island and the Dow...
In 1800 census-takers George Haliburton of Penobscot and Samuel Cony of Hallowell exceeded their off...
Stone walls running incongruously through deep woods; fields and pastures becoming overgrown with br...
The Compiler of the following work made these selections for a History of Penobscot, about two years...
The article discusses the important role played in the surreptitious trade in wheat to the British E...
This dissertation explores how people transform “new” and unfamiliar environments through colonizati...
A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for Honors in History, April, 1940. Au...
As the Maine back country was settled in the late eighteenth century, evangelical congregations were...
This article is an analysis of the influence of blacksmiths, and saw and grain millers on the develo...
The study of French-Canadian immigration is generally centered around New England ’5larger cities; s...
The article explores the origins of the Madawaska settlement in Northern Maine and provides an oppor...
In the late 1700s and early 1800s tens of thousands of people migrated from Southern New England (Ma...
This article discusses the impact of weather extremes on the people of New England in the eighteenth...
This article discusses the theory that previous discussions of the decline of Maine population in th...
There have been many accounts of individual settlements in Maine and a few histories of the State, b...
The history of cod fishing in the Gulf of Maine, particularly around Mount Desert Island and the Dow...
In 1800 census-takers George Haliburton of Penobscot and Samuel Cony of Hallowell exceeded their off...
Stone walls running incongruously through deep woods; fields and pastures becoming overgrown with br...
The Compiler of the following work made these selections for a History of Penobscot, about two years...
The article discusses the important role played in the surreptitious trade in wheat to the British E...
This dissertation explores how people transform “new” and unfamiliar environments through colonizati...
A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for Honors in History, April, 1940. Au...
As the Maine back country was settled in the late eighteenth century, evangelical congregations were...
This article is an analysis of the influence of blacksmiths, and saw and grain millers on the develo...
The study of French-Canadian immigration is generally centered around New England ’5larger cities; s...