The going got slower still. We trudged on.
Then my father asked if we should stop at Ketchawink.
As we entered the smoky camp our host said we could split the one beer he had left. They were just about to head into town to buy more, and he offered us a lift.
I pulled out my two beers and handed one to my father.
We fairly chugged our frothy beverages and decided we'd pick up the canoe later before hitching a ride back to the house.
The weather had improved by the next morning, and the slight wind was pushing the water in our direction, but my father said he didn't feel like getting the canoe that day. I wasn't about to insist otherwise.
Though the future looks bright for Monson, there is still some heavy paddling ahead. Hopefully by my next visit the artists will have arrived, the store will have refined its selections and prices, the canoe will be back in its rightful place, and maybe, just maybe, my father will have bought the motor boat and figured out how to start it.
Courthouse News Service has provided daily coverage of the U.S. District Court for Maine for more than a decade and provides regular coverage of state courts in every Maine county.
Cumberland County Facts
County Seat: Portland, also the state’s largest city
Population: 289,000
Named After: William, Duke of Cumberland and son of King George II
Interesting tidbits:
Cumberland County is home to the Portland International Jetport, Maine’s largest airport, the Maine Mall and the Portland Sea Dogs, minor-league affiliate of the beloved Boston Red Sox.
The great fire of 1866 burned 1,800 buildings and left 10,000 Portland residents homeless. The great fire was just one of four devastating fires that inspired the phoenix rising from the ashes on the city seal.
The Greater Portland Metropolitan Area is home half a million people, more than one third of the population of Maine.
Portland was home to Neal Dow, known as the “Napoleon of Temperance” and the “Father of Prohibition.” Dow was instrumental in the passage of the Maine Law, one of the first prohibition laws to hit the books, which might come as a surprise to the drunken revelers that spill from Old Port bars most weekends.
Portland was named after the English Isle of Portland. Portland, Oregon, was in turn named after Portland, Maine.
York County Facts
County Seat: Alfred
Population: 201,000
Named After: York, England, by explorer and member of the Plymouth Council for New England Christopher Levett, who had to abandon plans to found a settlement in present-day Portland
Interesting Tidbits:
Home to many of the oldest colonial settlements in Maine, York County is the oldest county in Maine and one of the oldest in the nation.
York County used to be much bigger. Cumberland and Lincoln counties were carved out of the original York County in 1760, and a northern part of the county was stripped away to become part of the new Oxford County in 1805.
The oldest court records in the United States still in existence are held at the historic York County Courthouse in Alfred. The records go back to 1636 and include a patent conveying land between the Piscataqua and Kennebec rivers from King Charles I of England to Sir Ferdinand Gorges.
Though he helped found what would become the state of Maine and set up its first court system, Gorges, a naval and military commander and governor of the port of Plymouth in England, never set foot in the New World.
York County is the only Maine county that borders both New Hampshire and the Atlantic Ocean.
Penobscot County Facts
County Seat: Bangor
Population: 152,000
Named After: The Penobscot Native American Tribe
Interesting Tidbits:
Penobscot County is home to the flagship campus of the University of Maine in Orono, located approximately 10 miles northeast of Bangor.
Penobscot County was split off from Hancock County in 1816, four years before Maine became a state as part of the Missouri Compromise, which allowed Missouri to enter the union as a slave state and Maine as a free state.
Penobscot is the most populous county in Maine’s northern second congressional district. The county’s support for Donald Trump in the 2016 election was instrumental in Maine splitting its electoral college votes for the first time since 1828.
There are more than 20 communities around the world named Bangor. Fifteen are in the United States and named after Bangor, Maine – which is named after either Bangor in Wales or Northern Ireland.
Bangor has been the port of entry for more than a million members of the military returning from foreign wars.
Kennebec County Facts
County Seat: Augusta, also the state capital
Population: 119,000
Named After: Eastern Abenaki word for large body of still water or still bay. The endangered language is spoken by many Native American tribes, including the Micmac, Passamaquoddy and Penobscot.
Interesting Tidbits:
Augusta is home to Fort Western, a former British colonial outpost built in 1754 during the French and Indian War. The original main building was restored in 1920 and depicts its use as a trading post. This bureau chief fondly remembers school field trips to the fort.
Kennebec County is home to Colby College and Thomas College, both in Waterville, as well as the University of Maine at Augusta.
Kennebec County was established in 1799 from portions of Cumberland and Lincoln counties.
A large amount of paper and textiles were produced in earlier years at mostly now-shuttered mills along the Kennebec River, some of which have been redeveloped as housing.
Augusta is home to approximately 19,000 people, making it the third least-populous state capital behind Montpellier, Vermont, with approximately 7,800 people and Pierre, South Dakota, with a population of approximately 13,000.
Read more coverage of Maine news
Maine Governor Calls for Guillotine After Beating Impeachment Attempt
Maine Splits Electoral College Votes
This Bureau Chief Writes What He Hopes Will Be His Only Overtly Political Column
‘North Pond Hermit’ Doesn’t Owe Police
Maine High Court Nixes Instant-Runoff Voting
[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row][vc_row][vc_column][vc_gallery type="nivo" interval="5" images="368884,368883,368882,368881,368880,368879,368874,368871,368869,368866,368865,368864,368863,368862,368861,214036,214035,214034,214033,214032,214030,214023,214021,214020,214019,214018" img_size="full"][/vc_column][/vc_row]
Subscribe to our columns
Want new op-eds sent directly to your inbox? Subscribe below!