The Pine Tree State

Maine is recognized as one of the most healthful states in the nation with summer temperatures averaging 70ºF and winter temperatures averaging 20ºF. It has 3,500 miles of coastline, is about 320 miles long and 210 miles wide, with a total area of 33,215 square miles or about as big as all of the other five New England States combined. It's comprised of 16 counties with 22 cities, 435 towns, 33 plantations, 424 unorganized townships and 3 Indian reservations. 

Maine abounds in natural assets - 542,629 acres of state and national parks, including the 92-mile Allagash Wilderness Waterway, Acadia National Park (one of the top ten most visited national parks in the United States), and Baxter State Park (location of Mt. Katahdin and the northern end of the Appalachian Trail). It has one county (Aroostook) so big (6,453 square miles) that it actually covers an area greater than the combined size of Connecticut and Rhode Island. Maine has one mountain which is approximately one mile high - Mt. Katahdin (5,271 ft. above sea level) and also claims America's first chartered city: York, 1641. 

Maine produces 99% of all the blueberries in the country making it the single largest producer of blueberries in the United States. Potatoes rank 7th in acreage and 10th in annual production. Maine is nationally famed for its shellfish; over 47 million pounds of lobster were harvested in 1998. The total of all shellfish and fin fish harvested was approximately 247 million pounds with a total value of $277 million in 1998. 

Timeline

1604 - French establishes a colony on the St. Croix River

1607 - English colonists establish Popham Colony on the Kennebec River

1622 - English divides land and give Maine to Fernando Gorges

1677 - Massachusetts buys Maine from Gorges’ heirs

1775 - Colonists capture the British ship Margaretta in Machias Bay

1820 - Maine becomes the 23rd state

1842 - Webster-Ashburton Treaty settles the Maine-Canada border

1851 - Maine outlaws the manufacturing and selling of alcohol

1969 - Maine adopts personal and corporate income taxes

1980 - The U.S. government pays $81.5 million to the Passamaquoddy and Penobscot Indians for lands seized in the late 1700s.

Brief State History

Thousands of Indians lived in Maine when France and England began their exploration of the area. Some of those tribes were the Abenaki, Etchemin, Passamaquoddy and Penobscot Indians.

In 1498, France sent many explorers to Maine.  They claimed the area of Canada and Maine, calling it Acadia. In 1604,       the first French colony was established     on the St. Croix River.

Two wealthy Englishmen, Fernando Gorges and John Popham, sent men to explore the Maine coast for England in 1605.  Two years later, colonists from England established Popham Colony        near the mouth of the Kennebec River. 

In 1622, England gave the land of      Maine and New Hampshire to Fernando Gorges and John Mason. The land was divided between the two men in 1629, and Maine was given to Gorges. Massachusetts bought Maine in 1677, from the heirs of Gorges after his death.

France and England fought for control of the New England area during the French and Indian Wars. With English victory,      The Treaty of Paris ended all French claims to Maine and most of   North America in 1763. 

Restricted trade and rising taxes led to   the Revolutionary War in 1775.  British   troops burned the city of Portland to   punish the colonists for opposing the        new laws.  Maine colonists captured      the British ship Margaretta at Machias,   during the first navel battle of the war.   

After the War of 1812, Maine wanted to separate from Massachusetts.  Maine became the 23rd state on March 15, 1820 with Portland as the first state capital.  Augusta became the capital in 1832.  The Missouri Compromise asked that Maine enter as a state without slaves, and Missouri enter as a slave state.  This was to keep the number of slave and free states equal.

Between 1820 and 1860, Maine’s population grew by 300,000.  Fishing, mining and logging industries grew as well.  Wood from Maine’s pine forests was used to make ships and many other products.  Ice was also cut out of Maine’s rivers and shipped south.

In 1846, Maine became the first state to pass a law making alcoholic drinks illegal.  Manufacturing and selling alcohol remained illegal in Maine until 1856.

Over 72,000 Mainers fought for the United States during the Civil War (1861-1865).  Hannibal Hamlin, a former governor of Maine, served as Vice-President under President Abraham Lincoln during his first term.  After the war, textile and leather industries grew at record rates.  Large farms were started in Aroostook County that specialized in potatoes and dairy products.  The Bath Iron Works industry began building steel ships.

During World War II (1939-1945), factories produced uniforms and boots.  Shipyards built destroyers and cargo ships.  After the war, the state government passed laws helping new industries to come to Maine.  Tax rates were reduced and roads were improved.  In 1969, Maine approved state personal and corporate income taxes.

In 1980, Passamaquoddy and Penobscot Indian tribes sued the state of Maine to recover almost 12 million acres of land taken by white settlers.  These tribes dropped the lawsuit in exchange for $81½ million from the federal government.

Maine Facts
Admission to Statehood:  March 15, 1820 (23th State)

Capital:

Augusta
Size: Area: 33,215 sq. mi. (39th among states)  
Shoreline: 3,500 mi.    
Highest Point:

Mount Katahdin

Population: 

1,274,923 (38th among states)

Gemstone:

Tourmaline

Cat:

Maine Coon Cat     

Animal:

Moose

Fish:

Landlocked Salmon

Bird:

Chickadee (Parus atricapillus)

Insect: 

Honeybee

Flag:

The coat of arms of the State of Maine is placed on a blue field of the same shade of blue in the flag of the United States. Adopted by the Legislature of 1909. Click here to see the Maine flag.

Motto:

Dirigo ("I Direct" or "I Lead")

Tree:

White Pine, adopted by the Legislature of 1945.

Berry:

Blueberry

Floral Emblem:

White pine cone and tassel 

(Pinus strobus, linnaeus).

Song "State of Maine Song"
 

Fun Facts

  • More wooden toothpicks are produced in Maine than in any other state.

  • Eastport is the most eastern city in the United States, receiving the first rays of the morning. 

  • Freeport is home to the L.L. Bean Company. 

  • Maine is the only state in the United States whose name has one syllable. 

  • Almost 40 million pounds, 90%, of the nation’s lobster supply is caught off the coast of Maine.  Maine also produces 99% of all the blueberries in the country. 

  • The first sawmill in the nation was established near York in 1623. 

  • In Wilton there is a cannery that imports and cans only dandelion greens. 

  • Founded in 1866, Togus became the first Veteran’s Hospital in the U.S. 

  • York became the nation’s first incorporated city in 1642.

  • More than nine-tenths of Maine's total land area is forested, the highest percentage of forest coverage of any state.

  • One of Maine's most important industries, cotton and woolen textiles, emerged in the 1840s in towns along the Androscoggin and Kennebec rivers.

  • American poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow spent much of his childhood in Portland.

  • Maine's coastal waters attract a steadily increasing number of saltwater sports fishing enthusiasts.

  • Famous Individuals from Maine: Hannibal Hamlin, U.S. Vice-President; Stephen King, author; Nelson Aldrich Rockefeller, U.S. Vice President; Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, poet; Margaret Chase Smith, first woman to be elected to both houses of Congress. 

Climate

Maine's four seasons offer a healthy, invigorating environment for the traveler.
The state has one of the most comfortable summer climates in the U.S., with
daytime temperatures averaging about 70F (21C) and occasionally hitting the
90s. (32C). Summer nights are usually cool and comfortable. In winter,
temperatures average about 22F (-5.5C), but prolonged cold spells are rare. A
total winter snowfall averages between 60 inches (152cm) and 90 inches (228cm), making the state very popular with skiers and other winter sports enthusiasts.

 

For the latest Maine weather provided by MaineToday.com, click here.