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