Posted inLewiston-Auburn

James Myall addresses the Lewiston Rum War

LEWISTON — It’s often said that Maine leads the way in many cultural and political matters, and the subject of sale and consumption of liquor from the mid-1850s to about 1930 bears out the truth of that observation. An audience of nearly three dozen people heard an entertaining address on the subject Tuesday afternoon by […]

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Posted inLewiston-Auburn, News

Dirigo students share Boston Tea Party knowledge

PERU — Fourth-grade students in Kristi Holmquist’s class at Dirigo Elementary School presented a Boston Tea Party readers’ theater to family and friends Thursday. Some students dressed as colonists or representatives of the British government to tell the story of colonists throwing chests of British tea into Boston Harbor on Dec. 16, 1773. Besides their performance […]

Posted inEncore, sj-web

Looking Back on January 8

100 years ago, 1918Prior to the inaugural the old Lewiston city council transacted a little routine business — and died. Then, its members, as private citizens, remained to witness the incoming of their successors. This meeting of the old council, set for nine o’clock, opened somewhere about eleven. The members of both bodies dribbled in […]

Posted inEncore, sj-web

Looking Back on November 30

100 years ago, 1917A valuable pair of horses and lumber cart owned by Robert Stewart mysteriously disappeared from Main street, Lewiston, yesterday afternoon at 4:46. The team was valued at about $625. Up to a late hour last night Mr. Stewart had been unable to get any trace of the team. Mr. Stewart left his […]

Posted inbPlus, sj-web

The horror in Halifax

Wrecked homes on Campbell Road in Halifax, Nova Scotia, in December 1917. (Nova Scotia Archives and Records Management) For the first time, Nova Scotia’s annual Christmas tree gift to the city of Boston will make a thank-you stop in Maine to mark the tragedy’s centennial and Maine’s assistance. On a morning in Maine 100 years […]

Posted inMaine, sj-web

Paul LePage says thousands of Mainers fought for Confederacy

If those seeking to remove the statues of Confederate heroes are successful, Gov. Paul LePage asked if they’ll next “take my books” and clear library shelves in a bid to strip away history. During a wide-ranging radio interview with Bangor’s WVOM, the governor blasted the press as “pencil terrorists,” defended Robert E. Lee and bemoaned […]