Posted inBicentennial, Maine, News

On this date in Maine history: Sept. 11

Sept. 11, 1922: Dora Pinkham, a Republican schoolteacher and bookkeeper from Fort Kent, becomes the first woman elected to the Maine House of Representatives. Her election takes place a scant two years after the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution granted women the right to vote. The Protestant candidate’s victory seems all the more remarkable […]

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Posted inBicentennial, Maine, News

On this date in Maine history: Sept. 8

Sept. 8, 1803: The Portland-based newspaper Eastern Argus publishes its first issue. The paper is the first one in Maine supporting President Thomas Jefferson’s Democratic-Republican Party, the nemesis of the Federalist Party, which dominated the press. The Federalists, who tend to oppose the District of Maine’s separation from Massachusetts, gradually are losing influence in Maine. […]

Posted inBicentennial, Maine, News

On this date in Maine history: Sept. 3

Sept. 3, 1853: The Harnden & Brother spool factory on the Kennebec River in Augusta catches fire about 2 a.m. The fire eventually consumes a grist mill, machine shops, six sawmills, a boardinghouse and other commercial enterprises. Before the fire spreads beyond the three-story, 160-by-60-foot spool mill, a night watchman and other people try to […]