June 10, 2019: The Legislature approves a bill that strives to settle disputes between the state and Native American tribes over sustenance fishing rights. The Senate votes 35-0 to approve the bill, which would designate dozens of Maine waterways as sustenance fishing areas. Those waterways, including several in northern and eastern Maine, would be subject […]
This Day in Maine History
On this date in Maine history: June 9
June 9, 1820: The Maine Legislature adopts the design of the state seal about three months after Maine becomes the 23rd state. Designed by committee – a foreboding circumstance in itself – the image shows a farmer resting on a scythe and a seaman leaning on an anchor, with a moose and a pine tree […]
On this date in Maine history: June 8
June 8, 1864: The National Union Convention, held in Baltimore, nominates Republican Abraham Lincoln for a second term as president. Then, with Lincoln’s support, it rejects Vice President Hannibal Hamlin of Maine in favor of War Democrat Andrew Johnson of Tennessee as Lincoln’s running mate. Lincoln wins re-election in November. Six weeks after his inauguration […]
On this date in Maine history: June 7
June 7, 1886: An elevator catches fire in the Bodwell & Allen icehouses in the riverside part of Pittston that would become the town of Randolph the following year. The fire jumps across the Kennebec River and ignites a Knickerbocker Ice Co. icehouse at Bowman’s Point in Farmingdale, then spreads to a neighboring Knickerbocker icehouse. […]
On this date in Maine history: June 6
June 6, 1944: Nineteen-year-old Charles Norman Shay, a Penobscot Indian, rescues drowning and wounded soldiers while under enemy fire among the first wave of attackers to land on Omaha Beach in France on D-Day. His actions earn him a Silver Star. Shay, who grew up on Indian Island in the Penobscot River, is an Army […]
On this date in Maine history: June 5
June 5, 2015: Abbott resident Robert Burton shoots his former girlfriend, Stephanie Gebo, 37, at her Parkman home, killing her. The discovery of her body later that day launches a manhunt that lasts 68 days, the longest and costliest in Maine history. Gebo was afraid of Burton, so she slept with a gun under her […]
On this date in Maine history: June 4
June 4, 1942: The USS Nicholas, a U.S. Navy Fletcher-class destroyer built at Bath Iron Works in Bath, is commissioned. The second ship to be named for the Marines’ first commandant, Samuel Nicholas (c. 1744-1790), the destroyer receives 30 battle stars – more than any other U.S. Navy ship – for service in World War […]
On this date in Maine history: June 3
June 3, 1851: Ten towns incorporate the West Oxford Agricultural Society and establish an annual exhibition. They hold their first fair Oct. 23 in Hiram. The event moves from town to town in its initial years but eventually settles permanently in the town of Fryeburg and becomes known as the Fryeburg Fair. It starts out […]
On this date in Maine history: June 2
June 2, 1851: Gov. John Hubbard signs what becomes known as the Maine Law, which bans the sale of alcoholic beverages except for “medicinal, mechanical, or manufacturing purposes.” The law, for which Portland Mayor Neal Dow lobbied furiously, also includes a search-and-seizure provision that enables any three voters to obtain a search warrant if they […]
On this date in Maine history: June 1
June 1, 1840: The U.S. census begins and eventually will show that Bangor’s population has reached 8,627, a 201 percent increase from the 1830 total. The then-booming lumber town was incorporated as a city in 1834. June 1, 1849: Inventors, businessmen and identical twins Freelan Oscar Stanley and Francis Edgar Stanley are born in Kingfield. […]