Posted inBicentennial, Local & State, News

On this date in Maine history: May 1

May 1, 2008: Rising rivers throughout northeastern Maine and northwestern New Brunswick drive area residents out, force bridge closures and submerge many businesses and homes in the worst inundation in living memory, caused by 5 inches of rain and a rapidly melting snowpack. The Aroostook River in Masardis crests at 18.33 feet, a record level. […]

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Posted inBicentennial, Local & State, News

On this date in Maine history: April 28, narrated by Heath Miller

April 28, 1780: Brig. Gen. Peleg Wadsworth, Revolutionary War commander of the American forces fighting the British in Maine, writes a letter describing the deplorable condition of his troops. Maine still is part of Massachusetts then. Wadsworth’s letter is addressed to the Massachusetts Council, the upper chamber of the Provincial Congress. In it, he says […]

Posted inBicentennial, Local & State, News

On this date in Maine history: April 27, narrated by Keith Carson

April 27, 1973: A storm system stalls over the Saint John River Valley, unleashing the worst flood ever recorded there. The flood causes severe damage in northern Maine and a crisis in next-door New Brunswick, where 1,450 people are evacuated. In and around the provincial capital, Fredericton, water pervades older neighborhoods and spills into the […]

Posted inBicentennial, Local & State, News

On this date in Maine history: April 26, narrated by Victoria Hugo-Vidal

April 26, 1879: Madame Nordica (1857-1914) takes nine curtain calls after a stunningly successful performance in Verdi’s “La Traviata” at Brescia, Italy, during the opening phase of her long singing career. The singer, who spent the first eight years of her life in Farmington, Maine, as Lillian Norton, changed her name to make it more […]

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On this date in Maine history: April 25, narrated by James Kennerley

April 25, 1906: Portland-born John Knowles Paine, one of the first Americans to achieve recognition for large-scale orchestral music, dies at 67 in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Paine’s father owned a music store, led a Portland band and published music. The son also drew inspiration from Hermann Kotzschmar (1829-1908), a German musician, conductor and composer who settled […]

Posted inBicentennial, Local & State, News

On this date in Maine history: April 24, narrated by Alain Nahimana

April 24, 1816: Four hundred to 500 people show up at the courthouse in Augusta in response to an invitation to attend a convention, moderated by Judge Daniel Cony (1752-1842), an Augusta physician and Revolutionary War veteran, about a proposal to separate Maine from Massachusetts. The crowd, composed of residents of Kennebec, Lincoln and Somerset […]