Issue for February 27, 2025

Issue for February 27, 2025

Celebrating 36 years of local news

Town of Fairfield leads climate resiliency informational sessions

The Town of Fairfield’s Economic and Community Development Committee (FECDC) is partnering with the State of Maine’s Community Resilience Partnership to host a series of four public informational sessions on climate resiliency…

Community Volunteers build raised beds for China Community Garden

On Saturday, February 8, a group of dedicated volunteers came together to build 36 raised garden beds for the China Community Garden. Hosted at the home of Marie and Tom Michaud, the workday was filled with teamwork and camaraderie as Emme Brown, Nate Dudley, Bill Powell, and Jeff Wood joined James and Jude Hsiang to construct the beds – under the watchful eye of one-year-old Edie Dudley, who provided moral support…

Town News

Select board, department heads hash over budget

VASSALBORO – Vassalboro select board members and leaders of town departments and groups discussed the proposed 2025-26 budget for more than 90 minutes Feb. 20 before moving on to the rest of the select board agenda…

Webber Pond dam main topic at select board meeting

VASSALBORO – A main business item on the Feb. 20 Vassalboro select board agenda, a discussion of planned enlargement of the fishway at the Webber Pond dam, turned into a discussion of movement for people, not fish…

Select board, budget committee, town employees hold long meeting

CHINA – China select board members, joined by some budget committee members and several town employees, held a long four-part meeting Monday evening, Feb. 24…

VCS school board sees contrasting presentations on special programs

VASSALBORO – Vassalboro school board members began their Feb. 11 meeting with contrasting presentations on special programs offered for Vassalboro Community School (VCS) students…

COMMUNITY COMMENTARY: Open meeting vs. secret ballot

CHINA — There’s a lot of talk around town about having a traditional town meeting with a moderator, with a required quorum in attendance to conduct business, or a day-long secret ballot meeting… by Sheldon Goodine

LETTERS: Sadly, estranged from my daughter

from Frank Slason (Augusta) Regarding my daughter’s rebuttal letter to The Town Line, it should be noted that the only references to dollars was what I paid a man to share my driving back to Maine. I would remind her I allowed her to write her own checks from our joint account, in her own words, “I do really appreciate your helping me out!”…

LETTERS: Funding for climate change research is needed

from Alexis Garretson (Hampden) As a scientist, I am deeply alarmed by the news that NOAA was asked to supply a list of active climate-related grant funding. This request raises alarms about potential cuts to critical climate research and mitigation efforts. There is no meaningful scientific debate about the reality of climate change, and over 70 percent of adults believe climate change will harm future generations…

LETTERS: Ending EV mandate shortsighted

from Rashmi Mohan (Bar Harbor) In response to President Trump’s inauguration speech on January 20, 2025, I found it profoundly concerning that the new president seems intent on reversing our country’s progress toward lasting energy solutions amid an energy crisis…

No child should be priced out of playing sports

CENTRAL ME — Participating in youth sports has long been a cornerstone of the American experience — or at least it used to be. Fewer American kids are playing sports, and shifting trends are leaving countless kids on the sidelines… by Hanna Skandera

SAD #18 students busy with school projects

CENTRAL ME — Projects at area schools…

Bar Harbor Bank accepting applications from seniors for 2025 career & technical education scholarship

CENTRAL ME — Bar Harbor Bank & Trust is currently accepting applications for the Bank’s 2025 Career & Technical Education Scholar­ship. The $1,000 scholarship is awarded to income-eligible high school seniors who attend a technical career program as part of their high school curriculum and are planning to attend a college or technical school in the academic year immediately following graduation…

Vassalboro Community School 2nd quarter honors

VASSALBORO — List of honor roll students for the 2nd quarter at Vassalboro Community School…

Maia Macek named to Hamilton College Fall 2024 dean’s list

MADISON — Maia Macek, of Madison, has been named to the dean’s list at Hamilton College, in Clinton, New York, for the fall 2024 semester. Macek, a senior majoring in art and Hispanic studies, is a graduate of The American School, in Japan.

Area students named to Fall 2024 dean’s list at Cedarville University

BENTON/CHINA — Students at Cedarville University, in Cedarville, Ohio, have been named to the dean’s list for the Fall 2024 semester. They include Zachary Craig, of Benton, and Josette Gilman, of China.

Area students named to dean’s list at University of Maryland Global Campus

FAIRFIELD — The following students were named to the dean’s list at Maryland Global, in Adelphia, Maryland: Seth Pratt, of Cornville, and Tyler Sheets, of Fairfield.

Andrei Llanto named to fall deans’ list at University of Nebraska

WATERVILLE — Andrei Llanto, of Waterville, has been named to the deans’ list at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, in Lincoln, Nebraska, for the fall semester of the 2024-25 academic year. Llanto, a junior majoring in business and law, was named to the dean’s list for the College of Business.

Dean’s list honors at Tufts University

OAKLAND/WATERVILLE/AUGUSTA — Tufts University, in Medford, Massachusetts, recently announced the dean’s list for the fall 2024 semester. Bella Wallingford, Class of 2026, of Oakland; Cole Bazakas, Class of 2027, of Waterville; Samuel Goldey, Class of 2028, of Augusta.

Local student earns dean’s list recognition at Norwich University

AUGUSTA — Riley Geyer, of Augusta, has been recognized on the dean’s list at Norwich University, in Northfield, Vermont, for the Fall 2024 semester.

Local student earns place on Furman University’s dean’s list

AUGUSTA — Bryan Ouellette, of Augusta, earned a place on Furman University’s dean’s list for the 2024 fall semester, in Greenville, South Carolina.

Keira Goldsmith achieves president’s list honors

OAKLAND — Keira Goldsmith, of Oakland, has achieved president’s list honors for the fall 2024 semester at Nichols College, in Dudley, Massachusetts.

Name that film!

Identify the film in which this famous line originated and qualify to win FREE passes to The Maine Film Center, in Waterville: “Mrs. Robinson, you’re trying to seduce me. Aren’t you?” Email us at townline@townline.org with subject “Name that film!” Deadline for submission is March 6, 2025.

Webber’s Pond Comic

Webber’s Pond is a comic drawn by a local central Maine resident…

Local happenings

EVENTS: 16 Counties for Courage: Neighbors for Common Ground

SKOWHEGAN – People in Maine’s 16 counties are rallying to find common ground and push back on the actions of the Trump administration and Elon Musk’s DOGE, Saturday, March 1, 2:30 – 4 p.m., starting with a march from the Margaret Chase Smith Memorial Bridge, in Skowhegan, and ending at the Miller’s table parking lot…

EVENTS: Palermo planning board reschedules meeting, again

PALERMO – The Palermo Planning Board, once again, has rescheduled its meeting to Thursday, March 27, 2025, at the Palermo Town Office, at 6 p.m. The purpose is to conduct official review of plans for the proposed Pine Hill subdivision on Hostile Valley Road, Tax Map R11, Lot 27C…

EVENTS: Spaghetti supper to benefit Winslow Community Cupboard Food Pantry

WINSLOW – Winslow Community Cupboard food pantry – which serves food-insecure children, seniors, and other adults from Winslow, Waterville, and 22 surrounding towns – will hold a Spaghetti Supper Fundraiser at Winslow Congregational Church, on Saturday, March 1, from 4:30 to 7 p.m…

EVENTS: Lincoln County Historical Association offers heritage craft workshops

WISCASSET – During the month of March, Lincoln County Historical Association’s education outreach program will offer a series of heritage craft workshops. The workshops will be held on March 2, 16, and 30 from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. They will feature stenciling on canvas, basketry, hand brooms, and foil art. The program is generously supported by a grant from the Margaret E. Burnham Charitable Trust…

Obituaries

MADISON – Anna Louise Richardson, 86, peacefully passed away on Wednesday, February 12, 2025. She was the wife for 62 years to Ernest Richardson. She was born in Bingham, on August 18, 1938. …

CALENDAR OF EVENTS: Apple Tree Pruning Workshop

VASSALBORO – There will be an apple pruning workshop on Saturday, March 8, from 9:30 a.m. – noon, at 167 Tabor Hill Road, in Vassalboro. Cost is $10 and registration deadline is March 3… and many other local events!

Up and Down the Kennebec Valley: Palermo residents – Part 2 (new)

PALERMO HISTORY — In case readers have not had enough genealogical confusion, this article continues with information about Palermo’s first three school committee members, elected in January 1805, and their families. Christopher Erskine, Stephen Marden and Samuel (or Samual) Longfellow were leaders among Palermo’s early settlers…. by Mary Grow

Up and Down the Kennebec Valley: Palermo early settlers

PALERMO HISTORY — As a break from trying to figure out which schoolhouse was in which end of town, your writer decided to profile some of the people mentioned in last week’s article about Palermo schools, starting with a sampling of the town’s first residents. The result is the following tantalizing tangle of contradictions and unanswered questions…. by Mary Grow

Up and Down the Kennebec Valley: Palermo elementary schools

PALERMO HISTORY — The Town of Palermo’s first settlers arrived around 1776 or 1777. By 1778 the area was called Great Pond Settlement, because, Milton Dowe explained in his 1954 history, it was “near the Sheepscot Great Pond,” now 1,193-acre Sheepscot Lake (the third largest in Waldo County, according to state data last reviewed in 1992)…. by Mary Grow

Up and Down the Kennebec Valley: Albion schools

ALBION HISTORY — The Town of Albion, north of China and east of Winslow, had half a dozen European families by 1790, according to Henry Kingsbury’s Kennebec County history. The area, including until 1818 the north end of present-day China, was organized as Freetown Plantation in 1802… by Mary Grow

Common Ground: Win a $10 gift certificate!

DEADLINE: Wednesday, March 13, 2025

Identify the people in these three photos, and tell us what they have in common. You could win a $10 gift certificate to Hannaford Supermarket! Email your answer to townline@townline.org or through our Contact page. Include your name and address with your answer. Use “Common Ground” in the subject!

Previous winner: Valoree Martin, So. China

Town Line Original Columnists

Roland D. HalleeSCORES & OUTDOORS

by Roland D. Hallee | You must remember the cartoon character of a bird with an innate chutzpah and brash demeanor that would fly into our living rooms during cartoon Saturdays in the 1950s and 1960s…

CRITTER CHATTER

by Jayne Winters | I continue to share more of Carleen Cote’s past articles because Duck Pond Wildlife Care Center isn’t accepting any wildlife or phone inquiries right now. I found several about the generous efforts of local students to help support the rehab center…

Peter CatesREVIEW POTPOURRI

by Peter Cates | The Cathedrals is a gospel men’s quartet in the tradition of the two most well known ones from the Deep South – the Blackwood Brothers; and the Statesmen. This cassette is a generously filled anthology of 15 previously released selections..

FOR YOUR HEALTH

HEALTH | Technology is making it easier for people to manage their health – in ways that may surprise you.  Wearables in conjunction with health apps are transforming how people manage their health. These tools enable users to monitor vital signs, track healthcare activities, and manage chronic conditions with ease…

EVENTS: Palermo planning board reschedules meeting, again

The Palermo Planning Board, once again, has rescheduled its meeting to Thursday, March 27, 2025, at the Palermo Town Office, at 6 p.m. The purpose is to conduct official review of plans for the proposed Pine Hill subdivision on Hostile Valley Road, Tax Map R11, Lot 27C

REVIEW POTPOURRI: The Cathedrals

Peter Catesby Peter Cates

The Cathedrals

The Cathedrals

The Cathedrals – Masters of Gospel; Riversong 84418-2876-4, 1992 cassette.

The Cathedrals is a gospel men’s quartet in the tradition of the two most well known ones from the Deep South – the Blackwood Brothers; and the Statesmen.

This cassette is a generously filled anthology of 15 previously released selections- such titles as As It Was In the Days of Noah, Take This Whole World, Blood Washed Band, An Old Convention Song, etc., with scholarly notes on the background of each selection.

The four gentlemen sang in a festive, fervent manner, the results making for conducive listening one side at a time. And there are times when well sung gospel tunes make for great listening, hence my attraction to hearing this tape.

Bellini

Vincenzo Bellini

Bellini: I Puritani; Riccardo Muti conducting the Ambrosian Opera Chorus and the Philharmonica Orchestra of London with a cast that includes soprano Montserrat Caballe, tenor Alfredo Kraus, and baritones Matteo Manuguerra and Agostino Ferrin etcs.; EMI CLASSICS 077776966328, recorded July-August 1979, three compact discs.

Opera composer Vincenzo Bellini (1801-1835) attended a production of Rossini’s Semiramide in 1824 while studying music, in Naples, Italy. A friend who accompanied him later wrote that “Bellini was so affected upon hearing it that…he…explained…in words of sad discomfort, that it seemed to him impossible to write good music in the face of that classic music by Rossini.”

Fortunately for musical posterity, the young man freed himself from this inhibition and would compose several very good operas, including the masterpieces Norma, La Sonnambula and the especially magnificent I Puritani before he died, at 33, from what was described as amoebic dysentery. During his last years, his operas had become popular in Paris and he was idolized in its social circles.

Puritani is most notable for the streams of melody in its arias, duets, vocal ensemble, choruses and orchestral writing. This 1979 recording features beautiful singing from Caballe, Krauss, Manuguerra, Ferrin and others while the conducting of Riccardo Muti, still active in his 80s, was among the best he achieved during those early years in his 30s – within a year, he would replace Eugene Ormandy as music director of the Phildelphia Orchestra.

Rusty Draper

Rusty Draper

Rusty Draper – The Shifting, Whispering Sands; and Time; Mercury 70696, seven inch 45, recorded 1955.

Pretty much forgotten in recent years, country singer Rusty Draper (1923-2003) had a few hits on Mercury records during the mid 1950s along with a TV show which featured other country singers. The Shifting Whispering Sands was among Billboard’s top 20 in 1955 and is sung with a concurrent story line narrated by Draper which combines wisdom about the shifting sands in the passage of time with corny sentimentality; Billy Vaughan did a best selling cover of it for Dot records. Side 2’s Time is a throwaway.

Draper sang decently but not memorably with the very good David Carroll’s arrangements.

Rossini

Rossini

Rossini: Stabat Mater- Fac Ut Portem (Oh, Endow Me); contralto Louise Homer; Victrola Red Seal 88132,12-inch one-sided acoustic shellac, recorded 1908.

Louise Homer (1871-1947) concertized several times in Portland and Bangor, according to the memoirs of her husband Sidney, and had a richly expressive contralto voice.

Starting in 1907, she recorded arias of Gluck, Handel, Saint-Saens and Mendelssohn; one of the best Star Spangled Banners and several hymns with soprano Alma Gluck (1884-1938) for Victrola Red Seal. And a large number of them make for wonderful listening.

The above Rossini selection from his Stabat Mater is a gem, despite the acoustic fidelity.

PUBLIC NOTICES for Thursday, February 27, 2025

LEGAL NOTICE

PETITION FOR A PARDON
STATE OF MAINE
Augusta, April 17, 2025

Notice is hereby given that a Petition for a Pardon for Deborah A. James (Woodburn) who was convicted of the crimes Gross Sexual Misconduct (A) and Unlawful Sexual Contact (C) CR88-152, is now pending before the Governor and a hearing will be conducted on Thursday, April 17, 2025, at 9 a.m. Please visit the following link for Hearing details: https://www.maine.gov/corrections/pardonboard.

Vassalboro Community School 2nd quarter honors (2024)

Vassalboro Community School (contributed photo)

EIGHTH GRADE

High honors: Zoe Gaffney, Allyson Gilman, Savannah Judkins, Cheyenne Lizzotte, Agatha Meyer, Grace Tobey and Ava Woods. Honors: Holden Altenburg, Samuel Bechard, Bryleigh Burns, Basil Dillaway, Fury Frappier, Baylee Fuchswanz, Dominic Heese, Jack LaPierre, Kaitlyn Lavallee and Mia McLean. Honorable mention: Peyton Bishop, Emily Clark, Jayden Portillo and Kassidy Proctor.

SEVENTH GRADE

High honor: Grace Clark, Mariah Estabrook, Leah Hyden, Sarina LaCroix, Elliott Rafuse, Charles Stein, and Cameron Willett. Honors: Aliyah Anthony, Zander Austin, Xainte Cloutier, Twila Cloutier, Kaylee Colfer, Samantha Craig, Riley Fletcher, Brandon Fortin, Aubrey Goforth, Aubrey Judkins, Landon Lagasse, Olivia Perry, Juliahna Rocque, Isaiah Smith, and Meadow Varney. Honorable mention: NolanAltenburg, Wyatt Devoe, Camden Foster, Dawson Frazer, Peter Giampietro, Arianna Muzerolle, Jaxson Presti, Eli St. Amand, Haven Trainor and Ethan York.

SIXTH GRADE

High honor: Ryder Austin, Hunter Brown, Kamdyn Couture, Anthony Dyer, Cooper Grant, Tanner Hughes, Aria Lathrop, Brooklyn Leach, Simon Olson, Willa Rafuse, Alexis Reed, Alana Rogerson, Addison Suga and Robert Wade. Honors: Alexander Bailey, Rylee Boucher, Grayson Brown, Reese Checkowitaz, Braiden Crommett, Molly Deaborn, Levi DeMerchant, Liam Dowe, Hunter Green, Ashlynn Hamlin, Sophia-Lynn Howard, Kendall Karlsson, Olivia Lane, Landon Lindquist, Trevyn Pooler, Landon Quint, Ashe Smith and Mason York-Baker. Honorable mention: Maverick Brewer, Eli Dulac, Chase Fay, Mikkah-Isabella Grant, Keegan Robinson, Christopher Santiago, Elliot Stratton and Gabriel Tucker.

FIFTH GRADE

High honor: Henry Gray, Finn Malloy, Evelyn Meyer and Sawyer Plossay. Honors: Ethan Altenburg, Olivia Booker, Parker Bouchard, Owen Clark, Camden Desmond, Emma Freeman, Norah French, Jaxson LaFlamme, Tucker Lizzotte, Gage Nason, Allysson Portillo, Gabriella Reynolds, Jayden Rhynd, Alivia Twitchell, Roman Wentworth, Mayla Wilson and Alicia Woods. Honorable mention: Titus Caruthers, Marley Field, Ember Irwin, Maksim LaCroix, Brayden Lang-Knights, Preston Richmond, Raegin Rodgers, Wesley Stewart, Oliver Sugden, Trenten Theobald and Haley Witham.

FOURTH GRADE

High honor: Payton Bowring, Aaliyah Doyen, Levi Hotham, Rose Matulis, Tristan Plossay, Aryn Rogerson, Sydney Suga, Aria Tardiff, Wynn Trainor and Samuel Tuttle. Honors: Cameron Bossie, Alexander Buckley, Colton Fletcher, Estelle Ford, Matthew Henrikson,, Thyri Kimball, Lillian Noll, Orion Paulette, Bianca Pooler, Dominic Poulin, Quentin Tarr, Meaghan Trask and Ryan York. Honorable mention: Jaxon Crommett, Leia Curtis, Jocelyn Parsons and Anastaysha Timberlake.

THIRD GRADE

High honor: Bruce Brothers, Conner Cayouette, Mason Hardy, Charlotte Phelps, Parker Poulin, Lux Reynolds, Heaven Smith, Natalie Vannah and Declan Wade. Honors: Cole Craney, Tarynn Crommett, Elijah Farshid, Isabelle Giguere, John Gray, Austin Henry, Kylie Killam, Matthew Maxwell, Declan McLaughlin, Charlee Nicknair, Willam Parks, Camdin Rodgers, Trey Soucy, Lennox Tardiff and Tyler White. Honorable mention: Spencer Brown, Dylan Brown, Jeremiah Clawson, Mason Gilman, Oliver Lessard, Ashlynn Levesque, Blayke Melanson, Sawyer Presti, Abigail Richards, Nevaeh Smith and Leela Vernon.

Up and Down the Kennebec Valley: Palermo residents – Part 2

by Mary Grow

In case readers have not had enough genealogical confusion, this article continues with information about Palermo’s first three school committee members, elected in January 1805, and their families. Christopher Erskine, Stephen Marden and Samuel (or Samual) Longfellow were leaders among Palermo’s early settlers.

Millard Howard wrote that Erskine was in Palermo by 1788. In 1803, he owned 200 acres, when most landowners who had dealt with the Kennebec Proprietors (including Longfellow and Marden) had 100 acres.

Howard called Erskine “one of the most prominent citizens.” His Turner Ridge lot included some of the town’s “best farm land”; by 1801, he “was running a tavern” there. Erskine was the man charged with convening the Jan. 9, 1805, town meeting at Robert Foye’s house. He was elected town treasurer, as well as a school committee member.

This Erskine was most likely the one named on line as Christopher Erskine III, born Feb. 27, 1761, in Alna (Find a Grave), or Feb. 27, 1763, in Pownalborough (FamilySearch).

Find a Grave says his first wife, married Jan. 2, 1789, in Wiscasset, was Sarah Elizabeth Dickey (born Aug. 12, 1766, in Palermo). They had five sons and one daughter (Find a Grave) or five sons and four daughters (FamilySearch).

Find a Grave says the last child was Abiel Wood Erskine, born in 1806. FamilySearch calls Abiel, born May 9, 1806, the youngest son and says the last child was Cynthia, born on Nov. 3, 1808. She married, had at least seven children and died in February 1894.

Sarah Dickey Erskine died Nov. 10, 1818, in Palermo.

According to Find a Grave, on June 20, 1806, Christopher took as his second wife Ruth (Cox) Erskine, widow of William Erskine (1752 – 1800), of Bristol. (Neither William nor Christopher is listed as the other’s brother in any source your writer found.)

Where did Sarah go? And what about Cynthia, allegedly born to Christopher and Sarah two years after Christopher married Ruth?

Ruth Cox was born July 21, 1757, according to WikiTree. She married first husband William in 1776. Between 1777 and 1798, they had two daughters and five (Find a Grave), eight (WikiTree) or nine sons (FamilySearch).

When Christopher married Ruth on June 20, 1806, WikiTree says four of her sons were young enough to be at home. William, born in 1792 (no month given), would have been about 14; Robert, born Jan. 3, 1795, was almost 11 and a half; and twins Jonas and James, born June 27, 1798, were eight.

On Christopher’s side, FamilySearch says seven of his children by Sarah were under 15 on June 20, 1806. John was born Jan. 31, 1792; Sarah, Feb. 19, 1794; Elizabeth, Nov. 3, 1795; Henry, Aug. 28, 1798 (making him two months younger than his twin step-brothers); Alexander, Feb. 7, 1801; Rebecca, April 18, 1803; and Abiel, May 9, 1806, six weeks before his father’s remarriage.

Did Ruth’s children come with her? Or had she, widowed, given them up to someone better able to care for them?

Did Christopher’s children stay with him and their stepmother? Or did some or all go with Sarah, wherever she went?

How did the 11 children and two adults blend, if they did?

* * * * * *

Also on that 1805 Palermo school committee was Stephen Marden, probably the Stephen Marden (or Stephen Marden, Jr.), born Sept. 13, 1771, in Chester, New Hampshire, son of a Stephen Marden born in 1736.

Howard quoted at length from an account by Stephen’s younger brother, John (born Feb. 15, 1779), which was reprinted in Alan Goodwin’s earlier Palermo history. John wrote that in 1781, in New Hampshire, his father was killed by a falling tree, leaving a widow and eight children; a ninth child was born in September.

John came to Great Pond Settlement in the District of Maine in January 1793, when he was 14. He worked with Stephen until he was 22, when he bought his own farm.

Milton Dowe, in his Palermo history, added a third brother, Benjamin (the one born Sept. 29, 1781, WikiTree says). Dowe wrote that about 1800, the “iron parts of a water wheel” were sent from New Hampshire to Augusta, whence the three brothers brought them to Palermo to power a saw and a machine to build hand rakes (which they sold for 25 cents each).

If dates are accurate, Stephen Marden came with his new bride: WikiTree says he married Abigail Black (born Oct. 29, 1768) in Chester on Jan. 1, 1793.

One WikiTree page lists two children of the marriage, a daughter named Mary, born Sept. 19, 1795, and a son named Albra, born about 1812. Both died in Palermo, Albra on Nov. 16, 1877, and Mary (by then the widow of John Spiller, by whom she had had nine children) on Sept. 3, 1878.

Find a Grave says Stephen and Abigail’s children were Benjamin, born Oct. 26, 1798, and Albra, born April 12, 1812. This site has photos of Benjamin and Albra’s gravestones in Palermo’s Smith cemetery.

Another WikiTree page says Stephen and Abigail had 11 children, starting with a son named Stephen.

(Perhaps a generational mix-up? Find a Grave says Stephen and Abigail’s son Albra and his wife Hannah had eight sons and three daughters, born between 1838 and 1859. The fourth son, born in 1847, was named Stephen.)

Howard wrote that when the Massachusetts legislature, in February 1802, approved a plan to reconcile the Palermo settlers with the Kennebec Proprietors who sold the settlers their land, Stephen Marden was one of three Palermo commissioners chosen to determine how much the settlers owed.

Voters at the Jan. 9, 1805, town meeting elected Marden a school committee member, constable and tax collector. In his discussion of the meeting, Howard called Marden “one of the most prominent resistance leaders,” apparently meaning resistant to the Proprietors and supportive of the settlers.

Marden died on Feb. 2 or Feb. 7, 1825, and his widow, Abigail, on Sept. 26, 1834, both in Palermo. They, and John and his wife Eunice, are buried in Palermo’s Dennis Hill Cemetery (Find a Grave lists no Benjamin there).

Find a Grave says Stephen and Abigail’s son Benjamin bought John Spiller’s farm on Marden Hill. (By combining lists from two sources, an imaginative reader can make John Spiller Benjamin’s brother-in-law, husband of Mary.)

This site says the younger Benjamin was a farmer, a blacksmith and a “practical wheelwright” (builder of wooden wheels). It calls him “a man of more than usual intelligence and looked up to by his neighbors, who bore for him the highest respect.”

Find a Grave credits this Benjamin Marden with an interest in town affairs and an active role in organizing the town’s first library, “the Palermo and China Social Library.” Howard called the library organizer Benjamin Marden, 2nd, and said the library, opened “around mid-century,” was “apparently at his home on Marden Hill.”

* * * * * *

At that Jan. 9, 1805, town meeting that made Samuel Longfellow a school committee member, he was also elected meeting moderator and one of Palermo’s first three selectmen.

Longfellow was born in Hampton, New Hampshire, in 1756. He and his younger brother, Stephen, born in 1760, came to Palermo in 1788, Howard said.

Find a Grave says they were second cousins, twice removed, of poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (Feb. 27, 1807 – March 24, 1882). Samuel served in the Revolutionary War from 1775 to 1779.

He married Mary Perkins (born July 5, 1759, in Kensington, New Hampshire) on March 28, 1779, in Kensington. Find a Grave names four children.

First was Mary “Polly,” born in 1781. In 1799 she married Samuel Fuller (1775 – 1853), by whom she had four daughters and a son between 1799 and 1820.

Second was Green, born Jan. 18, 1786, in Palermo. In 1805, Green married Sarah Jane Foy (1787 – 1848), with whom he had four sons and two daughters between 1809 and 1826 (Find a Grave) or eight sons and three daughters between 1806 and 1832 (Ancestry).

Find a Grave says Green had a second wife, Melinda Foster Fisher Palmer, born in Alna, Nov. 7, 1793. (Foster and Fisher were maiden names; her first husband had been John Palmer.) Melinda gave birth to a son and two daughters between 1826 and 1831; Find a Grave lists their last names as Palmer, not Longfellow (their names do not match the last three of Sarah’s children on the Ancestry list).

Find a Grave gives no marriage date for Green and Melinda, nor does it explain what happened to Sarah.

Howard wrote that in 1835, Green (maybe Green, Jr., born in 1811?) built Palermo’s District 2 schoolhouse, for $110. In March (1836?), district voters paid him $2 “for furnishing the room to keep school in the past winter.”

In 1847, two Longfellows, Green (probably Green, Jr.) and Dearborn (Green, Jr.’s brother, born in 1809), each had three students in the District 2 school.

Samuel and Mary’s third child was Jonathan Perkins Longfellow, born Dec. 15, 1795, in Palermo. Jonathan married Betsy Edwards (1799 – 1882); they had four sons (including another Samuel) between 1818 and 1837.

Fourth was Olive B., born in 1798. Find a Grave says she married twice. If dates are correct, her first husband, whom she married in 1841, was the Samuel Fuller who was her older sister Mary’s former husband. WikiTree says Mary died May 25, 1837.

Samuel died Jan. 3, 1853, and Olive married Capt. Edward Lawry, born in 1799. The Isleboro Historical Society’s on-line information says they married Dec. 2, 1853, in Searsmont.

Olive was Lawry’s second wife; his first was Pamelia W. Arnold (1804 – 1852), with whom he had two daughters and three sons in the 1830s and 1840s. The youngest son, Andrew, was listed in the 1870 census as a farmer in Searsmont, age 24 or 25, living with his father and stepmother.

* * * * * *

Two of Samuel and Mary’s granddaughters, Mary (Long­fellow) Fuller’s daughters, married back into the Longfellow family. The second Fuller daughter, Louisa (born July 6, 1807), married Dearborn Longfellow, son of Green Longfellow and Sarah Jane Foy, in 1834 (according to FamilySearch, which gives her name as Leorina Louise Fuller).

Her older sister, Mary Louise (born Nov. 30, 1799), on May 15, 1823, married Nathan Longfellow, son of Samuel Longfellow’s brother and sister-in-law Stephen and Abigail.

Stephen Longfellow was born in 1760 in Hampton, New Hampshire. He and Abigail (born in 1766) were married May 3, 1785, in Newcastle; they had four sons and eight daughters, starting with Mary, born Aug. 10, 1785. (Mary was the Longfellow readers met briefly last week, who married John Cain.)

John and Mary’s son Page Cain/Kane, born Jan. 21, 1834, married Martha Longfellow on March 2, 1861. Martha was another of Samuel and Mary (Perkins) Longfellow’s granddaughters, son of Jonathan, born in Palermo in 1795, and his wife Betsy (Edwards).

Stephen Longfellow died Jan. 31, 1834, and his brother, Samuel Longfellow, died Feb. 3, 1834. Stephen’s widow, Abigail, died May 13, 1843; Samuel’s widow, Mary, died April 6, 1849.

Samuel and Mary are buried under the same stone in Palermo’s Old Greeley Corner Cemetery, which also has graves of several descendants. Your writer did not find a burial location for Stephen or Abigail.

Main sources

Dowe, Milton E., History Town of Palermo Incorporated 1804 (1954).
Howard, Millard, An Introduction to the Early History of Palermo, Maine (second edition, December 2015).

Websites, miscellaneous.

FOR YOUR HEALTH: Use Personal Health Records to Take Control of Your Own Health

By using a new app, you can take charge of your well-being, make more informed choices, and stay on top of your health with ease.

(NAPSI)—Technology is making it easier for people to manage their health – in ways that may surprise you. Wearables in conjunction with health apps are transforming how people manage their health. These tools enable users to monitor vital signs, track healthcare activities, and manage chronic conditions with ease. By providing access to medical information, millions are making informed decisions about their well-being, improving their quality of life, and taking active steps toward a healthier lifestyle.

An Example

One easy-to-use app helps millions of people understand their health by tracking activity levels, sleep, exercise, heart rate, stress, and even what you eat. Called Samsung Health, it also offers challenges, tips, and coaching to help users set and meet their health goals.

By better understanding your personal health data, you can be in better control of your health and wellness goals. That’s why Samsung Health introduced Health Records, a new feature that gives users easy access to their medical records from clinics, hospitals and major health networks.

The new Health Records feature in the app guides users toward preventive care by offering meaningful insights and alerts that suggest proactive care steps, such as recommending medical tests or actions like scheduling your annual exam. Instead of relying on the hospital for your records, you have easy access to important data such as lab results, prescription records, list of medications, and past hospital visits.

One of the main reasons people use Health Records is because having all health information in one place makes it easy to stay in control of their health. Whether you’re tracking daily steps or managing a long-term health condition, having your health data in the app makes it simple to stay on top of things. And, with a holistic view of your health records, readily available at your fingertips, you can more effectively engage with providers.

With the ability to track everything from exercise to doctor’s appointments, medications, or test results, Samsung Health gives users more control over their health than ever before.

Learn More

To learn more visit https://www.samsung.com/us/support/owners/app/samsung-health.

PHOTOS: SAD #18 students busy with school projects

China Primary School: 2024 Maine Stem Film Challenge Winners: Second grader, Syar, from Ms. Kimmie’s class and his brother, Shya, from Mrs. Dunn’s kindergarten class recently participated in the 2024 Maine Stem Film Challenge held by the University of Southern Maine. They submitted a film on the topic of ecology – focusing on amphibians and won first place in the K-3 division!

China Middle School: Gifted and Talented Students Delve into Space Studies: Gifted and Talented students at both China and Messalonskee Middle schools participated in a space mission with the Bangor Challenger Learning Center. Both schools created a live 3D space timeline posted in their buildings. Students then learned how to use Canva to “digitize” their timeline and create a video. Some students used AI tools in and out of Canva to do voice overs. Mrs. Paquette and Ms. Fish teamed up for this technology piece.

Williams Elementary School: Challenger Learning Center of Maine: In an exciting educational initiative, Mrs. Pullen’s and Mr. Polley’s fifth graders teamed up with the Challenger Learning Center of Maine to delve into the mysteries of Mars and its moons. Through interactive simulations and expert guidance, students explored the unique characteristics of Mars’ moons. During their discussions, students connected to the science standard about Earth’s revolution and recognized that there is a critical window of landing opportunities on Mars, which is influenced by its orbit around the Sun.

Messalonskee Middle School: Seventh Grade Social Studies Colonization Simulation: Ms. Michaud’s social studies classes on Team Boothbay have been role playing life in Colonial America. Students have been journaling and acting out as though they are traders, explorers, governors, teachers, healers, blacksmiths, and Native Americans in class to gain first-hand experiences at life in the New World during the 1600-1700s. Students have enjoyed this engaging unit and exceeded expectations in their roles as colony members!

Bar Harbor Bank accepting applications from seniors for 2025 career & technical education scholarship

Bar Harbor Bank & Trust

Bar Harbor Bank & Trust is currently accepting applications for the Bank’s 2025 Career & Technical Education Scholar­ship. The $1,000 scholarship is awarded to income-eligible high school seniors who attend a technical career program as part of their high school curriculum and are planning to attend a college or technical school in the academic year immediately following graduation.

Students must reside in counties in Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont where the Bank has a branch location. Applicants selected to receive a 2025 scholarship will be eligible to apply for an additional $1,000 scholarship in 2026 to be used for their second year of college or technical school.

The deadline to apply for the 2025 Career & Technical Education Scholarship is May 1, 2025. Interested students can visit www.barharbor.bank/scholarships for more information about eligibility and to download the application.

EVENTS: 16 Counties for Courage: Neighbors for Common Ground

People in Maine’s 16 counties are rallying to find common ground and push back on the actions of the Trump administration and Elon Musk’s DOGE, Saturday, March 1, 2:30 – 4 p.m., starting with a march from the Margaret Chase Smith Memorial Bridge, in Skowhegan, and ending at the Miller’s table parking lot.

Come march and gather to hear unifying speakers talk about how proposed laws, like the Save Act, might impact you and your neighbors. They welcome Mainers of all political persuasions to demand that our representatives and government officials restore, checks and balances, the established rule of law, equity for all under the law, and privacy and security of our information.